Texas Gov. Greg Abbott plans to sign Ten Commandments bill after Senate approvalNew Foto - Texas Gov. Greg Abbott plans to sign Ten Commandments bill after Senate approval

A Texas bill that would order the Ten Commandments to be displayed in all public school classrooms was advanced by the state Senate on Wednesday, sending the legislation to Gov. Greg Abbott's desk after theHouse of Representatives passed an amended version Sunday. The Senate passed the GOP-draftedSenate Bill 10in March along party lines. Despite debate and attempts to delay the bill's progress in the House in recent days, a Democratic lawmaker'samendmentthat requires the state, rather than school districts, to defend any legal challenges to the law was approved on Sunday. Such a change forced the bill back to the Senate for approval with only days left in the current legislative session. With that approval in place, Abbott, a Republican, is expected to sign the bill. His spokesman referred a request for comment to what Abbottposted on Xearlier this month: "Let's get this bill to my desk. I'll make it law." Texas, the second-largest state with more than5 million students enrolledin public schools, would follow Louisiana andmost recently Arkansas in passing legislationrequiring that the Ten Commandments be displayed in classrooms. But like Louisiana, Texas could face a barrage of legal challenges over the law's constitutionality. Louisiana has not fully implemented its legislation after a coalition of parents of different faiths filed a federal lawsuit just days after the bill was signed by Gov. Jeff Landry, a Republican. Ajudge in November sided with those parents when he concluded thatthe state had not offered "any constitutional way to display the Ten Commandments." Louisiana officials appealed, but a ruling has not been issued. Now, with other states passing their own laws, the arguments could eventually wind up again before the U.S. Supreme Court, which in 1980 ruled that classroom displays of the Ten Commandments were unconstitutional. But awave of new lawsandmandates in states, particularly in the South, having begun to test the bounds of what may be legally permissible when it comes to religion in public schools. Under Texas' bill, all public elementary or secondary schools would have to "display in a conspicuous place in each classroom of the school a durable poster or framed copy of the Ten Commandments." The displays would have to be at least 16 inches by 20 inches and include the text of the Ten Commandments as written in the bill. Once the bill is signed into law, schools "must accept any offer of privately donated" displays or may use district funds, starting in the 2025-26 school year. The legislation does not have an enforcement mechanism, and it's unclear what might happen to schools or individual teachers who refuse to comply. State Sen. Phil King, the lead author of the bill, has said he believes the legislation stands up to scrutiny following a2022 Supreme Court rulingthat found a former Washington state high school football coach had a right to pray on the field immediately after games. The ruling by the conservative-majority court took a different approach by examining "historical practices and understandings" to interpret whether the First Amendment was being violated. "Now that the U.S. Supreme Court has reversed a previous erroneous decision, what was taken from our students can now be rightfully restored," King said in a statement Wednesday. "I look forward to having the Ten Commandments, a historical document foundational to our nation's history and character, back in schools across Texas." In arguments against the bill during debate, state Rep. James Talarico, a Democrat and a Christian, said the specific posting of the Ten Commandments would give the appearance that the state is favoring one religion over others to the detriment of non-Christian students. He also questioned if state lawmakers had ever broken any of the commandments themselves. Other Democrats and critics asked why parents and school districts could not have a choice in whether to allow the Ten Commandments in classrooms, when some Republicans have been vocal about wanting parents to decidewhat books and topicsare permissible in schools. "Families across Texas believe deeply in faith, but they also believe in freedom," Rocío Fierro-Pérez, the political director of the Texas Freedom Network, which has opposed the Ten Commandments legislation, said in a statement. "Freedom to raise their kids according to their own values. Freedom from government interference in personal beliefs. That's what's really under attack here." But the bill isn't the only religious-based one to win approval this legislative session, after Texas lawmakers passed a bill that would permit school districts to adopt policiesallowing for a period of prayerin schools and the reading of the Bible or "other religious text" with parental consent. Abbott is also expected to sign it into law.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott plans to sign Ten Commandments bill after Senate approval

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott plans to sign Ten Commandments bill after Senate approval A Texas bill that would order the Ten Commandments to be di...
South Carolina's budget passes with a big raise in lawmaker payNew Foto - South Carolina's budget passes with a big raise in lawmaker pay

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — The South Carolina General Assembly likely met for the last time this year Wednesday, easily passing a budget that included what is effectively an$18,000-a-year raisefor all of its members. If the governor does not veto it, lawmakers will see their "in-district compensation" — money set aside for legislative duties that has few limits on how it can be spent — increase from $1,000 a month to $2,500 a month for all 46 senators and 124 House members. The raise, quietly slipped into the budget about a month ago in the Senate after the initial budget passed the House, caused heartburn. Several members threated to veto the entire $14.5 billion plan. But in the end, it passed both chambers easily. "The anticipation is you will spend that on your constituents, doing the job they've elected you to do and going to the places they have asked you to go," Republican House Ways and Means Chairman Bruce Bannister said. "If you do not spend the money on your constituents, that's on you." Other budget items The rest of thespending planwas much less controversial. There are pay raises for teachers, and the state's highest income tax rate will be cut from 6.2% to 6%. There is $200 million to fix bridges, $35 million to pay for cleanup from Hurricane Helene last year and $50 million for a program to let parents use tax money to pay private school tuition that will undergo court scrutiny. Pay increase But the $3 million that will increase legislator pay got the most attention as House and Senate negotiators finalized the budget for fiscal year 2025-2026 earlier this moth. The monthly stipend for lawmakers has not been increased in about 30 years. Their in-district stipend would increase from $12,000 a year to $30,000 Lawmakers also get a salary of $10,400 a year that has not changed since 1990. In addition, they get money for meals, mileage to drive to Columbia and hotel rooms while in session. Legislators are considered part time because South Carolina's General Assembly meets three days a week from January to May. Lawmakers passed a $1,000-a-month increase in the budget in 2014. But Republican Gov. Nikki Haleyvetoed it, and senators did not have the votes to override her decision. And since it was passed within the budget, legislators get the extra money starting July 1. By law, a raise in their salaries cannot take effect until after the next election. Not everyone supports the increase A number of lawmakers who voted for the budget said it would have been better to handle it as a bill that got public input and was fully debated. Sen. Wes Climer called the raise a wart in an otherwise well-crafted spending plan that includes tax cuts and spending on key items like bridges or private school vouchers. "If there is going to be a pay raise, the people by way of elections ought to decide who does and who does not get that raise," the Republican from Rock Hill said. Climer said he has already talked to attorney and former state Sen. Dick Harpootlian, who is eager about suing over the increase, saying he thinks it violates the law requiring a delay until the next election even though it is in the budget. Governor gets a say Gov. Henry McMaster has a line-item veto he can use to strike items from the budget. He said Wednesday he would have to look it over, but he said he will likely leave the in-district expenses in place. "I believe the case can be made that the expenses have gone up dramatically," McMaster said. "And the remedy would be to provide some more money to be used for those district expenses, not a favor." Lawmakers expect McMaster to veto little if anything from the budget. So instead of returning to take up his vetoes, they don't plan to come back to the Statehouse until January 2026, when next year's session starts.

South Carolina's budget passes with a big raise in lawmaker pay

South Carolina's budget passes with a big raise in lawmaker pay COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — The South Carolina General Assembly likely met for...
Knicks in wait-and-see mode with hobbled KATNew Foto - Knicks in wait-and-see mode with hobbled KAT

Karl-Anthony Towns carried the Knicks in Game 3, but the big man buckled in Game 4 and his status is up in the air as New York faces elimination in the Eastern Conference finals. Towns stayed on his back in obvious pain moments after abanging knees with Pacers forward Aaron Nesmith late in the fourth quarter of a 130-121 loss at Indiana in Game 4 on Tuesday night. He briefly left the game but re-entered and was not in a talking mood postgame, leaving his status up in the air for a possible elimination game in the best-of-seven series. As for whether Towns is confident he can take the court for Game 5 at Madison Square Garden on Thursday night, that question won't be answered immediately. "I'm only thinking about this loss, I'm not thinking about that right now," Towns said postgame about his level of concern with the injury. "It's disappointing when you don't get a win. Just didn't do enough to get the job done (in Game 4)." Towns, 29, was favoring his left knee in the first half, but head coach Tom Thibodeau took it as a "good sign" that he was able to continue Tuesday night. With the Knicks trailing 3-1 in the series, Towns has done his part to keep New York in it. He's averaging 25.8 points and 11.5 rebounds, including a memorable effort with 24 points and 15 rebounds in Game 3. --Field Level Media

Knicks in wait-and-see mode with hobbled KAT

Knicks in wait-and-see mode with hobbled KAT Karl-Anthony Towns carried the Knicks in Game 3, but the big man buckled in Game 4 and his stat...
Here's why Rockies' free fall is worse than historically bad 2024 White SoxNew Foto - Here's why Rockies' free fall is worse than historically bad 2024 White Sox

