'Heated Rivalry' star Hudson Williams wears Balenciaga to the Met Gala
- ANGELA WEISS
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'Heated Rivalry' star Hudson Williams wears Balenciaga to the Met Gala
ANGELA WEISSTags
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The Met Gala turned New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art into the world's most glamorous red carpet, with A-list actors, musicians, athletes, artists and designers coming together for charity -- and offering their best looks.
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World officials pushed Monday for faster action to reduce methane emissions from the fossil fuel sector, arguing it would both help slow climate change and boost energy security as the Middle East war chokes off supply.
- Report: 2025 third most violent year on record for American Jews
- Mizzou baseball game suspended in ninth inning due to immense fog
- Great Falls police investigate incident on 12th Street NW
- Larkins lands in Columbia as Mizzou volleyball looks to rebuild roster
- Pro-life org: Informed consent for abortion pill impossible without doctor visit
- Trump announces three-day ceasefire, prisoner swap between Russia, Ukraine
- WATCH: Let's Go Washington launching initiative to repeal income tax
- Court strikes tariff, Trump moves ahead with replacement
- Hay named to SEC All-Defensive Team
Report: 2025 third most violent year on record for American Jews
(The Center Square) – Last year was the third most violent year on record for American Jews, according to an analysis by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL).
Although antisemitic incidents of harassment and vandalism significantly decreased last year from record highs in 2023 and 2024, physical assaults against Jews were the highest on record since ADL began tracking antisemitic incidents in 1979.
The ADL tracks reports of criminal and noncriminal incidents of antisemitic harassment, vandalism of property, and assault targeting individuals or groups because of their Jewish identity.
Last year, 6,274 incidents of antisemitic harassment, vandalism and assault were reported, according to the data. That’s down from 9,354 incidents in 2024, The Center Square reported. While the 33% drop from 2024 is significant, ADL notes the number is still five times higher than it was 10 years ago.
Antisemitic incidents drastically increased nationwide after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas terrorist attacks against Israel. This was after antisemitic incidents were already at a historic high in 2022, with an 87% increase occurring in the southwest U.S., The Center Square reported. Incidents increased in 2023, breaking records. These records were again broken in 2024, the year with the highest incidents reported on record.
Physical assaults also slightly increased last year, up from 196 in 2024 and 203 in 2025.
Notably, three Jewish people were killed last year.
Incidents involving a deadly weapon also increased last year. Of the 32 reported, several made national news, including the Capital Jewish Museum shooting in Washington, D.C., where two Israeli Embassy staffers were shot to death. Another was in Colorado, where an Egyptian national threw Molotov cocktails into a crowd of people participating in a solidarity walk for hostages taken by Hamas. Another was the political assassination attempt of Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro by a perpetrator who set the governor’s house on fire while he and his family slept inside.
In seven of the 32 cases, victims were targeted because of their perceived support of Israel, the analysis states.
The majority of antisemitic incidents that occurred nationwide occurred in public areas, followed by Jewish institutions, colleges and universities and K-12 public schools, according to the data.
The greatest number of antisemitic incidents occurred in New York (1,160), California (817) and New Jersey (687), according to the data.
The 10 states where the greatest number of antisemitic incidents were reported were New York, California, New Jersey, Florida, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Illinois, Texas, Maryland and Colorado.
New York City reported the most antisemitic incidents of any city in the country of 860. Manhattan accounted for more than half of the incidents, 465; followed by 278 in Brooklyn.
More than half of antisemitic assaults reported in New York, 56%, were reported in Brooklyn; 60% of all assaults statewide targeted Orthodox Jews, according to the data.
Los Angeles County reported the most antisemitic incidents of any county in the country.
It also accounted for nearly half of all incidents reported, 398. Nearly all incidents reported in the county were in Los Angeles, 322.
In New Jersey, Bergen County accounted for 20% of incidents in the state, 139. The communities of Teaneck, Bergenfield and Englewood were the most targeted, according to the analysis. Incidents of vandalism and assault also increased in New Jersey over the year.
