Silvia Capanema, eleita em Saint-Denis, celebra ascensão de candidatos imigrantes e muçulmanos nas eleições municipais e aposta em Jean-Luc Mélenchon para 2027 Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Silvia Capanema, eleita em Saint-Denis, celebra ascensão de candidatos imigrantes e muçulmanos nas eleições municipais e aposta em Jean-Luc Mélenchon para 2027 Fonte

စစ်ကော်မရှင်ကျင်းပနေတဲ့ လွှတ်တော်နဲ့ အစိုးရကို တရားမဝင်၊ လက်မခံကြောင်း ပြသသည့်အနေဖြင့် တိုက်ခိုက်ခြင်းဟုဆို။

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တလပတဲ့ အာရွအသံ
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စစ်ကော်မရှင်ကျင်းပနေတဲ့ လွှတ်တော်နဲ့ အစိုးရကို တရားမဝင်၊ လက်မခံကြောင်း ပြသသည့်အနေဖြင့် တိုက်ခိုက်ခြင်းဟုဆို။

တိုက်ပွဲ ၄၂ ကြိမ်အနက် တနင်္သာရီတိုင်း ၉ ကြိမ်နဲ့ အများဆုံးဖြစ်ပြီး ကရင်နဲ့ ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်မှာ ၄ ကြိမ်စီ ဖြစ်ပွားခဲ့။

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တလပတဲ့ အာရွအသံ
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တိုက်ပွဲ ၄၂ ကြိမ်အနက် တနင်္သာရီတိုင်း ၉ ကြိမ်နဲ့ အများဆုံးဖြစ်ပြီး ကရင်နဲ့ ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်မှာ ၄ ကြိမ်စီ ဖြစ်ပွားခဲ့။

TSE retoma julgamento que poderia cassar o governo e o ex-presidente da Alerj nesta terça-feira Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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TSE retoma julgamento que poderia cassar o governo e o ex-presidente da Alerj nesta terça-feira Fonte

An Idaho Senate committee narrowly advanced a bill on Monday to expedite welfare checks in response to child protection reports on infants who face certain risk factors. Lawmakers brought the bill in response to the death of a 12-day-old infant named Benjamin, “Benji,” in Nampa.  Benjamin died after multiple reports were made regarding the parents’ […]

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Idaho Capital Sun
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An Idaho Senate committee narrowly advanced a bill on Monday to expedite welfare checks in response to child protection reports on infants who face certain risk factors. Lawmakers brought the bill in response to the death of a 12-day-old infant named Benjamin, “Benji,” in Nampa.  Benjamin died after multiple reports were made regarding the parents’ […]

Conservationists in Australia are celebrating the fledging of a palm cockatoo chick, a species considered endangered in the country. It fledged from an artificial log hollow installed on a tree for breeding cockatoos. The structure is one of 29 such spaces created as part of People For Wildlife’s (PFW) Breeding Habitat Restoration Project, in partnership […]

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Mongabay
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Conservationists in Australia are celebrating the fledging of a palm cockatoo chick, a species considered endangered in the country. It fledged from an artificial log hollow installed on a tree for breeding cockatoos. The structure is one of 29 such spaces created as part of People For Wildlife’s (PFW) Breeding Habitat Restoration Project, in partnership […]

