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Trump Admin Has Found 23,000 MISSING Migrant Children Since January, 400 Traffickers Arrested — 27 Kids Dead from Murder, Overdoses, and Suicide | The Gateway Pundit

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President Donald Trump’s administration has already located over 22,000 missing unaccompanied migrant children who vanished under the Biden regime’s watch.

Led by border czar Tom Homan and senior Department of Health and Human Services advisor John Fabbricatore, an elite squad that was assembled to find the missing children has sadly found that 27 did not survive.

Fox News reports, “Under the Trump administration, 22,638 unaccompanied children have been located so far, and more than 400 sponsors have been arrested. Twenty-seven of the minors were found dead, either by murder, suicide, or drug overdose, according to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS.)”

The mission kicked off as one of Trump’s key campaign promises: track down the tens of thousands of kids lost in the system due to Biden’s lax immigration enforcement. Upon taking office, Trump tasked Homan with assembling a volunteer team from agencies like the FBI and Homeland Security Investigations. Operating from a high-tech “war room” in Washington, D.C., officially known as the ORR Interagency Crime Coordination Cell, the group has been sifting through shoddy records left behind by the Democrats.

“It’s important that we find these cases where children are being used for labor and sexually trafficked,” Fabbricatore told the network.

“We found children who have been raped,” he added. “We’re talking about debt bondage, where children are being made to work off debt, trafficking debt. We’re talking about children that were brought into situations and then treated like sexual slaves. You know, where children are in horrific environments, just environments that they should not be in, where the sponsor is a heroin dealer and that child winds up dying of a heroin overdose.”

Many of these tragedies could have been prevented with basic vetting by the previous administration.

Biden’s team dumped more than 470,000 unaccompanied kids into the system from 2021 to 2024, often releasing them to unvetted “sponsors” without DNA tests or proper checks.

Now, under Trump, safeguards are finally in place: DNA testing to confirm family ties, criminal background checks, fingerprinting, and proof of income for sponsors. Kids are staying in custody longer if needed to ensure safety, and the team is pushing to reunite them with parents in their home countries when there’s no credible fear claim.

“So now, under this administration, we are making sure that we know there’s a real familial connection through DNA, and we are not releasing these children unless we have the right information,” Fabbricatore said. “Children are staying in custody longer, but there’s a reason for that, because we want to ensure that these children remain safe.”

“If their parents are in a previous country and there is not a credible fear claim, is it not better for a child to be with their parents or in our foster care system here in the United States?” Fabbricatore said. “I would argue that we shouldn’t be putting them in care here in the US when they have families in their country of origin. And if we can prove that they’re safer in the country, that they’re going back to, that is where they should be with their parents.”




This story originally appeared on TheGateWayPundit

Mystery behind ‘old people’ smell revealed – and how to get rid of it

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Old people have a distinct smell and research has revealed exactly why. Experts have also revealed a specific food which can help get rid of the smell.

In Japan, where nearly a third of the population is aged 65 or over, they call the “old people smell” kareishuu. The idea has recently been at the centre of scientific research. One study, published in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology, analysed the sweat from 22 people of various ages.

As reported by the Daily Mail, the researchers revealed that people over the age of 40 emit more of a chemical called 2-nonenal. It is described as an “unpleasant greasy and grassy odour”.

The scientists said that 2-nonenal is formed when the fats in our skin are broken down by oxidative stress. This takes place as we get older and a build up of 2-nonenal can also cause our skin to age.

Researchers also believe that eating mushrooms can help combat the smell. Mushrooms contain antioxidants, primarily ergothioneine and spermidine, which help negate “old people smell” by reducing 2-nonenal.

However, getting rid of the smell can be challenging. Experts say that both showering and perfume are ineffective in fighting against 2-nonenal.

Leslie Kenny, who co-founded the Oxford Longevity Project, warned: “One of the problems with trying to shower it off is that 2-nonenal gets stuck in our skin layers and ageing skin becomes slower at sloughing this off.

“You can’t mask it with perfume. The perfume simply layers on top of it, giving it a musty smell. What you want to do is get rid of it from the inside out.”

She added: “The smell is caused by oxidation of molecules in sebum [the skin’s natural oil]. It’s young sebum that makes babies smell delicious. But in old age, sebum can oxidate and go rancid.

“Studies show that if you don’t have enough antioxidants in your diet, then that smell builds up. What’s more, it can linger because our skin cells don’t replace themselves so quickly when we age.”