One key factor for a marked reduction in violence and antisemitic attacks on college campuses was due to the encampment movement being shut down, the report notes. The ADL doesn’t credit the Trump administration or Congress for shutting it down.
As riots began and college campuses were taken over by pro-Hamas supporters who attacked Israeli and Jewish students, President Donald Trump threatened to withhold federal funding until the universities and colleges changed their policies to protect Jewish students. Congress also held several hearings resulting in the deans of Ivy League colleges being forced to resign.
Mizzou baseball game suspended in ninth inning due to immense fog
A game between Mizzou baseball and Vanderbilt that was initially supposed to start at 6 p.m. did not see the first the first pitch tossed until the 8:55 p.m.
Due to immense fog at 12:10 a.m at Taylor Stadium, the game was not able to end in the ninth, and was suspended until Saturday at 4 p.m.
Weather delay after weather delay kept pushing the game back. Determined to get the game in on Friday night, Mizzou played in one of its latest start times in recent history.
Coming out of the rain, the offense initially had a slow night. As May 8 waned, the Tigers offense woke up for a late comeback attempt against Vanderbilt.
Four consecutive plate appearances brought home four runs with no outs in the eighth. A single by Blaize Ward and a double from Mateo Serna led off the inning, then Donovan Jordan was able to reach on an overthrown ball, scoring Ward on the play.
A double from Kaden Peer, then back-to-back bunt singles from Keegan Knutson and Eric Maisonet each brought in runs. Jase Woita earned a walk to load the bases and was followed by another walk to Kam Durnin.
Vanderbilt had officially blown a 6-1 lead and walked in the tying run.
This forced the Commodores to a pitching change. Ward, who began the inning, responded with an RBI groundout to put the Tigers in front 7-6.
But then Sam Rosand put two on in the top of the ninth with a chance to close things out. Braden Holcomb hit the ball as the clock struck midnight, but due to immense fog covering the field, no one was sure where it landed. Mizzou right fielder Donovan Jordan instantly put his hands up to signal a ground-rule double.
After a review, the umpires ruled it a ground-rule double to tie the game at 7-7, then suspended the game to be finished tomorrow at 4 p.m.
On the mound, Josh McDevitt did not shine the way he had been in recent games. Coming off back-to-back quality starts, McDevitt was not able to reach the trifecta. He went just five innings and allowed four runs to the Commodores.
Vanderbilt was relentless pushing traffic across the bases. It brought one home on an RBI groundout in the second and two RBI singles in the fourth. The outlier was the solo home run from Braden Holcomb in the fifth.
As they often have this season, the Tigers found themselves in a 4-0 hole that they would have to dig out of. The quest began with a double from Kam Durnin in the sixth and a single from Blaize Ward to push him across.
Mizzou followed the first run by loading the bases, but weren't able to capitalize. The Tigers stranded all three with a swinging strikeout from Keegan Knutson to end the sixth.
The Commodores got the run right back with another solo shot, this one a 407-foot homer from Korbin Reynolds in the seventh. It was his sixth of the season.
An RBI single followed quickly and brought in Vanderbilt's sixth run.
Once the Tigers finally broke into the Commodores bullpen, the offense was able to plate the six runs in the eighth.
After McDevitt's five innings, lefty reliever Dane Bjorn took over and pitched the sixth, seventh and eighth, allowing both aforementioned runs. Sam Rosand came in for the ninth, before the game was suspended.
Great Falls police investigate incident on 12th Street NW
GREAT FALLS, Mont. — Great Falls Police Department reported officers were investigating an incident in the 1000 block of 12th St. NW.
The department stated one person was taken into custody and there was no threat to nearby schools.
Police asked people who live in the area to follow directions from officers at the scene.
Larkins lands in Columbia as Mizzou volleyball looks to rebuild roster
Missouri volleyball continued to address a key offseason need Friday, adding transfer middle blocker Lauren Larkin from Utah State as coach Dawn Sullivan reshapes the Tigers’ front line following the graduation of two starters.
