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Monday, September 8, 2025

Keep This Stock on Your Watchlist

They're a private company, but the same firms that backed Uber, eBay, and Venmo already invested in Pacaso. They've even reserved their Nasdaq stock ticker.
 
SystemTrading
Keep This Stock on Your Watchlist - Ad

They're a private company, but the same firms that backed Uber, eBay, and Venmo already invested in Pacaso. They've even reserved their Nasdaq stock ticker. Invest in Pacaso before the opportunity ends September 18
Powerball Jackpot Soars To $1.1 Billion After No Winning Tickets, 5th Largest In History

The Powerball jackpot has reached $1.1 billion after no winner in Saturday's drawing, with nine tickets earning $1 million. Continue Reading ➔
Trump Exec Order to Help Restore Wealth for American Citizens? - Ad

Thanks to President Trump's Executive Order 14179, a brief "AI Wealth Window" is opening now. Genius investor James Altucher has released 3 AI wealth-building strategies to take advantage of Trump's genius Executive Order 14179. James believes you could see $10,000 grow to $1 MILLION or more over the next few years. Everything you need to know is here now
Robert Kiyosaki Says Most Poor People Are Poor Because They Break These Two Laws of Money

Robert Kiyosaki has spent decades exploring why some people build wealth while others struggle financially. Continue Reading ➔
Gen Z Banking On Deals And Dupes For 2025 Holiday Season As The Young Plan Steep Spending Cuts

Holiday shoppers plan to spend $1,552 on gifts, travel, and entertainment, 5% less than last year, with Gen Z cutting spending by 23%. PwC survey shows price-conscious mindset and impact of tariffs on consumer behavior. Continue Reading ➔
What's inside Elon's building in Memphis will shock you - Ad

Inside Elon Musk's Memphis site lies a supercomputer built to power the world's first superhuman AI. It could make Elon a trillionaire - and new millionaires, too. With just $500, you could get in before the September 1st funding window closes. Continue Reading ➔
A downturn in international travel to the U.S. may last beyond summer, experts warn

LAS VEGAS (AP) — For a few hopeful weeks this summer, a bright billboard on the major highway linking Toronto to New York greeted Canadian drivers with a simple message: "Buffalo Loves Canada.” Continue Reading ➔
Mortgage Fraud Is Now A Trump-Era Flashpoint—Here's Everything You Need To Know

Given the recent high-profile cases, Benzinga decided to take a closer look at what mortgage fraud is and how it can be committed. Continue Reading ➔
Carlo Acutis, the saint next door: A teen computer whiz becomes a millennial saint

CHICAGO (AP) — At a Catholic school in Pope Leo XIV’s hometown, fifth graders read comic books about Carlo Acutis' life entitled “Digital Disciple.” They draw pictures of what the teenage Italian computer whiz might have had as his cellphone wallpaper. They discuss the miracles that allegedly occurred thanks to Acutis' intercession. Continue Reading ➔
Bondi Fires DOJ Employee Over Alleged Gesture Toward Guard Troops

AG Pam Bondi fired a DOJ paralegal for allegedly flipping off National Guard troops in D.C., underscoring tensions around Trump's federal crime crackdown. Continue Reading ➔
The Tesla Shock Nobody Sees Coming - Ad

While headlines scream "Tesla is doomed"...Jeff Brown has uncovered a revolutionary AI breakthrough buried inside Tesla's labs. One that is helping AI escape from our computer screens and manifest itself here in the real world all while creating a 25,000% growth market explosion starting as early as October 23rd. See the Tesla shock that could blindside everyone.
US media quickly forced to revisit a thorny question: How should a president's health be covered?

Early in Donald Trump's Tuesday, Fox News' Peter Doocy asked a question that surely baffled people who avoided social media for Labor Day. Continue Reading ➔
ICE Raids Hyundai-LG Georgia Battery Plant In Record 475-Worker Sweep, South Korea Slams US Over 'Unfair' Crackdown

HSI's record-breaking raid at a Hyundai-LG battery plant in Georgia detains 475 workers, straining US-South Korea ties and raising compliance concerns in the EV sector. Continue Reading ➔
Mystery surrounds $1.2 billion Army contract to build huge detention tent camp in Texas desert

WASHINGTON (AP) — When last month awarded a contract worth up to $1.2 billion to build and operate what it says will become , it didn’t turn to a large government contractor or even a firm that specializes in private prisons. Continue Reading ➔
Toyota announces $792m expansion of Czech plant to build new electric car

PRAGUE (AP) — Japanese carmaker said on Wednesday it will invest 680 million euros ($792 million) on a new production line in the Czech Republic to make a . Continue Reading ➔
Sikh truckers see spike in anti-immigrant vitriol after deadly Florida crash

