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Indiana classmates have high praise for ‘legend’ OG Anunoby


Long before OG Anunoby was rescuing the Knicks in the NBA Finals, he was the quiet kid wandering the halls of Indiana University and showing up at frat parties in Bloomington, Ind.

Now, as the 27-year-old forward powers New York’s championship chase, Hoosier alumni say they’re watching one of their own become a Knicks legend.

To Indiana University grads living in the city, he’s still the soft-spoken but hilarious, Young Thug-loving student who hung out at tailgates long before he became one of the NBA’s premier two-way players.

Anunoby, who starred under then-coach Tom Crean at Indiana from 2015-17 before launching an NBA career, has become an unlikely crossover hero for New Yorkers with Hoosier roots. For alumni who also happen to be lifelong Knicks fans, watching a Bloomington favorite thrive at Madison Square Garden feels almost too perfect.

“OG was one of the first people I ever met on the Bloomington campus in 2015,” said Jason Morrin, a 28-year-old former student who recalls meeting the basketball star during orientation, saying he was extremely friendly.

Morrin told The Post that at the time, Anunoby was close with current Cavaliers center Thomas Bryant.

“The two of them together made for quite the party. TB really brought OG out of his shell,” Morrin said.

Even as a freshman playing in Assembly Hall, his potential was evident to students who regarded him as one of the most athletically gifted players on the hardwood.

“It is surreal to watch him put everything together now for my beloved Knicks,” the New Yorker said. “He is forever a New York and Bloomington legend.”


OG Anunoby starred under then-coach Tom Crean at Indiana from 2015-17 before launching an NBA career.
OG Anunoby starred under then-coach Tom Crean at Indiana from 2015-17 before launching an NBA career. Getty Images

Josh Lomita remembers Anunoby from the freshman dorms and says he was always a fan favorite.

The 29-year-old New Yorker, who got to watch him play for a year in Bloomington, said his trade to the Knicks was “the best reunion.”

“It’s a full-circle storybook moment,” Lomita told The Post. “We are Knicks season ticket holders for 14 years, but lifelong fans. We lived through the darkest days of sports fandom.

“To have a player as special on both sides of the floor as OG is indescribable. Watching his tip shot fall produced an out-of-body experience. Whatever he wants in this city is his for life. Quite frankly, we should give him the key to the city and make him mayor.”

Off the court, Anunoby had a reputation for being just as approachable as he was talented, especially when he showed up at Zeta Beta Tau fraternity parties — and never turned down a photo with anyone who asked.

“Watching him party at the frat and seeing the other side of him was amazing,” Lomita said. “He used to put girls on his shoulders in the middle of the mosh pits during tailgates.”

There is something special about being both a Hoosier basketball fan and a Knicks fan, two teams that experienced historic greatness followed by a long period of struggle, only to find greatness again in recent years.

For Dylan Leist, 29, Anunoby’s rise has linked two fan bases that know plenty about long waits for championships.

“Watching OG from college to the pros has been nothing short of incredible. From the Tom Crean days to now, his special talent has transformed the Knicks in a way that I have never seen,” said former Hoosier Leist. “OG’s journey as a fan of both the Hoosiers and the Knicks has been an honor to witness.”

Even after reaching the NBA, former classmates say Anunoby never changed.

Morrin said the pair stayed in touch after graduation and even reunited after a 2017 Knicks-Raptors game.

“OG always had the ability to make everyone feel special,” Lomita said.

“He never thought he was better than anyone else. He was just OG.”



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Tornadoes pummel communities outside Chicago, tearing up homes and toppling power poles



At least three tornadoes battered communities outside Chicago on Thursday, leveling homes and ripping down trees and power poles, while storms grounded flights for some and knocked out power for hundreds of thousands in the Midwest and Northeast.

As a large column of air descended on Merrillville, Indiana, a town about 33 miles southeast of Chicago, the city’s police warned residents to take cover. By the evening, downed trees and power lines blocked the streets, homes were torn up and part of a high school’s roof was ripped off.

Meanwhile, emergency crews were in the nearby manufacturing and farm city of Streator, Illinois, as the community reeled from tornado damage. A reunification center for displaced residents was set up in its city hall and the Red Cross opened a shelter.

At least three tornadoes battered communities outside Chicago on Thursday, leveling homes and ripping down trees and power poles Valeria Moore via Storyful

Streator Mayor Tara Bedei said there were no reported deaths. “We are incredibly grateful for the safety of our residents and the quick action of emergency personnel,” she said in a statement.

