Most Viewed Videos

¿Quién era Luis Manuel Díaz?

Era secretario general del partido Acción Democrática en  Altagracia Orituco (centro) desde hace dos meses.

Luis Manuel Díaz estaba siendo investigado por homicidio desde 2010.  

De acuerdo a Jorge Rodríguez,  Díaz “era ampliamente conocido como un delincuente” en la entidad llanera, pertenecía a la banda “Los Plateados”.

Según las investigaciones Luis Manuel Díaz era el cabecilla de la banda Los Plateados y el presunto móvil es la venganza por el control de la zona.

Hace dos años salió de la cárcel, tenía amenaza de muerte según sus familiares “los familiares sabían que lo tenían amenazado porque era un líder sindical que negaba los puestos de trabajo, los negociaba y pretendía apoderarse del sindicato petrolero de Altagracia de Orituco”

 

 

 

Asesinato 

*La investigación del suceso determinó que su asesinato fue un ajuste de cuentas entre bandas criminales rivales.

*Oscar de Jesús Noguera Hernández de 28 años de edad, Alias “El Pipi”, es el presunto autor material del homicidio.

*El sospechoso está vinculado a la banda  de “El Picure” un peligroso delincuente que es buscado por las autoridades venezolanas.

*El asesino tenía acceso a la tarima de la bancada opositora.

 

 

 

 

Pronunciamientos apresurados

 

Reacciones oficiales

En conferencia de prensa, Jorge Rodríguez,  jefe del Comando de Campaña del PSUV, salió al paso de las acusaciones contra la tolda política socialista que se han hecho en las últimas horas, y que la responsabilizan de la muerte de Díaz.

Rodríguez le preguntó a esos organismos que se han pronunciado, por qué no se manifestaron ante los homicidios cometidos por José Rafael Pérez Venta, principal cabecilla de la Red Criminal de Ultraderecha. El jefe del Comando de Campaña señaló que las acusaciones de la derecha son  “una señal de desespero”, por los números negativos para la Mesa de la Unidad Democrática (MUD) que arrojan las encuestas de cara a los comicios parlamentarios del próximo 6 de diciembre. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Por su parte, Ernesto Samper, Secretario general de la Unión de Naciones Suramericanas (UNASUR) afirmó a través de la red social tuiter que la mejor opción para acabar con la violencia es votando masivamente en los comicios parlamentarios.

 

 

Source Article from http://www.telesurtv.net/news/Venezuela-Opositor-asesinado-pertenecia-a-banda-delictiva–20151126-0047.html

Outside a mobile Covid-19 vaccination center in Bolton, U.K., earlier this month, where the Delta variant, first identified in India, is driving up hospitalizations. This dangerous variant of the coronavirus is quickly spreading in the U.S., too, a new scientific analysis shows, and only broad vaccination is likely to stop it.

Peter Byrne/PA Images via Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Peter Byrne/PA Images via Getty Images

Outside a mobile Covid-19 vaccination center in Bolton, U.K., earlier this month, where the Delta variant, first identified in India, is driving up hospitalizations. This dangerous variant of the coronavirus is quickly spreading in the U.S., too, a new scientific analysis shows, and only broad vaccination is likely to stop it.

Peter Byrne/PA Images via Getty Images

The dangerous Delta variant of the coronavirus is spreading so quickly in the United States that it’s likely the mutant strain will become predominant in the U.S. within weeks, according to a new analysis.

The variant, first identified in India, is the most contagious yet and, among those not yet vaccinated, may trigger serious illness in more people than other variants do, say scientists tracking the spread of infection.

The Delta variant apparently already accounts for at least 14% of all new infections, according to the research analysis posted online Monday of more than 242,000 infections nationwide over the last six months.

Another reason to get vaccinated

“It definitely is of concern,” says William Lee, the vice president of science at Helix, which is under contract with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to help track the variants.

