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New York Times
15 hours ago
- New York Times
Venezuelan Youth Baseball Team, Denied Visas, Is Left Out of Tournament in U.S.
After a team of talented teenage baseball players from Venezuela swept through a qualifying tournament in Mexico last month, it seemed they were bound for the Senior League World Series in the United States, ready to take on some of the world's best youth ball clubs. But when the championship round begins in Easley, S.C., on Saturday, the undefeated squad from Venezuela will not be there. The team, Cacique Mara, has been denied the visas necessary to attend, Little League Baseball International said Friday. A team from Mexico will take its place. The Senior League World Series invites 12 teams of players ages 13 to 16 — older than those in the higher-profile Little League World Series, which is for ages 10 to 12 and is a staple of ESPN's daytime summer programming. Cacique Mara said it learned a week ago that the visas had been denied. Its players, raised in one of the world's most unstable countries, are demoralized, the team's president said. The State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday evening, but it appeared that Cacique Mara had been swept up in the severe travel restrictions that President Trump has placed on more than a dozen countries. The administration allows exceptions for athletes and coaches traveling for major athletic competitions such as the World Cup and the Olympics. Cacique Mara said on social media that players and coaches from the team sat for interviews on July 14 to try to secure visas, but were denied by an immigration officer. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Yahoo
15 hours ago
- Yahoo
Report ranks New Mexico 10th in traffic fatalities nationwide for 2024
NEW MEXICO (KRQE) – A new report said New Mexico was among the worst states for deadly crashes last year. According to the nonprofit transportation research firm, Trip, New Mexico saw 1.43 traffic fatalities per 100 million vehicle miles per hour. That's the 10th highest rate in the country, and above the national rate of 1.20. Albuquerque non-profit dealing with funding cuts lays off some staff The trip report found traffic deaths nationally fell for the third straight year last year, but it is still significantly higher than a decade ago. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Condé Nast Traveler
21 hours ago
- Condé Nast Traveler
The Best Places to Go in 2025: 16 Editor-Approved Hotels Worth the Trip
Let's be honest: we're living in the golden age of trip planning. Flight alerts ping during meetings, group chats spiral into dream itineraries, and somehow your saved folder is now 80% hotel pools. Every year, our team of editors and writers comb through the world's cities, islands, valleys, and coasts to pull together a list of places we can't stop thinking about—and believe you shouldn't either. This year's Best Places to Go list reflects what's exciting now: bold new openings, cultural shifts, once-in-a-decade events, and destination-defining activities. In addition to the locations, we've tacked on accommodations that aren't just photogenic, but also have a story to tell—and an exciting buzz you can feel when you get there; the kind of hotels that stay with you long after you unpack. Whether you're chasing a solar eclipse over Mexico, sleeping in a rewilded lodge in Uganda, or rediscovering a city that's quietly reinventing itself—2025 is all about travel that moves you. Below, 16 editor-approved hotels we think you should book in 2025.