Las zapatillas que triunfan por su diseño versátil y su increíble sensación de confort.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Las zapatillas que triunfan por su diseño versátil y su increíble sensación de confort.

Women's Roman Style White Sandals: las sandalias de 20 euros que resolverán todos tus looks de verano.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Women's Roman Style White Sandals: las sandalias de 20 euros que resolverán todos tus looks de verano.

Si buscas un capazo bonito y práctico, esta opción de 30 euros merece un vistazo.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Si buscas un capazo bonito y práctico, esta opción de 30 euros merece un vistazo.

17 minutes

Times of San Diego
Feed icon

El Departamento de Alimentos y Agricultura de California (CDFA) amplió una cuarentena por mosca mexicana de la fruta en el condado de San Diego después de que la plaga fuera detectada durante inspecciones de rutina en El Cajon y Spring Valley. La cuarentena ahora abarca aproximadamente 111 millas cuadradas y se superpone con el área […]

Feed icon
Times of San Diego
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

El Departamento de Alimentos y Agricultura de California (CDFA) amplió una cuarentena por mosca mexicana de la fruta en el condado de San Diego después de que la plaga fuera detectada durante inspecciones de rutina en El Cajon y Spring Valley. La cuarentena ahora abarca aproximadamente 111 millas cuadradas y se superpone con el área […]

Dans un communiqué conjoint publié mardi 23 juin 2026, sept pays européens ont appelé les paramilitaires soudanais des Forces de soutien rapide à « arrêter immédiatement » l'attaque qu'elles mènent contre la ville d'El-Obeid, capitale du Kordofan du Nord et sous contrôle de l’armée. Le Royaume-Uni, la France, l'Allemagne, l'Italie, l'Irlande, la Norvège et les Pays-Bas estiment qu'il « existe désormais des signes crédibles d'une offensive imminente ».

Feed icon
Radio France Internationale
Attribution+

Dans un communiqué conjoint publié mardi 23 juin 2026, sept pays européens ont appelé les paramilitaires soudanais des Forces de soutien rapide à « arrêter immédiatement » l'attaque qu'elles mènent contre la ville d'El-Obeid, capitale du Kordofan du Nord et sous contrôle de l’armée. Le Royaume-Uni, la France, l'Allemagne, l'Italie, l'Irlande, la Norvège et les Pays-Bas estiment qu'il « existe désormais des signes crédibles d'une offensive imminente ».

The CHILE Act would make accessing disaster assistance easier for specialty crop producers, as well as allocate $5 billion for that purpose.

Feed icon
Source NM
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

The CHILE Act would make accessing disaster assistance easier for specialty crop producers, as well as allocate $5 billion for that purpose.

The state of California and the Trump administration are on course for a major legal clash that could determine whether the state will continue to have unique authority to shape the American automotive market. On Monday, California Attorney General Rob Bonta, a Democrat, filed a lawsuit challenging President Donald Trump’s attempt to roll back California’s […]

Feed icon
Stateline News
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

The state of California and the Trump administration are on course for a major legal clash that could determine whether the state will continue to have unique authority to shape the American automotive market. On Monday, California Attorney General Rob Bonta, a Democrat, filed a lawsuit challenging President Donald Trump’s attempt to roll back California’s […]

El candidato de izquierda y heredero político de Pedro Castillo exige detener el escrutinio e insiste en que el voto en el extranjero, clave para la victoria de la líder de Fuerza Popular, fue manipulado.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

El candidato de izquierda y heredero político de Pedro Castillo exige detener el escrutinio e insiste en que el voto en el extranjero, clave para la victoria de la líder de Fuerza Popular, fue manipulado.