Strong storms delayed or halted flights at airports in some cities, including Chicago, Philadelphia and New York on Thursday. Parts of the Northeast and mid-Atlantic also strained under high heat and humidity.

The tornadoes came after severe storms swept through the Midwest Wednesday, knocking out power, damaging buildings and canceling flights.

In Des Moines, Iowa, a 54-year-old man died at a homeless encampment in a park Wednesday after being hit by a tree that “broke apart and fell during strong storms,” police said in a statement. There were no immediate reports of other deaths or injuries from the storms.

Tree limb breaks through roof

Tornado warnings were also in place in Chicago and in parts of Indiana and Michigan Thursday, according to the National Weather Service. In Chicago, a series finale between the White Sox and the Atlanta Braves was postponed due to rain.

A massive tornado that spun through a city in north central Illinois on Thursday, June 11, was captured up close by a local resident. Valeria Moore via Storyful

Jennifer Hall was in her garage in Elkhart, Indiana, as the winds and rain picked up Thursday evening. Suddenly, she said, she heard a loud crash and discovered a tree limb had gone through the roof of her rental home. She used buckets to catch the rain coming in from the hole.

“I’m just nervous because it’s just been one thing after another,” said Hall, explaining she just had surgery and her husband is out of town.

A home vanishes before residents’ eyes

Shane Tipton stepped out of his truck in Unionville, Missouri, Wednesday afternoon to find a twister bearing down, said his daughter, Kylie Rouse. He rushed to get his 87-year-old dad out of his mobile home.

They made it back to the truck, drove just far enough away and watched as the tornado obliterated the home. Shattered cabinets, furniture and appliances littered the ground. Clothes hung in trees. They believe they lost one of their hunting dogs, who has been missing since it struck.

The remnants of Shane and Jimmie Tipton’s home in Unionville, Mo., Wednesday, June 10, 2026, after a tornado struck. Kylie Rouse via AP

“Everything’s destroyed,” Rouse told The Associated Press in a phone interview Thursday. “It was scattered clear for miles. If my grandpa would have been in there, there’s no way that he would be alive.”

Storm damages animal shelter in Illinois

Residents of Springfield, Illinois, believe a tornado touched down in their area late Wednesday. Two buildings at the Animal Protective League shelter in Springfield were heavily damaged, but none of the nearly 150 cats and 28 dogs housed there were injured, said Deana Corbin, the group’s executive director.

“It pretty much wiped out our shelter facility, took the roofs off both of our buildings,” Corbin said. “It’s a miracle. We were so blessed to not have any injuries of either people or animals.”

The community pitched in to take in all the cats and dogs temporarily, including a local animal control center, veterinarians and residents, she said.

A large tornado moves through Livingston County, Illinois, on June 11, 2026. Brandon Eliott via REUTERS
A building in Stickney, Illinois, after its roof was damaged by the severe storms that struck the Chicago area on Wednesday, June 10, 2026. WMAQ-TV via AP

Damage also was reported at Abraham Lincoln Capital Airport in Springfield.

Weather service meteorologist Frank Pereira said the system that produced the storms, including high winds and hail, was moving eastward Thursday, fueled by cool air from Canada clashing with warm, humid air from the South.

Record high temperatures expected along East Coast

Potentially dangerous heat and high humidity arrived Thursday and was expected to continue Friday for a swath of the East Coast from the mid-Atlantic to the Northeast, where daily high record temperatures could be broken in numerous places, the weather service said. Temperatures in the mid-90s Fahrenheit were expected, but with the humidity it could feel like 100 degrees Fahrenheit or more, the service said.

Footage captured by Trevor Oliver at 3:46 pm shows a funnel cloud which developed in Warsaw, south of Hamilton, where the National Weather Service (NWS) issued a Tornado Warning. Trevor Oliver via Storyful

Philadelphia declared a heat health emergency for Thursday and Friday, activating cooling centers, home visits by field teams, outreach to people experiencing homelessness and other services. New York City officials were also urging residents to take precautions, including drinking plenty of water and finding a cool place to stay if they do not have air conditioning.

Severe weather wreaks havoc on air travel and power

At various points Wednesday and Thursday, ground stops were issued at Chicago’s O’Hare International and Midway International airports, and at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York.