If you can't stand the sight of bad baseball, shield your eyes from the 2025Colorado Rockies. Just one season after theChicago White Sox set the modern MLB record for worst season in MLB history, a new contender for the infamous claim to baseball infamy has risen. The Rockies are swiftly heading down atumultuous pathto top what the White Sox did and they're on pace to obliterate the not even year-old record. Colorado's 9-46 record entering Wednesday is the worst in baseball. Theylost in extra innings to the Chicago Cubs on Tuesday, 4-3, marking the 18th series this season they've failed to win. Aside from having single-digit victories just a few days from the beginning of June, the Rockies' slow and grueling drift to the doldrums of baseball's worst teams somehow feels worse than the White Sox's free-fall last season. When comparing the two abysmal seasons, Colorado's outlook looks even more bleak. The manager of the worst team in baseball has a tall task. It's his job to keep things together despite plenty of losing, and there's always the question of if/when it will be his last day in the dugout. For the 2024 White Sox and 2025 Rockies, both Pedro Grifol and Bud Black, were fired for their respective teams' poor performances. Grifol was a dark cloud over the White Sox. Even before the losing, there was a disconnect between him, his players and the media. Hisfiring last August after going 28-89 that seasonwas addition by subtraction. It also opened up the path for the hiring of new manager Will Venable, considered around baseball to be one of the bright young minds in the sport. General manager Chris Getz is the running mate to help steer the ship of the rebuild. Black, who had been in Colorado since 2017, always felt right for the Rockies, and the beginning of his tenure felt much different than the bitter end. Colorado made the postseason each of his first two seasons, but after that, with the departure of franchise staples likeNolan ArenadoandTrevor Story, things began to snowball. Back-to-back 100-loss seasons is usually a recipe for a manager to get fired. In the case of Black, unlike Grifol, his firing was falling on the sword for an incompetent organization that is more of a rudderless ship than a baseball team. While the team's third-base coach, Warren Schaeffer, has taken over on an interim basis, it's not a job that is going to be highly sought after this offseason. And while there's only 30 of them, whoever Colorado ends up hiring, is going to have an uphill battle from talent and organizational standpoints. The Rockies haven't won a series since last season 😳pic.twitter.com/P3IyhWCBTU — Yahoo Sports (@YahooSports)May 28, 2025 The White Sox were openly in a rebuild last season. After inheriting the reins of a beaten-down organization, Getz began a long, grueling process to turn the team's roster over and inject talent back into an organization that needed more of it. On a team with several strong veterans, Getz moved them for prospect capital. The traded players includedTommy Pham,Tanner Banks,Michael Kopech,Erick Fedde,Eloy JiménezandPaul DeJong. The trading continued in the offseason as the White Sox dealt All-StarGarrett Crochetto theBoston Red Soxfor a huge prospect haul. Conversely, the Rockies' roster doesn't have many, if any players who could help a playoff team. Many of them are young, pre-arbitration guys who are still trying to find their bearings in the big leagues. And with the exception of the team's best players — shortstopEzequiel Tovarand center fielderBrenton Doyle, each highly unlikely to be traded — there's not much else to choose from. Colorado's most-tradable asset is third basemanRyan McMahon. The Rockies could have moved him over the past two seasons as he was productive and has a team-friendly deal. But Colorado kept McMahon and with each passing year, it looks like a bigger mistake. McMahon is having the worst offensive season of his career and while a team could still take a flier on him, the value lost over the past two seasons is immense. To add insult to injury, even for being in a rebuild as long as they have, the Rockies don't have a ton of impact prospects knocking on the door of the big leagues like most rebuilding teams. Last season's No. 3 overall draft pick Charlie Condon is still in High-A and top pitching prospectChase Dollander(currently on the IL) has already made it to the majors. That's about it for a while. This is where things get tough for Colorado. The NL West is a monster, with two World Series contenders in theLos Angeles Dodgersand theSan Diego Padres. TheSan Francisco GiantsandArizona Diamondbacksare both postseason hopefuls as well. It's not hard to imagine a world where all four teams finish the season with at least 84 wins. But if you combine the fact that you have four of the best teams in the National League in one division and the other team in the division is the worst in baseball, what you have is a recipe for an all-time bad season. The Rockies are 3-13 against their own division and as the other teams in the division get better and likely add at the trade deadline, it could be a long summer in the NL West for Colorado. The Rockies are on pace to go 26-136 this season, which would be 15 games worse than the White Sox in '24. And for a team on a winding path to nowhere and lacking talent or a plan to acquire it, Colorado seems destined to be MLB's newest historic laughingstock.

Here's why Rockies' free fall is worse than historically bad 2024 White Sox

Here's why Rockies' free fall is worse than historically bad 2024 White Sox If you can't stand the sight of bad baseball, shield...
Trump offers 'Golden Dome' protection to Canada. But there's a catch.New Foto - Trump offers 'Golden Dome' protection to Canada. But there's a catch.

President Donald Trumpis still angling forCanada, home to one of the world's largest economies and boasting a land mass slightly exceeding that of the United States, to become the 51st state − this time offering the northern neighbor inclusion in an ambitiousair defense system. Trump dangled the proverbial carrot in a May 27 post on his social media platform Truth Social, writing that they could either pay billions to join his proposed "Golden Dome" missile defense system, or get it for free, if they give up their sovereignty. "I told Canada, which very much wants to be part of our fabulous Golden Dome System, that it will cost $61 Billion Dollars if they remain a separate, but unequal, Nation, but will cost ZERO DOLLARS if they become our cherished 51st State," Trump said in thepost. Video:King Charles praises Canada as 'strong and free' before parliament It's not the first time the two nations have discussed either topic, with Canadian Prime MinisterMark Carneyfirmly telling Trump in aMay 6 Oval Office meetingthat his country is "not for sale," but later telling reporters that he is in talks with the American president about joining the prospective defense system. The Republican leader claimed Canada was considering the offer, a claim quickly rebuffed by a spokesperson with the Prime Minister's Office, who told CBC May 27 that officials are discussing security-related issues with the U.S., including the Golden Dome and the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), not giving up its nationhood. "The prime minister has been clear at every opportunity, including in his conversations withPresident Trump, that Canada is an independent, sovereign nation, and it will remain one," the spokesperson toldCBC. Initially termed the 'Iron Dome for America' by the White House, the proposed U.S. system takes inspiration from Israel's well-known multi-layered defense system of the same name. Developed in partnership with the U.S.,Israel's defense systemis made up of a collection of interceptions of short-range rockets, shells and mortars. Collectively, these form a web or "dome" of air defense around the Middle East nation's roughly 8,500 square miles, about the size of New Jersey. Trump issued an executive order a week after taking office ordering the development of the system, and on May 20 announced an initial $25 billion initial investment in the ground- and space-based Golden Dome project. The president said the system "should be fully operational before the end of my term," in 2029. The Golden Dome plan aims to cover the country with three layers of air defenses, according towritten Senate testimonyby Northern Command leader Air Force Gen. Gregory Guillot. They are sensors to alert incoming threats, ground-based interceptor missiles to target incoming ballistic missiles, and additional systems to handle lower-altitude threats like hypersonic missiles and enemy drones. The Golden Dome is also intended to use a network ofhundreds of satellitescircling the globe to knock out incoming enemy missiles after they lift off from countries like China, Iran, North Korea or Russia. The proposal has drawn criticism from experts over its feasibility and cost, while military rivals Russia and China have condemned the project.North Koreahas also weighed in to oppose the proposed missile shield. The initial $25 billion funding is included as part of the Trump-endorsed tax cut megabill currently working its way through Congress, the president said. He has already picked a design forthe Golden Dome system, he told reporters during hisMay 20 announcement, and named a leader of the ambitious program. The president has said the program will cost $175 billion, however, independent projections from the Congressional Budget Office said in aMay 5 reportit could end up costing over $800 billion over two decades. Contributing: Davis Winkie, USA TODAY; Reuters. Kathryn Palmer is a national trending news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her atkapalmer@usatoday.comand on X @KathrynPlmr. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump offers 'Golden Dome' to Canada. But there's a catch.

Trump offers 'Golden Dome' protection to Canada. But there's a catch.

Trump offers 'Golden Dome' protection to Canada. But there's a catch. President Donald Trumpis still angling forCanada, home to ...
Gov. DeSantis signs law imposing tougher penalties for abandoning pets during disastersNew Foto - Gov. DeSantis signs law imposing tougher penalties for abandoning pets during disasters

ROYAL PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Legislation signed into law Wednesday by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis will impose tougher penalties on people who abandon pets during natural disasters, a measure inspired by the rescue of a dog left in floodwatersduring Hurricane Milton. With the2025 hurricane season starting next week, the governor also signed a bill that enhances criminal penalties for severe cruelty to dogs and other pets. The bull terrier found during Hurricane Milton was left chained to a fence along Interstate 75 near Tampa. A state trooper rescued the dog — now named Trooper — and he was adopted by a couple in Broward County, DeSantis said during an event at Big Dog Ranch Rescue outside Royal Palm Beach. The owner of that dog was charged with animal cruelty. Under the new law taking effect Oct. 1, violations taking place during hurricanes or other disasters will be punishable by up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. "Florida will not tolerate cruelty toward animals, especially in times of crisis," said the governor, who signed the bills while cradling a puppy. The second measure was inspired by a St. Petersburg-area case involving a dog named Dexter that was found decapitated at a park. This bill taking effect July 1 allows for a range of enhanced penalties in cases of severe animal abuse.

Gov. DeSantis signs law imposing tougher penalties for abandoning pets during disasters

Gov. DeSantis signs law imposing tougher penalties for abandoning pets during disasters ROYAL PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Legislation signed int...
Oilers F Zach Hyman needs season-ending surgeryNew Foto - Oilers F Zach Hyman needs season-ending surgery

Edmonton Oilers forward Zach Hyman will have season-ending surgery on Wednesday, head coach Kris Knoblauch confirmed. Hyman, 32, departed after just 3:11 of ice time in Tuesday's 4-1 win against the Dallas Stars in Game 4 of the Western Conference finals. He left the ice following a first-period hit to his right shoulder from Stars forward Mason Marchment. Knoblauch would only confirm it was an upper-body injury. "Zach's season is mostly likely done," Knoblauch said Wednesday morning. "He's getting surgery today and it'll be a while, so we're not expecting him back for the playoffs." The Oilers lead 3-1 in the best-of-seven series with Game 5 on Thursday night in Dallas. Hyman tallied two goals and an assist in Edmonton's 6-1 win in Game 3 on Sunday, his only points in this series. He has 11 points (five goals, six assists) in 15 games this postseason. Hyman recorded 44 points (27 goals, 17 assists) in 73 games in the regular season, his fourth with the Oilers after playing his first six seasons with the Toronto Maple Leafs. --Field Level Media

Oilers F Zach Hyman needs season-ending surgery

Oilers F Zach Hyman needs season-ending surgery Edmonton Oilers forward Zach Hyman will have season-ending surgery on Wednesday, head coach ...
Astros starter Ronel Blanco to miss rest of 2025 season after Tommy John surgeryNew Foto - Astros starter Ronel Blanco to miss rest of 2025 season after Tommy John surgery

Houston Astros starter Ronel Blancowill miss the rest of the season due to a right elbow injury, theteam announced Wednesday. Blanco will undergo Tommy John surgery on his elbow, manager Joe Espada confirmed. The team's initial statement did not provide specifics on Blanco's injury or surgery. Blanco, 31, rose to prominence with the club last year, when hethrew a no-hitteragainst the Toronto Blue Jays last April. That marked the first time in Blanco's major-league career that he threw more than six innings in a start. The performance propelled Blanco to a fantastic season in which he posted a 2.80 ERA over 167 1/3 innings. He opened the 2025 season in the team's rotation, and was hoping to build on his promising 2024 breakout. Blanco wasn't quite as good in nine starts to open 2025, though he was effective. Blanco posted a 4.10 ERA over 48 1/3 innings. While he had some shaky starts early in the season, he showed signs of righting the ship during a May 11 start against the Cincinnati Reds, when he tossed eight scoreless innings and notched 11 strikeouts. Blanco made just one more start, in which he gave up three runs in six innings against the Texas Rangers. While Blanco seemingly made it out of that start with no issues, he reported elbow soreness in between starts. He was sent back to Houston to be re-evaluated. Blanco was placed on the injured list on Thursday, and was seeking a second opinion on his injury. Following that second opinion, Blanco's 2025 season will end prematurely. The usual timetable for Tommy John is roughly 12 to 16 months, so Blanco should be back in action at some point during the 2026 MLB season.