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

Optimize Your Budget With a $50 Sam’s Club Membership and $35 in Rewards

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Disclosure: Our goal is to feature products and services that we think you’ll find interesting and useful. If you purchase them, Entrepreneur may get a small share of the revenue from the sale from our commerce partners.

Running a business or side hustle comes with enough costs. Your supplies, snacks, tools, and tech shouldn’t be one of them. With a Sam’s Club Membership, you get direct access to bulk pricing and high-quality inventory across nearly every category, from office breakroom staples to laptops, smart appliances, and furniture. And right now, new members pay just $50 and get $35 in Sam’s Cash to spend on whatever your business needs for the year.

This offer is designed specifically for new U.S. members and gives you a full year of membership benefits, including a complimentary household card for additional team savings. It’s perfect for small business owners, solo operators, freelancers, and teams looking to stretch their spend across food, operations, and client perks.

You’ll also unlock exclusive discounts on travel, car rentals, entertainment, and more — so the value doesn’t stop at your shopping cart. With the Sam’s Club mobile app and Scan & Go checkout, you can streamline the in-store experience and stay focused on what matters most: running your business efficiently.

Unlike other retailers, Sam’s Club operates on a curated, limited-item model, meaning each product is selected for quality, reliability, and value. And with nearly 600 U.S. locations, plus a robust online shopping experience, your next restock is never far away.

To get started, redeem your code within 30 days of purchase. Your membership is valid for one year from activation and auto-renews unless canceled.

For a limited time, join Sam’s Club for $50 for a one-year membership to get $35 in Sam’s Cash, and start turning everyday purchases into big-time business wins.

StackSocial prices subject to change.

Running a business or side hustle comes with enough costs. Your supplies, snacks, tools, and tech shouldn’t be one of them. With a Sam’s Club Membership, you get direct access to bulk pricing and high-quality inventory across nearly every category, from office breakroom staples to laptops, smart appliances, and furniture. And right now, new members pay just $50 and get $35 in Sam’s Cash to spend on whatever your business needs for the year.

This offer is designed specifically for new U.S. members and gives you a full year of membership benefits, including a complimentary household card for additional team savings. It’s perfect for small business owners, solo operators, freelancers, and teams looking to stretch their spend across food, operations, and client perks.

You’ll also unlock exclusive discounts on travel, car rentals, entertainment, and more — so the value doesn’t stop at your shopping cart. With the Sam’s Club mobile app and Scan & Go checkout, you can streamline the in-store experience and stay focused on what matters most: running your business efficiently.

The rest of this article is locked.

Join Entrepreneur+ today for access.



This story originally appeared on Entrepreneur

Amazon-backed Anthropic agrees to pay authors $1.5B to settle AI copyright lawsuit

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Anthropic told a San Francisco federal judge on Friday that it has agreed to pay $1.5 billion to settle a class-action lawsuit from a group of authors who accused the artificial intelligence company of using their books to train its AI chatbot Claude without permission.

Anthropic and the plaintiffs in a court filing asked US District Judge William Alsup to approve the settlement, after announcing the agreement in August without disclosing the terms or amount.

“If approved, this landmark settlement will be the largest publicly reported copyright recovery in history, larger than any other copyright class action settlement or any individual copyright case litigated to final judgment,” the plaintiffs said in the filing.

Writer Andrea Bartz was among those filed the class action against Anthropic last year. AP

The proposed deal marks the first settlement in a string of lawsuits against tech companies including OpenAI, Microsoft and Meta Platforms over their use of copyrighted material to train generative AI systems.

Anthropic as part of the settlement said it will destroy downloaded copies of books the authors accused it of pirating, and under the deal it could still face infringement claims related to material produced by the company’s AI models.

In a statement, Anthropic said the company is “committed to developing safe AI systems that help people and organizations extend their capabilities, advance scientific discovery, and solve complex problems.” The agreement does not include an admission of liability.

Writers Andrea Bartz, Charles Graeber and Kirk Wallace Johnson filed the class action against Anthropic last year. They argued that the company, which is backed by Amazon and Alphabet, unlawfully used millions of pirated books to teach its AI assistant Claude to respond to human prompts.

The writers’ allegations echoed dozens of other lawsuits brought by authors, news outlets, visual artists and others who say that tech companies stole their work to use in AI training.

The authors argued that the company, which is backed by Amazon and Alphabet, unlawfully used millions of pirated books to teach its AI assistant Claude to respond to human prompts. AP

The companies have argued their systems make fair use of copyrighted material to create new, transformative content.