“Just the fact that it’s so transmissible means that it’s it’s dangerous,” Lee says, “and so I think you’ll see outbreaks of Delta around the country and more people will get sick from it.”

Helix launched the study when researchers spotted a drop in the prevalence of the Alpha variant, a contagious strain first spotted in the U.K. that had quickly become the dominant variant in that country and the U.S.

The researchers discovered the drop in relative frequency of the Alpha variant in their spot checks of strains circulating in the U.S. was due to a rapid increase in two other variants: the Gamma variant, first spotted in Brazil, and the Delta variant. The Gamma variant may be slightly better than the original strain at outmaneuvering the vaccines, researchers say.

“It looks like both of them are going to slowly push out Alpha,” says Lee, whose study has not yet been peer-reviewed but has been posted on a pre-print server.

How Delta could prompt another U.S. COVID-19 surge

All the vaccines authorized for use in the U.S. appear, in general, to provide powerful protection against all the variants, including Delta. But the rapid spread of the variants is still raising concern because of the large number of people who remain unvaccinated.

“There still are big portions of the country where the rates of vaccination are quite low,” notes Dr. Jeremy Luban, a virologist at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. “And, in fact, the Helix paper shows that this Delta variant is increasing in frequency — the speed at which it’s increasing in frequency is greatest in those areas where vaccination rates are lowest.”

The Delta variant could trigger yet another moderate surge of infections through many parts of the U.S. because of these pockets of unvaccinated people, according to a recent set of projections from the COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub, which is helping the CDC plot the future course of the pandemic.

The projections indicate that infections could start to rise again as soon as some time in July, especially if the vaccination campaign continues to stall.

“For the most part, it’s a moderate resurgence,” says Justin Lessler, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins University who is helping coordinate the hub.

“We’re not having massive epidemics at a national level, but we have this kind of continuation of the virus just sticking around and keeping us on our toes,” Lessler says. “And in specific places there could be substantial epidemics still.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/06/22/1008859705/delta-variant-coronavirus-unvaccinated-u-s-covid-surge






  • English
  • Español

MT- Community News 09.23.15

Learn how to turn food scraps into fuel for plants.

Composting in Sherman Creek

Join the New York Restoration Project (NYRP) for a tour of its composting project on Sat., Sept. 26th from 1:00 – 3:30 p.m. Learn how the project separates compost into categories and processes tons of landscaping debris with food scraps collected at the local Inwood Greenmarket. Participants can also assist in using compost in a variety of gardening projects within Sherman Creek Park. The park is located at Dyckman Street between 10th Avenue and Harlem River Drive.

For more information, please call 212.333.2552 or visit www.nyrp.org.

Buzzy Bots

Visit the Fort Washington Library on Oct. 20th and 27th to learn how to make your own robot. Uptown Buzzy Bots is a free, hands-on, science workshop series for children from ages 6-12. During these sessions, children will learn how to wire circuits with motors, and build two different robots, including an ArtBot. The Fort Washington Library is located at 595 West 179th Street, between St. Nicholas and Audubon Avenues.

For more information, please call 212.927.3533.

What haunts the dark at Morris-Jumel Mansion?

Awakening In Ink

Enjoy a premiere performance of a new play at Morris-Jumel Mansion on Thurs., Oct. 15th from 8 – 9:30 p.m. Building on the primal fear of what haunts the dark, the story of Awakening In Ink finds one young woman’s first night as the caretaker of the ominous Morris-Jumel Mansion to be anything but quiet. Audiences will come face to face with the history and lore within the walls of the iconic dwelling. The Morris-Jumel Mansion is located at 65 Jumel Terrace.

For more information, please call 212.923.8008 or visit www.morrisjumel.org.

Discover new art at the Schomburg Center’s fall open house.

