This is why the Knicks traded for Karl-Anthony Towns.
With New York’s season hanging by a thread — down 10 on the road entering the fourth quarter in a series it already trailed 0-2 — Towns took over and scored 20 the rest of the way.
Karl-Anthony Towns scored 20 points in the fourth-quarter tonight!
He is the SECOND KNICK EVER to record 20+ points in a fourth-quarter of the playoffs in the PXP era 🤯😱
Combine that with the best New York defensive performance of these playoffs — their scrambling and ability to peel-switch off Haliburton to stay in front of him but cover pick-and-pop shooters has improved dramatically — and the improbable happened.
New York came back to take Game 3 106-100 on the road. Indiana still leads the series 2-1 but Game 4 on Tuesday night suddenly becomes a swing game in the Eastern Conference Finals.
This was a game where Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau tried everything.
Thibodeau made his big move before the game, starting Mitchell Robinson next to Karl-Anthony Towns and sending Josh Hart to the bench — and it worked out of the gate. Indiana shot 2-of-8 to open the game (although some of that was just missed open looks) and they had just one assist early, allowing New York to get out to a 15-10 lead.
Then Hart was subbed in for Towns, the Pacers hit back-to-back 3-pointers to retake the lead, and it was on.
Indiana dominated most of the rest of the first half.
A stretch in the second quarter summed up this game because both teams ran everything through or at Jalen Brunson. The Knicks had to initiate their offense with Brunson, not having another quality perimeter shot creator has been an issue, and it caught up with the Knicks here. On the other end, Indiana has targeted Brunson in pick-and-rolls and on switches relentlessly all series, but they were especially focused in this game and it spiraled into that second-quarter run where Indiana stretched its lead out to 20.
The other thing Tibodeau did was finally trust his bench (foul trouble for Towns and Brunson played into that). The Knicks came back with 16-4 run into the fourth quarter sparked by bench players — Miles “Duece” McBride and the previously unseen this series Delon Wright and Landry Shamet. Those guys brought the two-way play New York had been lacking.
Towns finished with 24 points and 15 rebounds, saving the Knicks’ season. Brunson finished with 23 points and despite a rough night came up clutch when it mattered.
Indiana shot 20% from 3 as a team (5-of-25) and got 20 points from Tyrese Haliburton and 19 from Myles Turner. That said, the Pacers struggled to create good looks when it mattered against a desperate Knicks team, and they will need to do that Tuesday to take control of this series.
MINNEAPOLIS — On Sunday, five years since the day George Floyd was killed, the Minneapolis square named for him was overflowing.
Hundreds gathered, as they have throughout recent days, with tears and renewed calls for justice for the man who died under a police officer’s knee while a crowd pleaded for him to stop.
Visitors on Sunday dropped colorful flowers — including many yellow roses — on the intersection where Floyd was murdered, decorating a memorial enshrining him on the city’s streets.
“The feeling that we have from previous ‘angelversaries’ is very different this year,” said Bridgette Stewart, a freelance journalist and community activist who lives in Minneapolis.
Stewart said her workplace is in George Floyd Square, so she is there “every day.” Five years on, a sense of calm has returned to the community, Stewart said, and people have started to come together.
“This is our first year, actually, where we haven’t had to have Homeland Security come in and do the whole bomb sweeping,” she noted.
Ximena Rayo, a 58-year-old school principal in the city, said she doesn’t live far from where Floyd was killed. She recalled the entire city being moved by the murder.
While “we’re nowhere where we need to be,” Rayo said, there are signs of progress. Namely she said, new people have been hired and the city’s mayor and police department are “really working on better ways.”
“It looks like people feel safe,” Rayo said.
The 5th annual “Rise & Remember Festival,” which its organizers say honors Floyd and others “lost unjustly to the pervasive impacts of systemic racism,” kicked off on Friday. On Saturday, bundles of colorful flowers marked Floyd’s memorial.
Billy Briggs, a live music photographer who lives just steps from George Floyd Square, described feeling intense anxiety leading up to the fifth anniversary of Floyd’s death, triggered by memories of that day. Briggs, who served as a caretaker of the square for a year, began photographing it as a way to cope with the trauma.
“When I watch families park in front of my house, walking over there [the square], sometimes it brings me a little bit tearful, because I know they’re going over for a hard lesson, but an important one,” Briggs said. “And I’m just glad that people are still coming and bringing their families here to teach that lesson.”