Larkin, a 6-foot-2 redshirt sophomore from St. George, Utah, becomes Mizzou’s second transfer addition of the 2026 cycle, joining former Evansville libero Ainoah Cruz. Sullivan announced the signing Friday as the Tigers continue rebuilding a roster that lost starting middle blockers Regan Haith and Tyrah Ariail after the 2025 season.
With both Haith and Ariail gone, Larkin appears poised to compete for, and potentially claim, a starting middle blocker role immediately. The Tigers currently have limited experience at the position, with redshirt-sophomore Tia Phinezy and freshman Millie Bauer the only other middle blockers listed on the roster.
The addition gives Missouri an experienced option in the middle after Larkin helped Utah State reach the second round of the NCAA Tournament last season. She emerged as one of the Aggies’ top defensive contributors in 2025, leading the team with 100 total blocks while averaging 1.27 kills per set and hitting .408. Her 76 blocks in Mountain West play ranked 10th in the conference.
Larkin also played a key role during Utah State’s postseason run. In the Aggies’ five-set NCAA Tournament first-round victory over Tennessee, she posted eight kills, two blocks and three digs as Utah State advanced to the second round.
Her defensive presence became her calling card during her redshirt-freshman campaign. Larkin earned Mountain West Freshman of the Week honors three times and was named Defensive Player of the Week once. She secured the defensive award after recording 13 blocks across victories against Colorado State and Wyoming, averaging 1.86 blocks per set while also contributing offensively.
For Sullivan, the move addresses a significant question mark entering the 2026 season. Missouri’s middle blocker room lacked proven collegiate production following the departures of Haith and Ariail, who helped anchor the Tigers at the net over the past several seasons.
Larkin’s experience at a high-major level and production as a blocker could make her an early favorite to start in the middle. Her ability to defend the net may also help stabilize a Missouri defense that will feature several new faces after a transitional 2025 campaign.
Missouri has leaned heavily into roster additions this offseason after coming off the first losing season of Sullivan’s tenure. The Tigers reached the NCAA Tournament in each of Sullivan’s first two seasons, advancing to the second round in 2023 and the Sweet 16 in 2024, before finishing 17-15 in 2025 and missing the postseason.
Now, Missouri hopes Larkin can bring that same production to Columbia as the Tigers attempt to reestablish themselves as an NCAA Tournament contender in 2026.
Pro-life org: Informed consent for abortion pill impossible without doctor visit
(The Center Square) – The nation’s largest pro-life organization filed an amicus brief Thursday in the U.S. Supreme Court asserting the impossibility of ensuring informed consent without an in-person doctor’s visit as it relates to the abortion pill, since anyone can order the drug online.
President of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America Marjorie Dannenfelser told The Center Square that her organization’s brief “highlights how impossible it is to ensure the right to informed consent in this unregulated Wild West environment” surrounding the abortion pill.
Dannenfelser said that “anyone – male or female, adult or minor, pregnant or not pregnant – can order these inherently dangerous drugs online, anonymously, have them shipped anywhere in the country, and even stockpile them.”
“For years, the abortion industry has planned on mail-order abortion drugs to do an end run around pro-life protections as a backstop when Roe v. Wade was reversed,” Dannenefelser said.
“The Biden-Harris administration was all too happy to abet them, using Covid as an excuse to get rid of basic safeguards like in-person doctor visits,” Dannenfelser said.
“Abortion drugs are the sole product of the manufacturers filing to block these safeguards from being reinstated, and they want to keep their profits rolling in,” Dannenfelser said.
“Never mind the harm that women like Rosalie Markezich and their babies suffer every day as a direct result of FDA policy that prevents states like Louisiana from enforcing pro-life laws,” Dannenefelser said.
In its amicus brief, SBA asks the Supreme Court “to reject abortion drug manufacturers’ bid to block in-person medical evaluations from being reinstated pending appeal,” according to an SBA release.
The brief states that informed consent cannot be obtained “without in-person care to adequately screen for coercion and potential severe health risks to individual women,” the release said.
