51 minutes
Auteur d’un doublé et homme du match contre le Botswana (3-0), Nicolas Jackson a peut-être définitivement convaincu les plus sceptiques quant à son statut de titulaire au poste très convoité d’avant-centre en équipe du Sénégal.
Auteur d’un doublé et homme du match contre le Botswana (3-0), Nicolas Jackson a peut-être définitivement convaincu les plus sceptiques quant à son statut de titulaire au poste très convoité d’avant-centre en équipe du Sénégal.
53 minutes
OKLAHOMA CITY — An Oklahoma City nonprofit is aiming to reduce homelessness among teens aging out of the foster care system, one tiny home at a time. Pivot, a program that offers teens aging out of fostercare food, shelter, and therapy, began building tiny homes in 2015. Multiple tiny homes have been built over the […]
53 minutes
OKLAHOMA CITY — An Oklahoma City nonprofit is aiming to reduce homelessness among teens aging out of the foster care system, one tiny home at a time. Pivot, a program that offers teens aging out of fostercare food, shelter, and therapy, began building tiny homes in 2015. Multiple tiny homes have been built over the […]
53 minutes
With 2025 drawing to a close, Mongabay’s flagship podcast has added more than 40 episodes over the course of the year. From professors and authors to Mongabay staffers, conservationists and advocates, we’ve hosted a diverse group of individuals, detailing their investigations, research, advocacy philosophy — all in service to shining a light on the existential […]
With 2025 drawing to a close, Mongabay’s flagship podcast has added more than 40 episodes over the course of the year. From professors and authors to Mongabay staffers, conservationists and advocates, we’ve hosted a diverse group of individuals, detailing their investigations, research, advocacy philosophy — all in service to shining a light on the existential […]
54 minutes

An eastern Oregon group charged with redeveloping a former military depot is considering rehiring an influential state lawmaker and giving him a large raise, despite state ethics watchdogs recently concluding he violated state laws when he inserted a $66,000 raise into a grant contract without his employer’s knowledge. The five members of the Columbia Development […]

An eastern Oregon group charged with redeveloping a former military depot is considering rehiring an influential state lawmaker and giving him a large raise, despite state ethics watchdogs recently concluding he violated state laws when he inserted a $66,000 raise into a grant contract without his employer’s knowledge. The five members of the Columbia Development […]
54 minutes
En un final de temporada marcado por una crisis deportiva, el asesinato de Mario Pineida a manos de sicarios en Ecuador caló hondo en el plantel del Barcelona SC y así lo dejo claro el goleador Felipe Caicedo. De vasta trayectoria, el atacante de 37 años aseguró este lunes que tras lo ocurrido con su … Continua leyendo "Ecuatoriano Caicedo medita retiro tras shock por muerte de Mario Pineida: "No quiero más del fútbol"" The post Ecuatoriano Caicedo medita retiro tras shock por muerte de Mario Pineida: "No quiero más del fútbol" appeared first on BioBioChile.
54 minutes
En un final de temporada marcado por una crisis deportiva, el asesinato de Mario Pineida a manos de sicarios en Ecuador caló hondo en el plantel del Barcelona SC y así lo dejo claro el goleador Felipe Caicedo. De vasta trayectoria, el atacante de 37 años aseguró este lunes que tras lo ocurrido con su … Continua leyendo "Ecuatoriano Caicedo medita retiro tras shock por muerte de Mario Pineida: "No quiero más del fútbol"" The post Ecuatoriano Caicedo medita retiro tras shock por muerte de Mario Pineida: "No quiero más del fútbol" appeared first on BioBioChile.
55 minutes
After lengthy study and contentious debate, officials say assisted outpatient treatment, or AOT, will be an alternative to involuntary hospitalization. The county says no one will be jailed or arrested for failure to stick with treatment, and an advisory group will monitor AOT’s use. The post Involuntary outpatient treatment for mental illness to start Jan. 1 in Allegheny County appeared first on Pittsburgh's Public Source. PublicSource is a nonprofit news organization serving the Pittsburgh region. Visit www.publicsource.org to read more.
After lengthy study and contentious debate, officials say assisted outpatient treatment, or AOT, will be an alternative to involuntary hospitalization. The county says no one will be jailed or arrested for failure to stick with treatment, and an advisory group will monitor AOT’s use. The post Involuntary outpatient treatment for mental illness to start Jan. 1 in Allegheny County appeared first on Pittsburgh's Public Source. PublicSource is a nonprofit news organization serving the Pittsburgh region. Visit www.publicsource.org to read more.