Astros starter Ronel Blanco to miss rest of 2025 season after Tommy John surgery

Astros starter Ronel Blanco to miss rest of 2025 season after Tommy John surgery Houston Astros starter Ronel Blancowill miss the rest of th...
Timeline: Trump administration's actions against Harvard UniversityNew Foto - Timeline: Trump administration's actions against Harvard University

A judge has set a Thursday hearing to address the Trump administration's attempt to revoke Harvard University's ability toenroll international students-- the latest salvo in what Harvard calls the administration's "escalating campaign of retaliation" against the school. Here is a timeline of what Harvard administrators say are the Trump administration's efforts to tighten the screws on the university. The Trump administration sends a letter to Harvard's president saying that the school has "failed to live up to both the intellectual and civil rights conditions that justify federal investment" and demanding that the university change its governance, adopt merit-based hiring, shutter any DEI programs and allow "audits" to ensure "viewpoint diversity." After Harvard refuses to comply with the Trump administration's demands, the administration responds byfreezing more than $2.2 billion in grantsand $60 million in contracts to the school. Trump posts on Truth Social that "Harvard should lose its Tax-Exempt Status." U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem sends a letter to Harvarddemanding informationon every international student with an F1 visa, warning that failing to comply with the request will result in the withdrawal of the school's Student and Exchange Visitor Program certification. DHS also cancels two grants to Harvard totaling $2.7 million. Harvardfiles a lawsuitagainst the Trump administration over the funding freeze. MORE: Trump administration bars Harvard from enrolling international students Harvard says it has given DHS "thousands of data points concerning its entire F-1 visa student population." U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon says that Harvard willno longer receiveany grants from the federal government. Harvard says it has begun to receive grant termination notices from the federal government, including from the National Institutes of Health. DHS tells Harvard that the school's initial production of information on its international students is insufficient, and asks for more details. Harvard redoes its search and produces more information for DHS. The U.S. Department of Agriculture terminates its grants with Harvard. MORE: Trump to push for end to all federal agencies' Harvard contracts The U.S. Department of Energy, the Department of Defense, the National Science Foundation, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development all cancel their grants with Harvard. Harvard amends its lawsuit against the Trump administration to cover additional funding cuts. A hearing in the case is set for July. Noem says she hasordered the cancellationof Harvard's Student and Exchange Visitor Program certification, which would bar the school from enrolling foreign students. Harvard sues the Trump administration over its attempt to cancel its Student and Exchange Visitor Program certification, and U.S. District Judge Allison Dale Burroughs grants atemporary orderblocking the move. MORE: Judge temporarily blocks Trump's move to bar Harvard from enrolling international students Trump, in a social media post, demands alist of the namesof international students enrolled at Harvard. The Trump administrationasks federal agenciesto "identify any contracts with Harvard, and whether they can be canceled or redirected elsewhere," according to a senior administration official. The development comes as Judge Burroughs sets a May 29 hearing to consider extending his order barring the Trump administration from revoking the Harvard's Student and Exchange Visitor Program certification. Timeline: Trump administration's actions against Harvard Universityoriginally appeared onabcnews.go.com

Timeline: Trump administration's actions against Harvard University

Timeline: Trump administration's actions against Harvard University A judge has set a Thursday hearing to address the Trump administrati...
No, Barron Trump was not rejected by Harvard, Melania says amid university battleNew Foto - No, Barron Trump was not rejected by Harvard, Melania says amid university battle

PresidentDonald Trumpis escalating his battle withHarvard University. Harvard is one of several universities targeted by the Trump administration, which alleges schools aren't doing enough to protect Jewish students. Harvard has defied executive orders seeking to influence the school's curriculum and filed multiple lawsuits. On May 27, theNew York TimesandCNNreported Trump is poised to cancel the remaining federal contracts with Harvard, worth an estimated $100 million in total. The fierce fight has led to questions aboutTrump's personal history with the university. Some have wondered if Donald Trump and first ladyMelania Trump's sonBarron Trump, 19, wasrejected from the university. "Can't help but wonder how many Trumps got rejected by Harvard,"Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., mused on a social media post that received more than 40,000 views. Here is what we know: Trump - the next generation:'That calling is there': Donald Trump Jr says he could run for president No. According to the first lady's office, he didn't even apply. "Barron did not apply to Harvard, and any assertion that he, or that anyone on his behalf, applied is completely false," Nick Clemens, spokesperson for the Office of the First Lady, said in an emailed statement. More:Trump tells West Point grads to avoid 'trophy wives' in commencement speech Harvard University did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In the months leading up to the 2024 presidential election, the president's youngest son attended a Florida rally, and then-candidate Donald Trump confirmedBarron Trump's plan to go to college. "He's now going to college, got into every college he wanted to," Donald Trump said at the July 9, 2024, rally in Doral, Florida. "He made his choice and he is a very good guy." Trump has threatened to withhold funding from several universities if they do not follow federal directives, all under the banner offighting antisemitism. He has alleged the institutions did not do enough to combat antisemitism during the protests against the war in Gaza, which brought allegations ofboth antisemitismandIslamaphobia. Harvard rejected the administration's orders, which included ending all diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs, hiring an external auditor to ensure the university hosts diverse ideological viewpoints, and update admissions processes to bar students "hostile to the American values and institutions inscribed in the U.S. Constitution and Declaration of Independence." Defying the orders has put billions of dollars in federal funding and Harvard'stax-exempt statusat risk. The Trump administration also recently attempted toprohibit the school from enrollinginternational students, which was blocked by a federal judge. Barron Trump recentlyfinished his freshman yearat New York University's Stern School of Business. He's projected to graduate in the class of 2028. More:Barron Trump is 'future of conservative movement' say College Republicans President Trump graduated from the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce at the University of Pennsylvania in May 1968 with a degree in economics. Contributing: Jennifer Sangalang, Antonio Fins, Zachary Schermele, Savannah Kuchar, USA TODAY Network Kinsey Crowley is the Trump Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach her at kcrowley@gannett.com. Follow her on X and TikTok @kinseycrowley or Bluesky at @kinseycrowley.bsky.social. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Was Barron Trump rejected by Harvard? FLOTUS says no, he didn't apply.

No, Barron Trump was not rejected by Harvard, Melania says amid university battle

No, Barron Trump was not rejected by Harvard, Melania says amid university battle PresidentDonald Trumpis escalating his battle withHarvard ...
Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani takes significant step toward pitching againNew Foto - Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani takes significant step toward pitching again

Shohei Ohtani is already known as one of the most feared players in baseball. He's about to get even scarier. The Los Angeles Dodgers' superstar, a two-way player who pitches and bats as a designated hitter, has not thrown to batters off a mound in 641 days after elbow surgery in September 2023. But in a simulated game before the Dodgers' matchup with the New York Mets at Citi Field on Sunday, Ohtani threw 22 pitches to five batters. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, pitching coach Mark Prior and teammates looked on from a few feet away. It was the first sign that Ohtani — a three-time MVP — could be pitching in a real game soon. "I haven't thrown in a while, so it was nice to be able to feel like I was a pitcher," Ohtani said through interpreter Will Ireton after the Dodgers' 3-1 loss to the Mets. "I just kind of remembered those days when I used to have a lot of good memories as a pitcher." Ohtani reportedly threw mostly fastballs, cutters and sinkers with two sweepers and a sinker. His fastball ranged from 94 to 97 mph. After he began his MLB career with the Los Angeles Angels, Ohtani pitched five seasons in Anaheim. When he signed a 10-year, $700 million contract with the Dodgers in December 2023, the expectation was that that would continue. But two operations on his elbow paused that dream, and so far he has only hit with the Dodgers. Roberts said that it is likely to change after the All-Star break in mid-July. "I've gotten so used to seeing him as a hitter," Roberts said after Ohtani threw. "So to see him on the mound just solely as a pitcher, it was different. And certainly exciting for all of us." Prior said he was impressed with what he saw after such a long layoff. "He looks good. He looked healthy," Prior said. "That's always the main thing with facing hitters — that he feels confident, his endurance is good, he maintained his stuff. From that standpoint, it was good. Pitch movement-wise, it looked good, too." Former Olympic gymnast Mary Lou Retton charged with DUI in West Virginia Ronaldo says 'chapter is over' and fuels speculation about potential move from Saudi Pro League Caitlin Clark out for at least two weeks with quadriceps strain, team says Los Angeles is certainly in need of extra reinforcements. Three members of the Opening Day rotation — Blake Snell, Tyler Glasnow and Roki Sasaki — are out with shoulder injuries, which has turned one of the best pitching staffs in baseball into one of the team's biggest question marks. The Dodgers (33-21) are in first place in the National League West but are only two games ahead of the San Diego Padres. Ohtani, who leads baseball with 20 home runs this season, is the only two-way player in the league. It has happened in the past — Babe Ruth is the top example as a pitcher and outfielder — but it is few and far between largely because of the physical and mental demands. Ohtani is 38-19 with a 3.01 ERA and 608 strikeouts in 481 2/3 innings over five MLB seasons. Adding his prolific arm every five days could immediately bolster the Dodgers' hopes of winning back-to-back World Series championships. His opponents are already taking notice. Mets manager Carlos Mendoza, who watched the practice session, called Ohtani "special." "He's getting ready to be the leadoff hitter for the Dodgers and four hours before the first pitch, he's throwing 95, 96 (mph) with a split," Mendoza said. "He's having fun. That's what the game needs, players like that. It's just fun to be out there and watch him do his thing." The "fun" for Mendoza didn't last too long. Just four hours later, Ohtani stepped to the batter's box and crushed Mets pitcher Kodai Senga's fastball 411 feet into the second deck in right field.

Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani takes significant step toward pitching again

Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani takes significant step toward pitching again Shohei Ohtani is already known as one of the most feared player...
Karl-Anthony Towns injury: Knicks star to be evaluated before Game 5 after banging knees with Aaron NesmithNew Foto - Karl-Anthony Towns injury: Knicks star to be evaluated before Game 5 after banging knees with Aaron Nesmith

New York Knicks star Karl-Anthony Towns is dealing with an injury ahead of the team's most important game of the season. Towns banged his knee twice duringthe team's 130-121 lossin Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals, and looked to be in a fair amount of pain late in the contest. With time winding down in the fourth quarter, Towns banged knees with Indiana Pacers forward Aaron Nesmith. Towns immediately grabbed his knee, and remained down on the court in obvious pain. Aaron Nesmith collided with Karl-Anthony Towns and appeared to bump knees with each other.KAT is down and in pain as the Knicks trail 121-114 with 2 minutes remaining 🙏pic.twitter.com/vsETysk38a — ClutchPoints (@ClutchPoints)May 28, 2025 Despite the injury, Towns was able to re-enter and finish the game, but he was hobbled the rest of the way. Townsdidn't want to talkabout the injury after the contest, saying, "I'm only thinking about this loss, I'm not thinking about that right now." Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau tried to take a more optimistic track, saying it was "a good thing" that Towns was able to get back into the game. Thibodeau added that Towns will be evaluated ahead of Thursday's Game 5. Losing Towns could prove devastating for the Knicks, who trail the series 3-1 following Tuesday's loss. Towns is averaging 25.8 points and 11.5 rebounds during the series and put up a standout performance in the team's Game 3 win. Towns was nearly as good in Game 4, dropping 24 points and grabbing 12 rebounds in the loss. Even if Towns can play in Game 5, his presence might not matter if Tyrese Haliburton continues to post huge numbers. Haliburton torched the Knicks in Game 4, dropping ahistoric triple-doubleon New York in the win. Haliburton is one of the few players who has been able to match Towns statistically during the series. In four games, Haliburton is averaging 24.3 points and 11 rebounds. Those numbers should only go up if Towns misses Game 5.

Karl-Anthony Towns injury: Knicks star to be evaluated before Game 5 after banging knees with Aaron Nesmith

Karl-Anthony Towns injury: Knicks star to be evaluated before Game 5 after banging knees with Aaron Nesmith New York Knicks star Karl-Anthon...
Trump pardons reality show couple convicted of bank fraud and tax crimesNew Foto - Trump pardons reality show couple convicted of bank fraud and tax crimes

President Donald Trump has signed full pardons for imprisoned reality show couple Todd and Julie Chrisley, who were sentenced to lengthy prison terms in 2022 for a conspiracy to defraud banks out of more than $30 million, according to a White House official. In addition to the bank fraud convictions, they were also found guilty of several tax crimes, including attempting to defraud the Internal Revenue Service. In a post on X Tuesday, Trump's adviser Margo Martin posted a video of Trump phoning Savannah Chrisley, the couple's daughter, informing her of the plans for pardons. "It's a terrible thing. But it's a great thing because your parents are going to be free and clean, and hopefully we can do it by tomorrow," Trump said. "I don't know them, but give them our regards," he continued. Alice Johnson, who Trump pardoned during his first term and is now acting as his "pardon czar," joined the president in the Oval Office for the phone call. "The President is always pleased to give well-deserving Americans a second chance, especially those who have been unfairly targeted and overly prosecuted by an unjust justice system. President Trump called Savannah and her brother from the Oval Office to personally inform them that he would be pardoning their parents, Todd and Julie Chrisley, whose sentences were far too harsh," White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said in a statement. Savannah Chrisley spoke at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in July. Chrisley also helped campaign for Trump as part of "Team Trump's Women Tour." She recently appeared on Lara Trump's Fox News program to discuss her parents' plight. Todd Chrisley is serving 12 years at a Federal Prison Camp in Florida, and Julie Chrisley is serving her seven-year sentence at a Federal Medical Center in Lexington, Kentucky. The Chrisleys, known for their reality program "Chrisley Knows Best," werefound guilty in June2022. Both of them have maintained their innocence and were appealing their criminal convictions. Scott Taylor, a spokesperson for the Federal Bureau of Prisons, told CNN in a statement that the "release process could be immediate or may take up to a couple of days depending on the type of pardon and the necessary travel arrangements needed to get the individual from the facility to their release residence, including the purchase of bus or plane tickets." This story has been updated with additional details. CNN's Kristen Holmes and Shania Shelton contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump pardons reality show couple convicted of bank fraud and tax crimes

Trump pardons reality show couple convicted of bank fraud and tax crimes President Donald Trump has signed full pardons for imprisoned reali...
Cornyn campaign launches ad buy accusing Paxton of 'funding the left'New Foto - Cornyn campaign launches ad buy accusing Paxton of 'funding the left'

Sen. John Cornyn's (R-Texas) campaign is rolling out four new ads attacking Texas Attorney General and Senate candidate Ken Paxton (R) for money his office gave to several Texas entities, accusing Paxton of "funding the left." The ads, roughly 30 seconds each and shared first with The Hill, criticize Paxton for issuing grant money toLegal Aid of NorthWest Texas, theTahirih Justice Center, theMontrose Center, andTexas RioGrande Legal Aid, insinuating that the organizations run counter to Republicans on issues related to immigration and gender. For example, a narrator in one of the ads accuses the Montrose Center of offering "gender programs for children as young as seven," noting that they have hosted "child-accessible drag shows." The Montrose Center, a group serving the LGBTQIA+ Houston community, offers various services, including case management and counseling. The group has previously hosted events that have included drag shows – events that have nationally drawn scorn and scrutiny from some Republicans. The ad is also likely referencing the center's Hatch Youth, which the center describes as "Houston's oldest, currently active social group dedicated to empowering LGBTQIA+ youth and young adults between the ages of 7 and 24." Cornyn's team told The Hill that the ads are part of a five-figure digital buy. Cornyn campaign senior adviser Matt Mackowiak alleged that the grants had cost millions of taxpayer dollars "approved that went to radical left organizations that do not share our conservative Texas values," describing Paxton as "crooked" and suggesting that "Texans cannot trust Ken Paxton." Paxton's campaign did not respond to a request for comment when contacted by The Hill regarding the ads. The different groups mentioned in the Cornyn campaign ads were approved for different types of grants in the past, largely under the "other victim assistance grant," whose service areas include direct victim services, victim services training, outreach and education, victim assistance coordinator and crime victim liaison. That hasn't stopped some of those groups from receiving scrutiny, however. Paxtoninvestigated the Tahirih Justice Center, a recipient of Texas Bar Foundation funding, in 2022 to see "whether these funds are being used to exacerbate the current crisis at the border and to thwart the efforts of federal and state law enforcement to secure the border." Republicans are bracing for a bitter primary between Cornyn and Paxton as Cornyn vies for a fifth term in the Senate. Paxton has described Cornyn as a "RINO" or "Republican in name only" while Cornyn's campaign has called Paxton a "fraud." The primary is already laying bare divisions within the Texas GOP and could threaten Republicans' chances of holding the seat.A poll commissioned by the Senate Leadership Fund, released this month, found Paxton leading Cornyn 56 percent to 40 percent. When Rep. Wesley Hunt (R-Texas) is added into the mix, the polling finds 44 percent behind Paxton, 34 percent behind Cornyn and 19 percent behind Hunt. But the polling also showed that Cornyn did the best among the three Republicans in a hypothetical matchup against former Rep. Colin Allred (D-Texas), who could launch a second Senate campaign. President Trump has notably not weighed in on the Texas Senate GOP primary. "They're both friends of mine. They're both good men. And I don't know. We don't know who else is running, but these two— Ken, John —they're both friends of mine. So I'll make a determination at the right time," the presidentsaid on Air Force One last month. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

Cornyn campaign launches ad buy accusing Paxton of ‘funding the left’

Cornyn campaign launches ad buy accusing Paxton of 'funding the left' Sen. John Cornyn's (R-Texas) campaign is rolling out four ...
Pacers vs. Knicks: Tyrese Haliburton erupts for historic triple-double in Game 4 as Indiana takes 3-1 leadNew Foto - Pacers vs. Knicks: Tyrese Haliburton erupts for historic triple-double in Game 4 as Indiana takes 3-1 lead