A view of the site where George Floyd was killed by a Minneapolis police officer. Sunday marked the five-year anniversary of the slaying, which sparked worldwide protests. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)Stephen Maturen / Getty Images
Floyd was killed on May 25, 2020, by white police officer Derek Chauvin, who used his knee to press the weight of his body on Floyd’s neck for more than nine minutes, asphyxiating him.
Floyd’s dying words were “I can’t breathe.”
Those words became a rallying cry for millions outraged by his murder, including politicians, institutions, businesses and schools. Protesters across the country took to the streets to call for change, demanding that America reckon with its deep-seated racial injustices and reform its police departments.
Chauvin was sentenced to 21 years for violating Floyd’s civil rights and 22 1/2 years for second-degree murder. Minneapolis banned police chokeholds, and companies pledged more than $66 billion for racial equity initiatives.
Floyd’s life was celebrated in other cities as well on Sunday — his family held a private memorial service in Houston and his brother hosted a march in Brooklyn, New York, that led to the unveiling of a new community plaque honoring Floyd.
Nekima Levy Armstrong, a civil rights attorney and activist, was one of the first to learn of Floyd’s death five years ago. When she watched the footage showing how he died, her heart was broken.
“I knew that I witnessed what felt like a lynching,” she said Saturday. “Tears began to stream down my face, and I was horrified by what I had seen.”
A protester in front of a burning building during a demonstration in Minneapolis in 2020 over the death of George Floyd.Chandan Khanna / AFP / Getty Images
Armstrong said the conditions that led to Floyd’s death “are still in place,” adding that she had hoped “people in positions of authority would do the right thing and that they would take intentional steps to change the laws and the policies that led to the murder of George Floyd.”
“We got crumbs when we asked for a whole feast, and that’s why we’re in a standstill as a city right now,” she said.
Armstrong expressed a desire for new leadership in Minneapolis, calling for a new mayor who can take control, reform the city’s police department and appoint a new police chief.
“Why are incidents still happening to Black residents? Why are they still not getting justice? Why are they still fearful?” Armstrong asked. “That points to one person, the leader over the Minneapolis Police Department, who appointed the chief. The chief is ill-equipped and underequipped to be the chief of a police department with this history and a diverse city. He needs to go as well.”
The Minneapolis Police Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
City Council member Andrea Jenkins, who represents Ward 8, where Floyd was killed, described the mood at the square over the weekend as a mix of somber reflection and joyful remembrance.
“I think people are feeling mixed emotions of all of those things,” she said. “And certainly remembering George Floyd, remembering the trauma that was inflicted then, but also recommitting to that resolve of continuing the fight for justice.”
Community members and Floyd family members gather around a mural of George Floyd at George Floyd Square to leave yellow roses and photos in his memory in Minneapolis on May 23, during a tribute marking nearly five years since Floyd’s killing by police.Kerem Yucel / AFP / Getty Images
Jenkins noted several significant changes in the city since Floyd was killed, including the formation of the Office of Public Safety, which integrates the police department, the fire department and emergency management. The city also created a behavioral crisis response team to respond to anyone experiencing mental health challenges.
“For a long time, I felt like Minneapolis Police Department was on an island out there by themselves and it was their own making, but now it feels like we pulled them back into the city enterprise and hopefully making them feel more a part of the community and less of the us-against-them,” Jenkins said.
Have the policy changes been enough? “No, but I think we’re on the path to significant change,” Jenkins said, adding that the current federal government is derailing some of the change she and others are fighting for.
“Which is, I think, the story of America,” she said. “Little progress, and then we regress.”
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President Trump late Sunday said he’s extending the deadline to make a trade deal with the European Union, after threatening to impose a 50% tariff on the bloc of nations. NBC News’ Yamiche Alcindor has more.May 25, 2025
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President Donald Trump said Sunday that he agreed to an extension on the 50% tariff deadline on the European Union until July 9.
“I received a call today from Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, requesting an extension on the June 1st deadline on the 50% Tariff with respect to Trade and the European Union,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.
“I agreed to the extension — July 9, 2025 — It was my privilege to do so,” he added.
Trump’s post came after Von der Leyen said that she had a “good call” with Trump, but needed until July 9 to “reach a good deal.”
“The EU and US share the world’s most consequential and close trade relationship,” she wrote on X.
“Europe is ready to advance talks swiftly and decisively,” she continued.
Trump imposed 20% tariffs on the EU as part of his sweeping “reciprocal tariffs,” before slashing the rate down to 10% for 90 days.
But Trump last week suggested a “straight 50% tariff” on the EU beginning on June 1, saying that the 27-nation bloc “has been very difficult to deal with.”
“Our discussions with them are going nowhere!” Trump wrote Friday on Truth Social.
