Nationals' bat-retrieving dog Bruce laps up pregame attention, makes MLB debutNew Foto - Nationals' bat-retrieving dog Bruce laps up pregame attention, makes MLB debut

WASHINGTON (AP) — The dog days of summer arrived Saturday at Nationals Park. Bruce, a 21-month-old Golden Retriever, fetched a bat during a ceremony before the Washington Nationals' game against the Miami Marlins as part of a Pups in the Park promotion. He retrieved bats the last two seasons with the Rochester Red Wings, Washington's Triple-A affiliate. Bruce, wearing a bandana with an "MLB debut" patch he received when he arrived at the stadium, was presented a commemorative bat. He then took a circuitous route from the dugout toward first base after Nationals reliever Zach Brzykcy dropped the bat in foul territory before the bat dog collected his quarry to the delight of a crowd wowed by his work and enthusiasm. "Look at this dog and try not to smile," said Josh Snyder, Bruce's owner. "He's great. He's goofy. I think he's the perfect candidate for Rochester, the Red Wings and now the Nationals." Snyder, who wore a No. 25 Nationals jersey with "Bruce" on the nameplate, said he drove through the night with Bruce and arrived in Washington around 3 a.m. Saturday. But it was anything but a rough morning and early afternoon for Bruce, who casually lapped up attention as he walked through the tunnel in the stadium. Bruce spent about 50 minutes on the field before the ceremony, where he was hounded by well-wishers. He also did a couple practice bat retrievals with Snyder's assistance before Nationals catcher Riley Adams stopped to pet him on his way out for pregame work. He won't work during the actual game, however, and will return to Triple-A duties afterward. Bruce is Snyder's second dog work to with the Red Wings, following the late Milo, and both participated in campaigns to raise money for Rochester's Veterans Outreach Center and Honor Flight of Rochester. This week — which included an announcement from the Nationals on Tuesday that Bruce had worked his tail off to earn a promotion — generated plenty of buzz even before Saturday's debut. "Social media, everything like that seems like it's seriously blown up, and we love it," Snyder said. "Really good publicity with our goal and our mission of bringing people together. It shows it's just doing that." ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Nationals' bat-retrieving dog Bruce laps up pregame attention, makes MLB debut

Nationals' bat-retrieving dog Bruce laps up pregame attention, makes MLB debut WASHINGTON (AP) — The dog days of summer arrived Saturday...
U.S. Open: Philip Barbaree and his caddying wife provide the best celebration of the tournamentNew Foto - U.S. Open: Philip Barbaree and his caddying wife provide the best celebration of the tournament

