El empresario alicantino aseguró en que ya tiene cerrados dos internacionales, un técnico y un director deportivo.

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Mundiario
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El empresario alicantino aseguró en que ya tiene cerrados dos internacionales, un técnico y un director deportivo.

TANJUNG BUNGAH, Malaysia — When Yap Jo Leen was tracking dusky langurs in the forests of Penang for her master’s degree in 2016, she watched a langur they called Towkay Soh — Hokkien for “lady boss” — get hit by a car while trying to cross a busy coastal road. Dazed, the langur managed to […]

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Mongabay
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TANJUNG BUNGAH, Malaysia — When Yap Jo Leen was tracking dusky langurs in the forests of Penang for her master’s degree in 2016, she watched a langur they called Towkay Soh — Hokkien for “lady boss” — get hit by a car while trying to cross a busy coastal road. Dazed, the langur managed to […]

La firma de lujo española se convierte en socio oficial de viaje de las selecciones nacionales y pone rostro a una nueva etapa marcada por la moda, la sofisticación y la proyección internacional.

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Mundiario
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La firma de lujo española se convierte en socio oficial de viaje de las selecciones nacionales y pone rostro a una nueva etapa marcada por la moda, la sofisticación y la proyección internacional.

14 minutes

Tennessee Lookout
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A three-judge state panel on Tuesday dismissed a legal challenge to Tennessee’s redrawn congressional maps brought by the state chapter of the NAACP, its president, a state lawmaker and a congressional candidate. The unanimous decision by the court keeps intact, for now, a GOP-led redistricting process that carved majority-Black Memphis into three separate voting districts […]

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Tennessee Lookout
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A three-judge state panel on Tuesday dismissed a legal challenge to Tennessee’s redrawn congressional maps brought by the state chapter of the NAACP, its president, a state lawmaker and a congressional candidate. The unanimous decision by the court keeps intact, for now, a GOP-led redistricting process that carved majority-Black Memphis into three separate voting districts […]

Depois de muita especulação, o senador e pré-candidato à presidência Flávio Bolsonaro (PL) se encontrou nessa terça-feira (26) com o presidente dos Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, no Salão Oval da Casa Branca, em Washington. No encontro, o senador pediu que Trump declare o Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC) e o Comando Vermelho (CV) grupos terroristas […] Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Depois de muita especulação, o senador e pré-candidato à presidência Flávio Bolsonaro (PL) se encontrou nessa terça-feira (26) com o presidente dos Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, no Salão Oval da Casa Branca, em Washington. No encontro, o senador pediu que Trump declare o Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC) e o Comando Vermelho (CV) grupos terroristas […] Fonte

22 minutes

Brasil de Fato
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As eleições presidenciais de 2026 caminham para uma disputa polarizada entre os pré-candidatos presidente Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (PT), que tenta a reeleição, e senador Flávio Bolsonaro (PL), que tenta seguir como herdeiro de seu pai, o ex-presidente Jair Bolsonaro (PL), preso por participação na tentativa de golpe em 8 de janeiro de 2023. […] Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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As eleições presidenciais de 2026 caminham para uma disputa polarizada entre os pré-candidatos presidente Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (PT), que tenta a reeleição, e senador Flávio Bolsonaro (PL), que tenta seguir como herdeiro de seu pai, o ex-presidente Jair Bolsonaro (PL), preso por participação na tentativa de golpe em 8 de janeiro de 2023. […] Fonte

L'Aïd al-Adha, la « fête du sacrifice », considérée comme la plus importante fête musulmane, est célébrée aujourd'hui dans de nombreux pays. Face à la hausse des prix en Égypte, beaucoup n'auront toutefois pas les moyens de sacrifier une vache ou encore un mouton comme le veut la tradition.

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Radio France Internationale
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L'Aïd al-Adha, la « fête du sacrifice », considérée comme la plus importante fête musulmane, est célébrée aujourd'hui dans de nombreux pays. Face à la hausse des prix en Égypte, beaucoup n'auront toutefois pas les moyens de sacrifier une vache ou encore un mouton comme le veut la tradition.

La estadounidense sufrió un accidente de coche camino al torneo, pero debutó con triunfo ante Taylor Townsend.