Sign up for Chalkbeat Tennessee’s free newsletter to keep up with statewide education policy and Memphis-Shelby County Schools.On a rainy Saturday, dozens of parents wearing white T-shirts that said “Save the children” in bright orange letters met under a tent in a North Memphis auto shop lot. Representatives of Memphis Lift, a longtime local parent advocacy group, led them in chanting “Fired up, ready to go!” The nonprofit invited parents to come to a “citywide revival” event that included educating them about the new, unprecedented state law that gives political appointees the power to take control of Memphis-Shelby County Schools from the elected school board. For the past two years, members of Memphis Lift have been vocal supporters of the state takeover of MSCS. The nine-member state board, which includes a former superintendent and several charter school advocates, will have power over key district decisions, including the annual budget and staffing, starting July 1. “I think this is the opportunity to change the education landscape in this city for children, especially Black children,” said Sarah Carpenter, director of Memphis Lift. Chalkbeat spoke with more than a dozen attendees at Saturday’s event about what actions they want the state-appointed board to take. While often unclear about the specific changes they want the political appointees to make, all supporters said they were hopeful the board could improve district literacy and increase transparency from MSCS leaders. Attendees also said they want better teachers and a higher-quality curriculum. But most said they don’t want any more school closures, even though it’s likely the state board will take that path. Over 75% of Memphis students did not achieve proficiency on last year’s state reading exams. “They’ve been in this spot for years and years and years, and ain’t nothing changed since I was in elementary,” said Carlos Person, father of an MSCS kindergartener and Memphis Lift staffer. Not all Memphis residents support the state takeover. But community pushback against a state-backed takeover was notably muted this year due to increased attention on immigration enforcement and lack of clarity on the takeover bill specifics. MSCS and Shelby County leaders filed a lawsuit late last week calling the law that ushered in the intervention unconstitutional. Tamarques Porter, who represents District 4 on the MSCS board and is a named plaintiff in the lawsuit, spoke at Saturday’s event. Carpenter praised him for being open to accountability. “We got to do the right things on the board, whether it’s through the board of managers or not through the board of managers,” Porter said. “Keep holding us accountable, because I’m tired of being reactionary to everything.”Parents at the event said they’re largely distrustful of the local school board and district leaders. Many advocated for the oversight board to bring back former Superintendent Marie Feagins, who was ousted by MSCS board members in January 2025. “We need a board that will actually care and put our kids first,” said Deneene Hughes, whose nephew is an MSCS elementary student. “It seems like everything is about money.”Billy Orgel, a former MSCS board member who was elected to the oversight board chair last week, said it’s too early to tell what changes the state-appointed members will pursue. He said he hopes the state’s forensic audit of the district will serve as a blueprint for the board’s work. “I don’t think the audit was trying to find some smoking gun,” he told Chalkbeat. “I think the audit was looking for an outcome of, ‘here’s how you can improve.’”The final results of the audit are expected on June 30. Early findings showed that less than 1% of MSCS’ annual budget over the past three years was “consistent with waste or abuse.” Memphis Lift leaders and supporters said no matter what the oversight board does, they want more transparency and a bigger platform for parent voices. That could include published plans for literacy improvement, some said, and regular surveys of MSCS families.Orgel said oversight members can provide support, but ultimately improving parent engagement largely falls on local school leaders.“Because in the end, this is four years and we’re trying to help push our students forward,” he said. “We’re not building a big administrative staff.”Bri Hatch covers Memphis-Shelby County Schools for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Reach Bri at bhatch@chalkbeat.org.

