Last Needy Family Fund donation aids Delaware families statewide

Sometimes, an ending becomes one more chance to give.

USA TODAY

Last year was supposed to mark the close of Delaware Online/The News Journal's Needy Family Fund — a program built over a century that raised millions of dollars and helped generations of Delawareans through partners likeThe Salvation Army,the Food Bank of Delaware, and theDivision of Social Services. The decision to end the fund was not due to a lack of interest but reflected how more direct giving had made the Needy Family Fund largely obsolete.

But thanks to an unexpected act of generosity, the story didn't end there.

A more than $390,000 gift from the Mark H. Goldman Trust gave the fund one final chance to make an impact, with the money distributed among three organizations to directly help people in need.

"For more than a century, The News Journal’s Needy Family Fund has stood as a testament to the generosity and compassion of our community," said Regan Apo, general manager at The News Journal. "While it is bittersweet to bring this chapter to a close, we take great pride in knowing that this final distribution — made possible by an extraordinarily generous donor — will continue that legacy by supporting organizations that are deeply embedded in and committed to serving Delaware's most vulnerable residents."

These three organizations were selected because of their past relationship with The News Journal's Needy Family Fund and their impact statewide. They were given leeway to use the money in whatever way they saw best, with a requirement that the money help people directly.

"At a time when the need is as great as ever, we are confident these funds will create meaningful, lasting impact for individuals and families across our state," Apo added.

Financial stability is slipping for more Delawareans, the three agencies told Delaware Online/The News Journal. Separately, the three said they’re seeing even working, typically stable residents struggle to afford basic needs as costs climb and safety nets fall short.

To support services for Delawareans, The Salvation Army and the Division of Social Services each received $153,000 on May 21, while the Food Bank received $86,000. With that addition to last year’s Needy Family Fund allocation, all three organizations received equal funding.

More:We are partnering with the Food Bank to fight hunger as we sunset Needy Family Fund

The Salvation Army expects to spread the donations over five years, allowing them to help people in need cover such things as rent, mortgage or utility bills.

"It just goes so far," April Smith, The Salvation Army’s social services director, told Delaware Online/The News Journal on May 21.

Here's how each agency says it plans to use the money and why.

The Salvation Army

Smith said the group plans to use the funding to strengthen its direct-service programs so people facing tough times can get help when they need it. This would include housing and utility assistance, along with other support to meet immediate needs.

"We believe this is the best use of the donation because the needs we are seeing continue to grow," Smith said. "More people are turning to us for help with essentials such as food, housing support, utility assistance and other basic necessities. This funding allows us to respond quickly and strategically to those needs rather than limiting the support to one program."

Smith said the faith-based human services organization is seeing more working families struggling to keep up with rising housing and utility costs, as well as more older adults living on fixed incomes who are forced to choose between paying for medication, food and other essentials.

"Flexible funding like this allows us to provide assistance where it can have the greatest immediate impact," she said. "The demand for services has increased significantly, and gifts like this help us continue meeting that demand while maintaining stability for the people who rely on our programs."

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Smith added that they are honored by the Mark H. Goldman Trust's confidence in the organization's work and are committed to using the funds to make a meaningful difference in the lives of those they serve at their Delaware locations in Wilmington, Dover, and Seaford.

Food Bank of Delaware

The Food Bank of Delaware, which distributes food statewide through a network of partners, will be using the money to support itsmobile pantry program.

"We know that many in our community are feeling the impact of the high cost of living — especially high fuel and food prices," said Kim Turner, the food bank's communications director. "The mobile pantry brings food directly into underserved communities so our neighbors in need don't have to travel far to get assistance."

The high cost of living is making many ordinary working Delawareans struggle to keep up, Turner said, recounting how one man told them he had a personal emergency and needed to replace his vehicle. This was an unexpected expense that wiped out his savings.

Turner said community donations help fund the mobile pantry, which costs about $2,500 per distribution, including food and operating expenses.

"We've seen a steady increase in demand since January," she said.

