6 minutes

法國國際廣播電台
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法國世界報周四關注中國的能源安全戰略。該報指出,因為伊朗戰爭,霍爾木茲海峽正在成為檢驗中國能源安全戰略的重要關口。

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法國國際廣播電台
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法國世界報周四關注中國的能源安全戰略。該報指出,因為伊朗戰爭,霍爾木茲海峽正在成為檢驗中國能源安全戰略的重要關口。

6 minutes

法国国际广播电台
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法国世界报周四关注中国的能源安全战略。该报指出,因为伊朗战争,霍尔木兹海峡正在成为检验中国能源安全战略的重要关口。

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法国国际广播电台
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法国世界报周四关注中国的能源安全战略。该报指出,因为伊朗战争,霍尔木兹海峡正在成为检验中国能源安全战略的重要关口。

An Oklahoma school district's police department briefly appeared on federal records as the first school system in the nation to hold a 287(g) immigration enforcement agreement with ICE. The listing was removed within days, and district officials say the police chief was misled at a training event and never had the authority to sign. The post Oklahoma School District at Center of First-in-Nation ICE Agreement Controversy Denies Signing Anything appeared first on Oklahoma Watch.

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OklahomaWatch.org
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An Oklahoma school district's police department briefly appeared on federal records as the first school system in the nation to hold a 287(g) immigration enforcement agreement with ICE. The listing was removed within days, and district officials say the police chief was misled at a training event and never had the authority to sign. The post Oklahoma School District at Center of First-in-Nation ICE Agreement Controversy Denies Signing Anything appeared first on Oklahoma Watch.

O aceno do governo Javier Milei em apoiar militarmente os Estados Unidos na guerra contra o Irã, caso o presidente Donald Trump faça um pedido formal, é visto por especialistas como mais um passo de submissão a Washington, em choque com a tradição pacifista argentina, com potencial de arriscar a soberania do país. A sinalização […] Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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O aceno do governo Javier Milei em apoiar militarmente os Estados Unidos na guerra contra o Irã, caso o presidente Donald Trump faça um pedido formal, é visto por especialistas como mais um passo de submissão a Washington, em choque com a tradição pacifista argentina, com potencial de arriscar a soberania do país. A sinalização […] Fonte

Bella Aurora Bio 10 Forte: el tratamiento antimanchas que transforma tu piel.

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Mundiario
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Bella Aurora Bio 10 Forte: el tratamiento antimanchas que transforma tu piel.