The Pittsburgh International Airport experienced a temporary power outage after a storm produced an “extraordinary” power surge, the airport said.

More than 1,000 flights going into and out of Chicago had been delayed or canceled, according to FlightAware, a flight tracking website.

Commonwealth Edison Company, which provides electric service across northern Illinois, said the storms had downed poles and wires. On X, it wrote that it expected “80% restoration” by late Saturday.



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Gunmen shoot and kill Mexican journalist in the eastern state of Veracruz


MEXICO CITY — Gunmen shot and killed a journalist Thursday in Mexico’s eastern state of Veracruz, authorities said. It was the country’s second killing of a media worker this year — both of them in Veracruz, known as exceptionally dangerous for journalists.

The Veracruz prosecutor’s office confirmed the killing, while the State Commission for the Attention and Protection of Journalists identified the victim as Luis Ángel López Valdez. He was the director of a local media outlet and a reporter for the Vanguardia de Veracruz newspaper.

According to Vanguardia, López Valdez was walking along a street in the city of Poza Rica when he was intercepted by gunmen who shot him at close range before fleeing. He specialized in police and security reporting.

A reporter who worked with López Valdez and spoke on condition of anonymity for safety reasons told The Associated Press that the journalist was under state protection measures. The AP asked the state commission to confirm this detail, but did not receive an immediate response.

In addition to his journalism work, López Valdez served as a deputy delegate for the relief organization Cruz Ámbar.

So far, authorities have not reported any arrests or a possible motive for the attack, though the prosecutor’s office indicated that one line of investigation links the killing to his journalistic work.

A reporter who covered crime in Veracruz was killed in same city in January. He was identified at the time by local media outlets as Carlos Castro, director of an online outlet called Código Norte Veracruz, who also collaborated with other regional outlets.

Meanwhile a search continues for journalist Roxana Guzmán Ramírez, director of the digital news site Pulso Informativo, who has been missing since early June in the municipality of Nanchital, in the southern part of the state. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has said that federal and state authorities are handling the case.

International organizations consider Mexico one of the most dangerous countries for practicing journalism outside of war zones. Reporters covering organized crime, corruption, and public security frequently fall victim to threats, attacks, and murders.

For years, Veracruz has topped the list of recorded attacks against journalists. Freedom of expression organizations such as Article 19 have documented 31 murders of journalists in the state since 2000 that could be linked to their reporting work.

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Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america



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Flip flop or deliberate? – Unpacking Trump’s strategy on Iran



The BBC’s Gary O’Donoghue looks at the US president’s mixed messaging over the war and the questions it raises.



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UK economy shrank by 0.1% in April



The contraction comes after the economy saw stronger than expected growth in March.



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Liberty’s Satou Sabally has big night as she works into form


ATLANTA — Satou Sabally heard a group of courtside fans’ playful chirps Thursday night. They told her she needed to relax on her shooting.

She told them she’d hit three more before the night ended.

When Sabally drained a 3-pointer midway through the fourth quarter, she turned back at them and they all laughed.

Sabally checked out later, falling short of her promise to drain three more.

But that didn’t matter.

What mattered is that Sabally continues to look more like herself with each passing day, her performance in Thursday’s 104-90 win against the Atlanta Dream being the latest example.

Sabally finished with a team-high-tying 19 points, going 5-for-6 from downtown. She also grabbed three rebounds. She did that while coming off the bench for the fifth straight game.

Sabally’s selflessness doesn’t go unnoticed. She deserves to be a starter, and she’s expected to get promoted to the opening five at some point.

A star of her magnitude could’ve demanded the Liberty give her her starting spot back when she returned from illness 2 ½ weeks ago.

But Sabally didn’t. She’s bought into the team’s mentality and the performance staff’s plans to ramp her up after she missed most of the offseason with lingering concussion symptoms and the start of this season with a cyst.


Satou Sabally, who scored a team-high 19 points, looks to make a pass during the Liberty  104-90 win over the Dream on June 11, 2026 in Atlanta.
Satou Sabally, who scored a team-high 19 points, looks to make a pass during the Liberty 104-90 win over the Dream on June 11, 2026 in Atlanta. NBAE via Getty Images

“We know what Satou can bring and that’s it,” Breanna Stewart said after the Liberty’s sixth straight win. “She’s really keeping the main thing the main thing and coming in and doing her job the same as she would any other place and hopefully she’s having fun while she’s doing it.