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Mundiario
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La estadounidense sufrió un accidente de coche camino al torneo, pero debutó con triunfo ante Taylor Townsend.

O ministro do Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF) Cristiano Zanin pediu vista do julgamento da Ação Direta de Inconstitucionalidade (ADI) 7.662, que questiona a legalidade da lei que instituiu o programa de escolas cívico-militares no estado de São Paulo. Até agora, somente o ministro Gilmar Mendes, relator do caso, havia votado. Ele considerou a lei válida, […] Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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O ministro do Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF) Cristiano Zanin pediu vista do julgamento da Ação Direta de Inconstitucionalidade (ADI) 7.662, que questiona a legalidade da lei que instituiu o programa de escolas cívico-militares no estado de São Paulo. Até agora, somente o ministro Gilmar Mendes, relator do caso, havia votado. Ele considerou a lei válida, […] Fonte

Green’s loss means the Texas House delegation is losing one of its most senior members, who served more than 20 years in Congress.

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The Texas Tribune
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Green’s loss means the Texas House delegation is losing one of its most senior members, who served more than 20 years in Congress.

La ausencia del bicampeón por lesión dejó a España sin gran referente y con menos de la mitad de sus jugadores clasificados.

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Mundiario
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La ausencia del bicampeón por lesión dejó a España sin gran referente y con menos de la mitad de sus jugadores clasificados.

Corbett previously ran a political strategy firm that helped Republican candidates.

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Capitol News Illinois
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Corbett previously ran a political strategy firm that helped Republican candidates.

The legal battle between utility regulators and Attorney General Aaron Ford’s Bureau of Consumer Protection is likely headed for the Nevada Supreme Court following Clark County Judge Mary Kay Holthus’ decision Tuesday in favor of the Public Utilities Commission and NV Energy. The utility intends to add a 14-cent per kilowatt charge for electricity consumption […]

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Nevada Current
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The legal battle between utility regulators and Attorney General Aaron Ford’s Bureau of Consumer Protection is likely headed for the Nevada Supreme Court following Clark County Judge Mary Kay Holthus’ decision Tuesday in favor of the Public Utilities Commission and NV Energy. The utility intends to add a 14-cent per kilowatt charge for electricity consumption […]

38 minutes

Freedom of the Press Foundation
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The latest decision in journalist Catherine Herridge’s legal fight over confidential sources highlights how fragile the reporter-source privilege remains in the absence of a federal shield law. Not only did the court refuse to reconsider the order forcing Herridge to identify her confidential sources, but it also asked the public to accept its decision without immediate access to the court records we need to fully understand it. On May 22, the appeals court declined to revisit its prior ruling requiring Herridge to name her confidential sources for her 2017 reporting about an FBI investigation into scientist Yanping Chen. Chen, who had founded an online college that received government funding, sued the FBI and other government agencies, claiming that federal officials damaged her career by leaking to the press. She then subpoenaed Herridge, arguing it was necessary to identify the source of those leaks. Because there’s no federal shield law, Herridge tried to rely on the First Amendment and common law protections that many courts have recognized for reporters. But both the trial court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit rejected those arguments. That outcome, and the court’s latest refusal to reconsider it, should concern every journalist who depends on confidential sources. The reporter’s privilege exists because source confidentiality serves the public interest. Whistleblowers and others often come forward only because they believe journalists can protect them. In Herridge’s case, however, the courts treated the public interest as secondary or even irrelevant. They focused narrowly on whether Herridge’s testimony was essential to Chen’s claim and whether Chen had exhausted other avenues to obtain the information she sought. That approach turns the reporter’s privilege into a weak procedural obstacle, rather than the meaningful safeguard for newsgathering it’s supposed to be. The D.C. Circuit has previously said that it should be the rare, exceptional case where a reporter is compelled to reveal her sources. But the decision in the Herridge case means that other journalists may be more likely to be forced to do so in the future. The secrecy surrounding certain documents in Herridge’s legal fight makes matters even worse. The right of access to court proceedings is supposed to be contemporaneous Herridge argued that she shouldn’t be forced to reveal her sources because any harm Chen suffered wasn’t caused by the alleged leaks, but rather by a later, independent decision by the Department of Defense to terminate the participation of the college Chen founded in a government tuition reimbursement program “on national security grounds.” But key records related to the department’s decision were sealed in the trial court and remain sealed, even though they directly relate to the justification for forcing Herridge to reveal her sources. As a result, the public can’t fully evaluate whether the courts properly weighed the factors before ordering Herridge to comply with the subpoena. Parts of the oral argument in Herridge’s appeal were even held behind closed doors because of the sealed materials. That’s hard to square with the principle that court proceedings should happen in public view. And that’s especially true of court proceedings that reshape constitutional rights, like this one. Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) and Herridge separately asked the appeals court to unseal the documents and hearing transcript. But in its May 22 ruling, the court declined to do so, sending the issue back to the district court instead. It didn’t explain why it wouldn’t act itself, even though its own rules allow it to unseal district court records “when the interests of justice require.”This delay matters. The right of access to court proceedings is supposed to be contemporaneous, so the public can understand and assess in real time whether judges are doing their job properly. Courts shouldn’t be making groundbreaking decisions on the reporter’s privilege by relying on partially sealed arguments and secret court records, even if they’re later unsealed. Herridge may now seek Supreme Court review. But the Supreme Court only accepts a small fraction of the cases it’s asked to hear each term, and there’s no guarantee that it would improve the reporter’s privilege even if it takes her case. It’s understandable if Herridge decides that petitioning the Supreme Court is necessary to protect her sources and her professional ethics. But the best solution in the longer term for other journalists would come from Congress. Lawmakers should pass a shield law like the PRESS Act to provide clear, strong protection against compelled disclosure of journalists’ sources. Without a federal shield law on the books, confidential newsgathering may continue to be eroded, one subpoena at a time.