Feed icon
Chalkbeat
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Sign up for Chalkbeat Tennessee’s free newsletter to keep up with statewide education policy and Memphis-Shelby County Schools.On a rainy Saturday, dozens of parents wearing white T-shirts that said “Save the children” in bright orange letters met under a tent in a North Memphis auto shop lot. Representatives of Memphis Lift, a longtime local parent advocacy group, led them in chanting “Fired up, ready to go!” The nonprofit invited parents to come to a “citywide revival” event that included educating them about the new, unprecedented state law that gives political appointees the power to take control of Memphis-Shelby County Schools from the elected school board. For the past two years, members of Memphis Lift have been vocal supporters of the state takeover of MSCS. The nine-member state board, which includes a former superintendent and several charter school advocates, will have power over key district decisions, including the annual budget and staffing, starting July 1. “I think this is the opportunity to change the education landscape in this city for children, especially Black children,” said Sarah Carpenter, director of Memphis Lift. Chalkbeat spoke with more than a dozen attendees at Saturday’s event about what actions they want the state-appointed board to take. While often unclear about the specific changes they want the political appointees to make, all supporters said they were hopeful the board could improve district literacy and increase transparency from MSCS leaders. Attendees also said they want better teachers and a higher-quality curriculum. But most said they don’t want any more school closures, even though it’s likely the state board will take that path. Over 75% of Memphis students did not achieve proficiency on last year’s state reading exams. “They’ve been in this spot for years and years and years, and ain’t nothing changed since I was in elementary,” said Carlos Person, father of an MSCS kindergartener and Memphis Lift staffer. Not all Memphis residents support the state takeover. But community pushback against a state-backed takeover was notably muted this year due to increased attention on immigration enforcement and lack of clarity on the takeover bill specifics. MSCS and Shelby County leaders filed a lawsuit late last week calling the law that ushered in the intervention unconstitutional. Tamarques Porter, who represents District 4 on the MSCS board and is a named plaintiff in the lawsuit, spoke at Saturday’s event. Carpenter praised him for being open to accountability. “We got to do the right things on the board, whether it’s through the board of managers or not through the board of managers,” Porter said. “Keep holding us accountable, because I’m tired of being reactionary to everything.”Parents at the event said they’re largely distrustful of the local school board and district leaders. Many advocated for the oversight board to bring back former Superintendent Marie Feagins, who was ousted by MSCS board members in January 2025. “We need a board that will actually care and put our kids first,” said Deneene Hughes, whose nephew is an MSCS elementary student. “It seems like everything is about money.”Billy Orgel, a former MSCS board member who was elected to the oversight board chair last week, said it’s too early to tell what changes the state-appointed members will pursue. He said he hopes the state’s forensic audit of the district will serve as a blueprint for the board’s work. “I don’t think the audit was trying to find some smoking gun,” he told Chalkbeat. “I think the audit was looking for an outcome of, ‘here’s how you can improve.’”The final results of the audit are expected on June 30. Early findings showed that less than 1% of MSCS’ annual budget over the past three years was “consistent with waste or abuse.” Memphis Lift leaders and supporters said no matter what the oversight board does, they want more transparency and a bigger platform for parent voices. That could include published plans for literacy improvement, some said, and regular surveys of MSCS families.Orgel said oversight members can provide support, but ultimately improving parent engagement largely falls on local school leaders.“Because in the end, this is four years and we’re trying to help push our students forward,” he said. “We’re not building a big administrative staff.”Bri Hatch covers Memphis-Shelby County Schools for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Reach Bri at bhatch@chalkbeat.org.

La Cámara Alta estadounidense aprueba por primera vez una resolución para limitar la capacidad de Donald Trump de prolongar el conflicto con Irán. La decisión abre una nueva batalla política en Washington.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

La Cámara Alta estadounidense aprueba por primera vez una resolución para limitar la capacidad de Donald Trump de prolongar el conflicto con Irán. La decisión abre una nueva batalla política en Washington.

Georgia lawmakers dialed back a controversial change that would have mandated hand recounts of the two top-ticket races in every election before local officials could certify the results. The hand-count provision was added by Senate Republicans over the weekend to a measure extending the state’s self-imposed deadline to stop using ballot QR codes to tally […]

Feed icon
Georgia Recorder
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Georgia lawmakers dialed back a controversial change that would have mandated hand recounts of the two top-ticket races in every election before local officials could certify the results. The hand-count provision was added by Senate Republicans over the weekend to a measure extending the state’s self-imposed deadline to stop using ballot QR codes to tally […]

Until now, cattle were believed to be the main screwworm carriers. Investigations continue.

Feed icon
The Texas Tribune
Attribution+

Until now, cattle were believed to be the main screwworm carriers. Investigations continue.

英國財政部周二(6月23日)宣布,將從2028年10月起取消低價值進口商品關稅豁免政策,較原計畫提前六個月實施,旨在改革被中國跨境電商平台希音(Shein)等企業廣泛利用低價進口包裹稅收優惠制度。

Feed icon
法國國際廣播電台
Attribution+

英國財政部周二(6月23日)宣布,將從2028年10月起取消低價值進口商品關稅豁免政策,較原計畫提前六個月實施,旨在改革被中國跨境電商平台希音(Shein)等企業廣泛利用低價進口包裹稅收優惠制度。

英国财政部周二(6月23日)宣布,将从2028年10月起取消低价值进口商品关税豁免政策,较原计划提前六个月实施,旨在改革被中国跨境电商平台希音(Shein)等企业广泛利用低价进口包裹税收优惠制度。

Feed icon
法国国际广播电台
Attribution+

英国财政部周二(6月23日)宣布,将从2028年10月起取消低价值进口商品关税豁免政策,较原计划提前六个月实施,旨在改革被中国跨境电商平台希音(Shein)等企业广泛利用低价进口包裹税收优惠制度。