56 minutes
El Ministerio de Energía destacó que hoy se publicó en el Diario Oficial la resolución para los cargos fijos de transmisión durante la primera mitad de 2026 y, a su vez, establece la devolución de los cobros en exceso en cuentas de luz, debido a un error de Transelec. Con ello, se confirma que la … Continua leyendo "Gobierno publica resolución para devolución de cobros excesivos de luz por el error de Transelec" The post Gobierno publica resolución para devolución de cobros excesivos de luz por el error de Transelec appeared first on BioBioChile.
56 minutes
El Ministerio de Energía destacó que hoy se publicó en el Diario Oficial la resolución para los cargos fijos de transmisión durante la primera mitad de 2026 y, a su vez, establece la devolución de los cobros en exceso en cuentas de luz, debido a un error de Transelec. Con ello, se confirma que la … Continua leyendo "Gobierno publica resolución para devolución de cobros excesivos de luz por el error de Transelec" The post Gobierno publica resolución para devolución de cobros excesivos de luz por el error de Transelec appeared first on BioBioChile.
57 minutes
各位好,我是安东尼,欢迎收听法国世界报摘要。美国第三季度经济增长率超出预期,达4.3%。美国经济分析局 (BEA) 将这一超出预期1.1%的增幅解释为“消费者支出加速增长”。这是法国世界报国际版今天发的一个醒目的内容。
57 minutes
各位好,我是安东尼,欢迎收听法国世界报摘要。美国第三季度经济增长率超出预期,达4.3%。美国经济分析局 (BEA) 将这一超出预期1.1%的增幅解释为“消费者支出加速增长”。这是法国世界报国际版今天发的一个醒目的内容。
57 minutes
各位好,我是安東尼,歡迎收聽法國世界報摘要。美國第三季度經濟增長率超出預期,達4.3%。美國經濟分析局 (BEA) 將這一超出預期1.1%的增幅解釋為“消費者支出加速增長”。這是法國世界報國際版今天發的一個醒目的內容。
57 minutes
各位好,我是安東尼,歡迎收聽法國世界報摘要。美國第三季度經濟增長率超出預期,達4.3%。美國經濟分析局 (BEA) 將這一超出預期1.1%的增幅解釋為“消費者支出加速增長”。這是法國世界報國際版今天發的一個醒目的內容。
59 minutes
Les Tunisiens se sont tranquillement imposés (3-1) face à l’Ouganda ce mardi 23 décembre au stade olympique de Rabat. Les Aigles de Carthage empochent les trois points et prennent la tête du groupe C devant le Nigeria.
Les Tunisiens se sont tranquillement imposés (3-1) face à l’Ouganda ce mardi 23 décembre au stade olympique de Rabat. Les Aigles de Carthage empochent les trois points et prennent la tête du groupe C devant le Nigeria.
59 minutes

An immigration judge backed a green card for a Sheboygan Falls mother arrested after accidentally crossing the Canadian border, but a delayed background check prolonged her ICE detention for weeks. The post Background check delay shows crackdown’s strain on immigration system appeared first on Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service.

An immigration judge backed a green card for a Sheboygan Falls mother arrested after accidentally crossing the Canadian border, but a delayed background check prolonged her ICE detention for weeks. The post Background check delay shows crackdown’s strain on immigration system appeared first on Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service.