(The Center Square) - Historic floods drenched Hawaii into the weekend, leaving behind an estimated $1 billion in damages with no plans yet for Federal Emergency Management Agency disaster response. While Hawaiian residents were evacuated during the floods, several states in the continental Southwest reeled from a record-breaking, early heat wave. Hawaii, meanwhile, saw what Gov. Josh Green called the state's worst flooding since 2004. “This storm could cost over $1 billion of damage,” Green told reporters during a press conference Friday. Rain pounded the Hawaiian Islands through the weekend on the tail end of two back-to-back storms that started March 10. Record rainfall hit the state day-after-day in some areas, with up to 4 feet of rain during the storm’s first week recorded in parts of Maui, according to the National Weather Service. The downpour came from two Kona Low storms, a form of cyclone in the Pacific Ocean. The first occurred from March 10-15, and the second started March 18 and was expected to fully clear the Hawaiian islands by the end of Monday. “It can essentially put the islands in a period of very active weather – very heavy rain for a week at a time,” Matthew Foster, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Honolulu, told The Center Square on Monday. “And the fact that we had two of them back-to-back is a little unusual.” Flash flood warnings and flood watches were still in effect across the big island of Hawaii Monday afternoon. Flood advisories remained active for the North Shore of Oahu and the island of Maui. Foster said the human impact was largest on Oahu, the island known for Honolulu. It's where much of the state’s population lives. “In terms of impacting towns, people and having the evacuation notice for the possible dam break … Oahu would have been the most impacted,” said Foster. “But in terms of rain amounts, the south side of Maui and the south side of the big island [Hawaii] actually received more rain.” Over 230 rescues had occurred across the state as of Sunday, according to Gov. Green. No deaths have been reported. In Oahu, over 5,500 residents were forced to evacuate from a near-overflow of the 120-year-old Wahiawā dam, according to the state government. Water levels at the dam have fallen since Sunday, and the evacuation orders have been lifted, leading residents to return home to mud-flooded homes. FEMA has not said if it would send emergency supplies or personnel to help Hawaiian residents recover, as it would typically for a natural disaster in the U.S. While Green said the White House had reached out to offer support, President Donald Trump had not publicly commented on the floods as of Monday afternoon. FEMA falls under the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, which is currently impacted by the partial government funding shutdown. Hawaii’s regional FEMA office did not return a call from The Center Square. Instead, the office sent an automatic email that it may not be able to reply for comment at this time, “due to the lapse in federal government funding.” On the U.S. mainland, the Southwest is still recovering from an unusually early heat wave. While only the Los Angeles area had an active heat warning as of Monday, states across the region were expected to continue to beat records across the week. Last week’s heat wave saw several cities reach 100 degrees Fahrenheit at the earliest point in the year in recorded history, including Las Vegas, which had never previously recorded 100 as early as March. “Coming out of this historic heat, we're still actually going to stay warm,” Sean Benedict, the National Weather Service's lead meteorologist in Phoenix, told The Center Square. “There's no significant system to cool us down, so we're still going to be seeing high temperatures pushing 20 degrees above normal for this time of year, and that's going to continue through the entire week.” Benedict said the heat wave had been caused by unusually high pressure air moving into the region, which has now cooled down, but a lack of other weather means the heat will remain for the time being. “It's not until the weekend and into early next week when we start to see the pattern shift a little bit more and we get more cloud cover, pulling some moisture up in here,” said Benedict. “Potentially even some rain showers.” Residents across the Southwest have been warned since last week to avoid direct sun, seek air-conditioned rooms when possible and hydrate well, including with extra electrolytes such as in sports drinks. But Benedict said this early summer stint could still be enjoyed. “ The mornings are still fairly cool even though they themselves are well above normal … Take advantage of the mornings when it is cool,” said Benedict. “But be prepared for it to get hot quickly and make sure you're prepared for that.”