Schomburg’s Open House

Head to the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture for its annual Fall Open House on Wed., Oct. 7th from 6 – 10 p.m. The event is an opportunity for audiences and patrons to access and engage with the center’s collections, exhibitions, and programs offered through an evening of talks, performances, films and art.  This year’s program, “The Black Fantastic”, will focus on the following themes: radical storytelling and black speculative fiction; black futurism; protest; and black survival. Guests can meet librarians, archivists and curators that will take them on a journey through the Schomburg’s collection of manuscripts, visual art, photographs and moving images. The center is located at 515 Malcolm X Boulevard.

For more information, please call 917.275.6975.

MT – Noticias de la Comunidad 09.23.15

Aprenda como convertir desperdicios de alimentos en combustible.

Abonando en Sherman Creek

Únase al Proyecto de Restauración Nueva York (NYRP, por sus siglas en inglés) para una excursión de su proyecto de abono el sábado, 26 de septiembre de 1:00 p.m. a 3:30 p.m. Aprenda como el proyecto separa el abono en categorías y procesa toneladas de desperdicios de jardinería con desperdicios de alimentos recogidos en la Plaza de Mercado local en Inwood. Los participantes también tendrán la oportunidad de asistir en el uso de abono en una variedad de proyectos de jardinería dentro del Parque Sherman Creek,que está localizado en la Calle Dyckman entre la Décima Avenida y Harlem River Drive.

Para más información favor de llamar al 212.333.2552 o visitar www.nyrp.org.

‘Buzzy Bots’

 

Visite la Biblioteca Fort Washington el 20 y 27 de octubre para aprender cómo construir su propio robot. ‘Buzzy Bots’ en el Alto Manhattan es una serie de talleres de ciencia gratuitos para niños entre las edades de 6-12. Durantes estas sesiones, los niños aprenderán como alambrar circuitos con motores, y construir dos robots diferentes, incluyendo ‘ArtBot’.La Biblioteca Fort Washington está localizada en el 595 Oeste en la Calle 179 (entre las Avenidas St. Nicholas y Audubon).

Para más información favor de llamar al 212.927.3533.

¿Qué atormenta la oscuridad en la Mansión Morris-Jumel?

Awakening in Ink

 

Disfrute de un estreno en la Mansión Morris-Jumel el jueves, 15 de octubre de 8:00 a 9:30 p.m. Utilizando el principal temor de que persigue la oscuridad, la historia de ‘Awakening in Ink’ encuentra una joven mujer la primera noche como cuidadora de la siniestra Mansión Morris-Jumel siendo de todo menos tranquila. Sumergido en el mundo de la obra, la audiencia se enfrentará con la historia y tradición dentro de las paredes de la icónica vivienda. La Mansión Morris-Jumel está localizada en el 65 de Jumel Terrace.

Para más información favor de llamar al 212.923.8008 o visitar www.morrisjumel.org.

Descubra nueva arte en el Centro Schomburg en la casa abierta de otoño

Centro Schomburg: Casa Abierta de Otoño

Únase al Centro Schomburg para la Investigación de la Cultura Negra en su Casa Abierta Anual el miércoles, 7 de octubre de 6:00 p.m. a 10:00 p.m. Esta es una oportunidad para el público y los clientes acceder y participar de las colecciones, exhibiciones y programas del centro ofrecidos a través de una noche de charla, presentaciones, películas y arte. El programa de este año, ‘The Black Fantastic’, se enfocará en los siguientes temas: narración de historias radical y ficción especulativa negra; futurismo negro; protesta; y supervivencia negra. Los invitados también tendrán una oportunidad de conocer bibliotecarios, archivistas y conservadores que los llevarán en un viaje a través de la colección de manuscritos, arte visual, fotografías e imágenes en movimiento de Schomburg. El Centro está localizado en el 515 Malcolm X Boulevard.

Para más información favor de llamar al 917.275.6975.