59 minutes
Un noticiero con información diaria de Estados Unidos y el mundo. [Lunes a viernes | 30 minutos]
59 minutes
Un noticiero con información diaria de Estados Unidos y el mundo. [Lunes a viernes | 30 minutos]
1 hour

The U.S. Department of Justice has instructed the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to stop providing any abortion care or abortion counseling, even in cases of rape or incest, reversing a 2022 policy meant to preserve access for members of the military no matter where they might be deployed. Peter Kasperowicz, press secretary for the VA, […]

The U.S. Department of Justice has instructed the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to stop providing any abortion care or abortion counseling, even in cases of rape or incest, reversing a 2022 policy meant to preserve access for members of the military no matter where they might be deployed. Peter Kasperowicz, press secretary for the VA, […]
1 hour

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Justice early Tuesday released thousands more files related to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, with several referencing President Donald Trump. The latest trove — which features nearly 30,000 more pages of documents related to Epstein — includes a note implicating Trump purportedly written by Epstein that the department later […]

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Justice early Tuesday released thousands more files related to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, with several referencing President Donald Trump. The latest trove — which features nearly 30,000 more pages of documents related to Epstein — includes a note implicating Trump purportedly written by Epstein that the department later […]
1 hour
Sign up for Chalkbeat New York’s free daily newsletter to get essential news about NYC’s public schools delivered to your inbox. Federico Zegarra, a special education teacher, spent a recent Thursday morning preparing lesson plans in his coworker’s classroom while her class was in session. Outside of the assistant principals’ office, three students received reading intervention at a table. What used to be a “mindfulness room” down the hall is now part dean’s office, part instructional space, and part study hall for students. This is what complying with New York’s class size reduction law looks like at Manhattan’s Stephen T. Mather Building Arts & Craftsmanship High School. While Zegarra and his colleagues agree that having smaller class sizes has made a world of a difference for them and their roughly 340 students, it’s meant playing a game of jigsaw puzzle in the building they share with four other schools. “People are teaching in offices, people are teaching in the hallway at some point because we just don’t have enough classrooms,” said Ivette Dobarganes, a Spanish teacher and United Federation of Teachers chapter leader at the school. The end of this semester marks the halfway point in the five-year implementation period of the class size law, which state lawmakers passed in 2022. The law requires New York City schools to have at most 20 students per class in grades K-3, 23 students for grades 4-8, and 25 students for grades 9-12 by September 2028. Last month, the city announced that about 64% of public school classrooms met those limits, surpassing the required 60%, but only after thousands of classes received exemptions. Educators with smaller classes are raving about the change. Out of about 50 educators who responded to a Chalkbeat survey about the class size mandate, nearly three-quarters said that their schools have reduced class sizes and they have seen positive changes in their classrooms. Educators said they could give students more attention, more detailed feedback, and allow for greater participation in class. They’re also noticing fewer behavioral issues in students, and they’re able to reach out to parents in a more manageable way. They’re feeling less stressed about their workload and have energy to give to students. But experts, advocates, teachers, and a lawmaker who spoke to Chalkbeat are also concerned the city is falling behind in its efforts to meet the mandate. They worry the second half of the implementation process will prove to be more challenging, and some teachers who responded to Chalkbeat’s survey expressed doubt that their class sizes will ever be reduced. Education Department officials emphasized that the city is in compliance with the current target of the class size mandate. “We remain committed to complying with state law and recognize that meeting the law’s future milestones of 80% and 100% will require an extensive commitment of resources,” Jenna Lyle, an Education Department spokesperson, said in a statement. To reach full compliance by 2028, the city will need an estimated 16,300 more teachers at a cost of $1.5 billion or more annually, according to the Independent Budget Office. This fall, the city spent $450 million on hiring new teachers and is planning to do a similar hiring spree next fall. In a letter to Gov. Kathy Hochul on Monday, New York City Comptroller Brad Lander wrote that the city’s recent financial plan isn’t sufficient to cover expenses needed to meet next year’s 80% target and full compliance the following year. He refused to certify the Department of Education’s latest class size reduction plan. (The lack of certification does not carry legal implications, according to experts.) Along with costs for additional teachers, classroom space remains a major concern. According to the School Construction Authority, the city needs 70,000 more seats to meet the class size mandate. Over half of the educators who responded to Chalkbeat’s survey mentioned space as a challenge. At Mather, which received city funding this year to hire six new teachers, nearly all classrooms are being used at all times, so teachers typically don’t have access to their desks to do their prep sessions and find whatever space they can. But Mather’s teachers are still finding silver linings. For example, they agree that it’s created less isolation and more opportunities for teachers to learn from one another. “We collaborate, we talk more,” Dobarganes said. ‘The biggest impact on education that I’ve ever seen’ Nicolina Mullins, from P.S. 146 in