Sign up for our free monthly newsletter Beyond High School to get the latest news about college and career paths for Colorado’s high school grads. Oliver Godoy stood near the steps of Colorado’s Capitol with more than 100 others on Thursday to celebrate the launch of a new coalition meant to amplify the voices of young people like himself.The Youth Agency Coalition brings together six Colorado nonprofit organizations with the goal of empowering people ages 16 through 34 like Godoy who want to effect change.Godoy, 26, said he doesn’t have a lot of experience advocating for policy issues and can get nervous about stepping into the political realm. But the fellow advocates he’s met at Young Invincibles and through the new coalition have empowered him to speak out — especially when he feels like older people dismiss his experience.Metropolitan State University of Denver student and advocate Oliver Godoy, 26, on Thursday, March 19, 2026, outside the Colorado Capitol in Denver.“I think this coalition gives young people more power in these spaces where it’s not designed for them to be,” said Godoy, who attends Metropolitan State University of Denver. The six organizations that make up the coalition are Young Invincibles, New Era Colorado, Rocky Mountain Partnership Cradle to Career, Ednium: The Alumni Collective, Mi Familia En Acción, and UpRISE. Melanie Kesner, Young Invincibles’ Rocky Mountain region director, said she hopes the coalition shows even more young people that they have a place in shaping state and local policy. The coalition will allow them to drive conversations about the issues they care about instead of limiting advocacy to just the areas the six nonprofits focus on. The coalition also plans to hold a June gubernatorial forum that youth and young adults will lead.Ednium’s Executive Director Richard Maez said when he took over as the nonprofit’s leader, he saw a group of organizations that all shared a common goal to get people ages 16 to 34 involved in policy issues. But the nonprofits have a narrow focus on issues compared to the many that affect young people, he said.For example, Ednium represents Denver Public Schools alumni and trains and mobilizes them to advocate for issues that include K-12, higher education, and economic mobility. Ednium has supported the state’s financial literacy requirement and workforce readiness legislation.UpRise wants statewide tobacco control, such as laws that have banned flavored nicotine products. And Mi Familia En Acción elevates the voices of the state’s Latino community through building political power. This year, the organization has backed House Bill 1272, which would collect data on how extreme temperatures impact workers.“We’ve proven to other people that we know what we’re doing,” Maez said of the different advocacy organizations “Now it’s time to say, ‘Let’s do it together.’”All six organizations have organized to bring young people to the Capitol. But the numbers have often been smaller than what the coalition brought on Thursday. Lawmakers have also given some young people a voice under Colorado’s golden dome. The Colorado Youth Advisory Council, created in 2008, brings together 40 youth ages 14 to 19 to make policy issue recommendations. The group was even given the ability by lawmakers in 2019 to draft bills, but lawmakers took that power away last year. After the rally, attendees filed into the Capitol to speak with lawmakers.Sara Navidi, 24, led a group of four who wanted to talk about health care bills. Navidi graduated college in 2022 and has taken time off before medical school to get work experience, including in policymaking.Navidi currently works with Young Invincibles but has also been active with New Era Colorado. She said she’s found the different organizations might advocate for the same issues at times, but do it separately. “We’re going to be even better when we collaborate together,” Navidi said.Young Invincibles advocate Sara Navidi speaks with Sen. Kyle Mullica, a Thornton Democrat, about a healthcare bill she would like to see passed during a youth advocacy day organized by six nonprofits on Thursday, March 19, 2026, at the Colorado Capitol in Denver.Others in Navidi’s group said they came to the Capitol for the first time. Noelle Romero, 24, heard about the day’s events from the Colorado School of Public Health, a collaborative that includes the University of Colorado Anschutz, where she attends school.So many organizations coming together to give young people a space to talk with lawmakers made her feel supported, she said. “I think if I had come here alone, I’d be terrified,” Romero said.Godoy said strength in numbers is the point of the coalition. “We’ve grown up in this world where all these decisions have already been made for us without our say,” Godoy said. “So it’s important for us to voice our opinions, for our voices to be heard, and for people to actually understand that we’re not going away.”Jason Gonzales is a reporter covering higher education and the Colorado legislature. Chalkbeat Colorado partners with Open Campus on higher education coverage. Contact Jason at jgonzales@chalkbeat.org.