2015-09-23


Source Article from http://www.manhattantimesnews.com/mt-community-news-09-23-15-mt-noticias-de-la-comunidad-09-23-15/

CLOSE

The nine U.S. Supreme Court justices, including the newest justice, Brett Kavanaugh, gathered for their official group photo at the Supreme Court. (Nov. 30)
AP

WASHINGTON – The chief justice of the United States endorsed an internal judicial report Monday that found inappropriate workplace conduct among federal judges and recommended changes, vowing to monitor progress throughout 2019.

Chief Justice John Roberts‘ report ended a year in which the federal judiciary found itself under a microscope, accused of the type of sexual harassment and abuse more often leveled against politicians and celebrities from Hollywood to Wall Street. 

The year began with an investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct against veteran federal appeals court Judge Alex Kozinski of California. It ended with an investigation into dozens of ethics complaints filed against new Supreme Court Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh over allegations that preceded his confirmation. 

Both probes ended without any action taken against the judges – in Kozinski’s case, because he retired, and in Kavanaugh’s case, because he was promoted to the high court by a 50-48 Senate vote. The judicial branch’s code of conduct does not apply to the Supreme Court.

“The job is not yet done,” Roberts said in his year-end report. “The job is not finished until we have done all that we can to ensure that all of our employees are treated with fairness, dignity, and respect.”

More: Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh offers clues to his Supreme Court tenure: collegiality and ‘common sense’

His assessment followed a year-long process in which the self-policing judicial branch looked inward to determine the extent of judicial misconduct in the federal court system. 

A working group appointed by Roberts announced in June that inappropriate workplace conduct was “not limited to a few isolated instances involving law clerks,” Roberts said. “The working group concluded that misconduct, when it does occur, is more likely to take the form of incivility or disrespect than overt sexual harassment, and it frequently goes unreported.”

Roberts first cited the problem in an addendum to his 2017 year-end report, noting that the judiciary “is not immune” from sexual harassment accusations. This year, however, he made the #MeToo movement’s initiative the subject of his full report – noting at the outset that 2019 will mark 100 years since Congress first funded the work of law clerks who have been on the receiving end of abuse and harassment.

“Recent events have highlighted that the very qualities that make the position of law clerk attractive – particularly, the opportunity to work with a senior member of the legal profession in a position of mentorship and trust – can create special risks of abuse,” Roberts said. “Similar concerns have of course been highlighted with respect to misconduct in other prestigious and high-profile professions.”

Kozinski, 68, a 32-year veteran of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, resigned last December after The Washington Post revealed allegations of sexual harassment involving former employees, including law clerks.

Kavanaugh, 53, was accused of sexual misconduct during his high school days more than 35 years ago. His vehement denial of Christine Blasey Ford’s sexual assault allegation became the subject of controversy after he accused Democrats of playing politics.

Eighty-three complaints were lodged against Kavanaugh, some alleging that he lied in his 2018 confirmation hearing or demonstrated inappropriate temperament. Others claimed he lied in his 2006 and 2004 confirmation hearings for a seat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, where he served for 12 years. They all were dismissed after his elevation to the Supreme Court put him outside the jurisdiction of the lower courts’ disciplinary system. 

Roberts did not name any judges in his mostly upbeat report, which heralded the appointment earlier this month of a judicial integrity officer to monitor workplace conduct issues and offer confidential guidance and counseling. 

He also did not preview any changes for his own court, which has largely escaped scrutiny because it isn’t subject to the same code as other judges.

“The Supreme Court will supplement its existing internal policies and training programs for all of its employees based on the initiatives and experience of the other federal courts,” Roberts said.

More: Brett Kavanaugh begins Supreme Court tenure cautiously as fellow conservatives push for change

More: President Trump’s conservative court shift may slow down as liberal judges avoid retirement

 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2018/12/31/chief-justice-john-roberts-federal-judges-must-end-abuse-harassment/2450667002/

The 21-year-old Arvada man arrested in Monday’s mass shooting at a Boulder King Sooper’s was violent, short-tempered and paranoid during high school, his former classmates said Tuesday.

Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa booking mug provided by Boulder Police Department.

Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa is suspected of killing 10 people at the grocery store Monday when he walked in around 2:30 p.m. and began shooting, according to law enforcement. He was taken into custody about an hour later with a gunshot wound in his leg.

Alissa was hospitalized for treatment and is expected to be transported to the Boulder County Jail Tuesday to face 10 counts of first-degree murder.

He attended Arvada West High School from 2015 until he graduated in 2018, Jeffco Public Schools spokeswoman Cameron Bell confirmed Tuesday. He was on the wrestling team his junior and senior years.

“He was kind of scary to be around,” said Dayton Marvel, a teammate on the wrestling team. Alissa once had an outburst and threatened to kill people during an intra-team match, Marvel said.

“His senior year, during the wrestle-offs to see who makes varsity, he actually lost his match and quit the team and yelled out in the wrestling room that he was, like, going to kill everybody,” Marvel said. “Nobody believed him. We were just all kind of freaked out by it, but nobody did anything about it.”

He said he did not like spending time with Alissa, and Alissa was not close with anyone on the wrestling team. Another teammate, Angel Hernandez, said Alissa got into a fight in the parking lot after the match.

“(The other wrestler) was just teasing him and goes, ‘Maybe if you were a better wrestler, you would have won.’ (Alissa) just lost it. He started punching him,” Hernandez said.

Hernandez said Alissa frequently appeared to be paranoid about perceived slights against him, and Marvel said Alissa was often concerned about being targeted because of his Muslim faith.

“He would talk about him being Muslim and how if anybody tried anything, he would file a hate crime and say they were making it up,” Marvel said. “It was a crazy deal. I just know he was a pretty cool kid until something made him mad, and then whatever made him mad, he went over the edge — way too far.”

“He was always talking about (how) people were looking at him and there was no one ever where he was pointing people out,” Hernandez said. “We always thought he was messing around with us or something.”

In 2017, Alissa, then 18, attacked a classmate at Arvada West High School, according to an affidavit filed in the case. He punched the classmate in the head without warning, and when the boy fell to the ground, Alissa continued to punch him. The classmate suffered bruises and cuts to his head, according to the affidavit.

Witnesses told police they didn’t see or hear any reason for Alissa to attack the classmate. Alissa told officers that the classmate “had made fun of him and called him racial names weeks earlier,” according to the affidavit.

He was convicted of misdemeanor assault in 2018 and was sentenced to probation and 48 hours of community service, according to court records.

Despite his short temper, Hernandez said Alissa could also be friendly and “joyful.”

“The sad thing about it is that if you really were to get to know him, he was a good guy,” Hernandez said. “Whenever you went up to him, he was always so joyful and so nice. But you could tell there was a dark side in him. If he did get ticked off about something, within a split second, it was like if something takes over, like a demon. He’d just unleash all his anger.”

Another former classmate, Keaton Hyatt, said he took a weightlifting class with Alissa and never knew him to be violent. Hyatt liked Alissa’s quick wit and sharp comebacks during locker room banter.

“He was super cool and super funny,” Hyatt said. “… It was never violent jokes about people or America or anything.”

Arvada Police Detective Dave Snelling confirmed Tuesday the local department had at least two interactions with Alissa over the past several years, including a case of criminal mischief. The details of that case were not immediately available.

Snelling would not say whether local police had received any warnings or complaints about Alissa recently, however, and instead deferred the question to the FBI.

Alissa lived with his family in an Arvada subdivision on West 65th Place, a quiet neighborhood of single-family homes. Neighbors said the household appeared to be multi-generational with a large number of family members living there.

The home is owned by Ali Aliwi Alissa, who also owns a nearby restaurant. The eatery, in a strip mall that shares space with a coffee shop, UPS store, battery store and other restaurants, was closed Tuesday.