Howard Beach, Queens, has 18 students in her class, which she co-teaches with a special education teacher for students with disabilities alongside typically developing children. In her 24 years teaching Mullins previously had as many as 32 kids in a class. She’s noticed more student engagement and fewer kids feeling overwhelmed with socializing. Her own mental health has also improved, and she can do more without having to bring as much work home. Kelli Hesseltine, an English teacher at Manhattan’s High School for Math, Science and Engineering at City College, feels the same. “I feel like I’m coming home every day less exhausted, and I just have more energy to reinvest in the relationships with students,” Hesseltine said. “I’ve been teaching for over 20 years, so I really cannot stress this enough that this has made the biggest impact on education that I’ve ever seen.” Last year, she had five classes of 34 students each. This year, four of her classes have 25 students or less. The difference, she said, is “powerful.” For starters, her classroom is less cramped. Before, she could barely walk between the tables. She now has time for every student to participate, and she’s able to give papers back to students within a week instead of a month. When a student is struggling she now has more time to talk to parents regularly. “Before it was always just about putting out the fire, but now it’s about celebrating wins,” Hesseltine said. She’s able to email parents to say, “‘I saw your kid do something awesome in class today.’” To address space constraints, Hesseltine’s principal and parent teacher association worked to turn some office spaces into teacher work rooms. “It’s actually really cool. We have a ‘quiet room’ and sort of a ‘loud work’ room, so teachers can be either meeting with each other or meeting with students in this one space,” Hesseltine said. Ivette Dobarganes, a Spanish teacher and United Federation of Teachers chapter leader at Manhattan’s Stephen T. Mather Building Arts & Craftsmanship High School. Bobson Wong, a math teacher at Bayside High School, never had his own desk or classroom, even before the class size reduction law. He said his Queens school, which has about 3,000 students, had to add more sessions to their staggered schedule to comply with the mandate. Last year, students and teachers would either start their day during period two or three but this year, to accommodate smaller classes, some are starting their days during period four at 9:37 a.m. To reach full compliance, Wong said some students and teachers might eventually have to start during period five, which means their day would begin at 10:17 a.m. and end at 4:35 p.m., according to the school’s bell schedule. The staggered schedule has created some logistical hurdles, Wong said. For example, it’s made it harder to schedule faculty meetings when everyone is on a different daily schedule. For all of the logistical hurdles, however, Wong didn’t want to give the impression that smaller class sizes were a “bad thing,” Wong said. He emphasized that it’s not. But as schools across the city work toward reaching full compliance, some teachers are worried about other unintended consequences. Hesseltine estimated that her school is about 70% in compliance with the class size mandate, and if they don’t reach 100%, she fears it could create an equity issue within the teaching staff: How would her school decide who gets smaller class sizes and who doesn’t? “I think we’re all kind of worried,” Hesseltine said. “Is there enough dedication to really making this happen 100% across the school, from state and from the city?” Mullins, the Queens teacher, hopes other teachers will get to experience the same benefits of the law that she has. “I hope all of my colleagues are able to benefit from it at some point because I’ll tell you,” Mullins said, “it definitely is a different world when you have [a] small classroom size.” Jessica Shuran Yu is a New York City-based journalist. You can reach her at jshuranyu@chalkbeat.org.
1 hour
Sign up for Chalkbeat New York’s free daily newsletter to get essential news about NYC’s public schools delivered to your inbox. Federico Zegarra, a special education teacher, spent a recent Thursday morning preparing lesson plans in his coworker’s classroom while her class was in session. Outside of the assistant principals’ office, three students received reading intervention at a table. What used to be a “mindfulness room” down the hall is now part dean’s office, part instructional space, and part study hall for students. This is what complying with New York’s class size reduction law looks like at Manhattan’s Stephen T. Mather Building Arts & Craftsmanship High School. While Zegarra and his colleagues agree that having smaller class sizes has made a world of a difference for them and their roughly 340 students, it’s meant playing a game of jigsaw puzzle in the building they share with four other schools. “People are teaching in offices, people are teaching in the hallway at some point because we just don’t have enough classrooms,” said Ivette Dobarganes, a Spanish teacher and United Federation of Teachers chapter leader at the school. The end of this semester marks the halfway point in the five-year implementation period of the class size law, which state lawmakers passed in 2022. The law requires New York City schools to have at most 20 students per class in grades K-3, 23 students for grades 4-8, and 25 students for grades 9-12 by September 2028. Last month, the city announced that about 64% of public school classrooms met those limits, surpassing the required 60%, but only after thousands of classes received exemptions. Educators with smaller classes are raving about the change. Out of about 50 educators who responded to a Chalkbeat survey about the class size mandate, nearly three-quarters said that their schools have reduced class sizes and they have seen positive changes in their classrooms. Educators said they could give students more attention, more detailed feedback, and allow for greater participation in class. They’re also noticing fewer behavioral issues in students, and they’re able to reach out to parents in a more manageable way. They’re feeling less stressed about their workload and have energy to give to students. But