“Two separate, independent studies also found more than 1 in 10 women experience at least one severe adverse event, such as hemorrhaging, infection or sepsis,” the release said, and that “women have died after taking abortion drugs.”
SBA said in the release that “peer-reviewed research found three quarters of ER visits within 30 days after abortion drug use were coded as severe or critical.”
SBA stated that “public opinion is firmly on the side of commonsense health and safety standards” and that “diverse polls consistently find Americans strongly oppose mail-order abortion drugs and want to reinstate in-person medical evaluations, including majorities of Independents, Democrats and liberal voters.”
As The Center Square has reported, various polls have shown that 70% of American voters think a doctor’s visit for the abortion pill should be required, with one of the polls having surveyed a majority of pro-choice voters.
“By failing to require in-person contact between prescribers and their patients, FDA’s 2023 REMS cannot ensure that vulnerable women and adolescents are protected from coercive partners and predators – further eroding the ability of women to make independent, voluntary decisions to use mifepristone,” SBA’s brief stated.
Dannenfelser told The Center Square: “We’re proud to stand with 23 states, as well as 113 members of Congress spearheaded by Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Republican leaders in the House and Senate, in asking the Supreme Court to deny the abortion industry petition and ensure that the cases of coercion, violent abuse, poisoning, severe injury and death we’ve documented do not continue to grow while this case continues."
Trump announces three-day ceasefire, prisoner swap between Russia, Ukraine
(The Center Square) – More than four years into the war between Russia and Ukraine, President Donald Trump has announced a three-day ceasefire between the two countries.
The ceasefire will go into effect May 9-11, marking the anniversary of Victory in Europe Day during World War II.
“This ceasefire will include suspension of all kinetic activity, and also a prison swap of 1,000 prisoners from each country. This request was made directly by me, and I very much appreciate [the] agreement by President Vladimir Putin and President Volodymyr Zelenskyy,” Trump posted on Truth Social Friday afternoon. “Hopefully, it is the beginning of the end of a very long, deadly, and hard fought war. Talks are continuing on ending this major conflict, the biggest since World War II, and we are getting closer and closer every day.”
It is estimated that the number of casualties (killed, injured and missing) on both sides could be as high as two million since the war began in February 2022, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Since taking office for the second time, Trump has worked to bring an end to the deadly war, meeting with Putin and Zelenskyy, the latter multiple times.
The president has expressed his frustration over ending the war, with Putin pulling away each time Trump believed a deal could be reached between the two Eastern European countries.
WATCH: Let's Go Washington launching initiative to repeal income tax
(The Center Square) - Let’s Go Washington on Friday announced they have received their initiative ballot titles from the office of Washington State Attorney General Nick Brown, as the group prepares to launch a signature gathering campaign aimed at repealing the new income tax.
ESSB 6346, signed into law by Governor Bob Ferguson just over a month ago, applies a 9.9% tax on income above one million dollars or combined household income above that threshold starting with 2028 earnings.
On April 10, LGW filed close to a dozen initiatives aimed at repealing the so-called "millionaire’s tax." Each of those was given a title by the AG’s office on Thursday, so now it’s a matter of deciding which to move forward.
“We expect Pacifica Law to play their political games and challenge the titles at the last moment, so we’re keeping our options open," LGW’s Hallie Balch told The Center Square on Friday.
"But people can preregister for sheets to receive the petitions as quickly as possible when we have the title we’re going with."
On May 4, the Washington State Supreme Court denied LGW’s appeal of a ruling from Secretary of State Steve Hobbs who rejected the group’s referendum attempt.
Hobbs cited the fact state lawmakers attached a “necessity clause” to the bill, stating that despite the fact the tax doesn’t start until first payments begin in 2029, it is necessary for the immediate support of state government.
That left LGW with mounting an initiative campaign and taking the issue directly to voters or the legislature, even as a legal challenge proceeds, which could take well over a year to play out.