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Chalkbeat
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Sign up for our free monthly newsletter Beyond High School to get the latest news about college and career paths for Colorado’s high school grads. Oliver Godoy stood near the steps of Colorado’s Capitol with more than 100 others on Thursday to celebrate the launch of a new coalition meant to amplify the voices of young people like himself.The Youth Agency Coalition brings together six Colorado nonprofit organizations with the goal of empowering people ages 16 through 34 like Godoy who want to effect change.Godoy, 26, said he doesn’t have a lot of experience advocating for policy issues and can get nervous about stepping into the political realm. But the fellow advocates he’s met at Young Invincibles and through the new coalition have empowered him to speak out — especially when he feels like older people dismiss his experience.Metropolitan State University of Denver student and advocate Oliver Godoy, 26, on Thursday, March 19, 2026, outside the Colorado Capitol in Denver.“I think this coalition gives young people more power in these spaces where it’s not designed for them to be,” said Godoy, who attends Metropolitan State University of Denver. The six organizations that make up the coalition are Young Invincibles, New Era Colorado, Rocky Mountain Partnership Cradle to Career, Ednium: The Alumni Collective, Mi Familia En Acción, and UpRISE. Melanie Kesner, Young Invincibles’ Rocky Mountain region director, said she hopes the coalition shows even more young people that they have a place in shaping state and local policy. The coalition will allow them to drive conversations about the issues they care about instead of limiting advocacy to just the areas the six nonprofits focus on. The coalition also plans to hold a June gubernatorial forum that youth and young adults will lead.Ednium’s Executive Director Richard Maez said when he took over as the nonprofit’s leader, he saw a group of organizations that all shared a common goal to get people ages 16 to 34 involved in policy issues. But the nonprofits have a narrow focus on issues compared to the many that affect young people, he said.For example, Ednium represents Denver Public Schools alumni and trains and mobilizes them to advocate for issues that include K-12, higher education, and economic mobility. Ednium has supported the state’s financial literacy requirement and workforce readiness legislation.UpRise wants statewide tobacco control, such as laws that have banned flavored nicotine products. And Mi Familia En Acción elevates the voices of the state’s Latino community through building political power. This year, the organization has backed House Bill 1272, which would collect data on how extreme temperatures impact workers.“We’ve proven to other people that we know what we’re doing,” Maez said of the different advocacy organizations “Now it’s time to say, ‘Let’s do it together.’”All six organizations have organized to bring young people to the Capitol. But the numbers have often been smaller than what the coalition brought on Thursday. Lawmakers have also given some young people a voice under Colorado’s golden dome. The Colorado Youth Advisory Council, created in 2008, brings together 40 youth ages 14 to 19 to make policy issue recommendations. The group was even given the ability by lawmakers in 2019 to draft bills, but lawmakers took that power away last year. After the rally, attendees filed into the Capitol to speak with lawmakers.Sara Navidi, 24, led a group of four who wanted to talk about health care bills. Navidi graduated college in 2022 and has taken time off before medical school to get work experience, including in policymaking.Navidi currently works with Young Invincibles but has also been active with New Era Colorado. She said she’s found the different organizations might advocate for the same issues at times, but do it separately. “We’re going to be even better when we collaborate together,” Navidi said.Young Invincibles advocate Sara Navidi speaks with Sen. Kyle Mullica, a Thornton Democrat, about a healthcare bill she would like to see passed during a youth advocacy day organized by six nonprofits on Thursday, March 19, 2026, at the Colorado Capitol in Denver.Others in Navidi’s group said they came to the Capitol for the first time. Noelle Romero, 24, heard about the day’s events from the Colorado School of Public Health, a collaborative that includes the University of Colorado Anschutz, where she attends school.So many organizations coming together to give young people a space to talk with lawmakers made her feel supported, she said. “I think if I had come here alone, I’d be terrified,” Romero said.Godoy said strength in numbers is the point of the coalition. “We’ve grown up in this world where all these decisions have already been made for us without our say,” Godoy said. “So it’s important for us to voice our opinions, for our voices to be heard, and for people to actually understand that we’re not going away.”Jason Gonzales is a reporter covering higher education and the Colorado legislature. Chalkbeat Colorado partners with Open Campus on higher education coverage. Contact Jason at jgonzales@chalkbeat.org.

"Whenever you see sanctions, you really should think war, because that's really ultimately the outcome."

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FAIR
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"Whenever you see sanctions, you really should think war, because that's really ultimately the outcome."

Pantene Pro-V AntiCaspa 3 en 1: la solución práctica para un cabello limpio y cuidado.

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Mundiario
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Pantene Pro-V AntiCaspa 3 en 1: la solución práctica para un cabello limpio y cuidado.

O Príncipe Custódio dá as boas vindas à Travessa dos Venezianos. Ele morou na casa de pedra bem na esquina da Lopo Gonçalves, com o número 498 de 1901 a 1935. Logo a seguir vem o Centro Africano São Miguel Arcanjo do Pai Alfredo, fundado em 20 de maio de 1980. E depois todo o […] Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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O Príncipe Custódio dá as boas vindas à Travessa dos Venezianos. Ele morou na casa de pedra bem na esquina da Lopo Gonçalves, com o número 498 de 1901 a 1935. Logo a seguir vem o Centro Africano São Miguel Arcanjo do Pai Alfredo, fundado em 20 de maio de 1980. E depois todo o […] Fonte

15 minutes

South Carolina Daily Gazette
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COLUMBIA — A white Richland County man publicly admitted Thursday that he shot at a Black man at the entrance of their subdivision because of his race. Jonathan Felkel, 34, pleaded guilty to a federal hate crime in Columbia before U.S. District Court Judge Mary Geiger Lewis. Felkel’s plea to the civil rights violation came eight […]

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South Carolina Daily Gazette
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COLUMBIA — A white Richland County man publicly admitted Thursday that he shot at a Black man at the entrance of their subdivision because of his race. Jonathan Felkel, 34, pleaded guilty to a federal hate crime in Columbia before U.S. District Court Judge Mary Geiger Lewis. Felkel’s plea to the civil rights violation came eight […]

A veces, no hace falta renovar todo el armario para darle un aire nuevo a tu estilo.