He later said that he was not planning to strike a deal with the EU before June 1.
“I just said, it’s time that we play the game the way I know how to play the game,” he said during an executive order signing event at the White House.
STOCKHOLM — The United States prevailed over Switzerland 1-0 in overtime of the final of the ice hockey world championship Sunday.
Tage Thompson wristed a shot past goaltender Leonardo Genoni from the top of the right circle for the winner 2:02 into overtime with the 40th shot on goal.
Logan Cooley and Brady Skjei provided the assists and goaltender Jeremy Swayman shut out the Swiss with 25 saves.
USA Hockey says it is the second trophy won at the tournament by the Americans after winning in 1933.
The Americans were also formally awarded the title in 1960 when they won the Olympic tournament and the worlds did not take place.
Bronze medal for Sweden
Mikael Backlund and Marcus Johansson scored two goals each as Sweden beat Denmark 6-2 to take the bronze medal earlier Sunday.
It was the second straight third-place finish for Sweden while fourth place was the best-ever result for Denmark.
Lucas Raymond and Mika Zibanejad also scored for the winners while Nick Olesen and Nikolaj Ehlers scored for Denmark.
For 9 minutes and 29 seconds on May 25, 2020, Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin pressed his knee and the weight of his body against George Floyd’s neck, killing him as people watched.
The murder prompted vows to deal with America’s deep-seated racial injustices. Five years later, many lawmakers, companies and institutions have rowed back on those commitments, and in a previously nondescript area of Minneapolis, hardly anyone can agree on whether things have changed for the better.
“That’s a challenging question,” said Andrea Jenkins, the City Council member for Ward 8, where the tragedy occurred. “There have been a number of changes, and yet it feels like things are very much the same.”
Samar Moseley, who drives a city bus in Minneapolis, said the “whole city is still suffering from PTSD after George Floyd.” Relations with the police are “easing up some, but there’s still tension,” he added.
Charles Adams, a North Minneapolis police inspector who has been in law enforcement in the area for 40 years, said the incident “put us back to the 1960s.”
Adams said that he was “surprised” by the number of Black recruits who have joined the force since then but that “the good news is that they say they want to be a part of the change.”
Zelenskyy attacks ‘silence’ from U.S. as Russia launches massive wave of strikes
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy criticized the United States and the international community for remaining silent after Russia unleashed what Ukrainian officials described as the largest aerial assault on the country since the war began.
Russian forces launched a massive overnight barrage Saturday night as 367 drones and missiles targeted more than 30 cities and villages across Ukraine, including the capital, Kyiv.
“The silence of America, the silence of others in the world only encourages Putin,” Zelenskyy wrote on Telegram. “Every such terrorist Russian strike is reason enough for new sanctions against Russia.”
The attack came shortly after a prisoner exchange in which each side released hundreds of detainees. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Moscow would give Ukraine a draft document outlining its conditions for a “sustainable, long-term, comprehensive” peace agreement once the prisoner exchange had finished.
Meet the Press
Former Surgeon General Vivek Murthy accused Congress of failing “in its responsibility to protect our kids” from the harms of social media, calling for legislation to force social media apps to include warning labels about their harms to children.
Murthy told moderator Kristen Welker on NBC News’ “Meet the Press” that the current approach to social media is “the equivalent of putting our kids in cars with no seat belts, with no air bags, and having them drive on roads with no speed limits and no traffic lights. And that is just morally unacceptable.”
Former Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., who is now a mental health advocate, told Welker he believes the United States “is falling down on its own responsibility as stewards to our children’s future” because of lack of action on the issue.
Politics in brief
Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., said there is enough opposition in the Senate to hold up President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful” bill.
Former President Joe Biden attended his grandson’s high school graduation, making his first public appearance since he announced he had been diagnosed with prostate cancer.
In her research for “Hick,” author Sarah Miller read about 3,500 of the letters the two women exchanged, sometimes twice daily, from 1932 until Roosevelt died in 1962.
“They loved each other. They were physically affectionate with each other. It was a romance, for sure. Whether that included sexual intimacy is probably something we can’t know,” Miller said.
While there appears to be consensus among historians that Hickok was romantically interested only in women, some past accounts have portrayed her correspondence with Roosevelt as a deeply intimate friendship, rather than a romance.
Notable quote
“Why re-erect a symbol of something that hurt so many people?”
Tammika Thompson, who traces her roots to enslaved people in White Castle, Louisiana
The fire that destroyed Louisiana’s Nottoway Plantation prompted a reckoning with the past and reignited the debate over how places born from slavery should be viewed — and how they should function today.
