Rico en vitamina C y antioxidantes, el kiwi emerge como clave inesperada en la recuperación y fortaleza del deportista.

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Mundiario
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Rico en vitamina C y antioxidantes, el kiwi emerge como clave inesperada en la recuperación y fortaleza del deportista.

17 minutes

Mundiario
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Para fraguar la etapa de inestabilidad inaugurada el miércoles, las dos derechas han necesitado cuatro meses de disputas, incluido el acatamiento de los de Feijóo a las tesis de Abascal. El PP se rinde a Vox.

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Mundiario
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Para fraguar la etapa de inestabilidad inaugurada el miércoles, las dos derechas han necesitado cuatro meses de disputas, incluido el acatamiento de los de Feijóo a las tesis de Abascal. El PP se rinde a Vox.

Frente al anglosionismo liberal-conservador y al wokismo de izquierdas, ambos dominantes en Europa, aparece un tercer eje ideológico, que actualmente lidera Eslovaquia y Bulgaria: el socialismo conservador y soberanista.

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Mundiario
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Frente al anglosionismo liberal-conservador y al wokismo de izquierdas, ambos dominantes en Europa, aparece un tercer eje ideológico, que actualmente lidera Eslovaquia y Bulgaria: el socialismo conservador y soberanista.

A planned Florida animal attraction that imported dozens of wild sloths has sent 13 surviving animals to a local zoo, days after an Inside Climate News investigation revealed that more than 31 sloths had died in the company’s care. Pressure on Orlando-based Sloth World has mounted over the last week amid public outcry. A member […]

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Inside Climate News
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A planned Florida animal attraction that imported dozens of wild sloths has sent 13 surviving animals to a local zoo, days after an Inside Climate News investigation revealed that more than 31 sloths had died in the company’s care. Pressure on Orlando-based Sloth World has mounted over the last week amid public outcry. A member […]

No se trata de una expulsión: los países podrán participar y mantener su pabellón en la Bienal de Arte, pero quedarán fuera de la competición oficial.

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Mundiario
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No se trata de una expulsión: los países podrán participar y mantener su pabellón en la Bienal de Arte, pero quedarán fuera de la competición oficial.

31 minutes

GNV
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この写真はデータセンターの非常用発電機と電力設備を写している。データセンターはサーバーやデータストレージなどのITインフラを収容する施設だ。人工知能(AI)やクラウドサービス向けの計算需要が増えているため、こうしたデータセンターの建設は世界中で急速に増えている。 そうした需要の一つが各国の軍からのもので、軍はAIやクラウドサービスを使って、軍事力の維持、最適化、運用に有用だと判断したデータを収集、 […]

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GNV
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この写真はデータセンターの非常用発電機と電力設備を写している。データセンターはサーバーやデータストレージなどのITインフラを収容する施設だ。人工知能(AI)やクラウドサービス向けの計算需要が増えているため、こうしたデータセンターの建設は世界中で急速に増えている。 そうした需要の一つが各国の軍からのもので、軍はAIやクラウドサービスを使って、軍事力の維持、最適化、運用に有用だと判断したデータを収集、 […]

32 minutes

Jornalet
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Lo duo de rapaires occitans Zifsi e Kbek ven de publicar lo clip de «Parats com cau», cançon principau de l’EP 6495, un minialbum de 8 pistas publicat arunan e ja disponible sus divèrsas plataformas, dont YouTube. «Parats com cau» s’impausa coma la pèça mai hip-hop de l’album, e es tanben la pòrta d’intrada. Segon çò que conta Zifsi, la cançon foguèt creada dins son ostal a Argenteuil, en Illa de França, , en companhiá del beatmaker basco LaGàbia. Continua llegint

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Jornalet
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Lo duo de rapaires occitans Zifsi e Kbek ven de publicar lo clip de «Parats com cau», cançon principau de l’EP 6495, un minialbum de 8 pistas publicat arunan e ja disponible sus divèrsas plataformas, dont YouTube. «Parats com cau» s’impausa coma la pèça mai hip-hop de l’album, e es tanben la pòrta d’intrada. Segon çò que conta Zifsi, la cançon foguèt creada dins son ostal a Argenteuil, en Illa de França, , en companhiá del beatmaker basco LaGàbia. Continua llegint