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) - Historic floods drenched Hawaii into the weekend, leaving behind an estimated $1 billion in damages with no plans yet for Federal Emergency Management Agency disaster response. While Hawaiian residents were evacuated during the floods, several states in the continental Southwest reeled from a record-breaking, early heat wave. Hawaii, meanwhile, saw what Gov. Josh Green called the state's worst flooding since 2004. “This storm could cost over $1 billion of damage,” Green told reporters during a press conference Friday. Rain pounded the Hawaiian Islands through the weekend on the tail end of two back-to-back storms that started March 10. Record rainfall hit the state day-after-day in some areas, with up to 4 feet of rain during the storm’s first week recorded in parts of Maui, according to the National Weather Service. The downpour came from two Kona Low storms, a form of cyclone in the Pacific Ocean. The first occurred from March 10-15, and the second started March 18 and was expected to fully clear the Hawaiian islands by the end of Monday. “It can essentially put the islands in a period of very active weather – very heavy rain for a week at a time,” Matthew Foster, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Honolulu, told The Center Square on Monday. “And the fact that we had two of them back-to-back is a little unusual.” Flash flood warnings and flood watches were still in effect across the big island of Hawaii Monday afternoon. Flood advisories remained active for the North Shore of Oahu and the island of Maui. Foster said the human impact was largest on Oahu, the island known for Honolulu. It's where much of the state’s population lives. “In terms of impacting towns, people and having the evacuation notice for the possible dam break … Oahu would have been the most impacted,” said Foster. “But in terms of rain amounts, the south side of Maui and the south side of the big island [Hawaii] actually received more rain.” Over 230 rescues had occurred across the state as of Sunday, according to Gov. Green. No deaths have been reported. In Oahu, over 5,500 residents were forced to evacuate from a near-overflow of the 120-year-old Wahiawā dam, according to the state government. Water levels at the dam have fallen since Sunday, and the evacuation orders have been lifted, leading residents to return home to mud-flooded homes. FEMA has not said if it would send emergency supplies or personnel to help Hawaiian residents recover, as it would typically for a natural disaster in the U.S. While Green said the White House had reached out to offer support, President Donald Trump had not publicly commented on the floods as of Monday afternoon. FEMA falls under the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, which is currently impacted by the partial government funding shutdown. Hawaii’s regional FEMA office did not return a call from The Center Square. Instead, the office sent an automatic email that it may not be able to reply for comment at this time, “due to the lapse in federal government funding.” On the U.S. mainland, the Southwest is still recovering from an unusually early heat wave. While only the Los Angeles area had an active heat warning as of Monday, states across the region were expected to continue to beat records across the week. Last week’s heat wave saw several cities reach 100 degrees Fahrenheit at the earliest point in the year in recorded history, including Las Vegas, which had never previously recorded 100 as early as March. “Coming out of this historic heat, we're still actually going to stay warm,” Sean Benedict, the National Weather Service's lead meteorologist in Phoenix, told The Center Square. “There's no significant system to cool us down, so we're still going to be seeing high temperatures pushing 20 degrees above normal for this time of year, and that's going to continue through the entire week.” Benedict said the heat wave had been caused by unusually high pressure air moving into the region, which has now cooled down, but a lack of other weather means the heat will remain for the time being. “It's not until the weekend and into early next week when we start to see the pattern shift a little bit more and we get more cloud cover, pulling some moisture up in here,” said Benedict. “Potentially even some rain showers.” Residents across the Southwest have been warned since last week to avoid direct sun, seek air-conditioned rooms when possible and hydrate well, including with extra electrolytes such as in sports drinks. But Benedict said this early summer stint could still be enjoyed. “ The mornings are still fairly cool even though they themselves are well above normal … Take advantage of the mornings when it is cool,” said Benedict. “But be prepared for it to get hot quickly and make sure you're prepared for that.”

Arizona is preparing for a legal battle over its rights to Colorado River water. Following an extraordinarily dry winter along the river basin and what’s expected to be an exceptionally hot and dry spring across the West, where high temperatures in March have already blown past records, the pressure to maintain access to the state’s […]

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Arizona Mirror
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Arizona is preparing for a legal battle over its rights to Colorado River water. Following an extraordinarily dry winter along the river basin and what’s expected to be an exceptionally hot and dry spring across the West, where high temperatures in March have already blown past records, the pressure to maintain access to the state’s […]

歡迎收聽國際縱橫節目,本次節目的主題是,繼委內瑞拉和伊朗之後,古巴似乎要是特朗普的下一個目標。 2026年3月16日,美國總統特朗普甚至表示,他可能很快要“榮幸地接管古巴”。儘管伊朗問題仍是特朗普的首要關注點,但特朗普密切關注古巴局勢,並認為卡斯特羅體制已接近尾聲。當然,美國總統的反覆表態以及華盛頓的持續施壓,讓外界對美國在古巴的真實目標也存在很多的疑問。

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法國國際廣播電台
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歡迎收聽國際縱橫節目,本次節目的主題是,繼委內瑞拉和伊朗之後,古巴似乎要是特朗普的下一個目標。 2026年3月16日,美國總統特朗普甚至表示,他可能很快要“榮幸地接管古巴”。儘管伊朗問題仍是特朗普的首要關注點,但特朗普密切關注古巴局勢,並認為卡斯特羅體制已接近尾聲。當然,美國總統的反覆表態以及華盛頓的持續施壓,讓外界對美國在古巴的真實目標也存在很多的疑問。

欢迎收听国际纵横节目,本次节目的主题是,继委内瑞拉和伊朗之后,古巴似乎要是特朗普的下一个目标。 2026年3月16日,美国总统特朗普甚至表示,他可能很快要“荣幸地接管古巴”。尽管伊朗问题仍是特朗普的首要关注点,但特朗普密切关注古巴局势,并认为卡斯特罗体制已接近尾声。当然,美国总统的反复表态以及华盛顿的持续施压,让外界对美国在古巴的真实目标也存在很多的疑问。

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法国国际广播电台
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欢迎收听国际纵横节目,本次节目的主题是,继委内瑞拉和伊朗之后,古巴似乎要是特朗普的下一个目标。 2026年3月16日,美国总统特朗普甚至表示,他可能很快要“荣幸地接管古巴”。尽管伊朗问题仍是特朗普的首要关注点,但特朗普密切关注古巴局势,并认为卡斯特罗体制已接近尾声。当然,美国总统的反复表态以及华盛顿的持续施压,让外界对美国在古巴的真实目标也存在很多的疑问。