Alsup ruled in June that Anthropic made fair use of the authors’ work to train Claude, but found that the company violated their rights by saving more than 7 million pirated books to a “central library” that would not necessarily be used for that purpose.

A trial was scheduled to begin in December to determine how much Anthropic owed for the alleged piracy, with potential damages ranging into the hundreds of billions of dollars.

A trial was scheduled to begin in December to determine how much Anthropic owed for the alleged piracy, with potential damages ranging into the hundreds of billions of dollars. CEO Dario Amodei, above. AP

The pivotal fair-use question is still being debated in other AI copyright cases.

Another San Francisco judge hearing a similar ongoing lawsuit against Meta ruled shortly after Alsup’s decision that using copyrighted work without permission to train AI would be unlawful in “many circumstances.”



This story originally appeared on NYPost

World Cup’s dynamic-priced tickets will cost an arm and a leg — and ruin the global game

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FIFA, soccer’s global governing body, announced Thursday tickets for next year’s World Cup (co-hosted with Mexico and Canada) will be sold using dynamic pricing. 

The controversial method, with prices fluctuating based on demand, means you’ll almost certainly pay more than $6,700 for a top-tier seat for the July 19 final at East Rutherford, NJ’s MetLife Stadium — around four times the cost at the last final, 2022 in Qatar.

That’s the initial selling price if you manage to snag one in the first early draw. And it isn’t even a hospitality package.

FIFA head Infantino (right) hands President Trump a ticket to next year’s World Cup final — not dynamically priced. AFP via Getty Images

The last time the United States hosted the World Cup, in 1994, there was no such thing as dynamic pricing in sports — well, not unless you bought your ticket from a scalper.

If you could get a seat at the Brazil-Italy final in Los Angeles, you could have paid just $60 (about $130 in 2025).

But soccer, like every other major sport, is in the entertainment business, and it’s following the path trodden by major music artists like Bruce Springsteen, Beyoncé and Oasis, who’ve all sold tickets using the technique, much to their devotees’ consternation.

(Oasis’ Labor Day weekend shows at MetLife weren’t dynamically priced — after fan furor, the band dropped it for American dates.)

And guess what? 

The concerts still sell out.

Besides, consumers are increasingly used to the concept. 

Noticed the cost of booking a vacation when the kids aren’t in school?

Attempted to get an Uber in rush hour?

Yes, everyone’s at it — and FIFA is joining the club. But it should be careful what it wishes for.

When dynamic pricing was used at this summer’s Club World Cup, hosted across the United States, the number of empty seats on view at some games made for a distinct lack of atmosphere and excitement. 

Fans could pick up a ticket for as little as $13 — a dollar cheaper than a beer inside the stadium — for the semifinal between England’s Chelsea and Brazil’s Fluminense at MetLife, as FIFA scrambled to boost the crowd. Three days before the match, the same ticket sold for $473.

Bruce Springsteen’s dynamic pricing left fans furious.

Dynamic pricing, surge pricing, price gouging — call it what you like, but it still smacks of greed and little else. 

But we shouldn’t be surprised FIFA, that grubbiest of governing bodies, is jumping on the bandwagon. It’s a specialist in not doing the right thing, and, as usual, money is driving its decision-making.

It knows that even if nobody can afford to attend the tournament, its coffers will continue to swell, thanks to broadcasting deals worth close to $4 billion and commercial partners and sponsors paying around $3 billion for the privilege of being associated with the world’s biggest sporting event.

The laughable thing: FIFA is, notionally, a nonprofit organization, but with its revenues in this four-year World Cup cycle expected to eclipse $13 billion and its boss Gianni Infantino enjoying a compensation package of around $5 million, it’s swimming in cash — and desperate for more.

Lionel Messi holds up the trophy Argentina won at the 2022 World Cup final in Qatar. AFP via Getty Images

When Infantino became president in 2016, it seemed like a much-needed changing of the guard after the controversies of his predecessor Sepp Blatter’s regime, when FIFA and its leadership stood accused of everything from fraud and money laundering to bribery and racketeering.

Not a decade later, though, Infantino is regularly seen fawning over shady world leaders, from Russia’s Vladimir Putin, who presented him with the Order of Friendship medal at the Kremlin in 2019, to Mohammed bin Salman, the Saudi crown prince implicated in the 2018 assassination of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

He visited the Oval Office for a second time, in August, to celebrate his “great friendship” with President Trump, though, presenting him a giant ticket to the final.