Jamie Poeling moved her business, Dream Dinners, a few doors down from the restaurant just over a year ago and said she ate there infrequently. Employees there gave Poeling a discount and she returned the favor.

Poeling said she doesn’t know everyone in the family by name, but that she never had a negative experience at the restaurant. Employees would go out of their way to offer food to a homeless woman living behind the restaurant, she said.

“I’ve been in the shop while they’ve given her food and they’re very kind,” Poeling said.

It was not immediately clear Tuesday whether any of Alissa’s family knew of his plan to attack King Soopers.

A relative told investigators Monday night that she’d seen Alissa “playing” with a gun that looked like a “machine gun” about two days prior, according to the affidavit.

“Alissa had been talking about having a bullet stuck in the gun and was playing with the gun,” the affidavit said. Others in the home became upset that he had the gun inside and took it from him, the relative told police, although she believed it had later been returned to him.

Alissa purchased a Ruger AR-556 pistol six days before the attack, according to a police affidavit released Tuesday.

He bought the gun on March 16. The weapon, which looks similar to a rifle, has a 30-round capacity, according to Ruger’s website. Witnesses to the shooting described the gunman as firing a “patrol rifle,” Boulder police have said.

On a Facebook page that appeared to belong to Alissa and has since been removed, the user posted in 2019 that he believed his former high school was hacking his cell phone. In a comment to someone who asked why the school would do that, he blamed racism.

“I believe part racism for sure,” he replied. “I believe someone spread rumors about me which are false and maybe that set it off.”

In other posts, the user expressed anti-LGBTQ sentiments and warned about perils he perceived from too much government control.

This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available. 


Source Article from https://www.denverpost.com/2021/03/23/boulder-shooting-suspect-ahmad-al-aliwi-alissa/

Russia and other actors will attempt to interfere in the 2020 elections, U.S. intelligence agencies told Congress on Tuesday, saying such actors will use the tactics they deployed in the 2016 and 2018 campaigns.

Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats told the Senate Intelligence Committee that foreign actors see the upcoming elections as a chance for them to push for their interests by disrupting the process and dividing the electorate.

From left, FBI Director Christopher Wray, CIA Director Gina Haspel and Director of National Intelligence Daniel Coats arrive to testify before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington Tuesday, Jan. 29.
(AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

“We assess that foreign actors will view the 2020 U.S. elections as an opportunity to advance their interests,” he said. “We expect them to refine their capabilities and add new tactics as they learn from each other’s experiences and efforts.”

Coats said Russia and perhaps other countries such as China – which is increasingly aligned with Moscow – are likely to use social media other means to influence the 2020 U.S. presidential election.

RUSSIAN INTERFERENCE IN US ELECTIONS FAR FROM OVER – HERE’S WHAT TO WATCH FOR

“Our adversaries and strategic competitors probably already are looking to the 2020 U.S. elections as an opportunity to advance their interests,” read the Worldwide Threat Assessment released by Coats on Tuesday.

“Russia’s social media efforts will continue to focus on aggravating social and racial tensions, undermining trust in authorities, and criticizing perceived anti-Russia politicians,” it continued. “Moscow may employ additional influence toolkits — such as spreading disinformation, conducting hack-and-leak operations, or manipulating data — in a more targeted fashion to influence U.S. policy, actions, and elections.”

Coats’s testimony went on to cast doubt on President Trump’s goal of a nuclear-free North Korea, saying it’s unlikely the regime will entirely dismantle its nuclear arsenal.

NORTH KOREANS ORDERED TO PRODUCE IMPOSSIBLE AMOUNT OF HUMAN MANURE EVERY DAY TO HELP SAVE AGRICULTURE: REPORT

While admitting that Kim Jong Un has expressed support for a nuclear-free Korean peninsula and has not recently tested a nuclear-capable missile, Coats said the intelligence assessment indicates will continue to seek to retain its nuclear capabilities and “is unlikely to completely give up its nuclear weapons and production capability because its leaders ultimately view nuclear weapons as critical to regime survival.”

