Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Breaux"


7 mentions found


Miss America: Madison March of Colorado wins 2024 pageant
  + stars: | 2024-01-15 | by ( Alex Rees | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
Miss Colorado, Madison Marsh, is crowned as the 2024 Miss America. From Miss AmericaMadison Marsh, a 22-year-old second lieutenant in the US Air Force and master’s student at the Harvard Kennedy School’s public policy program, emerged victorious at the 2024 Miss America pageant in Orlando, Florida on Sunday night. Miss Colorado, Madison March, poses in her evening gown. Carlos Velez Studio/Courtesy Miss AmericaThe five finalists then faced an additional question about their goals as Miss America. The 2024 Miss America’s Teen pageant, which took place Saturday night, crowned 16-year-old Hanley House, of North Carolina.
Persons: Madison Marsh, Harvard Kennedy, Ellie Breaux, Marsh, Breaux, Cydney, Mallory Hudson of, Caroline Parente, Madison, Carlos Velez, Grace Stanke Organizations: Miss, US Air Force, Harvard, Miss America, Air Force, District of Columbia, Madison, Carlos Velez Studio, Hanley House Locations: Miss America, Orlando , Florida, Colorado, Texas, United States, Cydney Bridges, Indiana, Mallory Hudson of Kentucky, Rhode Island, America, Miss Colorado, Grace Stanke of Wisconsin, Hanley, North Carolina
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSCOTUS wealth tax case ruling could blow up 'significant portions' of income tax: Tax Foundation CEOFormer U.S. Senator John Breaux (D-La.) and Tax Foundation president and CEO Daniel Bunn join 'Squawk Box' to discuss next week's Supreme Court wealth tax case, what the possible outcomes are, potential broader impact on income taxes, and more.
Persons: John Breaux, Daniel Bunn Organizations: Tax, Former U.S, Tax Foundation
The latest hurdle comes from a slow-moving threat — a mass influx of salt water from the Gulf of Mexico that is creeping up the drought-stricken Mississippi River. The issue is forcing farmers to brainstorm other ways to irrigate their crops with fresh water — including storing the little rain water they’ve gotten this summer, hauling in fresh water and establishing makeshift salination treatment facilities. Typically, the mighty flow of the Mississippi is enough to keep mass amounts of salt water from reaching too far inland. While officials believe adult citrus trees will be okay, seedlings are much more sensitive to salt water. Over the years some citrus farmers have focused on seedlings — shipping them to garden centers across the country and as far north as Canada.
Persons: They’re, , Joey Breaux, John Bel Edwards, Joe Biden, ” Biden, Belle Chasse, satsumas, Anna Timmerman, Louisiana State University AgCenter, Timmerman, , ” Timmerman, Kim Dillon, Ben, Ben Becnel Organizations: Army Corps of Engineers, Orange Festival, Louisiana State University, Inc Locations: BATON ROUGE, La, Louisiana, Gulf of Mexico, Mississippi, Belle, Plaquemines Parish, Florida, California, Belle Chasse, Canada
It felt as if he had always been there, a steady sight on a busy corner in a college town. He had reimagined his purpose, becoming a fixture at the intersection of Third and C Streets in Davis, Calif. It was there that he held a notebook and offered passers-by a question: Would you care to share your definition of compassion? Over the years, Mr. Breaux made countless connections and grew a reputation as a communal therapist of sorts. “You just really felt you could pour your heart out to him.”
Persons: David Breaux, Breaux, , Kristin Stansby Organizations: Stanford University, CVS Pharmacy Locations: Davis, Calif
He was a third-year, biological sciences student at U.C. It is unclear whether Mr. Dominguez knew any of the three victims, Chief Pytel said. Colloquially known as “the Compassion Guy,” Mr. Breaux had been stabbed “many, many times,” Chief Pytel said in a City Council meeting this week. Two days after that first attack, Karim Abou Najm, 20, a student majoring in computer science at U.C. Davis, was killed on a bike path after an altercation in a neighborhood park at 9:14 p.m. on Saturday.
But inside the walls at Ware, one of the state’s largest juvenile detention facilities, children have been trying to kill themselves with stunning regularity. In Louisiana, where brutal conditions prompted juvenile justice reform two decades ago, the system is again in crisis. Most Ware guards are Black, as well, though nearly all of its leaders are white, as are the local judge, sheriff and district attorney. “Of course, they still do.” In reports to the state, Ware’s nurses described carpet burns on children’s faces and head-to-toe bruises from restraints. In fact, of the four guards convicted of sexually assaulting children at Ware, Mr. Peace would be the only one imprisoned.
Tech companies are worried an aging Congress can't meet or even understand their demands. Younger members of Congress are beginning to take the lead in conversations on tech issues. Hawley said younger members are generally more critical of big tech. However, he added, new technologies are more widely used by younger people, and users tend to understand technology better. Meanwhile, major tech companies continue to ramp up their federal lobbying spending, together spending more in 2021 than in any other year in history.
Total: 7