Tyrese Haliburton and the Indiana Pacers are just a win away from their first trip to the NBA Finals in decades. The Pacers, thanks to a dominant performance from Haliburton on Tuesday night, fended off the New York Knicks andgrabbed a 130-121 winat Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals. That gave the Pacers a 3-1 series lead, and put them on the cusp of clinching their first NBA Finals appearance in 25 years. Haliburton finished with a 32-point triple-double in the win. He had 15 assists and 12 rebounds to go with it, and he didn't commit a single turnover in the process. Haliburton is now the third player, along with Oscar Robertson and Nikola Jokić, to put up a 30-15-10 triple-double in the playoffs. He's also the first to do that without a turnover. Haliburton came out firing. He dropped 15 points in the first quarter alone while leading the Pacers to an early lead. He accounted for half of their six made 3-pointers, too, which already surpassed the amount they made as a team in their Game 3 loss on Sunday night. Haliburton had six assists and five rebounds in the first period. That made him just the second player, and the first since LeBron James, to have at least 15 points, 5 rebounds and 5 assists in a playoff quarter in the play-by-play era. The Knicks, though, tied the game just a few minutes into the second quarter after going on a quick 9-2 burst. It wasn't anywhere near as high-scoring as the opening period, but the Pacers still carried a five-point advantage into the locker room after they successfully fended off the Knicks' push in the final minutes. Haliburton entered halftime just two rebounds away from his triple-double, and he set another NBA milestone. Per the great@StatsWilliams:Tyrese Haliburton is the first player with at least 20 points, 10 assists, 5 rebounds and 0 turnovers in a playoff half in the play-by-play data era (1996-97). — Tim Bontemps (@TimBontemps)May 28, 2025 The Pacers remained a step ahead throughout the third quarter, and repeatedly shut down the Knicks defensively. Haliburton at one point came up with a perfect steal on Jalen Brunson in the corner of the floor while they fought to maintain the double-digit lead they regained early on in the period. HALI HUSTLES FOR THE STEAL ON BRUNSON 😤Getting the@Pacerscrowd into it!pic.twitter.com/IGsMSSPnwY — NBA on TNT (@NBAonTNT)May 28, 2025 The Pacers then ended the third quarter on a 9-4 run to take an 11-point lead. That carried over into the early minutes of the fourth period, and a huge corner 3-pointer from Pascal Siakam sent the arena into a frenzy and gave the Pacers a 15-point advantage — their largest of the game at the time. OH MY PASCAL SIAKAM!!!Crafty euro step.Corner 3.MASSIVE SWING FOR INDY IN G4 😤pic.twitter.com/0ADIooER1h — NBA (@NBA)May 28, 2025 Though the Knicks mounted one last push — they went on a 10-2 run and briefly made it a two-possession game again — it came too late. The Pacers successfully held on, and held the Knicks without a field goal for a three-minute span late, to jump back ahead and grab the nine-point victory. Towns went down twice with a knee injury in the loss, and the second one looked significant. After banging knees in the opening minutes of the game, Towns collided again late in the final quarter with Myles Turner and went down grabbing his left knee. He was down on the baseline for quite some time, slamming his hand on the floor and was seen covering his face on the bench while the Knicks challenged the play. The call ended up being successful, and Towns drew the offensive foul. Towns eventually limped back onto the floor and finished the game. He was favoring his left leg significantly the rest of the way. His status going forward isn't clear, but finishing the night — even minimally — is a good start. Towns finished with 24 points and 12 rebounds on the night. Brunson led the Knicks with 31 points, though he was largely shut down in the fourth quarter and scored just once in those 12 minutes. The Knicks had 17 turnovers as a team, too. While they are now up 3-1 in the series, which is a hole very few teams in NBA history have come out of, the Pacers will now have to attempt to close out the series at Madison Square Garden on Thursday. The first two games in New York were both tight. The Pacers won Game 1 only after Hailburton hit a wild bucket at the buzzer in regulation to force overtime. They snuck out a five-point win in Game 2 a few days later, too. Like the Pacers, the Knicks are trying to end an equally long postseason drought. The franchise hasn't been to the Eastern Conference finals since 2000, though the Pacers beat them in that series 4-2. The Knicks were last in the NBA Finals in 1999, though they've not won a title since the early 1970s. The Knicks now have their backs against a 3-1 wall. If they are going to pull this off, they'll have play better. Actually stopping this Pacers group has been just about impossible for anybody in the East.

Pacers vs. Knicks: Tyrese Haliburton erupts for historic triple-double in Game 4 as Indiana takes 3-1 lead

Pacers vs. Knicks: Tyrese Haliburton erupts for historic triple-double in Game 4 as Indiana takes 3-1 lead Tyrese Haliburton and the Indiana...
Trump's tax and policy bill takes center stage at lively Nebraska GOP town hallNew Foto - Trump's tax and policy bill takes center stage at lively Nebraska GOP town hall

US Congressman Mike Flood faced a torrent of boos and jeers as he spoke to town hall attendees in his Nebraska district on May 27, one of the first held nationwide as House GOP leaders return home after passing PresidentDonald Trump'ssweeping tax policy bill. "I thought your party wanted to reduce the deficit," one constituent questioned in writing about the bill, which would add an estimated $3.8 trillion to the deficit. "What in the world?" Another attendee said Flood, R-Nebraska, had previously claimed he wouldn't vote for a bill that cuts Social Security and Medicare, but the GOP bill now maytrigger mandatory budget reductionsthat could impact Medicare. "You either lied to us or you have been bullied into voting against our health care," she said. An audience member who identified themselves as a para-educator raised concerns that theschool voucher programincluded in the GOP bill would pull money from public schools and hurt children with learning disabilities. They asked: "How is that an equitable school choice for my child?" Unlike in previous town halls – which have grabbed headlines as attendees protested the Trump administration's rapidtransformation of the federal government– Flood's crowd had Congress in its sights. Just before House members left for their week-long recess, they passeda massive billthat would have major impacts for Americans' pocketbooks, their benefit systems for healthcare and food support, access to renewable energy and more. The bill will next beconsidered in the Senate, where it is expected to be tweaked before going back to the House and then the president's desk. Flood, who is the vice-chair of the pragmatic Main Street Caucus in the House GOP, is among the members holding in-person forums afterRepublican leaders advisedin March that they switch to virtual or telephone town halls after early in-person meetings were flooded with protesters. Flood opened the meeting by shaking hands with each attendee as they came in and noting that they are "all Nebraskans." "I don't think one of you is here because you're getting paid. I don't think one of you is here because you were trucked in," he said, a reference to a common refrain from some Republican members that angry crowds at town halls across the country are Democratic "paid protesters." Liberal groups such asIndivisiblehave promoted and encouraged their members to go to congressional town halls, but there is no evidence that attendees are being paid. Flood extended the one-hour town hall by an extra 30 minutes, fielding questions on the proposed changes to Medicaid and food stamps; the impact on schools, hospitals, children and people with disabilities; the effects of tax cuts and the increased deficit and more. The National Republican Congressional Committee, House Republican's campaign arm,has advised membersto "go on offense" on the new bill and tout the party's efforts to keep undocumented people off of benefit programs, cut taxes, and secure the southern border. Flood defended the legislation as necessary to avoid a tax increase at the end of the year, when the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act expires, and thechanges to Medicaidas reasonable reforms that will help protect benefits for deserving recipients in the long term. "Our unemployment is so low that anybody that can work is most likely working," he said, arguing that the new work requirements for able-bodied adults without children are unlikely to have a big impact on the state. The proposed reforms, which also include more eligibility checks andseveral other changes, are expected to save more than $625 billion and cause 7.6 million Americans to lose their health insurance over the next 10 years. Flood said that he didn't know about one section of the bill that would make itharder for federal judges to hold people in contempt, which may shield Trump and other administration officials who choose to violate court orders, and pledged to work with the Senate to change it. "I do not agree with that section that was added to that bill," Flood said, and the room exploded in jeers. "I believe in the rule of law... I do believe that the federal district courts, when issuing an injunction, it should have legal effect." Flood also pushed back on attendees who suggested that he and other Republicans in Congress are unwilling to break with Trump and are ceding their authority to the executive branch. "It is incumbent upon members of Congress like me to be aware of what's going on and to be vocal about it, and I am working on doing that," he said. "I am hearing you. I think what you're saying is important, and I think it's something that binds us together." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Boos, jeers at Nebraska GOP town hall over Trump's tax bill

Trump's tax and policy bill takes center stage at lively Nebraska GOP town hall

Trump's tax and policy bill takes center stage at lively Nebraska GOP town hall US Congressman Mike Flood faced a torrent of boos and je...
Israel's Gaza aid model is 'distraction from atrocities', UNRWA chief saysNew Foto - Israel's Gaza aid model is 'distraction from atrocities', UNRWA chief says

By John Geddie TOKYO (Reuters) -The head of the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees said on Wednesday Israel's model for providing aid to Gaza was wasteful and a "distraction from atrocities", criticising a chaotic distribution by a U.S.-backed foundation this week. On Tuesday, thousands of Palestinians rushed an aid distribution site set up in the Israeli-held southern Gaza city of Rafah operated by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), with desperation for food overcoming wariness about biometric and other checks Israel said it would employ. "The model of aid distribution proposed by Israel does not align with core humanitarian principles," UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini told reporters at the Japan National Press Club in Tokyo. "We have seen yesterday the shocking images of hungry people pushing against fences, desperate for food. It was chaotic, undignified and unsafe," Lazzarini said. "I believe it is a waste of resources and a distraction from atrocities," he added, referring to civilian deaths during Israel's air and ground war in the small coastal enclave. Israel says its military operations target only Hamas-led militants and accuses them of using civilians for cover, which they deny. As a trickle of aid has resumed, Israeli forces - now in control of wide areas of Gaza - have kept up their offensive, killing 3,901 Palestinians since a short ceasefire collapsed in mid-March, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. The GHF, backed by Israel and its close ally, the United States, said it had distributed about 8,000 food boxes, equivalent to 462,000 meals, since Israel eased an 11-week-old blockade of the war-shattered Palestinian enclave last week. The United Nations and other international aid groups have boycotted the foundation, which they say undermines the principle that humanitarian aid should be distributed independently of the parties to a conflict, based on need. U.S. State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce dismissed criticism of the aid program as "complaints about style". Israel says one advantage of the new aid system is the opportunity to screen recipients at designated sites to exclude anyone found to be connected with Hamas. Israel, at war with Hamas since October 2023, accuses Hamas of stealing supplies and using them to entrench its position. Hamas denies this. (Reporting by John Geddie; editing by Tom Hogue and Mark Heinrich)

