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WNBA probing 'hateful' comments in Clark-Reese game
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Pro-EU centrist wins tense Romania presidential vote rerun
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Wes Anderson and his A-list cast dazzle at Cannes
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Sinner says Rome final loss 'good lesson' for French Open
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Global chip giants converge on Taiwan for Computex
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Pro-EU mayor narrowly ahead in Polish election: exit poll
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Israel announces 'extensive ground operations' in ramped-up Gaza campaign
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Brazilian Ribeiro strikes twice as Sundowns finish with victory
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Villarreal beat Barca to secure Champions League place
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Nuno dedicates Forest win to Awoniyi after horror injury
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Arteta vows to end Arsenal trophy drought
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IPL action resumes with Gujarat, Punjab and Bengaluru into playoffs
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Chelsea coach glad of Williams and Ohanian's support after Women's FA Cup triumph
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FBI identifies California bomb suspect as 'nihilistic' 25-year-old
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No.1 Scheffler leads by three as PGA final-round drama begins
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Iran says to keep enriching uranium, even with a deal
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Phillies reliever Alvarado suspended for positive test
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Sudharsan and Gill power Gujarat into IPL playoffs
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Austria's Eurovision winner receives hero's welcome
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New 'Final Destination' film slays N.America box office
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Control tower breakdown brings flight chaos to Paris airport
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Kenyan presidential candidate and lawyer deported from Tanzania
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Care 'incredibly blessed' as Harlequins edge Exeter in his final home game
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Arsenal secure Champions League place, Everton win on Goodison farewell
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Hungarians protest 'authoritarian' bill against NGOs, media
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McLaren's Norris blames poor qualifying after Imola second
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Wes Anderson and his A-list army dazzle at Cannes
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Arsenal sink Newcastle to seal Champions League berth
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Alcaraz downs Sinner to win Italian Open in Roland Garros warning
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Israel army announces 'extensive ground operations' in ramped-up Gaza campaign
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Vardy signs off in style with 200th Leicester goal
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Hamilton revels in Ferrari's 'sea of red' tifosi
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At least 17 killed in India building fire
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Portugal holds snap election with centre-right leading polls
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Everton win on Goodison farewell, Vardy makes it 200 in Leicester swansong
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US probes Mexican ship's deadly New York bridge collision
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Van Aert wins at last as Del Toro charges to Giro lead
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Verstappen 'incredibly proud' after Imola masterclass
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French veteran Ogier wins Rally of Portugal
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Nicole Kidman laments 'incredibly low' number of women-directed films
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Chelsea win Women's FA Cup to complete English treble in Bompastor's first season
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Brilliant Verstappen wins Emilia Romagna Grand Prix
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Zelensky meets Vance as Russian drones pound Ukraine
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IPL returns to action with Punjab edging Rajasthan
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Ajax woe as PSV Eindhoven crowned Dutch champions
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Chelsea win Women's FA Cup to complete English treble
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Israel army announces 'extensive ground operations' under ramped-up Gaza campaign
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Pakistan FM to visit China on heels of conflict with India over Kashmir
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De Bruyne 'probably' won't feature for Man City at Club World Cup
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Everton beat Southampton in emotional farewell to Goodison

Wes Anderson and his A-list army dazzle at Cannes
US director Wes Anderson brought his latest A-list cast led by Benicio del Toro to the Cannes film festival on Sunday, ramping up the star power as the competition reaches the halfway mark.
Anderson's typically whimsical "The Phoenician Scheme", which also finds roles for Tom Hanks, Scarlett Johansson and Kate Winslet's daughter, Mia Threapleton, is in the running for the top prize at Cannes.
It tells the story of risk-taking and accident-prone European tycoon Zsa-zsa Korda, played by del Toro, a character loosely based on Anderson's Lebanese father-in-law.
"He was a completely different sort of person, but he was an engineer and quite alpha," the director told AFP.
"His relationship with my wife is probably the DNA of the movie. He told her one day, 'I need to tell you about how my business works because I won't live forever.'
But "the way he told her about his business was he opened a closet and started taking out shoeboxes and said, 'This is the project that we are doing in Saudi. This is the project we are doing in Gibraltar," Anderson added.
"She came home and she said, 'This is crazy.' So all of that went in the movie. Sorry," said the maker of such quirky hits as "Asteroid City", "The Grand Budapest Hotel" and "The Darjeeling Limited".
With Anderson's film always thick with stars, the film's red-carpet premiere was packed with stars, with Edward Norton, Julianne Moore, Benedict Cumberbatch and Oscar-winning director Guillermo del Toro also in town.
- Nigeria's big moment -
Fellow A-listers Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson were also on the Croisette promenade on Sunday, a day after the premiere of their in-competition film "Die, My Love" by Scottish director Lynne Ramsay.
Australia's Nicole Kidman picked up a Kering Women In Motion award, meanwhile, where she lamented the still "incredibly low" number of women directors in the movie business.
Sunday also saw the premiere of Nigeria's first film in an official slot at Cannes.
"My Father's Shadow", the debut feature of newcomer Akinola Davies is set during a 1993 coup, a pivotal moment in Nigeria's recent history, when the military annulled the election and General Sani Abacha eventually took power.
"Getting into competition for the first time ever shows that Nigerian cinema has come of age," Prince Baba Agba, a cultural advisor to Nigeria's President Bola Tinubu, told AFP.
Culture Minister Hannatu Musawa led the large and stylish Nigerian presence on the red carpet for the premiere.
D.Moore--AMWN