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- [[Los Angeles Times]]
- A push to rename holiday as ‘Farmworkers Day’
- MAINTENANCE WORKERS, above, cover up a mural honoring Cesar Chavez at Santa Ana College as Daniella Marcial, right, studies. The labor leader’s name is on many schools, streets and other public places.
- Iran’s attacks on fuel facilities stoke fears of escalating war
- Gulf nations say they may retaliate. Tehran’s strikes further imperil global energy supply.
- IRAN STRUCK the Ras Laffan liquefied natural gas facility, shown in early March, QatarEnergy said.
- UFW dealing with Chavez fallout
- Newsom leads Harris in presidential poll
- Screen-time battle in classrooms
- Parents are growing increasingly alarmed about schools’ reliance on devices for young students
- KATE BRODY said her son, 7, would ignore his body’s signals while using a tablet computer at school.
- Industrial chemicals taint all oceans
- A push to rename holiday as ‘Farmworkers Day’
- [[USA Today]]
- Sarah Bond believes gaming has power to connect us all
- Former Xbox CEO shapes future of play to be more inclusive
- Sarah Bond fondly remembers sitting next to her father playing King’s Quest II – solving puzzles, navigating mazes and unlocking doors – all in an effort to rescue the beautiful maiden, Princess Valanice, from captivity. ● At age 6, Bond had no idea where those mazes would take her, what was behind those doors in real life. How her video adventures in the land of Kolyma would land her in a front office at Xbox as the first Black woman to helm a major global gaming platform before stepping away from the company on Feb. 20. ● “I was completely a gamer growing up,” Bond, 47, told USA TODAY in January. “My dad was a massive gamer, so it was one of the things that we would do to spend time together. It was a big part of how we connected.”
- ABOVE: Sarah Bond, former president of Xbox at Microsoft, grew up gaming and later became a game changer in the industry.
- About the Women of the Year project
- USA TODAY’s Women of the Year is a recognition of women who have made a significant impact in their communities and across the country.
- Legacy of Cesar Chavez imperiled
- Groups rethink ties after sex assault allegations
- Cesar Chavez, right, shown in 1977, has been revered for decades as the late leader of the United Farm Workers union. His legacy is under scrutiny with recent allegations of sexual assault.
- Kansas once tried a SAVE Act of its own
- 2013 measure unraveled in practice and in courts
- Sarah Bond believes gaming has power to connect us all
- [[The New York Times]]
- Attacks on Energy Sites Intensify a Global Crisis, Raising Pressure on U.S.
- Trump Tries to Calm Fears on Oil Prices
- The president said the crisis would be over “pretty soon.”
- Eliminating Iran’s Nuclear Fuel Is Much Easier Said Than Done
- Secret Flow of Guns From U.S. Shops to Mexico’s Violent Cartels
- Guns smuggled to the Sinaloa Cartel, a major fentanyl trafficker.
- In Arizona, near Mexico. U.S. border controls are designed primarily to stop inbound threats rather than to monitor outbound traffic.
- Driver Killed 4. At Age 80, Is Probation Just?
- Union Pioneer Recalls Misogyny and Her Rape
- “We’re just seen as sex objects,” said Dolores Huerta, who co-founded U.F.W. with Cesar Chavez.
- Company Knew of Problems With Its Pacemaker Batteries
- Attacks on Energy Sites Intensify a Global Crisis, Raising Pressure on U.S.
- [[Wall Street Journal]]
- Trump’s Iran War Frays Ties With Allies as Oil Prices Surge
- Multiple countries offer assistance, but not on the scale White House wants
- Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi met with President Trump on Thursday. When asked by a reporter why the U.S. didn’t notify allies before striking Iran, Trump referenced Pearl Harbor, saying, ’Who knows better about surprise than Japan?’
- https://www.wsj.com/world/trumps-iran-war-frays-ties-with-allies-as-oil-prices-surge-863211f9?st=G7r3AM&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
- Fed Plans to Ease Rules for Big Banks
- Bezos Seeks $100 Billion For AI Fund To Escalate Automation
- American Wins Top Drug Cartel Job
- California-born stepson of late Mexican kingpin is protected by Constitution
- https://www.wsj.com/world/americas/mexican-drug-kingpin-american-citizen-7a8a9c2f?st=4nF7C3&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
- U.S. Steps Up Attack In Bid to Reopen Hormuz
- Jets, copters target Iranian assets in an effort expected to continue for weeks
- https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/u-s-war-planes-and-helicopters-kick-off-battle-to-reopen-hormuz-530cdb78?st=dQmjWd&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
- Suddenly Everyone Is a ‘Builder,’ Whatever That Means
- Creating apps and websites used to be the rarefied world of tech developers. No more.
- https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/suddenly-everyone-in-san-francisco-is-a-builder-whatever-that-means-038ad768?st=CbG4vk&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
- Trump’s Iran War Frays Ties With Allies as Oil Prices Surge
- [[Financial Times]] 영국에 위치한 니케이 소유 회사입니다.
- Markets tumble as investors price in ‘protracted energy shock’ from war
- ▸ Gas plant strikes stir anxiety ▸ Inflation alarm bells ▸ Rate rise fears hit bonds ▸ Central banks warn
- Tokyo recoils from $6bn SoftBank fee as unease builds over US trade accord
- SoftBank was set to earn ¥1tn ($6.3bn) in fees from a flagship US-Japan project before panicking officials in Tokyo intervened, amid anxiety over the rollout of a $550bn joint investment plan with Donald Trump.
- OpenClaw grabs attention of China’s tech enthusiasts
- Open-source AI tool OpenClaw, which has gone viral among tech enthusiasts in the west, has a far wider audience in China. It allows users to create agents to raise productivity and manage their digital lives. But it is not a consumer product, and a consultant industry has flourished offering help. Tech groups have also jumped onboard, aiming to smooth adoption. But results can be mixed and the latest growth area is in advice on how to remove the tool.
- Markets tumble as investors price in ‘protracted energy shock’ from war