OAKMONT, Pa. — Imagine a five-foot putt, one shorter than the width of your outstretched arms. If you're a professional golfer, you've got a roughly three-in-four chance of making it. The odds are very much in your favor. Now imagine that putt is to make the cut at a major — in this case, the U.S. Open. Suddenly that five feet starts to look like five miles, doesn't it? Philip Barbaree faced that exact challenge Saturday morning. The former Junior Amateur champion returned to the course early Saturday to finish out his rain-delayed second round. He needed to make par on his final hole to make the cut. No pressure. With his wife Chloe caddying for him, with his entire career leading up to this very moment, Barbaree stepped up to the ball, gave it a tap, and watched it roll slightly uphill and true: Making the cut matters.Just ask the Barbarees ❤️pic.twitter.com/VSQnLFIycS — U.S. Open (@usopengolf)June 14, 2025 The moment of sheer joy, the exultation and embrace of Philip and Chloe, rocketed around social media with good reason. Even if you don't know who the Barbarees are — and, let's be honest, most golf fans don't — you can see the joy on their faces, pride and relief and exultation all at once. It was a welcome antidote to all the seething, griping andclub-tossinghappening elsewhere on the course. Here's how it came together. Barbaree has spent most of the last half-decade trying to find his way in the merciless world of professional golf. The 2015 U.S. Junior Amateur champion — he won it two years after a guy named Scottie Scheffler — Barbaree has struggled since turning pro out of LSU in 2021. At one point, he went three years without making a cut on a national-level tour. He only qualified for this year's U.S. Open through local and regional tournaments, but an opening-round 76 appeared to put his dreams of making the cut in jeopardy. The less-than-desirable late-Friday tee time meant Barbaree would have a whole lot of time to think about how to attack the cut line. He posted a three-birdie, two-bogey round through the first 15 holes of Friday to get two strokes clear of the +7 cut line. The finish line was in sight. But at Oakmont, nothing is ever easy. Barbaree bogeyed the par-4 7th, shrinking his margin of error to a single stroke. At that point, the heavens above Oakmont erupted, sending Barbaree and the other few golfers still on the course home for the night. He would have to return to Oakmont at 7:30 a.m. Saturday morning, and he would be facing the two toughest holes on the course. On the par-3 8th, his tee shot reached the green, but 101 feet from the pin. With the greens more unpredictable after an inch of rain had fallen, Barbaree three-putted, eliminating all cushion. Now he would need to make a par on the par-4 ninth hole — the toughest hole on the course, one that had been playing to an average of 4.54 strokes on Friday — to extend his tournament. His tee shot found the fairway, his second shot reached the green 32 feet from the pin, and his first putt stopped five feet, two inches short. He breathed deep, stepped up … and got it done. "Knowing that I pretty much had to come out and make par on one of the hardest holes on the course," Barbaree said after his round, "and then to actually do it, you know, that's what you practice for, that's what you dream about." Then he turned to Chloe, who stood beside him smiling. "To be able to pull off a shot like that when it matters, and then with her on the bag," he said, "is special." Chloe has been caddying for Philip for about a year. She doesn't tote a full tour bag, and she doesn't necessarily help him with the nuances of the course or club selection the way longtime caddies might. "I always tell him I'm honored that he chooses me as his caddy because I know that's a big role to fill," she said, smiling. "I'm not pushy, you know. I don't know all the facts, so I'm really there for moral support and encouragement." "I don't like a lot of information out there. I'll start thinking way too much, so if I start talking it through with the caddy then sometimes I just get it in my own head," Philip explained with a laugh. "Just to have her there with me, just to provide some peace and comfort, it's been really nice." Professionally speaking, making the cut at the U.S. Open is a huge benefit to Barbaree's career.He'll cash a significant paycheck this week, and he's proven he can hang with the game's best; he's several strokes ahead of major winners Cam Smith and Hideki Matsuyama after three rounds, and that's not to mention all those who didn't even make the cut. Beyond that, though, his performance this week exempts him from the first stage of Q School, giving him a leg up on obtaining his full PGA Tour card for the 2026 season. "Oakmont's hard, but Q-School as a whole might be harder," Barbaree said. "Just to be able to skip a stage is huge." Also hard: sticking with your golf dreams. Barbaree conceded that he's gone through some dark times as he's chased his dream. "There were some down periods, absolutely," he said, "multiple times where I'm thinking,Do I want to keep playing? Do I want to keep doing this?But I love golf so much that it's just too hard to give up." Plus, as he noted with a smile, there are tougher jobs than pro golfer. "Oakmont is just barely harder than my experience as a busboy at my dad's steakhouse," he said. "In two short days I got sick, I cut my finger wide open, and it just wasn't a whole lot of fun. So I knew I had to get back on the course." The decision has paid off nicely so far this week.

U.S. Open: Philip Barbaree and his caddying wife provide the best celebration of the tournament

U.S. Open: Philip Barbaree and his caddying wife provide the best celebration of the tournament OAKMONT, Pa. — Imagine a five-foot putt, one...
Twin federal proposals threaten provider taxes, key source of Medicaid funding for statesNew Foto - Twin federal proposals threaten provider taxes, key source of Medicaid funding for states