In case you missed it
A 28-year-old man was arrested at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York on Sunday following an alleged attempt to firebomb a branch office of theU.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv, the Justice Department said.
INDIANAPOLIS — Alex Palou has become the first driver from Spain to win the Indianapolis 500 by holding off former Chip Ganassi Racing teammate Marcus Ericsson over the closing laps Sunday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Palou, who has won three IndyCar titles in four years — including the last two, came to the speedway with four wins through the first five races this season. But it was No. 6, “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing,” that he had circled on his calendar.
Without an Indy 500 win, Palou said his career resume would never be complete.
Palou stopped the car just beyond the Yard of Bricks, climbing out of it and nearly losing his balance as he raised his arms in triumph. He jumped down and took off in a run down the front stretch, pulling off his gloves and tossing them behind him, and ultimately was engulfed by his father, Ramon, and his Chip Ganassi Racing team in a jubilant celebration.
Scott Dixon gave him a big hug, so did Dario Franchitti, with both Ganassi Indy 500 winners welcoming Palou into the exclusive club.
“I cannot believe it. What an amazing day. What an amazing race,” Palou said. “I cannot believe it. It was tough. Tough conditions out there, especially if you were like, third or fourth in the pack. Even leading, the fuel consumption was super high, so they didn’t want me to lead. I wanted to lead, honestly, so yeah, made it happen.”
Meanwhile, Ericsson climbed from his car and pressed his hands to his face at the disappointment of coming oh-so close to a second Indianapolis 500 victory.
Ericsson, the 2022 Indy 500 winner, finished second for Andretti Global in a 1-2 finish for Honda. David Malukas was third for A.J. Foyt Racing and the highest-finishing Chevrolet.
Josef Newgarden’s bid to win three consecutive Indy 500s ended with a fuel pump issue. He was trying to become the first driver to come from the back row to win because he and Team Penske teammate Will Power were dropped to the back of the field for failing inspection before qualifying.
Power wound up 19th, the highest-finishing Penske driver on a miserable day for the organization owned by Roger Penske. He earlier this week fired his top three IndyCar executives for a second technical infraction in just over a year, and has had to defend the optics of his teams failing inspections when he also owns IndyCar, Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the Indy500.
Penske has won the Indy 500 a record 20 times.
It was Indy 500 win number six for Ganassi, who has been on a dominating wave since hiring Palou ahead of the 2021 season. Palou then won the championship that year, has added two more titles and now seems on pace for a fourth one.
“The guy is just unbelievable — I don’t know what else to say,” Ganassi said. “It is an incredible thing — it’s going to make Alex Palou’s career, it is going to make his life, and it has certainly made mine.”
Palou started the race tied with Pato O’Ward as the co-favorites, listed at +500 by BetMGM. O’Ward finished fourth — the fifth time in six career starts the Mexican has finished sixth or higher.
Kyle Larson won’t complete “the double” after crashing out of the Indianapolis 500 before he headed to North Carolina to compete in the Coca-Cola 600 NASCAR race.
A bill that would require the Ten Commandments to be posted in every public school classroom in Texas cleared a key legislative hurdle Sunday and is poised to go to Gov. Greg Abbott for approval.
The state House of Representatives passed a version of the Ten Commandments bill in a 82-46 vote following a week of debate and delay, when Democratic lawmakers attempted to introduce amendments. Those amendments, including allowing individual school districts to opt in and for the Ten Commandments to be in different languages, were voted down by a Republican majority.
Abbott’s office did not immediately comment about its passage, but the Republican governor is expected to sign it into law after the state Senate approved its version of the legislation in March on a 20-11 party-line vote.
Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick had previously said that the success of the bill, known as SB 10, was among his priorities for the current session, which ends next month, after similar legislation failed in 2023 because of time constraints.
“By placing the Ten Commandments in our public school classrooms, we ensure our students receive the same foundational moral compass as our state and country’s forefathers,” Patrick said.
Still, Texas’ Ten Commandments legislation is likely to face constitutional opposition as it has in Louisiana, where a GOP-drafted law was signed last year by Gov. Jeff Landry and was quickly challenged by a coalition of parents of different religious beliefs.
Under Texas’ bill, all public elementary or secondary schools must “display in a conspicuous place in each classroom of the school a durable poster or framed copy of the Ten Commandments.” The displays must be at least 16 inches wide and 20 inches tall, and include the text of the Ten Commandments as written in the bill.