Adieu-siatz, mond… Pels somiaires e pescalunas que veson pas lo temps passar, fa un mes ja que las eleccions municipalas se tenguèron dins lo país de las Luses e me demandi se val lo còp de córrer la risca de pausar la question existenciala seguenta: «Pensatz que los electors son estats «enluminats» o las Luses an pas agut ges d’impacte suls resultats?» Estonarà pas degun —e degun s’es pas estonat!— de constatar que lo partit que se tròba a la drecha extrèma de l’escaquièr politic exagonal a vist lo nombre d’elegits locals créissser d’una faiçon importanta e, per via de consequéncia, lo nombres cònsols màgers tanben. Continua llegint

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Jornalet
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Adieu-siatz, mond… Pels somiaires e pescalunas que veson pas lo temps passar, fa un mes ja que las eleccions municipalas se tenguèron dins lo país de las Luses e me demandi se val lo còp de córrer la risca de pausar la question existenciala seguenta: «Pensatz que los electors son estats «enluminats» o las Luses an pas agut ges d’impacte suls resultats?» Estonarà pas degun —e degun s’es pas estonat!— de constatar que lo partit que se tròba a la drecha extrèma de l’escaquièr politic exagonal a vist lo nombre d’elegits locals créissser d’una faiçon importanta e, per via de consequéncia, lo nombres cònsols màgers tanben. Continua llegint

33 minutes

Mundiario
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¿Qué parte no entiende Santiago Abascal de que la esclavitud ha quedado abolida en la llamada civilización? El problema de la prioridad nacional, ese anzuelo electoral, son los peces de ciudad y de campo susceptibles de acabar picando.

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Mundiario
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¿Qué parte no entiende Santiago Abascal de que la esclavitud ha quedado abolida en la llamada civilización? El problema de la prioridad nacional, ese anzuelo electoral, son los peces de ciudad y de campo susceptibles de acabar picando.

El Paso Water bought a 300-acre tract last month without inspecting a 117-year-old dam on the site that is now in danger of breaching. The post El Paso Water didn’t assess a now-failing dam before acquiring Cement Lake property last month appeared first on El Paso Matters.

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El Paso Matters
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El Paso Water bought a 300-acre tract last month without inspecting a 117-year-old dam on the site that is now in danger of breaching. The post El Paso Water didn’t assess a now-failing dam before acquiring Cement Lake property last month appeared first on El Paso Matters.

Iedereen beleeft en viert Internationale Vrouwendag op een eigen manier. Wat betekent die dag voor Antwerpse jongeren? Onze reporters trokken de straat op om een antwoord te vinden op die vraag.

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StampMedia
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Iedereen beleeft en viert Internationale Vrouwendag op een eigen manier. Wat betekent die dag voor Antwerpse jongeren? Onze reporters trokken de straat op om een antwoord te vinden op die vraag.

Por incompatibilidad de la defensa, se deberá realizar un nuevo juicio por el crimen del estudiante Jeremy, el adolescente...

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BioBioChile
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Por incompatibilidad de la defensa, se deberá realizar un nuevo juicio por el crimen del estudiante Jeremy, el adolescente...

La Fiscalía ECOH Metropolitana obtuvo la prisión preventiva de tres adultos y la internación provisoria de un menor de 17...

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BioBioChile
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La Fiscalía ECOH Metropolitana obtuvo la prisión preventiva de tres adultos y la internación provisoria de un menor de 17...

Durante o 8º Congresso do Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT), Cristiano Silveira, coordenador do plano de governo, apresentou uma proposta de programa político construída por meio de consultas internas e contribuições de diferentes setores do partido. O texto deve servir como base para o debate programático e orientar a formulação de um plano de governo. Segundo […] Fonte

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Durante o 8º Congresso do Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT), Cristiano Silveira, coordenador do plano de governo, apresentou uma proposta de programa político construída por meio de consultas internas e contribuições de diferentes setores do partido. O texto deve servir como base para o debate programático e orientar a formulação de um plano de governo. Segundo […] Fonte

54 minutes

Colorado Newsline
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Tina Peters, the former Republican Mesa County clerk, plans to appeal a recently-denied rehearing request to the Colorado Supreme Court, her lawyer told Colorado Newsline Friday. “That is exactly what we are planning to do,” lawyer Peter Ticktin wrote in a text message. Peters is serving time in state prison for her role in a […]

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Colorado Newsline
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Tina Peters, the former Republican Mesa County clerk, plans to appeal a recently-denied rehearing request to the Colorado Supreme Court, her lawyer told Colorado Newsline Friday. “That is exactly what we are planning to do,” lawyer Peter Ticktin wrote in a text message. Peters is serving time in state prison for her role in a […]

Figuras importantes para a história do partido tiveram trajetórias políticas exaltadas durante a abertura do evento Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Figuras importantes para a história do partido tiveram trajetórias políticas exaltadas durante a abertura do evento Fonte

In February, copper wire theft damaged the business phone lines at the station, causing longer wait times for residents.