Republican efforts to restrict taxes on hospitals, health plans and other providers that states use to help fund their Medicaid programs could strip them of tens of billions of dollars. The move could shrink access to healthcare for some of the nation's poorest and most vulnerable people, warn analysts, patient advocates and Democratic political leaders. No state has more to lose than California, whose Medicaid program, called Medi-Cal, covers nearly 15 million residents with low incomes and disabilities. That'stwice as manyas New York and three times as many as Texas. A proposed ruleby the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, echoed in the Republicans'House reconciliation bill, could significantly curtail the federal dollars many states draw in matching funds from what are known asprovider taxes. Although it's unclear how much states could lose, the revenue up for grabs is big. For instance, California has netted an estimated $8.8 billion this fiscal year from its tax onmanaged care plansand took in about $5.9 billion last year from hospitals. California Democrats are already facing a$12-billion deficit, and they have drawn political fire for scaling back some key healthcare policies, includingfull Medi-Cal coveragefor immigrants without permanent legal status. And a loss of provider tax revenue could add billions to the current deficit, forcing state lawmakers to make even more unpopular cuts to Medi-Cal benefits. "If Republicans move this extreme MAGA proposal forward, millions will lose coverage, hospitals will close, and safety nets could collapse under the weight," Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, said in a statement, referring to President Trump's "Make America Great Again" movement. The proposals are also a threat toProposition 35, a ballot initiative California voters approved last November to make permanent the tax on managed care organizations and dedicate some of its proceeds to raise the pay of doctors and other providers who treat Medi-Cal patients. All states except Alaska have at least one provider tax on managed care plans, hospitals, nursing homes, emergency ground transportation orother typesof healthcare businesses. The federal government spends billions of dollars a year matching these taxes, which generally lead to more money for providers, helping them balance lower Medicaid reimbursement rates while allowing states to protect against economic downturns and budget constraints. New York, Massachusetts and Michigan would also be among the states hit hard by Republicans' drive to scale back provider taxes, which allow states to boost their share of Medicaid spending to receive increased federal Medicaid funds. In a May 12 statement announcing its proposed rule, CMS described a "loophole" as "money laundering," and said California had financed coverage for more than 1.6 million "illegal immigrants" with the proceeds from its managed care organizations tax. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said its proposal would save more than $30 billion over five years. "This proposed rule stops the shell game and ensures federal Medicaid dollars go where they're needed most — to pay for health care for vulnerable Americans who rely on this program, not to plug state budget holes or bankroll benefits for noncitizens," Mehmet Oz, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services administrator, said in the statement. Medicaid allows coverage for noncitizens who are legally present and have been in the country for at least five years. And California uses state money to pay for almost all of the Medi-Cal coverage for immigrants who are not in the country legally. California, New York, Michigan and Massachusetts together account for more than 95% of the "federal taxpayer losses" from the loophole in provider taxes, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said. But nearly every state would feel some impact, especially under the provisions in the reconciliation bill, which are more restrictive than the CMS proposal. None of it is a done deal. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services proposal, published May 15, has not been adopted yet, and the reconciliation bill is likely to be altered significantly in the Senate. But the restrictions being contemplated would be far-reaching. A reportby Michigan's Department of Health and Human Services, ordered by Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, found that a reduction of revenue from the state's hospital tax could "destabilize hospital finances, particularly in rural and safety-net facilities, and increase the risk of service cuts or closures." Losing revenue from the state's managed care organizations tax "would likely require substantial cuts, tax increases, or reductions in coverage and access to care," it said. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services declined to respond to questions about its proposed rule. The Republicans' House-passed reconciliation bill, though not the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services proposal, also prohibits any new provider taxes or increases to existing ones. The American Hospital Assn., which represents nearly 5,000 hospitals and health systems nationwide, said the proposed moratorium on new or increased provider taxescould force states"to make significant cuts to Medicaid to balance their budgets, including reducing eligibility, eliminating or limiting benefits, and reducing already low payment rates for providers." Because provider taxes draw matching federal dollars, Washington has a say in how they are implemented. And the Republicans who run the federal government are looking to spend far fewer of those dollars. In California, the insurers that pay the managed care organizations tax are reimbursed for the portion levied on their Medi-Cal enrollment. That helps explain why the tax rate on Medi-Cal enrollment is sharply higher than on commercial enrollment. More than 99% of the tax money the insurers pay comes from their Medi-Cal business, which means most of the state's insurers get back almost all the tax they pay. That imbalance, which the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services describes as a loophole, is one of the main things Republicans are trying to change. If either the CMS rule or the corresponding provisions in the House reconciliation bill were enacted, states would be required to levy provider taxes equally on Medicaid and commercial business to draw federal dollars. California would likely be unable to raise the commercial rates to the level of the Medi-Cal ones, because state law constrains the Legislature's ability to do so. The only way to comply with the rule would be to lower the tax rate on Medi-Cal enrollment, which would sharply reduce revenue. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services haswarned Californiaand other states for years, including under the Biden administration, that it was considering significant changes to managed care organizations and other provider taxes. Those warnings were never realized. But the risk may be greater this time, some observers say, because the proposed changes are echoed in the House-passed reconciliation bill and intertwined with a broader Republican strategy — and set of proposals — tocut Medicaid spendingby close to $800 billion. "All of these proposals move in the same direction: fewer people enrolled, less generous Medicaid programs over time," said Edwin Park, a research professor at Georgetown University's McCourt School of Public Policy. California's managed care organizations tax is expected to net California $13.9 billion over the next two fiscal years,according to January estimates. The state's hospital tax is expected to bring in an estimated $9 billion this year, up sharply from last year, according to the Department of Health Care Services, which runs Medi-Cal. Losing a significant slice of that revenue on top of other Medicaid cuts in the House reconciliation bill "all adds up to be potentially a super serious impact on Medi-Cal and the California state budget overall," said Kayla Kitson, a senior policy fellow at the California Budget & Policy Center. And it's not only California that will feel the pain. "All states are going to be hurt by this," Park said. Wolfson writes forKFF Health News, a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs atKFF— the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism. Sign up for our Wide Shot newsletter to get the latest entertainment business news, analysis and insights. This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