LGW Spokesman Darren Littell told The Center Square they have been overwhelmed with people contacting them about wanting to help gather signatures for an initiative to repeal the income tax.
“It’s truly unprecedented every day when we go out and talk to people," he said.
"We hear more and more stories of folks that are concerned that this is going to affect them, and that this tax is going to be expanded, and they already have plans to move out,” Littell said.
“They’re asking how can I help? How can I sign up? What can I do? We’ve got thousands of people who have signed up to receive petitions, which is more than we've ever had before in any of the other initiative signing campaigns we've done. So, we're pretty excited about the enthusiasm out there, and we're going to continue to build on it.”
Washington voters have rejected an income tax 10 times before, and the Washington State Supreme Court has also repeatedly ruled that income is “property”, such that it must be taxed uniformly, precluding a tax on only high-income earners.
Gov. Ferguson and Senator Jamie Pedersen, the sponsor of the income tax bill, have repeatedly stated that the people should have the right to vote on the income tax, however the legislation was crafted to preclude voters from a referendum.
In emails obtained exclusively by The Center Square, Sen. Pedersen coordinated with the AG's office to craft a bill with a “necessity clause”, such that it would not be subject to a voter referendum.
The AG’s office maintains there was nothing unusual about the coordination as lawmakers often seek legal advice on legislation.
Initiative decisions
“We are still trying to decide 100% between doing initiatives to legislature versus to the people," said Littell.
"But by getting back the ballot titles, we're going to be able to start collecting signatures here very, very soon, and we're excited about that,” he added.
If the organization runs an initiative to the voters, instead of the legislature, lawmakers couldn’t touch the issue for at least two years.
“If it goes to the people and is voted on in the fall, then it would be locked in for two years where nobody could touch it or do anything with it," Littell said.
"If it goes to the legislature, they would have to consider it, but as we've seen recently, they don't seem to hold a lot of reverence for the Constitution, so they could do whatever they want with it, apparently."
"And if they don't do anything with it, then it would go to the ballot in 2027,” she said.
Invest in WA Now, one of the main advocacy groups behind the income tax emailed The Center Square upon learning that LGW had secured ballot titles for its repeal effort.
“Polling shows Washingtonians overwhelmingly support fixing Washington’s upside down tax code, with 60% supporting the Millionaires Tax to fund education and health care," said the email from Invest in WA Now.
"This data is backed up by the landslide rejection of Brian Heywood’s I-2109, with 64% of voters choosing to maintain the capital gains tax on extraordinary profits in 2024 and by an independent poll showing 61% support the Millionaires Tax.”
Littell said Invest in WA Now wants to convince people that the income tax will only apply to the super-rich and be a benefit to most Washingtonians, but he suggests people see through that.
For an initiative to qualify for the November ballot, Let’s Go Washington would need to gather over 300,000 signatures by July 2. The group has said they would seek to gather closer to 400,000 signatures, to help ensure success following potential signature or petition challenges.
Had the group been allowed to proceed with a referendum to recall the tax, it would only have needed half the number of signatures to put the issue to voters.
Court strikes tariff, Trump moves ahead with replacement
(The Center Square) – President Donald Trump's administration signaled Friday it intends to appeal a federal trade court's ruling striking down his 10% global tariff as unlawful, while simultaneously pressing ahead with a separate round of import taxes that could take effect as early as July.
American businesses have paid $166 billion in tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Those tariffs, which the Supreme Court struck down in February, are in the process of being refunded to the importers who paid them. An additional $8 billion was collected from the Section 122 tariff, which was struck down Thursday, according to We Pay the Tariffs, a coalition of nearly 1,200 small businesses that opposes tariffs. The Yale Budget Lab, a nonpartisan policy research center, estimated the Section 122 tariffs would cost the average U.S. household between $600 and $800 per year.
A Federal Reserve Bank of New York report, the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, and a Duke University study all concluded that Americans are paying nearly the entire cost of tariffs, not foreign countries as the White House has maintained.