31 minutes

ده‌نگی ئه‌مه‌ریکا
Feed icon

سەرۆک دۆناڵد ترامپ، ڕۆژی سێشەممە، لە گردبوونەوەیەک لە پێنسلڤانیا ڕایگەیاند دانوستانەکان لەگەڵ ئێراندا بە ئاسایی بەڕێوەدەچن " ئێمە زۆر باش پێکەوە هەڵدەکەین" سەرۆک ترامپ گوتیشی " ئابوری ئێران ڕووخاوە، و بنەی پیشەسازی بەرگریشیان زیانێکی زۆری پێکەوتووە کە ساڵانێکی زۆریان دەوێت تا بتوانن بنیاتی بنێنەوە." گوتیشی تەنها شتی کە لێی تێدەگەن " چەکوشە" ، ئەمەش ئاماژەیەک بوو بۆ ئۆپەراسیۆنی چەکوشی نیوەشەوی دژ بە کۆماری ئیسلامی ئێران. سەرۆکی ئەمەریکا گوتیشی " ئێران زۆر باشە، ئەگەر بەرپرسیاربێت، ئەگەر...

Feed icon
ده‌نگی ئه‌مه‌ریکا
Public Domain

سەرۆک دۆناڵد ترامپ، ڕۆژی سێشەممە، لە گردبوونەوەیەک لە پێنسلڤانیا ڕایگەیاند دانوستانەکان لەگەڵ ئێراندا بە ئاسایی بەڕێوەدەچن " ئێمە زۆر باش پێکەوە هەڵدەکەین" سەرۆک ترامپ گوتیشی " ئابوری ئێران ڕووخاوە، و بنەی پیشەسازی بەرگریشیان زیانێکی زۆری پێکەوتووە کە ساڵانێکی زۆریان دەوێت تا بتوانن بنیاتی بنێنەوە." گوتیشی تەنها شتی کە لێی تێدەگەن " چەکوشە" ، ئەمەش ئاماژەیەک بوو بۆ ئۆپەراسیۆنی چەکوشی نیوەشەوی دژ بە کۆماری ئیسلامی ئێران. سەرۆکی ئەمەریکا گوتیشی " ئێران زۆر باشە، ئەگەر بەرپرسیاربێت، ئەگەر...

(New York Jewish Week) — Voters in New York’s Hudson Valley on Tuesday are choosing a Democrat to challenge the staunchly pro-Israel Republican Rep. Mike Lawler in a heavily Jewish swing district. Two candidates have emerged as frontrunners in the Democratic primary in New York’s 17th Congressional District, a suburb of New York City that... The post Pro-Israel Democrats battle to take on vulnerable Republican Rep. Mike Lawler appeared first on The Forward.

Feed icon
The Forward
Attribution+

(New York Jewish Week) — Voters in New York’s Hudson Valley on Tuesday are choosing a Democrat to challenge the staunchly pro-Israel Republican Rep. Mike Lawler in a heavily Jewish swing district. Two candidates have emerged as frontrunners in the Democratic primary in New York’s 17th Congressional District, a suburb of New York City that... The post Pro-Israel Democrats battle to take on vulnerable Republican Rep. Mike Lawler appeared first on The Forward.

最新一期全球超級計算機500強(Top500)排行榜23日公布,中國超級計算機“靈晟”(LineShine)首次登上榜首,成為自2017年以來首台問鼎全球最強超級計算機的中國設備。

Feed icon
法國國際廣播電台
Attribution+

最新一期全球超級計算機500強(Top500)排行榜23日公布,中國超級計算機“靈晟”(LineShine)首次登上榜首,成為自2017年以來首台問鼎全球最強超級計算機的中國設備。

最新一期全球超级计算机500强(Top500)排行榜23日公布,中国超级计算机“灵晟”(LineShine)首次登上榜首,成为自2017年以来首台问鼎全球最强超级计算机的中国设备。

Feed icon
法国国际广播电台
Attribution+

最新一期全球超级计算机500强(Top500)排行榜23日公布,中国超级计算机“灵晟”(LineShine)首次登上榜首,成为自2017年以来首台问鼎全球最强超级计算机的中国设备。

(New York Jewish Week) — A primary race on New York’s Upper West Side for a state legislative battle pits a rabbi against  a Jewish lawyer in a referendum on where Jews stand on Mayor Zohran Mamdani and on the right to protest outside houses of worship. Stephanie Ruskay would be the first female rabbi... The post Primary battle between rabbi and Jewish lawyer is a referendum on Mamdani and buffer zones appeared first on The Forward.