Israel's Gaza aid model is 'distraction from atrocities', UNRWA chief says

Israel's Gaza aid model is 'distraction from atrocities', UNRWA chief says By John Geddie TOKYO (Reuters) -The head of the U.N....
Chelsea looks to complete UEFA trophy collection by beating Betis in Conference League finalNew Foto - Chelsea looks to complete UEFA trophy collection by beating Betis in Conference League final

Chelsea will look to become the first team to have all four of UEFA's club competitions in its trophy collection by beating Real Betis in the Conference League final in Wroclaw, Poland, on Wednesday. Chelsea has twice been king of Europe after winning the Champions League in 2012 and2021. It also claimed the Europa League title — the successor to the UEFA Cup — in 2013 and 2019, and won the now-defunct Cup Winners' Cup in 1971 and 1998. The Conference League — Europe's third-tier competition — was only founded in 2021 and has had three winners so far: Roma (2022), West Ham (2023) and Olympiacos (2024). Chelsea would be the most high-profile winner of a competition created, in theory, to give teams from smaller nations more matches in Europe and a better chance of winning a UEFA trophy. Chelsea, one of the top English clubs, only dropped into the Conference League because of its disappointing sixth-place finish in the Premier League last season. Easily the biggest team in the competition, it has had a comfortable passage to the final — winning all six of its matches in the league phase and then getting past FC Copenhagen, Legia Warsaw andDjurgardenin the knockout stage. Betis eyes first European trophy Betis represents Chelsea's toughest opponent yet, a team which finished in sixth place in the Spanish league and has some well-known faces in its lineup — such as former Real Madrid playmaker Isco, Argentina midfielder Giovani Lo Celso and on-loan Manchester United winger Antony — as well as in the dugout in former Manchester City and Madrid coach Manuel Pellegrini. The Seville club won the Spanish league in the 1930s, three Copas del Rey — most recently in 2022 — but it is looking for a first trophy at continental level. This is Betis' first European final. The match is a bonus for Chelsea at the end of a season when it achieved its primary objective:Qualifying for the Champions Leaguecourtesy of a fourth-place finish in the Premier League. Since the start of the 2001/02 season, all 23 finals in the Champions League, Europa League or Conference League featuring Spanish clubs have been won by a Spanish team, UEFA said. That includes four all-Spanish match-ups. This season's European finals More than 40,000 will be at Stadion Wroclaw for the second European final of the season, after last week's Europa League title match whereTottenham beat Manchester United 1-0. The Champions League final between Paris Saint-Germain and Inter Milan takes place on Saturday. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Chelsea looks to complete UEFA trophy collection by beating Betis in Conference League final

Chelsea looks to complete UEFA trophy collection by beating Betis in Conference League final Chelsea will look to become the first team to h...
Paralympic chief challenges Brisbane 2032 organizers to top the success of SydneyNew Foto - Paralympic chief challenges Brisbane 2032 organizers to top the success of Sydney

BRISBANE, Australia (AP) — There was no better day to urge the people of Brisbane to do better than the benchmarks Sydney set for the Paralympics. International Paralympic Committee President Andrew Parsons' visit to the2032 Olympic and Paralympic host cityWednesday coincided with the start of the traditionalrugby leaguegrudge match that is the Origin series, one of the biggest annual fixtures on Australia's sports calendar. "Without doubt, the year 2000 was a gamechanger and provided the foundations from which we could advance the Paralympic Games and wider Paralympic movement," Parsons told a gathering at a Brisbane riverside restaurant, hyping Sydney's overwhelming success in staging the Olympics and Paralympics almost 25 years ago. "After the tremendous success of Barcelona 1992, and the troublesome experiences of Atlanta 1996, the Sydney 2000 Paralympic Games got the Paralympic movement back on track with a sensational showcase of sport." Challenge set Sydney is the capital of New South Wales state. Brisbane, capital of Queensland state, has another seven years to prepare and improve on that Games legacy. The sporting rivalry between the neighboring eastern Australian states is intense, and there's no better illustration than the Origin series. Brisbane wasawarded the 2032 Gamesin 2021 but it took more than 1,340 days before a new state governmentfinalized the venue plansthat center around a new main stadium and aquatics venue built in a downtown parkland precinct. What Sydney did to raise the profile of athletes, ticket sales and broadcast audiences for the Paralympics, Brisbane organizers aim to do in terms of setting new benchmarks for accessibility in the design of venues, buildings and transport. "You've got to get to a point as a global look at accessibility, in other words people with disabilities, as being standard in the design. As First Nations, and including their culture, as standard in what we do. Environment, and certification of buildings and treating the environment well, as standard," Andrew Liveris,president of the Brisbane 2032 organizing committee, said. "We're not there (yet), but we can set that standard. We will be, as an Olympic and Paralympic Games, the standard bearer." With the start of venue construction and thefinalizing of the sports programnot expected until late next year, Liveris said there's time to ensure the end results are accounted for in the planning. A big-ticket item Parsons said Sydney was the first Paralympics to sell tickets — 1.2 million were sold and Australia topped the medal standings. It launched a new era for the Games. There were 2.5 million tickets sold for the 2024 Paralympics in Paris, where 4,400 Para athletes competed and 168 national Paralympic Committees sent teams. "In terms of ticket sales, the Paralympic Games are now the world's third biggest sport event with only the Olympic Games and men's FIFA World Cup selling more," Parsons said, adding that Paralympic-related internet searches "broke the 1 billion barrier." "The main driver for the increasing global appeal of the Paralympic Games is the constantly improving quality of sport, level and depth of competition, and the performances of Para athletes," Parsons said. "Progress in the last 25 years has been emphatic." Based on his past visits and his knowledge of planning already, Parsons said Brisbane is "starting from a position of strength definitely in terms of accessibility." "But you can always improve," he added. "We cannot be satisfied until we have 100% of everything accessible, and I'm absolutely sure that this is the objective here." ___ AP Olympics athttps://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games

Paralympic chief challenges Brisbane 2032 organizers to top the success of Sydney

Paralympic chief challenges Brisbane 2032 organizers to top the success of Sydney BRISBANE, Australia (AP) — There was no better day to urge...
Knicks vs. Pacers: Tyrese Haliburton's flawless Game 4 showed exactly how much he means to Indiana — 'This guy is unbelievable'New Foto - Knicks vs. Pacers: Tyrese Haliburton's flawless Game 4 showed exactly how much he means to Indiana — 'This guy is unbelievable'