“Our assessment is bolstered by our observations of some activity that is inconsistent with full denuclearization,” he added, without providing more details.

The assessment deals a blow to the Trump administration’s view that North Korea, thanks to the historic summit last year where the North agreed to denuclearization of the peninsula, no longer seeks to develop their nuclear arsenal or poses the threat of nuclear weapons to its neighbors and American allies.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

The threat assessment report also contradicts the Trump administration’s insistence that ISIS has been defeated, with the report claiming the terror group “very likely will continue to pursue external attacks from Iraq and Syria against regional and Western adversaries, including the United States.”

Coats told the committee that the terror group, which since has been decimated territory-wise in the Middle East, has “returned to its guerrilla warfare roots while continuing to plot attacks and direct its supporters worldwide.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/spy-chief-says-russia-will-attempt-interfere-in-2020-contradicts-trump-on-north-koreas-denuclearization-isis-defeat

Las asombrosas “balsas” de hormigas de fuego que flotan por las calles inundadas de Houston

Ellas también han creado una “balsa” para escapar de las inundaciones en Texas.

La forman con sus propios cuerpos, unas sobre otras, como una mancha gigantesca.

Son miles de hormigas de fuego, insectos invasores que, con las lluvias, han visto sus colonias destruidas y ahora “navegan” por las calles, ríos y campos de Houston y sus alrededores.

Los entomólogos dicen que es un comportamiento normal tras las lluvias, pero sus imágenes han “inundado” también las redes sociales.

Jim Hardie, un especialista de la Royal Entomological Society explica a la BBC que estas colonias pueden estar formadas por unas 100.000 hormigas, que crean con sus cuerpos cerosos una red resistente al agua para proteger a su reina.

Y así viajan, mientras buscan un nuevo lugar para crear los túneles y cámaras que componen sus hormigueros.

Derechos de autor de la imagen
@The_Reliant/Twitter

Image caption

Esta imagen fue compartida por Bill O’Zimmermann (@The_Reliant) a través de Twitter.

Pero no hay aquí sacrificios de los súbditos por su reina: las hormigas crean un sistema de bolsas de aire con sus cuerpos que les permite absorber el oxígeno desde la superficie.

“Los que están en el fondo están bien,” asegura Hardie.

Un material para la investigación

Las hormigas producen de esa forma una especie de material que ni siquiera rompe la superficie del agua cuando se les empuja hacia abajo, por lo que grupos científicos lo estudian por sus potencialidades para la ingeniería.

“Son tipas duras. Han pensado en todo, incluso en los huracanes”, afirma Hardie.

Según el especialista, estos insectos podrían sobrevivir así durante semanas sin nuevas fuentes de alimento.

Derechos de autor de la imagen
Biosecurity Queensland

Image caption

Las hormigas de fuego son llamadas así por el ardor que provocan sus picaduras.

Pero las hormigas flotantes no se quedan sin comer: en realidad, para sobrevivir, se alimentan de sus crías (en forma de pupas).

Una vez en tierra firme construirán un nuevo hormiguero y volverán a su dieta variada y omnívora normal, que van desde huevos y otros insectos hasta la carne de mamíferos, semillas, lombrices de tierra y, por supuesto, los dulces y desechos de nuestros hogares.

¡Cuidado con ellas!

Estas hormigas, cuyo nombre científico es solenopsis invicta, son llamadas popularmente “rojas”, por su color, o “de fuego”, por el ardor que provocan sus picaduras.

Son originarias de América del Sur y se colaron accidentalmente en Estados Unidos a principios del siglo XX.

También viven en Australia, Nueva Zelanda, China, Hong Kong, Taiwán y Filipinas.

Derechos de autor de la imagen
Getty Images

Image caption

Suelen ser muy agresivas cuando se molestan.

Si se molestan, son generalmente muy agresivas y pueden atacar incluso a los animales domésticos o el ganado.