Twin federal proposals threaten provider taxes, key source of Medicaid funding for states

Twin federal proposals threaten provider taxes, key source of Medicaid funding for states Republican efforts to restrict taxes on hospitals,...
Trump's DC military parade 2025: Start times, schedule, route, map, how to watchNew Foto - Trump's DC military parade 2025: Start times, schedule, route, map, how to watch

PresidentDonald Trump'smulti-million dollarfestival and paradecelebrating the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army kicks off Saturday morning, June 14 and will continue late into the evening –rain or shine, the White House says. The 250th Birthday of the U.S. Army GrandMilitary Paradewill conclude a day-long festival,full of music, fireworks and a fitness competition. The pomp and circumstance also coincides with Trump's79th birthday. "For two and a half centuries, the men and women of America's Army have dominated our enemies and protected our freedom at home," Trump said in avideoposted to Truth Social in early June. "This parade salutes our soldiers' remarkable strength and unbeatable spirit. You won't want to miss it. Just don't miss this one. It's going to be good." Here's everything to know about the 250th Birthday of the U.S. Army Grand Military Parade. The military parade and festival celebrates the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army. On June 14, 1775, the Second Continental Congress voted to establish the Continental Army, organizers say, marking the creation of America's first national military force more than a year before the Declaration of Independence. The parade is 6:30-7:45 p.m. ET on Saturday, June 14. Here's a look at the fullfestival schedule*, per theU.S. Army: 8:15 a.m.:Wreath-laying ceremony hosted by Secretary of DefensePete Hegsethat Arlington National Cemetery 9:30 a.m. to noon:Fitness competition and awards ceremony 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.:Music and entertainment provided by the U.S. Army Band, Latin Music Ensemble, DJ Nyla and U.S. Army Drill Teams 12:30-1 p.m. ET:Noah Hicks performance on main stage 1-2 p.m.:NFL "Skills and Drills" event 1:30-1:45 p.m.:Medal of Honors recipients recognition 2-2:50 p.m.:Scott Hastings performance on main stage 2:45-3 p.m.:Army Astronaut Special Presention 4:15-5 p.m.:250th Army Birthday Festival official ceremony with cake cutting 6:30 p.m.:Parade begins 7:45-8 p.m.:Enlistment ceremony, concert at the Ellipse and fireworks *The times listed in the above schedule are in eastern time. The parade will take place along Constitution Avenue NW, starting on Constitution Avenue NW and 23rd Street and ending on 15th Street alongside the National Mall, near the National Museum of African American History and Culture. It is next to the Smithsonian Metro Station NW entrance, which will be closed, organizers say, though the Smithsonian Metro Station SW entrance will be open. Yes, the military parade is free. Tickets are not required, but those who register on theU.S. Army event websitemay get a good view of the procession. Prospective attendees will need to provide their full name, phone number, email and address. Attendees are limited to two RSVPs per phone number. To learn more or RSVP, visitevents.america250.org/events/250th-anniversary-of-the-us-army-grand-military-parade-and-celebration. A full list of road closures is availablehere. USA TODAY will stream the military parade on itsYouTube channel.The livestream is also at the top of this story. A full round-up of TV broadcast plans, including CNN, NBC and Fox News, can be foundhere. Officials initially estimated theArmy Birthday Festivaland parade would range in cost from $25 million to $45 million, but the Army's latest estimate totaled $40 million, asUSA TODAY's Tom Vanden Brook previously reported, citing a Defense official who was not authorized to speak publicly. Trump has said that the Saturday parade will go on,rain or shine, even though the National Weather Service's forecast, as of Friday afternoon, showed a60% chain of rain. "I hope the weather's okay, but actually if it's not, that brings you good luck, and that's okay, too,"Trump saidon June 12, during the congressional picnic at the White House. "It doesn't matter. It doesn't affect the tanks at all, it doesn't affect the soldiers. They're used to it. They're tough. Smart." Thelast major military parade, the National Victory Celebration, was held on June 8, 1991 to celebrate the end of the Gulf War. Contributing: Tom Vanden Brook, Amaris Encinas and Fernando Cervantes Jr., USA TODAY Greta Cross is a national trending reporter at USA TODAY. Story idea? Email her atgcross@usatoday.com. Kathryn Palmer is a national trending news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her atkapalmer@usatoday.comand on X @KathrynPlmr. This story was updated to add a video. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump's DC military parade 2025: Time, schedule, route, how to watch