"President Trump has lawfully used the tariff authorities granted to him by Congress to address our balance of payments crisis," White House spokesman Kush Desai told The Center Square on Friday. "The Trump administration is reviewing legal options and maintains confidence in ultimately prevailing."
Trump's U.S. Trade Representative, Jamieson Greer, said Friday the administration expects to prevail on appeal.
"They essentially said that Congress passed a law that can't be used, which we all know in the legal community, that's not how law should be interpreted," Greer told Fox Business Network's "Mornings with Maria" show. "They should be interpreted to be used. So we're confident that on appeal we'll be successful."
The Court of International Trade's decision on Thursday only applied to two small businesses and the state of Washington. That means the government is still collecting the tariffs on all other importers.
Michael Lowell, partner and chair at Reed Smith's Global Regulatory Enforcement Group, said the narrow ruling leaves the next move to the administration.
"Without a universal injunction, the ball's really in the government's court on what comes next," he said. "It's almost certainly an appeal to the Federal Circuit court of appeals."
The lone dissenting judge, Timothy Stanceu, argued the majority invented a measurement standard and warned that under the majority's logic, a federal statistics agency could repeal a law simply by changing how it measures economic data.
Phillip Magness, a senior fellow at the Independent Institute, said Trump's path ahead is "becoming increasingly difficult."
"The Supreme Court has already ruled against the administration in the IEEPA tariff case, and the Court of International Trade is showing growing impatience over delays in refunding unlawfully collected tariffs," he said.
While the expected appeal plays out in the courts, the administration has been building its next tariff vehicle. Greer's office launched Section 301 investigations on March 11 against 16 economies, including most of the United States' top trade partners. Hearings on those investigations ended Friday. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in April the new tariff regime could go into effect in July.
Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 allows the president to impose tariffs after the U.S. Trade Representative investigates and finds that a foreign country's trade practices are unfair or discriminatory. Greer cited what he called structural overproduction that displaces U.S. manufacturing.
Critics say the administration is stretching the law again. Magness said in March that Greer was offering "a tautological redefinition" of unfair trade practices that "basically treats any exportation of any good to the United States for almost any reason as if it is evidence of an 'unfair' trading practice."
Alfredo Carrillo Obregon, a policy analyst at the Cato Institute, said the Section 122 tariffs "were always meant to be a bridge" to future tariff actions.
"We can expect more tariff announcements in the coming months," he said.
That's something small businesses can't afford, said Dan Anthony, executive director of We Pay the Tariffs.
"Small businesses cannot afford a repeat of the IEEPA refund headaches now playing out," he said.
With midterm elections approaching, public skepticism of the administration's tariff agenda is growing. The Center Square Voters' Voice Poll conducted in March found that 42% of voters believe American consumers primarily pay for tariffs, while just 12% say foreign countries bear the burden.
Magness previously told The Center Square the political costs may become more visible as the Midterm election nears.
"Not all have made the connection yet that tariffs are tantamount to a tax increase on affected goods," he said. "I suspect this connection will become more pronounced as the election approaches."
Hay named to SEC All-Defensive Team
Mizzou first baseman Abby Hay was selected to the SEC All-Defensive Team on Friday.
It is Hay’s first time on the All-Defensive Team and it marks the first time a Mizzou first baseman has been selected to the list. It is also her second postseason All-SEC recognition, having been named to the All-SEC Second Team in 2024.
Hay posted a perfect 1.000 fielding percentage this season, committing zero errors in 57 starts. She ranked third in the SEC in putouts with 349, and led all SEC first basemen with zero errors, adding four double plays and three assists.
The Columbia product and Rock Bridge alum was equally productive at the plate, leading the team with a .333 batting average while adding nine home runs, 33 RBI, nine doubles, a .419 on-base percentage and a .564 slugging percentage.
Her most notable moment of the season came against rival Kansas. Hay hit the game-winning two-run home run in the seventh inning against Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas. She also collected her 100th career hit on a home run against No. 8/9 Tennessee that tied the game in the sixth inning of Missouri's senior day win.
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