FIFA is forever telling the world its raison d’être is to “grow the game.”

That supposedly is why it gave 2018 World Cup honors to Putin’s Russia and the 2022 tournament to Qatar, a tiny Middle Eastern state smaller than Connecticut that had no soccer infrastructure or great history of playing the game.

And it’s clearly nonsense.

You grow the game by making it affordable to watch, not taking it to countries with warmongering regimes and, in Saudi Arabia’s case, a human-rights record Amnesty International declared “atrocious.”

And not by employing dynamic pricing.

Besides, in soccer, perhaps the only truly global sport, it is the fans that make the game. 

Think of them as unpaid extras, loyal and passionate, willing to go to the four corners of the planet to support their teams.

The least FIFA could do is reward that devotion by making the tickets as inexpensive as possible, not squeezing every last cent out of supporters.

After all, it can afford it.

Gavin Newsham won Best New Writer at the National Sporting Club Book Awards for his first book, “John Daly: Letting the Big Dog Eat.”



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Trump’s Hyundai Plant Immigration Raid Massively Backfires

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It was a warning that will echo around the world to every foreign government and company considering investing in the United States.

Back in 2021, Hyundai agreed to build an EV battery manufacturing plant just outside of Savannah, Georgia, that would employ thousands of the state’s residents when completed, and supply batteries to the company’s cars.

Republicans in Georgia have been worried about the plant’s fate since Trump returned to office due to his hostility toward EVs. What they could not foresee was that Trump’s immigration raids would hit the plant and cause complete chaos.

ICE initially targeted four Hispanic workers at the plant, but ended up arresting nearly 500 people, more than 300 of whom were South Korean nationals who allegedly were in the country illegally by either overstaying their visas or doing work that was not permitted by their visa.

The Wall Street Journal reported:

The Hyundai raid could raise concerns for South Korean companies that are sending Korean personnel to the U.S. and hiring locally for their plants, said Hur Jung, who is president of the Korean Association of Trade and Industry Studies.

If such crackdowns are repeated, it “would damage trust and hurt industrial cooperation between the U.S. and South Korea across various industries, with negative repercussions for local communities as well,” said Hur, who is also an economics professor at Sogang University.

….

After news of the Georgia arrests, South Korea’s largest newspaper, the right-leaning Chosun Ilbo, ran a story with the headline: “After Investing in ‘Trump MAGA,’ What Came Back Was the Arrest of 300 Koreans.”

If foreign companies and the government lose faith in the United States due to Trump, the people who will be hurt most are those Americans who could be employed by these new investments.

Trump claims that he wants to bring manufacturing back, but manufacturing is plummeting due to his policies.

The Trump administration’s policies are backfiring, worsening the economy and the nation’s international standing.

Trump is doing immense damage to the United States. The people who will pay the most severe price aren’t the billionaires, like the president. Those who will be harmed most are working Americans who are seeing their paths to economic success closed down.

What do you think of Trump’s Georgia immigration raid? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

Leave a comment



This story originally appeared on Politicususa

iPhone 16 review one year later: Still a great phone, and will be for years

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After a year of heavy use, the iPhone 16 still holds up, and I have absolutely no desire to update to the iPhone 17.

iPhone 16 review: The iPhone 16 remains a great option, even with the iPhone 17 only days away.

When it launched, the iPhone 16 looked noticeably different from its predecessor, the iPhone 15. Bold color options and a redesigned camera bump made the iPhone 16 stand out as a new device.

In September 2025, a year after it debuted, the iPhone 16 remains a great option for those looking to upgrade. The battery life will easily last you an entire day. Performance has also been greatly improved, relative to older models.

Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums


This story originally appeared on Appleinsider

Ohio public schools are canceling buses for thousands of kids while busing some to private schools

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A scramble is underway for some Ohio families over a staple of the back-to-school season: rides on the big, yellow school bus.

Public school districts canceled bus transportation for thousands of high schoolers again this year while in some cases still busing students to private and charter schools to avoid steep fines under state requirements. In Dayton, a stopgap effort that gives students public transit passes in lieu of school bus rides was temporarily restored by a judge last week. This came after the district sued, alleging the state illegally restricted the program.

The crunch for rides emerged as a bus driver shortage was compounded by Ohio’s school transportation regulations and its expansion to a universal voucher program to help pay for students to attend private schools. Districts have been required for years to transport students with EdChoice vouchers, but disputes over how to do that intensified as the program added nearly 90,000 students over the past four years.