Trump's DC military parade 2025: Start times, schedule, route, map, how to watch

Trump's DC military parade 2025: Start times, schedule, route, map, how to watch PresidentDonald Trump'smulti-million dollarfestival...
Jack Nicklaus recounts U.S. Open win in Arnold Palmer's backyardNew Foto - Jack Nicklaus recounts U.S. Open win in Arnold Palmer's backyard

OAKMONT, Pa. -- The way Jack Nicklaus describes the challenges of Oakmont Country Club in 1962 can just as easily apply to Oakmont in 2025. The character of this championship golf course hasn't changed. "I knew that you had to drive the ball straight," Nicklaus told reporters Saturday. "I knew that putting was going to be a premium on this golf course." Here's where Nicklaus' story differs: To secure his first major championship -- and, in fact, his first professional victory of any kind -- he also had to go toe to toe with Arnold Palmer, the best and most popular golfer in the world. And for Palmer, from nearby Latrobe, Pa., this was a home game. "I finished second (at the U.S. Open) in '60 and fourth in '61 and I sort of felt like this was my Open," Nicklaus said. "I didn't realize that, as a 22-year-old might not, that I was in Arnold Palmer's backyard." Palmer, 11 years Nicklaus' senior, already was established with five majors to his name, including the Masters earlier that year. And Palmer's galleries were the stuff of legends. In Western Pennsylvania, the throngs were even deeper. When Palmer and the up-and-coming Nicklaus finished 72 holes in 1 under par, they were sent to an 18-hole playoff the next day. Nicklaus stunned the fans by building a four-stroke lead through six holes, and he endured a mid-round charge by Palmer to win the playoff by three. "It was really kind of funny because I never really heard the gallery," Nicklaus said. "I was a 22-year-old kid with blinders on and not smart enough to figure out that people rooted for people. I just went out and played golf. "I never really considered Arnold as something different. Arnold took me under his wing when I turned pro, and he never treated me anything other than as an equal, and became one of the closest friends I've ever had in the game." Also on hand to speak with reporters Saturday was Johnny Miller, who wrote his own chapter of history the next time the U.S. Open was held at Oakmont in 1973. Miller had shot a 76 in the third round and was outside the top 10, six strokes off the lead. He proceeded to author a U.S. Open-record 63 on Sunday, passing both Nicklaus and Palmer on the leaderboard to win in stunning fashion. "I had played with Arnold Palmer the first two rounds, which was, back in those days, was a crazy experience with his gallery," Miller said. "His gallery was -- they were crazy. Crazy good. "But to get through the gauntlet of playing with Arnold on the first two rounds was pretty good. We both shot 140, and just handling the pressure that week was -- that was the other part." This year's U.S. Open marks the first at Oakmont since Palmer's death in September 2016. Three months earlier, Dustin Johnson lifted the trophy at Oakmont, but Palmer was not healthy enough to attend. Nicklaus called Palmer's impact on the game "enormous," while Miller opted for an analogy to John Wayne as a "big-time man's man." "He came along basically when television came along, and maybe television was great for Arnold, but Arnold was great for television and great for the game," Nicklaus said. "He had a flair about him that nobody else had, and people loved him. And rightfully so." The world of golf has changed in the decades since. Nicklaus received $17,500 for winning the 1962 U.S. Open; the champion Sunday will take home $4.3 million. But at Oakmont, the affection for Palmer and his career hasn't died down, nor has the modern-day player's respect for their elders. "I was talking to some of the guys in there, in the locker room a few minutes ago, and they're saying -- they said, 'What do you think (of the course)?'" Nicklaus said. "I said, 'Well, obviously putting is the key out here.' I said, 'I three-putted the 55th green. I had one three-putt that week and I'm still ticked off I three-putted that one. That was sort of my mindset.'" Miller, in the true tell-it-like-it-is vein of his broadcasting career, added a jab at the 2024 champion who missed the cut. "It's still all about hitting that ball in the fairway," Miller said. "You see the guys that don't -- like Bryson DeChambeau, he was living in the rough there these last couple days. Of course he gets to watch it on TV today." --Adam Zielonka, Field Level Media