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Freedom of the Press Foundation
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The latest decision in journalist Catherine Herridge’s legal fight over confidential sources highlights how fragile the reporter-source privilege remains in the absence of a federal shield law. Not only did the court refuse to reconsider the order forcing Herridge to identify her confidential sources, but it also asked the public to accept its decision without immediate access to the court records we need to fully understand it. On May 22, the appeals court declined to revisit its prior ruling requiring Herridge to name her confidential sources for her 2017 reporting about an FBI investigation into scientist Yanping Chen. Chen, who had founded an online college that received government funding, sued the FBI and other government agencies, claiming that federal officials damaged her career by leaking to the press. She then subpoenaed Herridge, arguing it was necessary to identify the source of those leaks. Because there’s no federal shield law, Herridge tried to rely on the First Amendment and common law protections that many courts have recognized for reporters. But both the trial court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit rejected those arguments. That outcome, and the court’s latest refusal to reconsider it, should concern every journalist who depends on confidential sources. The reporter’s privilege exists because source confidentiality serves the public interest. Whistleblowers and others often come forward only because they believe journalists can protect them. In Herridge’s case, however, the courts treated the public interest as secondary or even irrelevant. They focused narrowly on whether Herridge’s testimony was essential to Chen’s claim and whether Chen had exhausted other avenues to obtain the information she sought. That approach turns the reporter’s privilege into a weak procedural obstacle, rather than the meaningful safeguard for newsgathering it’s supposed to be. The D.C. Circuit has previously said that it should be the rare, exceptional case where a reporter is compelled to reveal her sources. But the decision in the Herridge case means that other journalists may be more likely to be forced to do so in the future. The secrecy surrounding certain documents in Herridge’s legal fight makes matters even worse. The right of access to court proceedings is supposed to be contemporaneous Herridge argued that she shouldn’t be forced to reveal her sources because any harm Chen suffered wasn’t caused by the alleged leaks, but rather by a later, independent decision by the Department of Defense to terminate the participation of the college Chen founded in a government tuition reimbursement program “on national security grounds.” But key records related to the department’s decision were sealed in the trial court and remain sealed, even though they directly relate to the justification for forcing Herridge to reveal her sources. As a result, the public can’t fully evaluate whether the courts properly weighed the factors before ordering Herridge to comply with the subpoena. Parts of the oral argument in Herridge’s appeal were even held behind closed doors because of the sealed materials. That’s hard to square with the principle that court proceedings should happen in public view. And that’s especially true of court proceedings that reshape constitutional rights, like this one. Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) and Herridge separately asked the appeals court to unseal the documents and hearing transcript. But in its May 22 ruling, the court declined to do so, sending the issue back to the district court instead. It didn’t explain why it wouldn’t act itself, even though its own rules allow it to unseal district court records “when the interests of justice require.”This delay matters. The right of access to court proceedings is supposed to be contemporaneous, so the public can understand and assess in real time whether judges are doing their job properly. Courts shouldn’t be making groundbreaking decisions on the reporter’s privilege by relying on partially sealed arguments and secret court records, even if they’re later unsealed. Herridge may now seek Supreme Court review. But the Supreme Court only accepts a small fraction of the cases it’s asked to hear each term, and there’s no guarantee that it would improve the reporter’s privilege even if it takes her case. It’s understandable if Herridge decides that petitioning the Supreme Court is necessary to protect her sources and her professional ethics. But the best solution in the longer term for other journalists would come from Congress. Lawmakers should pass a shield law like the PRESS Act to provide clear, strong protection against compelled disclosure of journalists’ sources. Without a federal shield law on the books, confidential newsgathering may continue to be eroded, one subpoena at a time.

