
Shops empty in a Hispanic neighborhood as immigration crackdown comes to Louisiana
KENNER, La. (AP) — The doors of Carmela Diaz's taco joint are locked, the tables are devoid of customers and no one is working in the kitchen. It's one of many once-thriving Hispanic businesses, from Nicaraguan eateries to Honduran restaurants, emptied out in recent weeks in neighborhoods with lots of signs in Spanish but increasingly fewer people on the streets. In the city of Kenner, which has the highest concentration of Hispanic residents in Louisiana, a federal immigration crackdown for...
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- Shops empty in a Hispanic neighborhood as immigration crackdown comes to Louisiana
- Trump administration to direct more water to California farms
- Zohran Mamdani and the Louvre make the list of most mispronounced words of 2025
- Gov. Walz denounces Trump for calling Minnesotas Somali community garbage
- Police video shows Luigi Mangione said he didn't want to talk. They kept asking questions
Trump ventures deeper into anti-immigrant language by calling people from Somalia 'garbage'
He said it four times in seven seconds: Somali immigrants in the United States are “garbage. ”It was no mistake. In fact, President Donald Trump’s rhetorical attacks on immigrants have been building since he said Mexico was sending “rapists” across the border during his presidential campaign announcement a decade ago. He's also echoed rhetoric once used by Adolf Hitler and called the 54 nations of Africa “s—-hole countries. ” But with one flourish closing a two-hour Cabinet up...
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- Trump ventures deeper into anti-immigrant language by calling people from Somalia 'garbage'
- Melania Trump lights the National Christmas Tree after president counts down
- US military conducts strike on another suspected drug boat as probe into the first strike begins
- Supreme Court allows Texas to use a congressional map favorable to Republicans in 2026
- Court decision calling for end to National Guard deployment in DC paused by appeals court
A brown pelican 'feeding frenzy' is an encouraging sign for the often-struggling large seabirds
MORRO BAY, Calif. (AP) — On a jagged coastline in Central California, brown pelicans gather on rock promontories, packed in like edgy commuters as they take flight to feed on a vast school of fish just offshore. The water churns in whitecaps as the big-billed birds plunge beneath the surface in search of northern anchovies, Pacific sardines and mackerel. If awkward and wobbly in appearance on land, they are graceful once airborne. The signature pouch dangling beneath the lower bill can scoop...
Read MoreScience News
- A brown pelican 'feeding frenzy' is an encouraging sign for the often-struggling large seabirds
- A dozen former FDA leaders lambaste claims by the agency's current vaccine chief
- Renowned astronomers push to protect Chile's cherished night sky from an industrial project
- Billionaire spacewalker is back before the Senate seeking NASA's top job
- Researchers slightly lower study's estimate of drop in global income due to climate change

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