Once 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 may happen to schools or individual teachers who refuse to comply. According to a state House committee analysis, the bill itself also “does not expressly create a criminal offense.”
State Sen. Phil King, the lead author of the bill, previously said he was introducing the legislation because “the Ten Commandments are part of our Texas and American story.”
But state Rep. James Talarico, a Democrat who is Christian, objected to the bill this week during an earlier vote, saying a display of such religious text may feel exclusionary to non-Christian students.
“Forcing our religion down their throats is not love,” Talarico said.
With Louisiana and most recently Arkansas mandating the Ten Commandments in public schools, legal arguments over such laws could eventually wind up again before the U.S. Supreme Court, which in 1980 ruled that classroom displays of the Ten Commandments were unconstitutional.
Louisiana has not fully implemented its law as officials await a federal appeals court ruling on its constitutionality. In November, a lower court judge concluded the state had not offered “any constitutional way to display the Ten Commandments.”
Meanwhile, Texas House lawmakers on Friday approved another religion-based bill that would permit school districts to adopt policies allowing for a period of prayer and reading of the Bible or “other religious text” with parental consent. Abbott is also expected to sign it into law.
Emily Witt, a spokeswoman for the Texas Freedom Network, a grassroots group that advocates for religious freedom, said the wave of conservative-leaning legislation across Texas and other states is part of a wider “coordinated strategy” to infuse the Bible in public school education.
“The message this sends to kids is that they’re being told their religion doesn’t matter and isn’t as important as this one,” Witt said. “We worry that leads to bullying and otherism — all things in public schools that we try to prevent.”
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Nearly a dozen fire departments responded to extinguish the flames engulfing the pre-Civil War Nottoway Plantation House in Louisiana. No injuries were reported at the 53,000-square-foot home, which was a resort and event venue. WVLA’s Khayla Gaston reports.May 25, 2025
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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Strauss’ “Blue Danube” is heading into space this month to mark the 200th anniversary of the waltz king’s birth.
The classical piece will be beamed into the cosmos as it’s performed by the Vienna Symphony Orchestra. The celestial send-off on May 31 — livestreamed with free public screenings in Vienna, Madrid and New York — also will celebrate the European Space Agency’s founding 50 years ago.
Although the music could be converted into radio signals in real time, according to officials, ESA will relay a pre-recorded version from the orchestra’s rehearsal the day before to avoid any technical issues. The live performance will provide the accompaniment.
The radio signals will hurtle away at the speed of light, or a mind-blowing 670 million mph (more than 1 billion kph).
That will put the music past the moon in 1 ½ seconds, past Mars in 4 ½ minutes, past Jupiter in 37 minutes and past Neptune in four hours. Within 23 hours, the signals will be as far from Earth as NASA’s Voyager 1, the world’s most distant spacecraft at more than 15 billion miles (24 billion kilometers) in interstellar space.
NASA also celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2008 by transmitting a song directly into deep space: the Beatles’ “Across the Universe.” And last year, NASA beamed up Missy Elliott’s “The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly)” toward Venus.
Music has even flowed from another planet to Earth — courtesy of a NASA Mars rover. Flight controllers at California’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory sent a recording of will.i.am’s “Reach for the Stars” to Curiosity in 2012 and the rover relayed it back.
These are all deep-space transmissions as opposed to the melodies streaming between NASA’s Mission Control and orbiting crews since the mid-1960s.
Now it’s Strauss’ turn, after getting passed over for the Voyager Golden Records nearly a half-century ago.
Launched in 1977, NASA’s twin Voyagers 1 and 2 each carry a gold-plated copper phonograph record, along with a stylus and playing instructions for anyone or anything out there.
The records contain sounds and images of Earth as well as 90 minutes of music. The late astronomer Carl Sagan led the committee that chose Bach, Beethoven, Mozart and Stravinsky pieces, along with modern and Indigenous selections.
Among those skipped was Johann Strauss II, whose “Blue Danube” graced Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 sci-fi opus “2001: A Space Odyssey.”
The tourist board in Vienna, where Strauss was born on Oct. 25, 1825, said it aims to correct this “cosmic mistake” by sending the “the most famous of all waltzes” to its destined home among the stars.
ESA’s big radio antenna in Spain, part of the space agency’s deep-space network, will do the honors. The dish will be pointed in the direction of Voyager 1 so the “Blue Danube” heads that way.
“Music connects us all through time and space in a very particular way,” ESA’s director general Josef Aschbacher said in a statement. “The European Space Agency is pleased to share the stage with Johann Strauss II and open the imaginations of future space scientists and explorers who may one day journey to the anthem of space.”