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Letters: Route 66 series neglects to capture the beauty along the road in New Mexico
Letters: Route 66 series neglects to capture the beauty along the road in New Mexico

Chicago Tribune

time14 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Chicago Tribune

Letters: Route 66 series neglects to capture the beauty along the road in New Mexico

Regarding the Tribune series 'One Century, One Road': I am a fan of Route 66. However, I was disappointed by the description of Route 66 through Albuquerque, New Mexico ('The route meets modern-day reality in Albuquerque,' June 22). The discussion focuses on the unhoused people along Route 66. The report misses the portions (Central Avenue) going through the University of New Mexico campus, downtown Albuquerque and historic sites and the part that parallels the Rio Grande to Santa Fe. Let's not forget the great natural beauty of New Mexico and the wonderful restaurants, such as The Frontier near the university (the setting of some Tony Hillerman books) and Route 66 Diner for some serious diner food including chocolate malt, mile-high lemon meringue pie and patty melts. There is a reason New Mexico is called 'The Land of Enchantment.'I am so disappointed that the Tribune so obviously politicized its series on Route 66 with this entry on June 22, 'Feeling less at home at an Oklahoma protest.' It turns an otherwise so interesting and meaningful series of stories, dear to me from my family's road trips in the 1960s to Arizona and beyond, into a biased article. I will not continue to read the series in future I address letter writer Joanna Summa's preposterous reason ('Moral code is missing,' June 22) for trying to Christianize public schools? In a nutshell, her letter says that some people support a mentally disturbed individual who is accused of murder, so we need to hang a religious document in public schools so kids will learn not to kill. Presumably, it follows that if this individual and his equally disturbed followers had seen the commandments on their second grade classroom wall, things would have been different. Does she really not think that the vast majority of children know they aren't supposed to kill anybody? If so, then she is supposing an utter failure in parenting. This is the kind of thing a child learns at home from the very beginning and, if in a churchgoing family, probably in church services. Hanging Christian propaganda in classrooms is not going to help at all. This is the same shtick the religious right has tried for years to turn our public schools into Christian indoctrination centers, completely contrary to our Anne, in his op-ed 'Ending LGBTQ+ youth support for the 988 hotline puts Chicago teens at risk' (June 25), shows strong wisdom and maturity beyond his years as he advocates for teens in genuine need of this hotline service. These teens are in need of being met where they are, and Anne states the heart of the issue in making the point that 'removing a tailored option doesn't level the playing field — it erases it.' To keep the 'Press 3' option would mean not just the teens keeping their voice but also those who are trained, able and willing to be there for them and offer the genuine understanding, empathy and insight that is needed. I ask that those in charge of the decision-making keep this option for those who need it; they, too, would be on the side of York City just had an election using ranked choice voting. I've been reading a lot about how so many people would like that system to be used here. Be careful what you wish for. I'm old enough to remember when Harold Washington became the first Black mayor of Chicago. He would not have been elected if we had ranked choice voting. Jane Byrne and Richard M. Daley split the white vote in the Democratic primary, and their voters would have picked the other white candidate if there had been ranked his op-ed 'Northwestern needs better leadership to fight back against Donald Trump' (June 24), professor Luis A. Nunes Amaral writes: 'Graduate workers received a salary raise of approximately 25%. Federal grants would have helped absorb the bulk of those costs — meaning that the (university's) financial concerns arise not from the raise but from the actions of the (Donald) Trump administration.' How nice it must be for raises at a university to be paid for by someone else. As onetime British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said: 'The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money.' How obtuse it is to use an example that proves the opposite of the author's point. 'Of course, raises don't increase costs,' this professor appears to think. He should not be allowed within 300 feet of students or closing of the Gale Street Inn and the demise of many other restaurants due to staffing shortages reveal how important immigration is to our nation's economic stability. There are estimates that immigrants added about 5 million workers from 2020 to 2024, which makes it clear that our native labor force cannot make up for worker shortages if U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement continues its zealous quest to track down all immigrants, including those who are law-abiding. Most immigrants, whether or not here legally, are not criminals. They are responsible for much of our economic growth, and they pay taxes. In addition to restaurants, their labor is extremely important in agriculture, service industries, day care, meatpacking, construction, hospitality, health care and home care. Even if native-born Americans were willing to handpick strawberries and tomatoes and butcher animals in meatpacking plants, there are simply not enough of them to do the work that is needed. Those who support and cheer every time ICE instills fear or conducts a raid should not complain when their favorite eatery closes. Or when scarcity occurs and prices skyrocket due to labor shortages in vital economic sectors.