Jack Nicklaus recounts U.S. Open win in Arnold Palmer’s backyard

Jack Nicklaus recounts U.S. Open win in Arnold Palmer's backyard OAKMONT, Pa. -- The way Jack Nicklaus describes the challenges of Oakmo...
Stephen A. Smith spotted playing solitaire on his phone during Game 4 of the NBA FinalsNew Foto - Stephen A. Smith spotted playing solitaire on his phone during Game 4 of the NBA Finals

Stephen A. Smith was put in the hot seat on social media after getting spotted playing solitaire during Game 4 of the NBA Finals. The ESPN star was filmed playing the mobile game amid the action between the Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on Friday night. The first picture of Smith playing the card game went viral after getting posted by Hoops Legion on X. Smith then shared the post, claiming he was multitasking. "Yep! That's me. Who would've thought,"The First Take host wrote. "I can multi-task. Especially during TIMEOUTS! Hope y'all are enjoying the NBA Finals. This is going 7 games now, peeps!" Bro the video version is even more hilariouspic.twitter.com/eUQgIYrjXL — Ahmed/The Ears/IG: BigBizTheGod 🇸🇴 (@big_business_)June 14, 2025 However, a video was later posted, showing that Smith had his solitaire game on amid the action on the court. Phoenix Suns forwardKevin Durant posted the pictureon his Instagram story with the words "CMON STEVE." Although social media users criticized the analyst over the video, Smith stood by his explanation. The 57-year-old posted a screenshot of a solitaire game with a stream of the Thunder-Pacers game at the bottom of the screen. Smith's viral moment came as the NBA is under fire for the drop in ratings and lack of interest in the Finals. The association was criticized for the lack of special presentations to make the Finals different than regular season games. On Wednesday, NBA commissionerAdam Silver joined Smithand the ESPN panel and addressed the drastic decline in viewership. While the numbers suggest poor performances on the airwaves, Silver suggested that the Finals are dominating the small markets involved. "It's an interesting time in society," Silver said. "We have two markets that are completely captured by the Finals. Every store you go to, there's signage. Everybody on the street is wearing team colors. I've been doing this for a long time; I don't remember it being two markets that feel so dominant to have these games." Before Friday's game,Smith predictedthat the Indiana Pacers would win the Finals series if they took a 3-1 lead at home. Unfortunately, the Thunder played spoiler by tying the series with a111-104 win. The Thunder will host the Pacers for Game 5 at Paycom Center on Monday night.

Stephen A. Smith spotted playing solitaire on his phone during Game 4 of the NBA Finals

Stephen A. Smith spotted playing solitaire on his phone during Game 4 of the NBA Finals Stephen A. Smith was put in the hot seat on social m...
Police evacuate Texas state Capitol after credible threat to lawmakersNew Foto - Police evacuate Texas state Capitol after credible threat to lawmakers

(Reuters) -The Texas State Capitol and grounds in Austin were evacuated on Saturday ahead of a planned protest after a credible threat to lawmakers, the Texas Department of Public Safety said. Local media said a protest against President Donald Trump dubbed the "No Kings" event was set to begin at the Texas Capitol at 5 p.m. Saturday. Police around the U.S. are on high alert after a gunman posing as a police officer killed a Democratic state lawmaker and her husband in Minnesota in an apparent politically motivated assassination, and wounded a second lawmaker and his spouse, state officials said. (Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Daniel Wallis)

Police evacuate Texas state Capitol after credible threat to lawmakers

Police evacuate Texas state Capitol after credible threat to lawmakers (Reuters) -The Texas State Capitol and grounds in Austin were evacuat...

 

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