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Jack Healy

United States

Correspondent at The New York Times

Once in Baghdad, now Rocky Mountain correspondent for The New York Times. Total sucker for one adopted Iraqi kitten. Write: [email protected].

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Articles

  • 1 week ago | nytimes.com | Jack Healy |Jamie Davis

    Durante 20 años, Carol Hui ha servido waffles, criado a sus hijos y abrazado el pequeño pueblo de Kennett, en Misuri. Su detención y deportación pendiente a Hong Kong ha golpeado duramente a la comunidad. Ming Li Hui, conocida por la gente de Kennett, Misuri, como Carol, habló desde la cárcel por videoconferencia con Liridona Ramadani, cuya familia es propietaria del restaurante donde Carol trabajaba.

  • 1 week ago | smh.com.au | Jack Healy

    , register or subscribe to save articles for later. Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. The first sign of trouble came early this month when Carol didn’t show up for her shift at John’s Waffle and Pancake House. She was as reliable as the sun rising over rice and melon fields in her adopted hometown, of Kennett, Missouri, a conservative farming hub of 10,000 people in the state’s south-eastern boot heel, where “Missouri” becomes “Missour-uh”.

  • 1 week ago | nytimes.com | Jack Healy

    For 20 years, Carol Hui has served waffles, raised her children and embraced the small town of Kennett, Mo. Her detention and pending deportation to Hong Kong has hit the community hard. Ming Li Hui, known to people in Kennett, Mo., as Carol, spoke from jail by video link to Liridona Ramadani, whose family owns the restaurant where Carol worked.

  • 1 week ago | flipboard.com | Jack Healy

    NowSources familiar with the matter say the move comes after it failed to go public in London. Shein is working towards a listing in Hong Kong after the online fast-fashion retailer’s proposed initial public offering (IPO) in London failed to secure the green light from Chinese regulators, said three …

  • 2 weeks ago | ourcommunitynow.com | Jack Healy

    Share Two Native American tribes on Thursday filed what they called the first major lawsuit against the U.S. government’s notorious system of Indian boarding schools, which for decades splintered families and stripped Indigenous children of their language and culture.The tribes argued that the federal government betrayed the promises it made in treaties to provide for the education of tribal youths.

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