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Mundiario
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A veces, no hace falta renovar todo el armario para darle un aire nuevo a tu estilo.

Nivea edición especial: la crema universal que nunca deja de ser tendencia.

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Mundiario
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Nivea edición especial: la crema universal que nunca deja de ser tendencia.

A Senate vote on a bill that would have required Alabama governments and agencies to refer to the Gulf of Mexico as the “Gulf of America” was delayed Thursday amid a Democratic filibuster.   HB 2, sponsored by Rep. David Standridge, R-Hayden, would require all state and local entities to change the name of the Gulf […]

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Alabama Reflector
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A Senate vote on a bill that would have required Alabama governments and agencies to refer to the Gulf of Mexico as the “Gulf of America” was delayed Thursday amid a Democratic filibuster.   HB 2, sponsored by Rep. David Standridge, R-Hayden, would require all state and local entities to change the name of the Gulf […]

23 minutes

Times of San Diego
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Whether your tastes run to classic country, classical chamber, or sludge metal, you'll find something to satisfy your auditory appetite.

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Times of San Diego
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Whether your tastes run to classic country, classical chamber, or sludge metal, you'll find something to satisfy your auditory appetite.

24 minutes

Mundiario
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Cárdigan de punto fino: el básico silencioso que siempre salva tus looks.

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Mundiario
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Cárdigan de punto fino: el básico silencioso que siempre salva tus looks.

25 minutes

Louisiana Illuminator
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After three consecutive years of standstill state budgets, Louisiana’s public colleges and universities are struggling with the effects of inflation and bloating athletics budgets.  Gov. Jeff Landry has boasted of not growing the state budget since he took office in 2024. But while funding has generally stood still, inflation has created the practical effect of […]

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Louisiana Illuminator
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After three consecutive years of standstill state budgets, Louisiana’s public colleges and universities are struggling with the effects of inflation and bloating athletics budgets.  Gov. Jeff Landry has boasted of not growing the state budget since he took office in 2024. But while funding has generally stood still, inflation has created the practical effect of […]

Falda midi con vuelo de lunares: el clásico que siempre vuelve (y siempre gana).

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Mundiario
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Falda midi con vuelo de lunares: el clásico que siempre vuelve (y siempre gana).

Estefany Rodríguez, a Nashville Noticias journalist, was released from ICE custody after more than two weeks and is now free on bond as she continues to fight for her right to remain in the U.S. The post Nashville Journalist Estefany Rodriguez Released from Louisiana Detention Facility appeared first on Nashville Banner.

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Nashville Banner
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Estefany Rodríguez, a Nashville Noticias journalist, was released from ICE custody after more than two weeks and is now free on bond as she continues to fight for her right to remain in the U.S. The post Nashville Journalist Estefany Rodriguez Released from Louisiana Detention Facility appeared first on Nashville Banner.

The Senate Dems’ “CT option” builds on Gov. Ned Lamont's actions and own proposal to create a state health care option, but goes further.

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CT Mirror
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The Senate Dems’ “CT option” builds on Gov. Ned Lamont's actions and own proposal to create a state health care option, but goes further.

Tras un recuento completo de votos realizado por máquina el líder del Senado Phil Berger continúa perdiendo por 23 votos frente al alguacil Sam Page en la primaria republicana del Distrito 26 del Senado estatal. La entrada Page mantiene ventaja tras recuento en primaria republicana, Berger impugna 13 votos se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. Page mantiene ventaja tras recuento en primaria republicana, Berger impugna 13 votos was first posted on marzo 19, 2026 at 7:10 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org

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Enlace Latino NC
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Tras un recuento completo de votos realizado por máquina el líder del Senado Phil Berger continúa perdiendo por 23 votos frente al alguacil Sam Page en la primaria republicana del Distrito 26 del Senado estatal. La entrada Page mantiene ventaja tras recuento en primaria republicana, Berger impugna 13 votos se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. Page mantiene ventaja tras recuento en primaria republicana, Berger impugna 13 votos was first posted on marzo 19, 2026 at 7:10 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org