“I feel like you continue to just get more and more comfortable and having nights like tonight, like, nobody’s surprised that Satou had a night like tonight. We’re just really happy for her and we want to keep it going.”

Sabally keeps reiterating that the team’s biggest strength is its depth. She thought the Liberty’s 22-8 run to close out the third quarter — which included contributions from Sabally, Stewart, Leonie Fiebich, Jonquel Jones, Betnijah Laney-Hamilton, Rebekah Gardner, Raquel Carrera and Pauline Astier — was a prime example.

“Basketball is a game of runs,” Sabally said. “I think we just went on a run there and had some stops. … We had a lot of great things happening today but that particular stretch was also just fun.”


Gardner is one of the Liberty’s unsung role players.

She provides a jolt to the Liberty every time she steps on the court. She’s a smart slasher and solid defender.

The Liberty have outscored opponents by 27 points when Gardner is on the court — trailing only Laney-Hamilton for the best plus/minus among the team’s current reserves.

Is Gardner underrated?

“Well, not for me,” Marine Johannès said. “I don’t know. It’s a good question. I really have a lot of respect for her. She’s a great player.”



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What to know about the EU’s new rules on migration and asylum


BRUSSELS — The European Union is set to implement a new set of rules Friday governing how each of its 27 member states will deal with irregular migration and asylum seekers.

The European Migration and Asylum Pact is the culmination of years of grueling negotiations that overhauled the previous system, which was widely considered a failure and gave far-right parties a potent issue to win votes.

All EU members were meant to be prepared for Friday’s implementation by adapting laws, training staff and beefing up border infrastructure. But even the European Commission admits no member is completely ready.

Human rights advocates warn the pact could add to the difficulties of asylum seekers face while trying to find safe haven in the EU.

Here is what to know:

Under the new rules, foreigners will be screened at EU borders for up to seven days before they are admitted.

Asylum seekers from countries listed as “safe” by the EU or pose a “security threat” will go through faster asylum procedures of three months instead of six. Some applicants may be kept at the border while their cases are processed. They will be given only one chance to appeal a rejected application.

The European Commission says some member states still need to implement a new biometric database called Eurodac that will register and store information of adults and children as young as 6.

Many more countries need to set up border facilities to handle screening, asylum processing and detentions. Work also is needed to ensure there are independent rights monitoring at the border, the commission said.

One of the pillars of the new pact is to speed up voluntary and forced returns of rejected asylum seekers by automatically issuing return orders when an application is rejected. A clear political priority of the center and far-right politicians who swept to power in 2024 across the EU, returnees are slated to be sent to countries deemed safe like Syria and Bangladesh.

The European Agency for Asylum said there were about 802,000 pending first-time asylum applications in March.

Member states also are working with EU lawmakers to allow for the creation of “return hubs” in third countries where they can send migrants who can’t be repatriated. Questions about deportation centers are being quietly negotiated between a group of five nations and potential partners abroad.

Among the most contentious issues that has divided EU countries was sharing responsibility for asylum seekers, especially in times of crisis. Because migrants must apply for asylum in the first EU country they enter, front line countries along the Mediterranean like Greece and Italy have long complained they bear the weight of irregular arrivals.

Citing their inability to cope under pressure, these countries allowed passage of many migrants to northern and western Europe without permission. This shifted some of the burden onto northern countries like Germany and Sweden that saw asylum applications soar to record levels, bringing their migration systems to the brink of collapse.

The new pact includes a solidarity mechanism to ensure border countries aren’t left on their own. Other EU members will either take in a share of asylum seekers or offer financial support to compensate. Countries can also offset their share if they receive migrants through secondary movements, meaning when a migrant arrives in one country and moves on to another.

But not all member states were happy with this solution. Poland for example suspended the right to asylum since early 2025 citing the weaponization of migration on its border with Belarus. Originally a temporary measure, it has been extending the suspension since.

Hungary’s new prime minister Péter Magyar is continuing many of the hardline immigration policies of his predecessor, Viktor Orbán, including a refusal to take in migrants. But Magyar has said he would realign Hungary’s asylum procedures to avoid being fined 1 million euros daily for Orban’s policy that broke the bloc’s asylum rules.

The commission has admitted work on implementing the pact will continue after June 12 since no country is fully ready.