Demand for the Food Bank's mobile pantry has surged, with the number of households served more than doubling in the first three months of the year:

  • January had 662 households.

  • February had 826 households.

  • March had 1,349 households.

  • April had 1,394 households.

  • As of May 18, there have been 913 households served by the program.

Delaware Division of Social Services

Every day, the state's Division of Social Services sees people with urgent needs visit one of its 14 service centers. These are people who need help right now, but do not quite meet a program's eligibility requirements or are waiting for benefits to kick in.

Faith Mwaura, Division of Social Services' deputy director, said the fund will let them say yes when other programs cannot.

"A family facing eviction, someone whose lights are about to be shut off, a person who just lost their job and needs help keeping a roof over their family's head," Mwaura said. "These are not unusual situations. They are what we see every single day.

"This fund lets us meet people where they are and help them stabilize before things get worse."

Such donations allow the state division the flexibility that programs with strict eligibility rules simply cannot.

"Not everyone who walks through our doors qualifies for every program, but they still need help," she said. "Charitable funds fill that gap. And yes, the need is growing.

"We are seeing more families stretched thin by rising rents, high utility costs and the end of supports that helped people through the pandemic."

Mwaura explained that $100 can help:

  • Provide a week's worth of groceries for a family facing hardship.

  • Cover a $60, 30-consecutive-day bus pass that allows a parent to get to and from work reliably.

  • Essential household items, or other basic necessities during a difficult time.

"When someone is in crisis even a small amount at the right moment can make the difference between stability and losing everything," Mwaura said.

Send tips or story ideas to Esteban Parra at (302) 324-2299 oreparra@delawareonline.com.

This article originally appeared on Delaware News Journal:Needy Family Fund receives final gift to help Delaware families

Last Needy Family Fund donation aids Delaware families statewide

Sometimes, an ending becomes one more chance to give. Last year was supposed to mark the close of Delaware Online/The News Journal...
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Stephen Colbert's “The Late Show” ends with a reality-bending wormhole, Strike Force Five, and a song

The final episode of The Late Show With Stephen Colbert aired Thursday.

Entertainment Weekly Stephen Colbert greets the audience on 'The Late Show' series finaleCredit: Scott Kowalchyk/CBS

Key Points

  • Music icon Paul McCartney was the show's final traditional guest.

  • Colbert's fellow late-night hosts again appeared on the show to support their friend and colleague.

And that's a wrap forThe Late Show.

Stephen Colbert, the franchise's host for the past decade, signed off Thursday, May 21 after over 1,800 shows.

Fans startedlining up earlyin the rain for a chance to see Colbert tape his last show and held up signs of thanks to the now-former talk show host.

Colbert opened the show not with his usual monologue but with amessage to the audience: "This show, I want you to know, has been a joy for us to do for you," he told the camera. "In fact, we call this show the 'Joy Machine.'"

The machine part, he said, was required to crank out so many shows.

"But the thing is, if you choose to do it with joy, it doesn't hurt as much when your fingers get caught in the gears," Colbert said. "And I cannot adequately explain to you what the people who work here have done for each other and how much we mean to each other."

But he also cracked, "If you're just tuning intoThe Late Show, you misseda lot."

The comediandid not once mention President Donald Trump, his frequent sparring partner over recent years who many believe used his authority over CBS network's business dealings toget Colbert's show canceled.

While there were numerous celebrities in the audience who made a "forced" celebrity cameos and wanted to be his last guest — including Bryan Cranston, Paul Rudd, and Tim Meadows — Colbert's last sit-down interview was withmusic icon Paul McCartney. The former Beatle returned to where it all began, the Ed Sullivan Theater, where his band famously performed onThe Ed Sullivan Showin 1964.

Strike Force Five members John Oliver, Seth Meyers, Jimmy Kimmel, and Jimmy Fallon on 'The Late Show'Credit: CBS

Before the episode ended, Colbert also welcomed astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, who explained the wormhole eatingThe Late Showset. Colbert's fellow Strike Force Five members — late-night hostsJimmy Kimmel,Jimmy Fallon,Seth Meyers, andJohn Oliver— also returned one last time, along with Colbert's longtime mentor and formerThe Daily Showcolleague Jon Stewart.