29 minutes

Idaho Capital Sun
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After little debate, the Idaho House widely passed a bill that calls for the state to implement Medicaid work requirements for adults enrolled in Medicaid expansion by the end of the year.  The Idaho Legislature has called for able-bodied adults on Medicaid expansion to prove they are working to receive benefits through the public assistance […]

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Idaho Capital Sun
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After little debate, the Idaho House widely passed a bill that calls for the state to implement Medicaid work requirements for adults enrolled in Medicaid expansion by the end of the year.  The Idaho Legislature has called for able-bodied adults on Medicaid expansion to prove they are working to receive benefits through the public assistance […]

La posible decisión del alto tribunal sobre el sufragio por correo no solo afecta a Misisipi, sino que amenaza con reconfigurar el sistema electoral estadounidense a pocos meses de nuevas elecciones clave.

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Mundiario
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La posible decisión del alto tribunal sobre el sufragio por correo no solo afecta a Misisipi, sino que amenaza con reconfigurar el sistema electoral estadounidense a pocos meses de nuevas elecciones clave.

The Idaho Senate on Monday narrowly passed a bill that calls for nearly $22 million in budget cuts to Medicaid disability services, sending the legislation to the governor. The bill, House Bill 863, would cut provider reimbursement rates for residential habilitation services by $21.8 million next fiscal year. The Medicaid cuts — recommended by Gov. […]

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Idaho Capital Sun
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The Idaho Senate on Monday narrowly passed a bill that calls for nearly $22 million in budget cuts to Medicaid disability services, sending the legislation to the governor. The bill, House Bill 863, would cut provider reimbursement rates for residential habilitation services by $21.8 million next fiscal year. The Medicaid cuts — recommended by Gov. […]

Poliția anti-teroristă din Marea Britanie investighează un atac antisemit în care trei suspecți au incendiat patru ambulanțe al unei organizații de caritate evreiești. Este cel mai recent incident într-un climat de exacerbare a antisemitismului care a atins un nivel record, mai ales după atacul Hamas împotriva Israelului din 7 octombrie 2023.

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Radio France Internationale
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Poliția anti-teroristă din Marea Britanie investighează un atac antisemit în care trei suspecți au incendiat patru ambulanțe al unei organizații de caritate evreiești. Este cel mai recent incident într-un climat de exacerbare a antisemitismului care a atins un nivel record, mai ales după atacul Hamas împotriva Israelului din 7 octombrie 2023.

The three men were ordained as deacons on March 18, the final stage before becoming priests.

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Fort Worth Report
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The three men were ordained as deacons on March 18, the final stage before becoming priests.

Last week, Speaker of the Montana House of Representatives Brandon Ler tried out a new law passed in 2025  allowing the sponsor of a bill  challenged in court to move that legal challenge to their home court — literally. Senate Bill 97 allows the sponsor of challenged legislation to move the legal tussle to a […]

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Daily Montanan
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Last week, Speaker of the Montana House of Representatives Brandon Ler tried out a new law passed in 2025  allowing the sponsor of a bill  challenged in court to move that legal challenge to their home court — literally. Senate Bill 97 allows the sponsor of challenged legislation to move the legal tussle to a […]

Este lunes, desde el Ministerio de Hacienda se confirmó un considerable aumento en el precio de las gasolinas y el...

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BioBioChile
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Este lunes, desde el Ministerio de Hacienda se confirmó un considerable aumento en el precio de las gasolinas y el...