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Boyle Heights Beat
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In February, copper wire theft damaged the business phone lines at the station, causing longer wait times for residents.

စိန်ခေါ်ချက်များနဲ့မြန်မာလူငယ် - ၁၂

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စိန်ခေါ်ချက်များနဲ့မြန်မာလူငယ် - ၁၂

(The Center Square) – The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals handed Texas its third win Friday on border security. As the border crisis escalated during the Biden administration, Gov. Greg Abbott took a series of measures to implement border security efforts, including building and expanding concertina wire barriers, building a border wall and installing marine barriers in the Rio Grande River, all on Texas soil. He also signed several border security bills into law, including SB 4. Border barriers were implemented through Abbott’s border security initiative, Operation Lone Star. In response, the Biden administration and private groups sued. On Friday, the Fifth Circuit ruled on a lawsuit filed by immigrant groups to block SB 4 from going into effect. The law makes illegal entry into Texas a state crime. It gives Texas law enforcement the authority to return illegal foreign nationals to a port of entry and/or arrest them for unlawful entry, among other provisions. Gov. said then President Joe Biden's "deliberate inaction … left Texas to fend for itself." He pointed to Article 1 Section 10 of the U.S. Constitution, which empowers states "to take action to defend themselves and that is exactly what Texas is doing." The Biden administration sued, as did El Paso County, Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center and American Gateways. They argued the law is unconstitutional and the federal government has the “exclusive authority under federal law to regulate the entry and removal of noncitizens.” SB 4 “creates purported state immigration crimes for unlawful entry and unlawful reentry, permits state judges and magistrates to order the removal of noncitizens from the country, and mandates that state officials carry out those removal orders.” The district court and a Fifth Circuit panel of three judges agreed, blocking SB 4 from going into effect. Texas appealed, requesting the full court to hear the case. After President Donald Trump was elected, his administration dropped the federal lawsuit against SB 4 but the private action continued. On Friday, the court issued a 12-page ruling solely on procedural grounds, arguing the plaintiffs didn’t have standing to sue. It didn’t address the merits of the claims. Circuit Judge Jerry Smith wrote the opinion for the majority, joined by Chief Judge Jennifer Walker Elrod and judges Edith Jones, Catharina Haynes, Don Willett, James Ho, Stuart Duncan, Kurt Engelhardt, Andrew Oldham and Cory Wilson. Citing Supreme Court cases, Smith wrote, “‘Courts sometimes make standing law more complicated than it needs to be; … [P]laintiffs must have a ‘personal stake’ in a case to have standing to sue; … Plaintiffs cannot ‘manufacture standing by voluntarily’ incurring costs.’ “That should be the end of this matter: These Plaintiffs voluntarily incurred costs to advocate for clients. Under recent Supreme Court precedent, that falls far short of conferring standing. We vacate the preliminary injunction to the contrary.” Circuit Judge Priscilla Richman, joined by Judges Carl Stewart, Leslie Southwick, Stephen Higginson and Irma Carrillo Ramirez, issued a lengthier dissent, joined in part by judges James Graves and Dana Douglas. They argued Texas enacted its own immigration laws and Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center had standing. “Federal laws on the books permit Texas to assist the federal government in apprehending illegal immigrants if the federal government so requests. But Texas cannot enact its own immigration regime,” she wrote. This was the third win the court handed Texas. In July 2024, the Fifth Circuit handed Texas its first win, ruling Texas had a legal right to install marine barriers. In this case, Ho emphasized state sovereignty. “A sovereign isn't a sovereign if it can't defend itself against invasion,” Ho wrote. “Presidents throughout history have vigorously defended their right to protect the Nation. And the States did not forfeit the sovereign prerogative when they joined the Union. Indeed, the Constitution is even more explicit when it comes to the States.” By December 2024, the Fifth Circuit handed Texas its second win, stating it had a legal right to erect the concertina wire barriers and the federal government could not remove them, The Center Square reported. In both cases, the Fifth Circuit reversed the lower courts’ rulings in favor of Texas. The barriers remain in place and have expanded. OLS is currently in its fifth year. While lauding the first two wins, Abbott said the fight was “far from over. Texas will continue to defend our constitutional right to secure our southern border to keep our state and the nation safe.” After the third win, his press secretary Andrew Mahaleris, told The Center Square, “Governor Abbott signed SB 4 into law to protect Texas and America from President Biden’s open border policies, the effects of which did not disappear overnight. He thanks the Fifth Circuit for reaffirming this common-sense law that helps ensure public safety. Texas will not back down from its constitutional right to self-defense.”