Jon Batiste and Elvis Costello appeared as musical guests during the episode with Colbert performing with them. Some of the last moments of the show featured McCartney at the mic, singing his former group's 1967 song "Hello, Goodbye" with Colbert backing him on vocals along with Batiste and Costello.

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Stephen Colbert with Paul McCartney on 'The Late Show' finaleCredit: CBS

CBS announced in July that it planned to end its late-night TV franchise, which debuted with hostDavid Lettermanin 1993, after one last season. The move was "purely a financial decision," the network said at the time, insisting that the move was unrelated to "the show's performance, content or other matters happening at Paramount."

Colbert himself thanked his fans and staff on-air, vowing to make his show's final season count.

"We get to do this show for each other, every day, all day," Colbert said. "And I've had the pleasure and the responsibility of sharing what we do every day with you in front of this camera for the last 10 years."

'The Late Show With Stephen Colbert' in 2016Credit: Scott Kowalchyk/CBS

He showed a different emotion after Trump, a frequent nemesis of late-night TV, expressed his delight over the news Colbert was out.

After Trump wrote on social media, "I absolutely love that Colbert got fired," the host demanded on-air, "How dare you sir?" He then did a bit in which he told Trump to "Go f--- yourself."

Colbert has received much love from his fellow late-night hosts in the final days of his show. Kimmel even took out a billboard seeking support for Colbert and company to win theEmmyfor Outstanding Talk Series for the first time, which they did. The men also reassembled as the collective Strike Force Five to raise money for charity in one of Colbert's final shows.

The last dozen or so episodes were stacked with impressive guest lineups that included former PresidentBarack Obama,Tom Hanks,Steven Spielberg, andJulia Louis-Dreyfus. Colbert also spent time on a "worst of" episode, which featured sketches and jokes that hadn't made it to air previously, and an episode of him reminiscing with Letterman himself. That one ended with the two tossing CBS-owned furniture off the roof.

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Colbert mused in final days on the air that leaving late-night just might have "saved my life," the husband and father-of-three adult children toldPEOPLE. "It takes a lot of bone marrow to do the show every day, and now I'll be stepping down with enough time, enough energy to do other things that I want to do."

Beginning Friday,The Late Show's spot on the TV schedule will be filled byComics Unleashed With Byron Allen, which is hosted by aColbert fan.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Stephen Colbert's “The Late Show” ends with a reality-bending wormhole, Strike Force Five, and a song

The final episode of The Late Show With Stephen Colbert aired Thursday. Key Points Music icon Paul McCartney was ...
Syria's Sharaa to attend G7 summit in France, sources say

By Feras Dalatey

Reuters

May 21 (Reuters) - Syria will attend the G7 summit in France next month as ‌a guest nation and be represented by President ‌Ahmed al-Sharaa, three sources familiar with the matter said, marking Syria's ​first participation in a summit of the group since the forum was founded in 1975.

An invitation to Sharaa to attend the June 15-17 summit in Évian-les-Bains, southeastern France, ‌was hand-delivered to Syrian ⁠Finance Minister Yisr Barnieh, who attended the group's financial talks earlier this week in ⁠Paris, one of the sources said.

The source, a Syrian official, said Syria's participation in the talks would likely focus ​on ​the country's role as a “potential ​strategic hub for supply ‌chains” following the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

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Shipping through the strait has been largely halted since the Iran war erupted at the end of February, rattling the global economy.

Syria, emerging from its 14-year civil war ‌as an ally of the West, ​is seeking to rebuild an ​economy shattered by ​years of conflict and sanctions.

While most sanctions ‌imposed during former Presidents Hafez ​and Bashar al-Assad's ​rule have since been eased, attracting foreign investment and restoring normal banking ties have proven slower and ​more difficult ‌than many officials had hoped.