There are multiple ways to cast a ballot in the June 2 primary.

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LAist
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There are multiple ways to cast a ballot in the June 2 primary.

A study of almost 700 perpetrators from across the world sheds light on why some men sexually abuse children.

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The Conversation
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A study of almost 700 perpetrators from across the world sheds light on why some men sexually abuse children.

Rep. Josh Elliott was endorsed for reelection to the House of Representatives while he challenges Gov. Ned Lamont in a primary for governor.

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CT Mirror
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Rep. Josh Elliott was endorsed for reelection to the House of Representatives while he challenges Gov. Ned Lamont in a primary for governor.

نیویورک تایمز به نقل از دو مقام آمریکایی در روز سه‌شنبه ۵ خرداد گزارش داد که حملات دوشنبه شب نظامی ایالات متحده به اهدافی در جنوب ایران پس از آن صورت گرفت که تحلیلگران اطلاعاتی، مجموعه‌ای از اقدامات نظامی بالقوه تهدیدآمیز جمهوری اسلامی را در ۲۴ ساعت منتهی به این حملات شناسایی کردند.

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صدای آمریکا
Public Domain

نیویورک تایمز به نقل از دو مقام آمریکایی در روز سه‌شنبه ۵ خرداد گزارش داد که حملات دوشنبه شب نظامی ایالات متحده به اهدافی در جنوب ایران پس از آن صورت گرفت که تحلیلگران اطلاعاتی، مجموعه‌ای از اقدامات نظامی بالقوه تهدیدآمیز جمهوری اسلامی را در ۲۴ ساعت منتهی به این حملات شناسایی کردند.

Professores da Universidade de São Paulo (USP) aprovaram na segunda-feira (25) a paralisação da categoria por reajuste salarial e declararam apoio à greve dos estudantes que já dura mais de um mês. Entre as principais reivindicações dos alunos, está o aumento do auxílio para permanência estudantil, que hoje é de R$ 885. Os estudantes defendem […] Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Professores da Universidade de São Paulo (USP) aprovaram na segunda-feira (25) a paralisação da categoria por reajuste salarial e declararam apoio à greve dos estudantes que já dura mais de um mês. Entre as principais reivindicações dos alunos, está o aumento do auxílio para permanência estudantil, que hoje é de R$ 885. Os estudantes defendem […] Fonte

When the Austin City Council approved Austin Energy’s plan to buy new natural gas “peaker” units last week, council members voted behind closed doors, an unusual move that sparked backlash from environmental advocates and government watchdogs who accused city leaders of shielding a controversial public decision from scrutiny. Because the city operates Austin Energy, state […] The post Austin City Council’s private vote on peaker units draws transparency backlash appeared first on Austin Current.

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Austin Current
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When the Austin City Council approved Austin Energy’s plan to buy new natural gas “peaker” units last week, council members voted behind closed doors, an unusual move that sparked backlash from environmental advocates and government watchdogs who accused city leaders of shielding a controversial public decision from scrutiny. Because the city operates Austin Energy, state […] The post Austin City Council’s private vote on peaker units draws transparency backlash appeared first on Austin Current.