Feed icon
The Forward
Attribution+

(New York Jewish Week) — A primary race on New York’s Upper West Side for a state legislative battle pits a rabbi against  a Jewish lawyer in a referendum on where Jews stand on Mayor Zohran Mamdani and on the right to protest outside houses of worship. Stephanie Ruskay would be the first female rabbi... The post Primary battle between rabbi and Jewish lawyer is a referendum on Mamdani and buffer zones appeared first on The Forward.

Sign up for Chalkbeat Newark’s free newsletter to get the latest news about the city’s public school system delivered to your inbox.Danielle Rose sat in her home on Monday night trying to figure out how to be in two places at once. Her son’s eighth grade graduation at Dr. E. Alma Flagg in the North Ward started at 9 a.m. Tuesday. His little sister’s pre-K ceremony at The Leaguers, a preschool provider contracted by Newark Public Schools, started at 9:45 a.m. downtown. But her son only had one request: He wanted both parents there. “In one moment, my husband is like, okay, I’m going to go to this one, then go to the other one. And then my son comes in and says, “Can y’all please both come?”Rose is not alone. In recent years, Newark parents with more than one student graduating have faced an impossible choice on what should be one of their family’s biggest days. The district packs dozens of ceremonies into the same time frame each June, resulting in scheduling conflicts, and during last week’s school board meeting, three members called it out publicly. Superintendent Roger León at the June 18 school board meeting said the fix has been having elementary school graduations in the morning and high schools in the afternoon. But he warned that venue shortages across the city make that a hard promise to keep. On Tuesday, high schools such as East Side and Arts still had morning ceremonies at the same time as elementary schools. León said the district’s hands are practically tied. The Newark Teachers Union contract requires the last day of school to also be the last working day for educators, León said. That means ceremonies can only happen on June 23 unless staff volunteer their time. Holding graduations before the last day, he added, “had increased attendance problems.”Newark resident Danielle Rose poses for a picture with her son, a graduate of Dr. E. Alma Flagg Elementary School, and her daughter, a graduate of The Leaguers Preschool.Those conflicts aren’t new. Two years ago, Yvonne Davis had the same problem and was forced to split up her family to celebrate a big milestone.Her son was graduating from Malcolm X Shabazz High School, and her daughter crossed the stage at Avon Avenue Elementary’s eighth grade ceremony, both at 9:30 a.m. At the time, she said she called the principal and raised her concern, but was told it was the scheduling decision of the school board, not the school.“I felt like the Board of Education should have considered that,” Davis said. “A lot of parents, we just got left out.”Davis, a single mother, went to her son’s ceremony while her mother and her children’s father covered her daughter’s. She only saw her daughter’s graduation in pictures and said that she knew at least three other parents that year who faced the same impossible split. My daughter “understood, but I wasn’t there,” Davis said. During the June meeting, board member David Daughtey said he had already heard from parents and other community members frustrated about having to travel to multiple venues across the city for overlapping ceremonies. He called on the district to separate elementary and high school graduations into different time frames, as it had done in the past, Daughety said. “I’ve already heard parents and community members reach out and ask and complain about all of it happening at the same time,” Daughety added. Board member Helena Vinhas during the meeting also said she raised the same concern last school year and urged the district again to, at a minimum, separate elementary graduations from high school ones. Yvonne Davis' children, Tariq and Samaiyah, pose for a picture during their 2024 high school and eighth grade graduations, respectively.“A lot of the families do have difficulty by having children graduating on the same day and having to choose which one to attend,” Vinhas said. Board member Kanileah Anderson proposed another solution during the meeting. She called for high school seniors and eighth graders to graduate on entirely different days while pointing out that families with children in both levels, increasingly common as the district pulls students from across city neighborhoods, have no realistic way to attend both. “We all know that that is impossible,” Anderson said. “So I’m looking forward to the discussion, and actually a change for graduation classes of 2027.”But León stopped short of a broader solution. He said high schools like Data Science and Information Technology are having their graduations in Montclair because of venue constraints. “So, the idea that we have to maximize the space becomes an important factor,” León added. On Tuesday morning, Rose and her mother, who traveled from New York, just made it to her son’s graduation at Alma Flagg after finding a parking spot. But by the time the ceremony was over and she got back in her car, she could not get back downtown in time for her daughter’s pre-K ceremony. Luckily, she had explained the situation to her daughter’s teacher who allowed Rose to take photos before the ceremony with her daughter, in case she did not make it back in time. “Unfortunately, no one was able to attend my preschooler’s graduation,” Rose said. Jessie Gómez is a reporter for Chalkbeat Newark, covering public education in the city. Contact Jessie at jgomez@chalkbeat.org.