INDIANAPOLIS — Rick Carlisle walked into his press conference after Game 4 understanding that he was going to be asked about the masterpiece that his virtuoso point guard had just unleashed upon the Knicks: a 32-point, 12-rebound, 15-assist,zero-turnovertriple-double topropel his Pacers to a 130-121 win, and to within one win of the franchise's first NBA Finals appearance in 25 years. But that didn't mean Indiana's head coach had to like it. "I know Ty did some historic stat stuff tonight, and that's great," Carlisle said after Game 4. "But it's tough talking stats when it's such a team thing right now." Heard, Coach. So, here are some stats you might like better: In the course of an 11-plus minute podium session with reporters — an interview that spanned nearly 2,000 words, the primary topic of which was playing the game of his life to get his team within one win of a chance to play for an NBA championship — Haliburton used the word "we" 28 times, the word "our" five times, the phrase "as a group" six times, and the phrase "play the right way" five times. He said "It's about winning" twice, "I just want to impact winning" once, and "How can I impact winning?" once, bringing us to four discrete instances of emphasizing how much he wants to win. He gave a 52-second, 189-word answer in praise of Bennedict Mathurin, who bounced back from a rough start to the series by exploding for 20 points in 13 minutes off the bench, helping Indiana expand its lead with his physical drives to the basket and the free throws they generated. Healmostsaid that it was more exciting to see Triple H in Gainbridge Fieldhouse than it wasto see his dad back in the building— but he stopped short. Chalk up another possession successfully concluded without an unforced error. "Look, Tyrese is a great player, and people realize that," Carlisle said. "He happens to do some very impressive statistical things. But he's well aware that all of this far transcends statistics." Haliburton left Game 3 with a bad taste in his mouth, frustrated by Indiana scoring just 42 points in the second half and leaving the door open for New York to pull off a daring comeback — unhappy with a finish where he felt the team he's responsible for leading was on the back foot rather than pressing the action. "They've got some guys who just make some hellacious shots, you know, and [Karl-Anthony Towns and Jalen Brunson] did that last game, and I felt like those were kind of like taking the air out of us," Haliburton said. "We were kind of sighing after every one, walking the ball up. Today, we were just trying to keep focused on, 'Who cares?' You know, let's get [the ball] in and let's run, go right back at them. They're gonna make shots. Let's just keep going." Haliburton hit the gas off the jump, repeatedly attacking Towns andBrunsonin the pick-and-roll and generating great looks. He rebounded misses and mashed the pedal to the floor, creating three open 3-point attempts in the first three minutes of the game before stepping into his first — an almost unfathomably openstepbackafter the Knicks miscommunicated assignments on a switch in transition — and drilling it to put Indiana up 16-9, a sterling start that put Game 3's ugly finish behind them. The Pacers scored 42 points in the second half on Sunday; they scored 43 points in the first quarter on Tuesday. They were off to the races, with Haliburton, as always, setting the pace. "I felt like I'd let the team down in Game 3 — felt like I could have been so much better," he said. "So I felt like I responded the right way today." Yeah, you could say that. "I just thought he was free out there," said Pacers forward Pascal Siakam, who scored 30 points on 11-for-21 shooting with five rebounds. "Just playing with pace, just not slowing down whatsoever, just being in attack mode the whole game. And for him, what makes him special is attack mode is not just scoring — it's getting us in position, bringing the pace, playing the way that we want to play, and then also him just being in control of the game." "He was the leader tonight," Carlisle said. It's a role that Haliburton has steadily grown into since landing in Indianapolis back in February of 2022 in a blockbuster trade that — with all due respect to Domantas Sabonis, an excellent player — looked like a steal at the time and now feels like outright larceny. Step by step, brick by brick, Haliburton has been the foreman overseeing the construction project in Indiana: an overhaul in overarching approach, a revolution in RPMs. "Unbelievable," said Pacers forward Aaron Nesmith, who gutted through asprained right ankleto play 33 minutes of physical defense on Brunson while also chipping in 16 points on 5-for-9 shooting. "He's a special player. He does what we ask of him, what we need him to do every night, and I think he almost had a triple-double at halftime. This guy is unbelievable." The most unbelievable part, really, is the turnovers — or, rather, their absence. Haliburton now has a 44-to-6 assist-to-turnover ratio in 153 minutes in these Eastern Conference finals — almost all of which has been spent with him fending off physical defenders in his face, playing as fast as he possibly can, and slinging the ball all the hell over the court. "He was really throwing the ball ahead tonight, too, which was really important for us," Carlisle said. "And to not have any turnovers in any of those situations, too, is pretty remarkable. But this is — this has become his thing. And you know, there will be a new statistical category, perhaps named after him, somewhere down the line. "You know, him and Chris Paul, these guys … there aren't a lot of guys. I know [John] Stockton didn't turn it over much, back when he played. There are others. LeBron James doesn't turn it over very much. And you can go right down the line. Some of the all-time greats. I know he takes great pride in it, and that's a motivating factor." (Haliburton confirmed that: "I'd rather do really anything else on the basketball court than turn the ball over.") Go back a second, though, and look at those names: Paul, Stockton, James. These are some of the absolute greatest playmakers in the history of the sport. Maybe it feels a little early for all that. With one more win and a Finals berth, though — and, let's face it, likely an Eastern Conference final MVP trophy — Haliburton would take a big step toward earning a spot in such august company … even if the way he gets there looks a little bit different from those all-time table-setters. "I think my game is a little unorthodox," Haliburton said. "I jump to pass probably more than anybody in the NBA. But I work on that stuff. That's how I've worked my whole life to play the game. So I take pride in taking care of the ball. I feel like the more we take care of the ball as a team, the more opportunities we get to shoot the ball. The more shots we get in the game, the better opportunity we have to win." Just so long as he doesn't forget to look for his own shot sometimes, too. "He's amazing — like, when he's playing that way, and just the pace and getting us in position, and then also being aggressive, just finding that balance of doing both, like … yeah, we know he's a pass-first kind of guy, but he also was able to give us big buckets when we really needed them," Siakam said. "I just loved the way he played tonight, his energy on both ends of the floor. And also you don't turn the ball over? That's amazing." Combine that with stepped-up effort on the defensive end — 12 defensive boards, four steals — and you've got a performance for the ages. After one of those steals, when he pounced on Brunson to force a turnover in the third quarter, Haliburton popped up and high-fived Pacer alum and former teammate George Hill, who was seated in the front row: How about this steal from Tyrese Haliburton 😮‍💨🙌Haliburton wasn't giving in against Jalen Brunson and look how much it means. Class defence 👏Don't miss the#NBAPlayoffsLIVE on ESPN on#disneyplusau/#disneyplusnz! 📺pic.twitter.com/CbNOym9FTZ — ESPN Australia & NZ (@ESPNAusNZ)May 28, 2025 That moment meant a lot to Haliburton. "I see G-Hill as kind of like one of my vets," Haliburton said after the game. "He was here with me for a little bit, and we do have constant conversation to this day. But you see Lance [Stephenson] in the building, you know, Stephen Jackson was here the other day, Al Harrington, Roy Hibbert, [Danny Granger], Reggie [Miller] — I mean, all these guys are guys I've grown up watching." "Yeah, and he's doing this within the system — you know, there isn't a lot of freelance stuff, where they're just outside-the-box gambles," Carlisle said. "He's doing it within the system, and that's real growth." Everywhere you look in Indiana, there's growth: Nesmith's evolution as a shooter, Mathurin's bounce-back maturity, Andrew Nembhard's developing two-way work, and on, and on. These Pacers aresmack in the middle of the pack in terms of average roster ageamong NBA teams; there's plenty of young guys still with a ton of runway to get better, Haliburton included. The deeper the play, the bigger the games get, and the more they learn. One thing they're learning: When you get an opportunity as good as the one that's in front of them right now, you have to seize it with both hands. And when you do, it's awful nice to have a point guard who'd rather do anything than cough it up. "He runs our team," Siakam said. "When he brings the ball up, the pace he brings it with, just the way he plays … yeah, it makes our team go. For me, I just enjoy being a part of it — playing with him, just knowing that he cares about putting us all into the position to be successful. That's what makes him special." "Look, he's had a lot of things happen this year," Carlisle said. "You know, the year's been filled with ups and downs. He's remained remarkably resilient and steadfast in his belief in what we're doing and who he is. We just need him to continue to lead us." That mantle of leadership, passed down from those Pacer greats in the building for Game 4, rests with Haliburton. He knows the franchise will go as far as he can take it; he also understands, like all the great point guards do, that you can go a hell of a lot farther together than you can alone. "When I got traded to the Pacers, or just being a basketball fan, you think of all the guys that come before you," Haliburton said. "And they've tried to help put this organization in a better place than they found it. And that's what I'm trying to do, as well."

Knicks vs. Pacers: Tyrese Haliburton's flawless Game 4 showed exactly how much he means to Indiana — 'This guy is unbelievable'

Knicks vs. Pacers: Tyrese Haliburton's flawless Game 4 showed exactly how much he means to Indiana — 'This guy is unbelievable' ...
China being provocative, ignoring olive branches, top Taiwan policymaker saysNew Foto - China being provocative, ignoring olive branches, top Taiwan policymaker says

By Ben Blanchard and Yimou Lee TAIPEI (Reuters) -China is being provocative with an "extreme pressure" campaign against Taiwan and is intentionally ignoring the island's olive branches and goodwill, its top China policy maker told Reuters, as Beijing ratchets up its tactics against Taipei. China, which views Taiwan as its own territory despite the rejection of that position by the democratic and separately governed island, has stepped up military and political pressure on it, calling President Lai Ching-te a dangerous "separatist". Since Lai took office in May last year, China has held at least three rounds of major war games around Taiwan, while also threatening the death penalty for "diehard" supporters of its independence, and setting up hotlines to report such activity. Mainland Affairs Council minister Chiu Chui-cheng said Beijing should own up to its responsibility for stoking tension by exerting "extreme pressure" which includes almost daily military incursions near Taiwan and public influence campaigns. "It's true that we don't see any sincerity from mainland China," Chiu said this week, speaking in his office in central Taipei. He repeated the government's offer for talks with China based on equality and respect, but without Beijing's political preconditions. "We have made a lot of effort and offered many olive branches," Chiu added. "We are a democratic country and it is impossible for us to accept your political premise of eliminating the Republic of China, belittling Taiwan or treating Taiwan as part of the People's Republic of China." The defeated Republic of China government fled to Taiwan in 1949 after losing a civil war with Mao Zedong's communists, and that remains the island's formal name. No peace treaty has ever been signed, and neither government recognises the other. Asked on Wednesday about Taiwan saying it was showing goodwill towards China, a spokesperson for China's Taiwan Affairs Office said it was an "objective fact" the island was part of China. "Scheming for Taiwan's independence and secession means there is no way to talk about cross-Strait dialogue and consultations," spokesperson Chen Binhua told reporters in Beijing. "It will only undermine peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait." CHINA A "HOSTILE FORCE" In March, Lai called China a "foreign hostile force", saying it had deepened its influence campaigns and infiltration tactics against the island, while pledging measures to tackle Beijing's efforts to "absorb" Taiwan. An angry China responded with a new round of war games. "We were just explaining the facts to everyone," Chiu said of Lai's description of China. "The serious threat level to Taiwan from mainland China, the Beijing authorities, can be described as extreme pressure pressing ever closer." Chiu said China's hotlines to report supposed separatist activity, which Beijing says generated 6,000 reports, had only served to sow fear amongst Taiwan's sizeable business community in China, spurring some to leave. He compared such "indiscriminate reporting" to actions during the Cultural Revolution of 1966-1976 in China, referring to the decade of chaos and violence unleashed after Mao declared class war, turning neighbours and families against each other. "I myself have heard many of our Taiwanese business people say, 'We have been in mainland China for 30 to 40 years, and we are willing to stay here even if the economy is bad, but living in an environment where we are on edge and worried about being reported day and night, that's why I decided to leave.'" (Reporting by Yimou Lee and Ben Blanchard; Additional reporting by Beijing newsroom; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

China being provocative, ignoring olive branches, top Taiwan policymaker says

China being provocative, ignoring olive branches, top Taiwan policymaker says By Ben Blanchard and Yimou Lee TAIPEI (Reuters) -China is bei...
European companies cut costs, scale back investments in China as its economy slowsNew Foto - European companies cut costs, scale back investments in China as its economy slows

BEIJING (AP) — European companies are cutting costs and scaling back investment plans in China as itseconomy slowsand fierce competitiondrives down prices, according to an annual survey released Wednesday. Their challenges reflect broader ones faced by a Chinese economy hobbled by a prolonged real estate crisis that has hurt consumer spending. Beijing also faces growing pushback from Europe and the United States oversurging exports. "The picture has deteriorated across many key metrics," the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China said in the introduction to its Business Confidence Survey 2025. The same forces that are driving up Chinese exports are depressing the business outlook in the Chinese market. Chinese companies, often enticed by government subsidies, have invested so much in targeted industries such aselectric vehiclesthat factory capacity far outpaces demand. The overcapacity has resulted in fierce price wars that cut into profits and a parallel push by companiesinto overseas markets. In Europe, that has created fears that growing imports from China could undermine its own factories and the workers they employ. The EU slapped tariffs on Chinese EVs last year, saying China had unfairly subsidized electric vehicle production. "I think there's a clear perception that the benefits of the bilateral trade and investment relationship are not being distributed in an equitable manner," Jens Eskelund, the president of the EU Chamber in China, told reporters earlier this week. He applaudedefforts by Chinato boost consumer spending but said the government must also take steps to ensure that supply growth doesn't outpace that in demand. The survey results show that the downward pressure on profits increased over the past year and that a fall in business confidence has yet to bottom out, Eskelund said. About 500 member companies responded to the survey between mid-January to mid-February. "It is just very difficult for everyone right now in an environment of declining margins," he said.