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals handed Texas its third win Friday on border security. As the border crisis escalated during the Biden administration, Gov. Greg Abbott took a series of measures to implement border security efforts, including building and expanding concertina wire barriers, building a border wall and installing marine barriers in the Rio Grande River, all on Texas soil. He also signed several border security bills into law, including SB 4. Border barriers were implemented through Abbott’s border security initiative, Operation Lone Star. In response, the Biden administration and private groups sued. On Friday, the Fifth Circuit ruled on a lawsuit filed by immigrant groups to block SB 4 from going into effect. The law makes illegal entry into Texas a state crime. It gives Texas law enforcement the authority to return illegal foreign nationals to a port of entry and/or arrest them for unlawful entry, among other provisions. Gov. said then President Joe Biden's "deliberate inaction … left Texas to fend for itself." He pointed to Article 1 Section 10 of the U.S. Constitution, which empowers states "to take action to defend themselves and that is exactly what Texas is doing." The Biden administration sued, as did El Paso County, Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center and American Gateways. They argued the law is unconstitutional and the federal government has the “exclusive authority under federal law to regulate the entry and removal of noncitizens.” SB 4 “creates purported state immigration crimes for unlawful entry and unlawful reentry, permits state judges and magistrates to order the removal of noncitizens from the country, and mandates that state officials carry out those removal orders.” The district court and a Fifth Circuit panel of three judges agreed, blocking SB 4 from going into effect. Texas appealed, requesting the full court to hear the case. After President Donald Trump was elected, his administration dropped the federal lawsuit against SB 4 but the private action continued. On Friday, the court issued a 12-page ruling solely on procedural grounds, arguing the plaintiffs didn’t have standing to sue. It didn’t address the merits of the claims. Circuit Judge Jerry Smith wrote the opinion for the majority, joined by Chief Judge Jennifer Walker Elrod and judges Edith Jones, Catharina Haynes, Don Willett, James Ho, Stuart Duncan, Kurt Engelhardt, Andrew Oldham and Cory Wilson. Citing Supreme Court cases, Smith wrote, “‘Courts sometimes make standing law more complicated than it needs to be; … [P]laintiffs must have a ‘personal stake’ in a case to have standing to sue; … Plaintiffs cannot ‘manufacture standing by voluntarily’ incurring costs.’ “That should be the end of this matter: These Plaintiffs voluntarily incurred costs to advocate for clients. Under recent Supreme Court precedent, that falls far short of conferring standing. We vacate the preliminary injunction to the contrary.” Circuit Judge Priscilla Richman, joined by Judges Carl Stewart, Leslie Southwick, Stephen Higginson and Irma Carrillo Ramirez, issued a lengthier dissent, joined in part by judges James Graves and Dana Douglas. They argued Texas enacted its own immigration laws and Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center had standing. “Federal laws on the books permit Texas to assist the federal government in apprehending illegal immigrants if the federal government so requests. But Texas cannot enact its own immigration regime,” she wrote. This was the third win the court handed Texas. In July 2024, the Fifth Circuit handed Texas its first win, ruling Texas had a legal right to install marine barriers. In this case, Ho emphasized state sovereignty. “A sovereign isn't a sovereign if it can't defend itself against invasion,” Ho wrote. “Presidents throughout history have vigorously defended their right to protect the Nation. And the States did not forfeit the sovereign prerogative when they joined the Union. Indeed, the Constitution is even more explicit when it comes to the States.” By December 2024, the Fifth Circuit handed Texas its second win, stating it had a legal right to erect the concertina wire barriers and the federal government could not remove them, The Center Square reported. In both cases, the Fifth Circuit reversed the lower courts’ rulings in favor of Texas. The barriers remain in place and have expanded. OLS is currently in its fifth year. While lauding the first two wins, Abbott said the fight was “far from over. Texas will continue to defend our constitutional right to secure our southern border to keep our state and the nation safe.” After the third win, his press secretary Andrew Mahaleris, told The Center Square, “Governor Abbott signed SB 4 into law to protect Texas and America from President Biden’s open border policies, the effects of which did not disappear overnight. He thanks the Fifth Circuit for reaffirming this common-sense law that helps ensure public safety. Texas will not back down from its constitutional right to self-defense.”

Em primeira visita de Estado desde o ataque dos EUA, Gustavo Petro se reuniu com Delcy Rodríguez Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Em primeira visita de Estado desde o ataque dos EUA, Gustavo Petro se reuniu com Delcy Rodríguez Fonte