experts, advocates, teachers, and a lawmaker who spoke to Chalkbeat are also concerned the city is falling behind in its efforts to meet the mandate. They worry the second half of the implementation process will prove to be more challenging, and some teachers who responded to Chalkbeat’s survey expressed doubt that their class sizes will ever be reduced. Education Department officials emphasized that the city is in compliance with the current target of the class size mandate. “We remain committed to complying with state law and recognize that meeting the law’s future milestones of 80% and 100% will require an extensive commitment of resources,” Jenna Lyle, an Education Department spokesperson, said in a statement. To reach full compliance by 2028, the city will need an estimated 16,300 more teachers at a cost of $1.5 billion or more annually, according to the Independent Budget Office. This fall, the city spent $450 million on hiring new teachers and is planning to do a similar hiring spree next fall. In a letter to Gov. Kathy Hochul on Monday, New York City Comptroller Brad Lander wrote that the city’s recent financial plan isn’t sufficient to cover expenses needed to meet next year’s 80% target and full compliance the following year. He refused to certify the Department of Education’s latest class size reduction plan. (The lack of certification does not carry legal implications, according to experts.) Along with costs for additional teachers, classroom space remains a major concern. According to the School Construction Authority, the city needs 70,000 more seats to meet the class size mandate. Over half of the educators who responded to Chalkbeat’s survey mentioned space as a challenge. At Mather, which received city funding this year to hire six new teachers, nearly all classrooms are being used at all times, so teachers typically don’t have access to their desks to do their prep sessions and find whatever space they can. But Mather’s teachers are still finding silver linings. For example, they agree that it’s created less isolation and more opportunities for teachers to learn from one another. “We collaborate, we talk more,” Dobarganes said. ‘The biggest impact on education that I’ve ever seen’ Nicolina Mullins, from P.S. 146 in Howard Beach, Queens, has 18 students in her class, which she co-teaches with a special education teacher for students with disabilities alongside typically developing children. In her 24 years teaching Mullins previously had as many as 32 kids in a class. She’s noticed more student engagement and fewer kids feeling overwhelmed with socializing. Her own mental health has also improved, and she can do more without having to bring as much work home. Kelli Hesseltine, an English teacher at Manhattan’s High School for Math, Science and Engineering at City College, feels the same. “I feel like I’m coming home every day less exhausted, and I just have more energy to reinvest in the relationships with students,” Hesseltine said. “I’ve been teaching for over 20 years, so I really cannot stress this enough that this has made the biggest impact on education that I’ve ever seen.” Last year, she had five classes of 34 students each. This year, four of her classes have 25 students or less. The difference, she said, is “powerful.” For starters, her classroom is less cramped. Before, she could barely walk between the tables. She now has time for every student to participate, and she’s able to give papers back to students within a week instead of a month. When a student is struggling she now has more time to talk to parents regularly. “Before it was always just about putting out the fire, but now it’s about celebrating wins,” Hesseltine said. She’s able to email parents to say, “‘I saw your kid do something awesome in class today.’” To address space constraints, Hesseltine’s principal and parent teacher association worked to turn some office spaces into teacher work rooms. “It’s actually really cool. We have a ‘quiet room’ and sort of a ‘loud work’ room, so teachers can be either meeting with each other or meeting with students in this one space,” Hesseltine said. Ivette Dobarganes, a Spanish teacher and United Federation of Teachers chapter leader at Manhattan’s Stephen T. Mather Building Arts & Craftsmanship High School. Bobson Wong, a math teacher at Bayside High School, never had his own desk or classroom, even before the class size reduction law. He said his Queens school, which has about 3,000 students, had to add more sessions to their staggered schedule to comply with the mandate. Last year, students and teachers would either start their day during period two or three but this year, to accommodate smaller classes, some are starting their days during period four at 9:37 a.m. To reach full compliance, Wong said some students and teachers might eventually have to start during period five, which means their day would begin at 10:17 a.m. and end at 4:35 p.m., according to the school’s bell schedule. The staggered schedule has created some logistical hurdles, Wong said. For example, it’s made it harder to schedule faculty meetings when everyone is on a different daily schedule. For all of the logistical hurdles, however, Wong didn’t want to give the impression that smaller class sizes were a “bad thing,” Wong said. He emphasized that it’s not. But as schools across the city work toward reaching full compliance, some teachers are worried about other unintended consequences. Hesseltine estimated that her school is about 70% in compliance with the class size mandate, and if they don’t reach 100%, she fears it could create an equity issue within the teaching staff: How would her school decide who gets smaller class sizes and who doesn’t? “I think we’re all kind of worried,” Hesseltine said. “Is there enough dedication to really making this happen 100% across the school, from state and from the city?” Mullins, the Queens teacher, hopes other teachers will get to experience the same benefits of the law that she has. “I hope all of my colleagues are able to benefit from it at some point because I’ll tell you,” Mullins said, “it definitely is a different world when you have [a] small classroom size.” Jessica Shuran Yu is a New York City-based journalist. You can reach her at jshuranyu@chalkbeat.org.