(Reporting by Feras Dalatey in ​Dubai; Additional reporting by Khalil Ashawi; Editing ​by Raju Gopalakrishnan, Aidan Lewis)

Syria's Sharaa to attend G7 summit in France, sources say

By Feras Dalatey May 21 (Reuters) - Syria will attend the G7 summit in France next month as ‌a guest nation and be represented by...
Sheryl Crow Received Breast Cancer Diagnosis 'Same Week' She Discovered Lance Armstrong Was Seeing a 'Really Famous Actress'

Sheryl Crow recalled getting her breast cancer diagnosis the "same week" she and Lance Armstrong split

People Sheryl Crow and Lance Armstrong in December 2004 in Los AngelesCredit: Kevin Winter/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • The singer-songwriter also said during that time she discovered the former professional cyclist was seeing a "really famous actress"

  • Crow and Armstrong split in 2006

Sheryl Crowrecalled a difficult time in her life.

Duringthe Tuesday, May 19 episodeofThe Bobbycast, the "Soak Up the Sun" hitmaker reflected on receiving her breast cancer diagnosis and going through heartbreak.

Crow, now 64, reflected on being diagnosed with breast cancer in 2026 and splitting with her then-fiancéLance Armstrongthe same week.

Sheryl Crow in February 2025 in L.A.; Lance Armstrong in June 2018 in L.A.Credit: Tibrina Hobson/Getty

"I was engaged. I had three beautiful step-children. I wanted to have kids with this person. We split. In the same week that we split, I got diagnosed with breast cancer, and I found out he was seeing a really famous actress," she recalled.

At the time, Crow said she went through "about nine months of radiation and grieving and anger."

"I had a really stoic oncologist who literally looked like my grandmother, but one of the things that she said to me was, 'I've had a thousand women come in with cancer, don't miss out on the lesson,'" she said.

Crow realized, amid her breast cancer diagnosis, that she was "a caretaker," which made her realize she was the last person she took care of at the end of the day.

"It took my life screeching to a halt to get to a place to go, 'Okay, who am I? And why am I doing what I'm doing? Do I love what I'm doing? What am I supposed to be doing?" she asked herself.

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Sheryl Crow on 'The Bobbycast' in May 2026Credit: Netflix

PEOPLE reached out to a rep for Armstrong for comment.

Crow and Armstrong got engaged in October 2005 and split in February 2006.

The Texas-born athlete, now 54, has since remarried,tying the knot with Anna Hansen Armstrongin August 2022. They share two children, son Max and daughter Olivia. He shares three children,son Lukeand twin daughters Grace and Isabelle, with his first wife, Kristin Richard.

Crow has two sons whom she adopted: Wyatt, 19, and Levi, 15.

In a 2019interview with PEOPLE, Crow reflected on ending her engagement to Armstrong amid her breast cancer diagnosis.

“When I was diagnosed and my relationship fell apart, people were camped outside trying to get that picture of Sheryl Crow at her lowest moment. I just lost all faith in humankind,” she said at the time.

Crow continued, “But I licked my wounds. I started feeling like, ‘I'm at a point in my life where I need to manifest something more realistic.'”

Read the original article onPeople

Sheryl Crow Received Breast Cancer Diagnosis 'Same Week' She Discovered Lance Armstrong Was Seeing a 'Really Famous Actress'

Sheryl Crow recalled getting her breast cancer diagnosis the "same week" she and Lance Armstrong split NEED TO KNOW ...
Madonna, 67, Dances on a Disco Floor in a Lavender Mesh Minidress and Blush Pink Fishnets

Madonna seemingly had a cheeky comeback to Charli XCX's claim that the "dance floor is dead."

InStyle Madonna arrives at the Dolce & Gabbana afterparty during the Milan Fashion Week Women's Fall/Winter 2026/2027 in Milan.Credit: Getty Images

The Gist

  • The "Vogue" singer showed off her disco dance moves in a ruched lavender minidress in photos shared on May 20.