Just 6 days left — ready for some unfiltered AI truths at TechCrunch Sessions: AI?
Just 6 days left — ready for some unfiltered AI truths at TechCrunch Sessions: AI?

Yahoo

time30-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Just 6 days left — ready for some unfiltered AI truths at TechCrunch Sessions: AI?

June 5 is almost here — bringing real, unfiltered AI conversations… and higher ticket prices. Lock in your savings now. Register now to save $300 on your TechCrunch Sessions: AI pass — and get 50% off for your +1. Don't wait for rates to spike when event doors open. Join us at UC Berkeley's Zellerbach Hall — the one-day epicenter for next-gen AI insights, big questions, and actionable ideas from the builders, thinkers, and investors shaping the future. The Frontier of AI: Fireside with Anthropic's Jared Kaplan From Seed to Series C: What VCs Want from AI Founders How Founders Can Build on Existing Foundation Models Launching Against the Giants: Winning Against Incumbents Hard Talk on AI Ethics & Safety Explore the full agenda here. Main stage and breakout sessions are packed with tactical insight and bold vision from leaders like: Iliana Quinonez, Director, Customer Engineering Google Cloud Startups, Google Cloud Hao Sang, Startups Lead, OpenAI Jae Lee, CEO, Twelve Labs Kanu Gulati, Partner, Khosla Ventures Kordel France, Principal AI Engineer, Toyota Logan Kilpatrick, Senior Product Manager, DeepMind Oliver Cameron, CEO, Odyssey …and many more — see the full speaker list Whether you're pitching your AI startup, swapping ideas with fellow builders, or just getting started, networking at TC Sessions: AI is smarter — thanks to the Braindate app. Use the app to match on topics, meet face-to-face, and make meaningful connections with people who care about what you care about. And when the event's a wrap? The conversations keep flowing at Side Events all week long in Berkeley. This isn't another hype-filled AI event. It's where the noise drops out — and the real conversations begin. Only six days left to lock in your low ticket rate for TechCrunch Sessions: AI. Don't sit this one out — save $300 on your pass, and get 50% off for your +1. Register now before prices jump at the door, and be part of the conversations actually shaping the future of AI. Interested in a deeper discount? Participate in our AI trivia for a chance to purchase a ticket at $200 and receive a second ticket for free. This article originally appeared on TechCrunch at Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Everything You Might Have Missed From the Australian Fashion Week Resort 2026 Collections
Everything You Might Have Missed From the Australian Fashion Week Resort 2026 Collections

Vogue

time19-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Vogue

Everything You Might Have Missed From the Australian Fashion Week Resort 2026 Collections

Last November IMG announced that after about two decades, it would no longer be backing Australian Fashion Week, putting the event in limbo for a few months. In March, the Australian Fashion Council officially announced its return under its guidance, giving brands just a few months to prep their new collections. While this resulted in a shorter week (four days instead of five), and a slightly smaller number of designers on the schedule, the shows still managed to highlight the diversity of Sydney's fashion scene. One thing that the week does very well is hold space for designers at different stages in their careers. On the schedule this season were two group shows that focused on new (and new-ish) labels: The brand-new The Frontier featured designers like Courtney Zheng (who made her on-schedule debut this year) and Amy Lawrence (showing for the second time), along with more established brands like Esse and Common Hours; while the NewGen show, which has been going on since 1996, showcased a mix of art-y and commercial labels like Haluminous and Miimi & Jiinda. Vogue Australia also showcased the city's independent brands with its special Vogue Vanguard fashion show, which included seven designers who each showed two looks from their current collections. Scroll through to get a glimpse at the Australian Fashion Week scene—and catch up on the rest of the shows here. Liandra

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