Feed icon
Chalkbeat
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Sign up for Chalkbeat Newark’s free newsletter to get the latest news about the city’s public school system delivered to your inbox.Danielle Rose sat in her home on Monday night trying to figure out how to be in two places at once. Her son’s eighth grade graduation at Dr. E. Alma Flagg in the North Ward started at 9 a.m. Tuesday. His little sister’s pre-K ceremony at The Leaguers, a preschool provider contracted by Newark Public Schools, started at 9:45 a.m. downtown. But her son only had one request: He wanted both parents there. “In one moment, my husband is like, okay, I’m going to go to this one, then go to the other one. And then my son comes in and says, “Can y’all please both come?”Rose is not alone. In recent years, Newark parents with more than one student graduating have faced an impossible choice on what should be one of their family’s biggest days. The district packs dozens of ceremonies into the same time frame each June, resulting in scheduling conflicts, and during last week’s school board meeting, three members called it out publicly. Superintendent Roger León at the June 18 school board meeting said the fix has been having elementary school graduations in the morning and high schools in the afternoon. But he warned that venue shortages across the city make that a hard promise to keep. On Tuesday, high schools such as East Side and Arts still had morning ceremonies at the same time as elementary schools. León said the district’s hands are practically tied. The Newark Teachers Union contract requires the last day of school to also be the last working day for educators, León said. That means ceremonies can only happen on June 23 unless staff volunteer their time. Holding graduations before the last day, he added, “had increased attendance problems.”Newark resident Danielle Rose poses for a picture with her son, a graduate of Dr. E. Alma Flagg Elementary School, and her daughter, a graduate of The Leaguers Preschool.Those conflicts aren’t new. Two years ago, Yvonne Davis had the same problem and was forced to split up her family to celebrate a big milestone.Her son was graduating from Malcolm X Shabazz High School, and her daughter crossed the stage at Avon Avenue Elementary’s eighth grade ceremony, both at 9:30 a.m. At the time, she said she called the principal and raised her concern, but was told it was the scheduling decision of the school board, not the school.“I felt like the Board of Education should have considered that,” Davis said. “A lot of parents, we just got left out.”Davis, a single mother, went to her son’s ceremony while her mother and her children’s father covered her daughter’s. She only saw her daughter’s graduation in pictures and said that she knew at least three other parents that year who faced the same impossible split. My daughter “understood, but I wasn’t there,” Davis said. During the June meeting, board member David Daughtey said he had already heard from parents and other community members frustrated about having to travel to multiple venues across the city for overlapping ceremonies. He called on the district to separate elementary and high school graduations into different time frames, as it had done in the past, Daughety said. “I’ve already heard parents and community members reach out and ask and complain about all of it happening at the same time,” Daughety added. Board member Helena Vinhas during the meeting also said she raised the same concern last school year and urged the district again to, at a minimum, separate elementary graduations from high school ones. Yvonne Davis' children, Tariq and Samaiyah, pose for a picture during their 2024 high school and eighth grade graduations, respectively.“A lot of the families do have difficulty by having children graduating on the same day and having to choose which one to attend,” Vinhas said. Board member Kanileah Anderson proposed another solution during the meeting. She called for high school seniors and eighth graders to graduate on entirely different days while pointing out that families with children in both levels, increasingly common as the district pulls students from across city neighborhoods, have no realistic way to attend both. “We all know that that is impossible,” Anderson said. “So I’m looking forward to the discussion, and actually a change for graduation classes of 2027.”But León stopped short of a broader solution. He said high schools like Data Science and Information Technology are having their graduations in Montclair because of venue constraints. “So, the idea that we have to maximize the space becomes an important factor,” León added. On Tuesday morning, Rose and her mother, who traveled from New York, just made it to her son’s graduation at Alma Flagg after finding a parking spot. But by the time the ceremony was over and she got back in her car, she could not get back downtown in time for her daughter’s pre-K ceremony. Luckily, she had explained the situation to her daughter’s teacher who allowed Rose to take photos before the ceremony with her daughter, in case she did not make it back in time. “Unfortunately, no one was able to attend my preschooler’s graduation,” Rose said. Jessie Gómez is a reporter for Chalkbeat Newark, covering public education in the city. Contact Jessie at jgomez@chalkbeat.org.