1 hour
塑料回收行业正面临着来自中国和亚洲其他地区的激烈竞争, 欧盟周二公布了一系列旨在帮助欧洲塑料回收行业的提案。塑料垃圾不断增加,回收能力的增长速度却在放缓。2021年,回收能力增长了17%,2022年增长放缓至10%,2023年的增长仅为6%。
塑料回收行业正面临着来自中国和亚洲其他地区的激烈竞争, 欧盟周二公布了一系列旨在帮助欧洲塑料回收行业的提案。塑料垃圾不断增加,回收能力的增长速度却在放缓。2021年,回收能力增长了17%,2022年增长放缓至10%,2023年的增长仅为6%。
1 hour
塑料回收行業正面臨著來自中國和亞洲其他地區的激烈競爭, 歐盟周二公布了一系列旨在幫助歐洲塑料回收行業的提案。塑料垃圾不斷增加,回收能力的增長速度卻在放緩。2021年,回收能力增長了17%,2022年增長放緩至10%,2023年的增長僅為6%。
塑料回收行業正面臨著來自中國和亞洲其他地區的激烈競爭, 歐盟周二公布了一系列旨在幫助歐洲塑料回收行業的提案。塑料垃圾不斷增加,回收能力的增長速度卻在放緩。2021年,回收能力增長了17%,2022年增長放緩至10%,2023年的增長僅為6%。
1 hour
The post How the “Donroe Doctrine” is changing Puerto Rico appeared first on Pasquines.
The post How the “Donroe Doctrine” is changing Puerto Rico appeared first on Pasquines.
1 hour
Después de más de dos meses de incertidumbre, tras su inesperada salida de O’Higgins en plena segunda rueda de la Liga de Primera, Joaquín Montecinos ha encontrado un nuevo hogar futbolístico. El veloz extremo nacional de 30 años fue confirmado este martes como el segundo refuerzo de Deportes Limache para la temporada 2026, tras el … Continua leyendo "Tras bullada salida de O’Higgins: Joaquín Montecinos tendrá su revancha en Primera y en Limache" The post Tras bullada salida de O’Higgins: Joaquín Montecinos tendrá su revancha en Primera y en Limache appeared first on BioBioChile.
1 hour
Después de más de dos meses de incertidumbre, tras su inesperada salida de O’Higgins en plena segunda rueda de la Liga de Primera, Joaquín Montecinos ha encontrado un nuevo hogar futbolístico. El veloz extremo nacional de 30 años fue confirmado este martes como el segundo refuerzo de Deportes Limache para la temporada 2026, tras el … Continua leyendo "Tras bullada salida de O’Higgins: Joaquín Montecinos tendrá su revancha en Primera y en Limache" The post Tras bullada salida de O’Higgins: Joaquín Montecinos tendrá su revancha en Primera y en Limache appeared first on BioBioChile.
1 hour

St. Norbert priest, professor and politician Robert Cornell hobnobbed with famous musicians, then befriended - and tangled with - powerful politicians from both sides of the aisle in Washington. The post The rock ‘n’ roll congressman priest from Green Bay who was benched by the pope appeared first on The Badger Project.

St. Norbert priest, professor and politician Robert Cornell hobnobbed with famous musicians, then befriended - and tangled with - powerful politicians from both sides of the aisle in Washington. The post The rock ‘n’ roll congressman priest from Green Bay who was benched by the pope appeared first on The Badger Project.