Members of California’s Sikh trucking community say a deadly crash involving one of its own, which triggered heated national , has led to a spike in anti-Sikh rhetoric. Continue Reading ➔
Putin says foreign troops deployed to Ukraine before any peace deal would be 'legitimate targets'

Russian President said Friday that any foreign troops deployed to Ukraine before a peace agreement has been signed would be considered “legitimate targets” by Moscow's forces. Continue Reading ➔

Friday, October 4, 2024

Race/Related: Aid is slow to reach some Latino areas in storm-hit North Carolina

Language and other barriers are hobbling the flow of assistance to hard-hit communities.
Race/Related

October 4, 2024

Maria Navarro, left, and Maria Salgado in the Alan Campos Mobile Home Park, where they live Juan Diego Reyes for The New York Times

Language and other barriers are hobbling the flow of assistance to hard-hit communities

As soon as Maria Salgado spotted a pickup truck loaded with supplies pulling into the North Carolina mobile home park where she lives, she sprang into action. She waved it down and began translating for the group of Spanish speakers gathering behind her.

"Quién ocupa agua?" Ms. Salgado called out. "Pañales para los bebés?" ("Who needs water? Diapers for the babies?")

Inside the truck were a family from Georgia who had raced to North Carolina as soon as they learned of the devastation left by Hurricane Helene. They took their cues from Ms. Salgado, and tried to communicate with the residents in broken Spanish. "Agua, aquí," one man said, handing out bottled water to eager families.

A close-knit group of immigrants from Mexico and Central America live at the mobile home park, known as Alan Campos. Many residents of the park, on a side road between the hard-hit towns of Black Mountain and Swannanoa, barely escaped with their lives after torrents of water came rushing into their trailers.

A large group of families, many with young children, remain without flushing water or reliable cellphone service on Thursday, and electricity remains spotty. Those whose homes are still intact have taken other families in, with one three-bedroom trailer now housing about 12 people.

"We don't have a lot right now," Ms. Salgado said, "but we have each other."

Article Image

Nicole Craine for The New York Times

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EDITORS' PICKS

We publish many articles that touch on race. Here are a few you shouldn't miss.

Kamala Harris claps her hands and smiles while wearing a black suit and a light blue shirt.

Erin Schaff/The New York Times

Harris's Historic Run Could Outpace Hollywood's Oval Offices

Black and Asian American women have rarely, if at all, played the U.S. commander in chief in television and film. As Kamala Harris makes her presidential bid, Hollywood lags behind.

By Sara Ruberg

A production image shows a man in a black suit jacket and a white collared shirt standing in front of a darkened screen with text of a news article. The headline reads:

Sara Krulwich/The New York Times

Critic's Pick

Review: Daniel Dae Kim as a Playwright Unmasked in 'Yellow Face'

David Henry Hwang's 2007 play, now in a fine Broadway revival, is a pointed critique of identity, masquerading as a mockumentary.

By Jesse Green

At the Brooklyn Museum, a gallery with a flowered wallpaper strip from a textile design, a painting of the Virgin, a painting of a woman sniffing a flower enclosed in a white circle and a blue square and a study of flower petals.

George Etheredge for The New York Times

Critic's Notebook

Brooklyn Museum at 200 Celebrates Beauty and Art's Hidden History

A new American wing draws on feminist and racially and ethnically diverse thinking to spotlight 400 exceptional works in its collection.

By Holland Cotter

In a black-and-white photo smoke from buildings on fire billows into the air.

Getty Images

Justice Department to Analyze the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre

Federal civil rights investigators will review the events surrounding the race massacre for a public report under the department's Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crime Act.

By Audra D. S. Burch

Article Image

Nina Westervelt for The New York Times

Out & about

Alicia Keys, LaChanze and Kristin Chenoweth Gather to Support Black Theater

The stage stars were among more than 600 people who turned out for an evening of dinner and performances to benefit Black Theater United.

By Sarah Bahr

Ozzie Virgil Sr., wearing a Pirates uniform, kneels on a baseball field with his left arm and a bat resting on his left knee.

Louis Requena/MLB, via Getty Images

Ozzie Virgil Sr., First Dominican-Born Major Leaguer, Dies at 92

An outstanding fielder though never an All-Star, he broke that barrier with the Giants in 1956 and later became the Tigers' first Black player.

By Richard Goldstein

A black and white portrait of a man with dreads wearing a T-shirt and casual pants. His cheeks are puffed out, and he makes cactus arms. He's in front of a stone building.

Jussi Puikkonen for The New York Times

Dancing in an Emotional Washing Machine

Botis Seva, a rising British choreographer who mixes hip-hop and contemporary dance, brings his Olivier Award-winning "BLKDOG" to New York.

By Brian Seibert

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