European companies cut costs, scale back investments in China as its economy slows

European companies cut costs, scale back investments in China as its economy slows BEIJING (AP) — European companies are cutting costs and s...
Tyrese Haliburton's historic triple play inspired by dad's returnNew Foto - Tyrese Haliburton's historic triple play inspired by dad's return

Tyrese Haliburton just dropped one of the all-time great playoff performances, and — for the first time in several weeks —he did it in front of his father. Looking to deliver a crushing blow to the Knicks,Haliburton's Pacers outran New York130-121in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals to claim a 3-1 lead. And it was Haliburton's historic triple-double that sparked Indiana to the victory. Haliburton became the first player in NBA playoff history to record a 30-point, 15-assist, 10-rebound triple-double without committing a single turnover. He finished with 32, 15 and 12 — a career high in rebounds. He also became the first player in Pacers history with multiple playoff triple-doubles. ANALYSIS:Knicks' generous mood giving Pacers free pass to NBA Finals MORE:Shawn Kemp pleads guilty to second-degree assault charge from 2023 shooting "I feel like we making up stats at some point to make me look better," Haliburton joked after the game when asked to contextualize his performance. "I'm just trying to play the right way, man, I just want to impact winning. … I'm just trying to do that to the best of my ability. We're building something special here. We're having a lot of fun with what we're doing. I feel like I'm at the forefront of that with a lot of these guys." Attending his first game since he was told to stay away from home and road Pacers games following an on-court incident with Milwaukee Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo during the first round of the NBA playoffs, John Haliburton saw his son put on a show. "I just wanted to put on a good performance," Haliburton said. "I wanted to win the game. Obviously my dad being here is special. Growing up, my dad was reffing a lot on the weekends, so he didn't get to come to many of my games growing up, so when he would come to my games, I would want to play well. So with him being in the building, of course I wanted to play well." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Tyrese Haliburton, inspired by dad, has triple-double for ages

Tyrese Haliburton's historic triple play inspired by dad's return

Tyrese Haliburton's historic triple play inspired by dad's return Tyrese Haliburton just dropped one of the all-time great playoff p...
NFL OTAs tracker: Kirk Cousins, James Cook and Kyle Pitts among big names not participating in voluntary workoutsNew Foto - NFL OTAs tracker: Kirk Cousins, James Cook and Kyle Pitts among big names not participating in voluntary workouts

NFL OTAs are underway, and a number of players are gathering with teammates to get ready for the start of the 2025 NFL season. While attendance is voluntary at this point in the offseason, a number of prominent players decided to skip the first day of those workouts for various reasons. Atlanta Falcons quarterback Kirk Cousins is among the biggest namenot present at OTAson Tuesday. Cousins is seeking a trade after he was benched in favor of Michael Penix last season. Cousins hasn't come out and vocally requested a trade, but there are rumors he wants to start next season and is willing to waive his no-trade clause to get that opportunity elsewhere. While Cousins did show up for team workouts in April, he was a no-show Tuesday, increasing speculation he prefers to join another team ahead of the regular season. Cousins is far from the only big-name player not taking part in OTAs on Tuesday. Below is a list of some of the most prominent players who opted against attending their team's workouts. After two straight seasons with over 1,200 scrimmage yards, Buffalo Bills running back James Cook wouldlike a new contract. Cook, 25, is entering the final year of his rookie contract, and is hoping to secure a long-term extension before hitting the free-agent market. Cook dropped some hints during the offseason that he's seeking roughly $15 million per year as part of his next deal. That would make him the third-highest paid running back in football, behind Saquon Barkley and Christian McCaffrey. Cook is set to make roughly $5 million next season unless he's able to secure a contract extension ahead of the regular season. The Falcons also opened OTAs without tight end Kyle Pitts in attendance. Pitts, like Cook, is entering the final year of his rookie deal. Pitts is set to make roughly $10 million in 2025 after the team picked up his fifth-year option. Pitts discussed the importance ofsecuring his next contractduring an appearance on Cam Newton's podcast in the offseason, though hasn't gone to the same lengths as Cook to vocalize his demands. It's unclear whether Pitts' absence is contract-related, though the fact that he's set to be a free agent after the 2025 NFL season makes his lack of attendance notable. The Cincinnati Bengals appear determined to anger any player seeking a new contract. Trey Hendrickson might be the biggest name on the team still waiting for a new deal, but first rounder Shemar Stewart is also a part of that group. While both thelength and salaries of rookie contractsare essentially set, Stewart appears to be at an impasse with the team overlanguage in his offer, per Pro Football Talk. The specific language in question wasn't included in recent deals handed out by the Bengals, including the one given to receiver Tee Higgins or the one given to last year's first-round pick Amarius Mims, according to PFT. Stewart is present at OTAs, but he is not taking part in workouts since he hasn't signed his deal yet. Haason Reddick, who signed a one-year, $14 million deal with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in March, was not present at the start of OTAs on Tuesday. Buccaneers head coach Todd Bowles was asked about the situation Tuesday, saying he believes the team will see Reddick "one of these days." OTAs are voluntary, so Reddick — who missed multiple games last season after a contract holdout with the New York Jets — is not obligated to be there. The team reportedly did not put an incentive in his contract that encouraged him to show up, per PFT. A number of Bucs veterans — including Mike Evans and Chris Godwin — were not present at voluntary OTAs. Reddick's absence received more attention given his holdout last season and the fact that's he's new to the team. Twenty-four different teams held OTAs on Tuesday. Eight other teams will begin OTAs on Wednesday, so there could be more big-name players who decide to stay home due to contract-related issues.

NFL OTAs tracker: Kirk Cousins, James Cook and Kyle Pitts among big names not participating in voluntary workouts

NFL OTAs tracker: Kirk Cousins, James Cook and Kyle Pitts among big names not participating in voluntary workouts NFL OTAs are underway, and...
Arizona's rural groundwater deal stalls as legislative session nears endNew Foto - Arizona's rural groundwater deal stalls as legislative session nears end

PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona's governor and the GOP-controlled Legislature are at odds over regulating groundwater pumping in the state's rural areas — and time is running out. Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbsstood with local Republican leadersat the start of this year's session, optimistic that Republicans in the Legislature would embrace her proposal to create rural groundwater management areas. But almost four months later, talks have stalled and frustration has mounted as both sides try to find a solution to conserve water that's increasingly becoming more scarce amid a prolonged drought. Negotiators have not met since early April, Hobbs' office said. Around the same time, Republicans and some interest groups grew frustrated with a separate proposal by the Arizona Department of Water Resources to slash overdraft in the Willcox Basin by a percentage that is "unattainable," said Sen. Tim Dunn, one of the Republican negotiators. Overdraft refers to when groundwater extraction exceeds what is being replenished. Hobbs has said that if lawmakers adjourn — typically in the summer — with no deal, she will take matters into her own hands. Disagreements as water supplies dwindle Water basins in rural Arizona are largely unregulated, and Democrats and Republicans have different visions on how to slow depletion. Negotiators, including staff from the governor's office and bipartisan lawmakers, have clashed over proposed mandates for reducing groundwater pumping from aquifers. Republicans who introduced their own plan say the one from Democrats is too high. Democrats say the GOP proposal isn't high enough. Both sides also disagree on the makeup of local councils that would govern groundwater usage, the water basins that would be included and the pathway for future regulation. Meanwhile, underground water supplies continue to shrink to the point that some wells in rural areas have gone dry. Residents are faced with the choice of drilling deeper, hauling water or moving, said Sarah Porter, director of the Arizona State University Kyl Center for Water Policy. Managing the groundwater won't reverse the decline but can slow it, she said. Arizona's regulatory framework for managing groundwater was first enacted in 1980 and largely centers on the state's most populous areas, including Phoenix and Tucson. Porter said the active management areas were designed to apply to growing cities and are too burdensome to replicate in rural areas where agriculture is at the heart of local economies. The Arizona Department of Water Resources has proposed a separate reduction in overdraft in the Willcox Basin, which caused uneasiness among Republicans and others who say that could jeopardize businesses in rural Arizona. For years, legislators on both sides of the aisle have failed to get proposals to manage groundwater in rural Arizona to the governor's desk or signed into law. In 2022, voters approved a ballot measure to establish an active management area in Douglas, a rural city on Arizona's southeastern edge. In recent months, Hobbs used executive authority to create another in the Willcox Basin, another rural community north of Douglas. 'Negotiations are going nowhere' Bipartisan negotiators have not met in several weeks on a framework that would significantly broaden the scope of the Groundwater Management Act, according to multiple people. "I think it's pretty clear that the rural groundwater negotiations are going nowhere," said Democratic state Sen. Priya Sundareshan, one of the legislative negotiators. In a Tuesday statement, Hobbs accused GOP legislators of refusing to come to the negotiating table. Emails obtained by The Associated Press show frustration from Hobbs' office over what the deputy chief of staff, Jennifer Loredo, describes as a "unilateral" move by Republicans to decide who is invited to the negotiating table. "After zero response for a month, you have now proposed to significantly increase the number of stakeholders, and instead of reciprocating our request for input, you sent out a calendar invite to this group of external parties," Loredo said in an email addressing the GOP negotiators. Dunn said since the last negotiating meeting he's been meeting regularly with people on what language they might find agreeable despite sour moods over the water resources proposal for the Willcox Basin and the little time lawmakers have left to make a deal. He said he would like to call another meeting with Hobbs' office and Democratic legislators soon but said the water resource's proposal doesn't bode well for talks in the Legislature. "If that's their end game, we can't get there," Dunn said. Philip Bashaw, CEO of the Arizona Farm Bureau, which has been involved in crafting the GOP rural groundwater bills the past two years, said the water resources' proposal further frustrated negotiations on the bills and fueled anxiety. "It definitely took a lot of the air out of the balloon, that's for sure," Bashaw said.

Arizona's rural groundwater deal stalls as legislative session nears end

Arizona's rural groundwater deal stalls as legislative session nears end PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona's governor and the GOP-controlled Le...

 

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