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UPI
10 minutes ago
- UPI
On This Day, Aug. 10: Founding Fathers propose 'E pluribus unum' as U.S. motto
1 of 6 | On August 10, 1776, a committee of Benjamin Franklin, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson suggested the United States adopt "E pluribus unum" -- "Out of many, one" -- as the motto for its Great Seal. File Photo by Chris Kleponis/UPI | License Photo Aug. 10 (UPI) -- On this date in history: In 1776, a committee of Benjamin Franklin, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson suggested the United States adopt "E pluribus unum" -- "Out of many, one" -- as the motto for its Great Seal. In 1920, Francisco "Pancho" Villa surrendered to Mexican authorities -- and drowned his sorrows in a bottle of cognac. In 1962, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and three other civil rights leaders were found guilty of disorderly conduct charges in Albany, Ga. Judge Adie Durden fined each $200 and sentenced them to 60 days in jail, but immediately suspended the sentences and placed King and his associates on probation. UPI File Photo In 1977, 24-year-old postal employee David Berkowitz was arrested and charged with being the "Son of Sam," the serial killer who terrorized New York City for more than a year, killing six young people and wounding seven others. Berkowitz was sentenced to life in prison. In 1980, Hurricane Allen made landfall along the Texas coast, killing 24 people there and in Louisiana. The storm killed a 269 people through the Caribbean, Mexico and United States. In 1991, China agreed in principle to sign the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty. In 1993, Ruth Bader Ginsburg was sworn in as the U.S. Supreme Court's 107th justice. In 1993, three ships collided with one another in Tampa Bay, Fla., spilling 336,000 gallons of fuel oil into the water. No one was killed. The incident marked the first time officials used a computerized trajectory model to track the location of an oil spill. In 1996, Republican presidential nominee Bob Dole selected former congressman, Cabinet secretary and NFL quarterback Jack Kemp as his running mate. File Photo by Ezio Petersen/UPI In 2003, more than 80 inmates tunneled their way out of Brazil's Joao Pessoa prison, one of the nation's top security facilities. In 2017, President Donald Trump said opioid addiction "is a serious problem the likes of which we have never had" and declared a national emergency over the crisis. In 2021, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced his resignation in the wake of a damning attorney general's report that found he'd sexually harassed nearly a dozen women in recent years. In 2023, a non-profit rescue team recovered 17 bodies while 33 remained missing after a boat carrying Rohingya Muslims capsized near Myanmar while sailing to Malaysia.


New York Times
10 minutes ago
- New York Times
Mamdani Tries to Build Bridges to Black Voters Who Snubbed Him in June
In the heart of working-class Queens, Zohran Mamdani, the newly minted Democratic nominee for mayor of New York City, received polite applause as he stepped to the pulpit before a recent Sunday audience at an African Methodist Episcopal church. He praised the rich history of the Greater Allen A.M.E. Church, and that of a former senior pastor who was also a congressman and prominent academic. And then he turned to his objective that day: preaching his political message to the largely unconverted. Just over one-third of voters in the church's corner of Southeast Queens supported Mr. Mamdani, according to precinct data from the June 24 primary, a signal that he has much work to do in predominantly Black neighborhoods. Indeed, when Mr. Mamdani, a 33-year-old state assemblyman, spoke of his plans to freeze rents in rent-stabilized apartments, audible whispers and groans could be heard from the parishioners, many of them homeowners. In his landmark victory in the Democratic primary, Mr. Mamdani was able to assemble a diverse alliance that included people who had voted for President Trump, immigrants, infrequent voters and newly registered ones. It did not, however, appear to include a majority of Black voters — a traditional requisite for any citywide Democratic candidate. The ability of Mr. Mamdani, who is Indian American, to easily win without winning the Black vote marked a shift in the city's political landscape, scrambling traditional assumptions about New York's Black electorate and the influence it holds in city politics. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


New York Times
10 minutes ago
- New York Times
Dr. Phil's Road From Oprah to ICE Raids
My session with Dr. Phil had reached an impasse. About three hours in, seated inside the Dallas mega-mansion where he is steering his herky-jerk transition from daytime TV behemoth to MAGA-friendly newsman, the once-licensed psychologist was giving no ground on what seemed to me an obvious point. 'I don't think I'm qualified to talk about politics,' he said, steepling his fingers in contemplation. And so, he insisted, he really hadn't. This was difficult to square with recent events. In the last two years, Dr. Phil (surname: McGraw) had ended his flagship talk show and created his own news and entertainment network, trafficking daily in conservative-coded subjects — 'Dr. Phil: The Hidden Gem in Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill,'' 'Dr. Phil Investigates: Are Schools Secretly Transitioning Your Child?' — in an unswerving crusade against 'the woke left.' He had spoken glowingly of President Trump as an invited guest at Mr. Trump's Madison Square Garden campaign rally, at a White House faith event and at a recent Texas flood briefing, where the president interrupted himself after spotting Dr. Phil — 'There's Dr. Phil. Look at Dr. Phil. You're looking good, Phil. This is a hell of a situation, isn't it?' — and later asked him to address the bereaved. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.