“It won’t be a like a light switch turning on on June 12,” said Susan Fratzke, a senior policy analyst with the Migration Policy Institute. “Some of these things will take time.”

The lack of clarity and consistency is problematic, said Susanna Zanfrini, director of the International Rescue Committee’s Italy office.

That ambiguity “creates uncertainty for both people seeking protection and the organizations supporting them at the very moment they most need clear information about their rights, options, and access to support to survive, recover and rebuild their lives,” she said.

Human rights advocates have criticized the new rules, arguing they undermine the right to seek asylum by rushing assessments.

They say accelerated procedures introduce racial profiling while denying international protection to applicants with legitimate claims, while also warning of an expected spike in prolonged detentions at EU borders.

Judith Sunderland, senior refugee and migrant rights adviser at Human Rights Watch, said the new pact “slams the door in the face of people who deserve to be treated with dignity and to have a fair hearing of their claims for protection.”

Lukas Gehrke, the Brussels chief for the International Organization For Migration, said regardless of how many people are sent out of the EU, many migrants will remain while losing integration funding under the new budget for the pact.

“If we under focus on this, the failure of integration becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy,” he said.

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Hadjicostis reported from Nicosia, Cyprus, and Brito reported from Barcelona, Spain. Claudia Ciobanu in Warsaw, Poland, contributed to this report.



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Scott McTominay: Scotland midfielder not with team as they arrive at Boston hotel


Scotland midfielder Scott McTominay was not on the team bus as it arrived at their hotel in Boston after missing Thursday’s training session because of an upset stomach.

The Napoli player, who has been the Scots’ leading man in recent campaigns, was part of the group as they travelled from their base camp in Charlotte.

However, the 29-year-old made his own onward journey with a doctor in what is believed to be a precautionary measure.

Steve Clarke’s side get their first World Cup in 28 years under way when they face Haiti on Saturday evening (Sunday 02:00 BST) at Boston Stadium in Foxborough.

They will also face Morocco and Brazil in the group stage.

McTominay, who has scored 15 goals across 70 caps, found the net in Scotland’s convincing 4-0 win over Bolivia on Saturday.

Scotland fans, who have been flooding to Boston in huge numbers, will be anxious for an update from Clarke who is due to address the media on Friday.

Speaking at Thursday’s media conference, fellow midfielder Kenny McLean said of the situation: “Hopefully that doesn’t spread. Fingers crossed Scott will be fine. I’m sure he will be.

“I don’t need to speak too much on him, everyone knows how big he is.

“It’s a team effort and always will be, but when you have special, special players like that you want them to be available. I’m sure he will be.”



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Jailed South Korea ex-president gets 30 more years for sending drones into North



Prosecutors argued that Yoon ordered the operation to provoke Pyongyang and create a pretext for martial law.



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World Cup 2026: Jude Bellingham highlights importance of feeling loved playing for England


England midfielder Jude Bellingham has stressed the importance of needing to “feel loved” as he looks to help them enjoy World Cup success this summer.

The tournament in North America got under way on Thursday as Mexico – hosts alongside USA and Canada – beat South Africa 2-0.

England’s tournament does not get under way until next Wednesday, when they take on Croatia in Arlington, Texas.

Bellingham was part of the England squad that reached the final of Euro 2024, where they were beaten by Spain.

However, the national team – then managed by Gareth Southgate – were often accused of playing poorly in that tournament, with Bellingham saying previously he felt like a bit of a scapegoat for England’s failure to win that tournament.

Bellingham admitted something felt that the group were “not quite connected” during the Euros but has stressed there is a different feel around the camp now.

“At the Euros we got some things a little bit wrong off the pitch,” he said on England’s Lions’ Den show.

“I don’t feel like the group connected as well as it could have for a number of reasons. Expectation was part of it – we had done well in 2018 and done well in Qatar [for the 2022 World Cup] and when it came to that tournament we were seen as one of two or three teams that should win it.

“We were not playing particularly well so even when we were winning you didn’t get the feeling you were as happy as you should be.

“There has to be that element of relentless and wanting to win but it is the nature of football that wins go out of the system quickly and we should hold on to that moment a little more.

“I think this time round having those experiences… and knowing, for example, that the guy who scores the winning goal in the World Cup final isn’t always the one you’d bet your house on so you’ve always got to be ready, everyone’s got to feel loved and feel a huge part of the team. The other thing is just to enjoy it.”



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