Public dollars for busing private students

Advocates for public education argue Ohio’s transportation mandates are inflexible, vague and expensive.

It makes public school districts responsible for transporting K-8 students to their private or charter schools, even on district holidays or when buses break down. It also requires districts to extend whatever transportation service they offer to their own high schoolers to every high schooler at a private or charter school in the same area.

Some large districts responded by canceling bus service to high schools altogether, providing city transit passes where available or leaving public school students to find their own rides. And those districts still might have to bus private students if those students weren’t notified within a certain timeframe.

“To know that they are having to take those public dollars to funnel into other entities is not a fair situation, and I don’t think that it’s right,” said Ronnee Tingle, a Dayton mom whose 7th-grader rides the school bus and whose teens in public school have to take a city bus.

Her daughter Suelonnee Tingle, a senior, begins her mornings checking an app for when a public bus will arrive at her stop. Riding it is “not bad,” but learning routes, catching connections and getting to school on time can be challenging as arrival times fluctuate, she said.

Dayton Superintendent David Lawrence calls it “madness” that the Republican-led Legislature diverted roughly $2.5 billion in state education funding to the voucher program over the next two years — and still is still is requiring public districts to foot transportation costs for those students. His district runs 54 bus routes for its students and 74 for non-public students, according to data compiled by the Ohio 8 Coalition, representing the eight largest districts.

The Dayton district could easily provide bus rides for all of its public school students if the state ended some of the requirements about transporting voucher students, Lawrence said.

“If we didn’t have to transport charter school and parochial students, we could transfer all of our students almost door to door from K through 12,” he said. That would also help eliminate ancillary issues that arose with public high schoolers making their own ways to school, including disruptions on city buses and threats to their physical safety, he said.

Footing the bill

Republican state Sen. Andrew Brenner, a school choice advocate who chairs the Senate Education Committee, said he doesn’t believe that financial hardship, logistical nightmares and driver recruitment challenges are creating a school transportation crisis in Ohio, as public education advocates contend.

“That’s a completely inaccurate description,” he said. “What they have done is they’re excluding all the kids with school choice in many districts and they’re doing everything they can to avoid transporting them.”

Brenner said lawmakers provided districts with $1,500 per student to cover the costs of transporting voucher students, and he accused districts of abusing a provision that lets them deem busing the voucher students “impractical” and make “payment in lieu” of transportation to those families. The amount ranges from roughly $600 to $1,200 per student this year to offset the families’ costs.

Public school districts argue that transporting both public and private students costs way more than the state provides for it, contributing to budget woes. For Ohio’s largest districts, the gap can total millions of dollars.

Transportation burdens for parents

Cleveland paid families for 2,739 students it deemed impractical to transport to private schools this fiscal year, according to state data. Columbus was second on the list, paying for about 2,500. The state has sued Columbus schools, accusing the district of shirking mandates about transporting voucher students.

“Parents are being forced to quit their jobs, rearrange their livesand scramble for transportation, while the school board fails to meet its legal duties,” Republican Attorney General Dave Yost said last year. The case is still pending.

Columbus defended the decision, arguing that folding those non-public school students into its operation — a sophisticated, software-driven enterprise whose buses transport more than 16,000 public and 3,400 non-public students along some 450 routes — was unworkable. Spokesperson Mike Brown said the district has $75 million budgeted this school year for transportation, and another $15 million budgeted for transportation-related fines.

Lawrence said Ohio’s setup requires public districts to cover overhead for transportation systems. In Dayton, that includes buses that can cost more than $150,000 each, a stable of $66,000-a-year mechanics, a $1.1 million maintenance division, and drivers who make about $22 an hour with benefits on average. Those wages aim to offset the “Amazon effect” of drivers choosing package delivery over ferrying children for reasons including comfort, schedule flexibility and pay.

Brenner said he’d like to see more public schools explore the benefits of combining operations within counties to share resources.

The state’s largest urban and suburban districts — the Ohio 8 — argue lawmakers could help solve the issue by updating “antiquated” laws and regulations to align with current realities.

A study group was created in the last budget but tasked with studying just one issue: how to get non-public students to school on days when public districts are closed. Its recommendations are due in June 2026.

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This story originally appeared on Fortune

Few UK shares have soared 817% in 5 years. This one has….

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Image source: Getty Images

On the hunt for UK shares that may double, treble, quadruple, or even more? Join the club!

Over the past five years, the Rolls-Royce share price has soared 1,228%. That sort of performance is remarkable for a mature blue-chip company. For comparison, the wider FTSE 100 is up by 59% during the same period.