  • Madonna paired the look with a lingerie-inspired accessory.

Charli XCX might think the “dance floor is dead,” but according to the Queen of Pop, she’s just playing the wrong music. Fresh off the release of her newclub-inspired albumConfessions II,Madonnashowed she’s not ready to hang up her dancing shoes as she lit up a disco floor in a semi-sheer lavender minidress.

In a photo dump shared on May 20 with herSabrina Carpenter collaboration“Bring Your Love” playing in the background, the “Vogue” singer had fans feeling like they were back in herConfessions on a Dance Floorera circa 2005. I

Madonna performs during The Celebration Tour at The O2 Arena on October 15, 2023 in London, England.Credit: Getty Images

n the first image, which appeared to be taken in her giant dressing room, Madonna could be seen posing in a tiny lavender crewneck minidress that was completely covered in ruching. True to form, the67 year oldgave the spring-coded look alingerie-inspired twist, thanks to a pair of blush pink fishnet tights.

Madonna showed off a maximalist accessories moment, adding a pair of hot pink leather gloves with cutouts on the back of her hands, a pair of rose-colored aviator sunglasses trimmed with a silver metallic embellishment, and a matching silver, black, and purple cropped leather jacket that had a white fur accent along the neckline.

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Madonna performs with Sabrina Carpenter at the Coachella Stage during the 2026 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival at Empire Polo Club on April 17, 2026 in Indio, California.Credit: Getty Images

However, Madonna couldn’t decide on just one pair of shoes as she turned into a disco queen in subsequent images. The “4 Minutes” singer showed off her fishnets as she leaned back in a chair, putting her knee-high black leather lace-up boots front and center.

Madonna attends the Saint Laurent Womenswear Spring/Summer 2026 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on September 29, 2025 in Paris, France.Credit: Getty Images

Later, she changed into a pair of silver metallic lace-up shoes as she spun around on a lit-up dance floor. Last but not least, Madonna swapped out her boots for a pair of towering rhinestone-encrusted light pink stilettos, which sparkled from every angle.

The star styled hersignature blonde hair in a middle partwith soft curls framing her face. She opted for a frosty beauty look with a white Y2K-inspired eyeshadow, vivid black eyeliner, and a soft pink lipstick.

Read the original article onInStyle

Madonna, 67, Dances on a Disco Floor in a Lavender Mesh Minidress and Blush Pink Fishnets

Madonna seemingly had a cheeky comeback to Charli XCX's claim that the "dance floor is dead." The Gist ...
Why police are stepping up seat belt stops

Local law enforcement agencies are increasing seat belt enforcement ahead of Memorial Day.

USA TODAY

The "Click It or Ticket" campaign runs from May 15-26 according to a community announcement.

The campaign, funded by federal highway safety funds through the Illinois Department of Transportation, emphasizes the importance of seat belt use. Officers will be conducting high-visibility enforcement day and night, focusing on seat belt violations.

Illinois police will step up seat belt enforcement May 15–26 during the Memorial Day travel period as part of the Click It or Ticket campaign.

Unrestrained fatalities remain a concern

"Buckle up every trip, every time," Chief Deputy Kirk Raab said in the release. "Seat belts save lives, and we are committed to keeping our roads safe."

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Illinois law requires all drivers and passengers to wear seat belts. While usage has increased to 93% in 2025, unrestrained fatalities remain a concern, especially at night, according to the announcement.

Motorists who fail to buckle up can expect to be stopped and ticketed.

This story was created by reporter Nida Tazeen,NTazeen@usatodayco.com, with the assistance of Artificial Intelligence (AI). Journalists were involved in every step of the information gathering, review, editing and publishing process. Learn more atcm.usatoday.com/ethical-conduct.​

This article originally appeared on Journal Standard:Click It or Ticket returns May 15–26 for Memorial Day travel

Why police are stepping up seat belt stops

Local law enforcement agencies are increasing seat belt enforcement ahead of Memorial Day. The "Click It or Ticket" camp...

 

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