(The Center Square) – The U.S. Department of Education held a virtual briefing on Monday to unveil a new portal allowing American colleges and universities to disclose foreign funding. Deputy General Counsel Paul Moore presented the portal as a tool to increase transparency around foreign financial contributions to U.S. institutions, Executive Order 14282, which Trump signed titled “Transparency Regarding Foreign Influence at American Universities,” calling for stronger safeguards against foreign exploitation of U.S. research and students. The department reported that, so far, $72.1 billion in foreign funding has been disclosed across 559 institutions. A February investigation by the Trump administration found that U.S. colleges and universities received $5.2 billion in foreign gifts and contracts in 2025 alone. “America’s taxpayer-funded colleges and universities have both a moral and legal obligation to be fully transparent with the U.S. government and the American people about their foreign financial relationships,” U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon said. The media was excluded from the briefing, and the Department of Education has not responded to The Center Square’s request for comment. Under Section 117 of the Higher Education Act, colleges must disclose foreign gifts or contracts exceeding $250,000. Republicans have long argued that some institutions fail to report such funding and have called for stricter oversight. The department also released newly compiled data from institutional disclosures, documenting more than 8,300 transactions totaling over $5.2 billion in reportable foreign gifts and contracts. Qatar was the largest source in 2025, accounting for about $1.1 billion, bringing its total to $8.8 billion. Other top sources included the United Kingdom, China, Switzerland and Japan. Other top sources included China, Germany, Saudi Arabia, England and Japan. Between 1986 and 2025, Harvard University received more foreign funding than any other institution reporting to the department, totaling nearly $4.48 billion, including over $630 million from China alone. The Center Square reached out to the University of California system for a comment, but did not receive a response.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – The U.S. Department of Education held a virtual briefing on Monday to unveil a new portal allowing American colleges and universities to disclose foreign funding. Deputy General Counsel Paul Moore presented the portal as a tool to increase transparency around foreign financial contributions to U.S. institutions, Executive Order 14282, which Trump signed titled “Transparency Regarding Foreign Influence at American Universities,” calling for stronger safeguards against foreign exploitation of U.S. research and students. The department reported that, so far, $72.1 billion in foreign funding has been disclosed across 559 institutions. A February investigation by the Trump administration found that U.S. colleges and universities received $5.2 billion in foreign gifts and contracts in 2025 alone. “America’s taxpayer-funded colleges and universities have both a moral and legal obligation to be fully transparent with the U.S. government and the American people about their foreign financial relationships,” U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon said. The media was excluded from the briefing, and the Department of Education has not responded to The Center Square’s request for comment. Under Section 117 of the Higher Education Act, colleges must disclose foreign gifts or contracts exceeding $250,000. Republicans have long argued that some institutions fail to report such funding and have called for stricter oversight. The department also released newly compiled data from institutional disclosures, documenting more than 8,300 transactions totaling over $5.2 billion in reportable foreign gifts and contracts. Qatar was the largest source in 2025, accounting for about $1.1 billion, bringing its total to $8.8 billion. Other top sources included the United Kingdom, China, Switzerland and Japan. Other top sources included China, Germany, Saudi Arabia, England and Japan. Between 1986 and 2025, Harvard University received more foreign funding than any other institution reporting to the department, totaling nearly $4.48 billion, including over $630 million from China alone. The Center Square reached out to the University of California system for a comment, but did not receive a response.

Amerikako Estatu Itsusiak
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40 minutes

ARGIA
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Amets amerikarra deitua amesgaizto bihurtzen ari dela ikusten ari gara, baina batzuentzat beti izan da hala. Aukeren lurraldean batzuei ez zaie sekula aukerarik eman. Zehazki, eta garai batean legalki, pertsona itsusiei. Historian atzera egin eta AEBtako beste garai ilun bat gogorarazi digu Nagore Irazustabarrenak.  Abesti hauek erabili ditugu: Madonna - 'American Life' The Mamas & The Papas - 'California Dreamin' Asgarth - 'Mugak'

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ARGIA
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Amets amerikarra deitua amesgaizto bihurtzen ari dela ikusten ari gara, baina batzuentzat beti izan da hala. Aukeren lurraldean batzuei ez zaie sekula aukerarik eman. Zehazki, eta garai batean legalki, pertsona itsusiei. Historian atzera egin eta AEBtako beste garai ilun bat gogorarazi digu Nagore Irazustabarrenak.  Abesti hauek erabili ditugu: Madonna - 'American Life' The Mamas & The Papas - 'California Dreamin' Asgarth - 'Mugak'

Euskoaren esperientzian oinarrituta, tokiko moneta osagarri bat sortzeko urratsak egiten ari dira Hego Euskal Herrian. “Gure Moneta” izeneko proiektua Oarsoaldean eta Baztanen jarriko dute martxan lehenik, esperimentazio fase gisa, eta 2026ko azken hiruhilekoan erabiltzen hasteko aurreikusten dute.

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ARGIA
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Euskoaren esperientzian oinarrituta, tokiko moneta osagarri bat sortzeko urratsak egiten ari dira Hego Euskal Herrian. “Gure Moneta” izeneko proiektua Oarsoaldean eta Baztanen jarriko dute martxan lehenik, esperimentazio fase gisa, eta 2026ko azken hiruhilekoan erabiltzen hasteko aurreikusten dute.