But with a market capitalization of £91bn, Rolls-Royce is clearly well known to many investors — and closely watched.

There are other UK shares that are much smaller but that have also been doing well – and that I think could potentially continue to do well in future.

Strong news flow

One of those is Journeo (LSE: JNEO).

I wrote just a few days ago that having already invested in Journeo, I was hoping the share price might fall a bit so I could increase my stake.

Since then, things have gone the other way. Journeo jumped in recent days following news of an acquisition that the City seemed to like.

That means that the Journeo share price is now up 58% since the start of the year – and 817% over the past five years.

But that still means its market capitalization, at £78m, is small enough to fly beneath many investors’ radar.

Simple business, with sizeable potential

The latest acquisition offers cross-selling potential for Journeo, potentially helping it increase its share of spend by existing clients as well as hopefully attracting new ones.

What I like about Journeo’s business model is that it is simple but effective.

With ongoing spending on public transport like trains, its potential end market is set for sustained growth. But there are a limited number of players offering the sorts of solutions it does, such as bus arrival time display boards. The more contracts it wins, the more credibility it gains to bid for new contracts – and hopefully build economies of scale.

Journeo has operations outside the UK: for example it has been supplying equipment to New York City’s subway system. Hopefully that international footprint will grow.

But, for now at least, I see that as secondary to the investment case. The UK market alone for the transportation-related products and services Journeo is marketing is sizeable and set to grow. Simply continuing to grow its market share here could ultimately be a big win for Journeo.

Looking to the long term

That helps explain why this UK share now trades on a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 18.

That may not look cheap. But with recent contract wins and the acquisition potentially set to see earnings grow, the prospective P/E ratio could fall. Last year’s diluted earnings per share grew 36%.

The acquisition brings a risk that management may focus on integrating the business and neglect the existing one. However, management has been doing a sterling job lately and I am optimistic that can continue.

I think this UK share, even after growing more than 800% in five years, still looks like a possible bargain. I plan to hang onto my shareholding and see Journeo as a share for investors to consider.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

Donatella Versace among mourners as Giorgio Armani lies in state | World News

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Donatella Versace has joined scores of mourners in Milan to pay respects to legendary fashion designer Giorgio Armani as his body lies in state.

The Italian billionaire died at home surrounded by his family on Thursday at the age of 91.

Fellow fashion icon Ms Versace, 70, wore a dark skirt suit and left a bouquet of white flowers when she visited the Armani Theatre to pay tribute on Saturday, where the casket of Mr Armani lies surrounded by candles.

Other notable attendees included Milan mayor Giuseppe Sala, who was among the first to arrive, along with film directors Gabriele Salvatores and Giuseppe Tornatore, Angela Missoni; daughter of late Italian designer Rosita Missoni; and other high-end designers and business people.

Outside the theatre, Mr Sala told reporters: “A man of extraordinary elegance. Milan is full of signs of Armani. It will be impossible to forget him.”

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People queue outside the Armani Theatre before paying their respects. Pic: Reuters

Pic: Reuters
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Pic: Reuters

The line of mourners stretched back down the block some two hours after the theatre opened, as some said they travelled for several hours to go and pay their respects.

Among them was Annamaria Longo Dorni, from Lago Maggiore, north of Milan, who wore an Armani midnight blue jacket for the occasion.

“You put it on, and you’re perfect,” she said as she waited. “It’s always up to date, even after 20 years.”

Read more on Sky News:
The best celebrity looks created by Giorgio Armani
The London-born teen about to become first millennial Catholic saint

At the viewing chamber, a photo of the designer smiling and waving was projected on the back wall, along with his parting words which read: “The mark I hope to leave is one of commitment, respect and genuine care for people and for reality. That’s where everything truly begins.”

The view from inside the theatre, where Armani's casket lies below his parting quote. Pic: Reuters
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The view from inside the theatre, where Armani’s casket lies below his parting quote. Pic: Reuters

The public viewing will continue until Sunday evening, before Mr Armani is buried following a private funeral on Monday.

Other celebrities including Ralph Lauren, Julia Roberts, Anna Wintour and Leonardo DiCaprio have paid tribute in messages.

Mr Armani did not appear at his runway shows in Milan for the first time ever in June as he recovered from an unknown illness, but he later revealed he “oversaw every aspect of the show remotely via video link”.

In a statement after his death, his fashion house said he was “indefatigable to the end,” working until his final days.



This story originally appeared on Skynews