Los montículos que crean para sus hormigueros pueden causar daños estructurales a edificios y al pavimento.

Pero el que ha recibido alguna de sus picadas, puede asegurar que no hay nada peor que esto.

Y ¡alerta!, porque cuando una pica, emite señales de feromonas a las otras hormigas para que también ataquen.

Así que hay que tener cuidado con ellas, aunque “naveguen” inocentemente por las calles después de una inundación.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias-41104380


MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto faced fresh questions on Wednesday about his dealings with a company at the center of a conflict-of-interest scandal, after it emerged that he enjoyed rent-free use of a house belonging to the firm as a campaign office.

Already under pressure over the government’s handling of the presumed massacre of 43 students abducted by corrupt police in southwestern Mexico in September, Pena Nieto is facing his most difficult period since taking office two years ago.

On Nov. 3, the government announced a Chinese-led consortium had won a no bid contract to build a $3.75 billion high-speed rail link in central Mexico.

Three days later, the government abruptly canceled the deal, just before a report by news site Aristegui Noticias showed that a subsidiary of Grupo Higa, a company that formed part of the consortium and had won various previous contracts, owned the luxury house of first lady Angelica Rivera.

Under public pressure, Rivera said she would give up the house. But neither she nor Pena Nieto have addressed the apparent conflict of interest stemming from the government’s business with Grupo Higa.

On Wednesday, Aristegui Noticias published a new story that said Pena Nieto used a different property belonging to another Grupo Higa subsidiary as an office when he was president-elect in 2012.

Eduardo Sanchez, the president’s spokesman, said Pena Nieto unwittingly used the property. Sanchez said it was leased from the Grupo Higa firm by Humberto Castillejos, the president’s legal adviser, who lent it rent-free to Pena Nieto’s team.

“If I invite you to my house, do you come to my house and ask me under whose name it is? Neither does the president,” Sanchez said, denying there were conflicts of interest.

The spokesman also said there were no more properties Pena Nieto or his team had used belonging to Grupo Higa.

“No, there is no other house that was used in a professional capacity,” Sanchez said.

Castillejos could not immediately be reached for comment.

Jorge Luis Lavalle, a senator with the opposition conservative National Action Party, said the public saw a clear conflict of interest in the dealings of Pena Nieto and his government with Grupo Higa.

“It needs to be investigated. All these doubts need to be dispelled fully and clearly,” he said. “We now have another case with no explanation.”

(Additional reporting by Ana Isabel Martinez; Editing by Simon Gardner and Tom Brown)

Source Article from http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/11/26/us-mexico-president-idUSKCN0JA22220141126

Kyle Rittenhouse took jabs at “the left” and said he’s looking into legal action against people who he feels misrepresented his case.

Rittenhouse, recently acquitted on all charges in a racially-charged multiple homicide trial, stood by his stance that he was acting in self-defense when he killed two people and injured one other in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

The 18-year-old blamed the charges against him on “a mob mentality” during an interview with Tucker Carlson that aired Monday night.

“And apparently, a lot of people on the left, it’s criminal to want to protect your community,” Rittenhouse said.

The exonerated teen said he’s hoping to lead a quiet life as an Arizona State University student, even as he receives numerous threats and feels his life has been “extremely defamed” by the case.

Kyle Rittenhouse said he’s looking into legal action.
Fox News

Carlson asked if the shooter was confident the government would protect him, and Rittenhouse replied “I hope so, but we all know how the FBI works.”

Rittenhouse was 17-years-old when he went armed with a semiautomatic rifle to Kenosha on Aug. 25, 2020 amid anti-police brutality and anti-racism protests.

He has claimed he was protecting a local business when he shot a man who threatened him and tried to take his gun. He ran, but was pursued by other protesters and clashed with them, ultimately shooting two more people before running toward police.

Tucker Carlson asked if the shooter was confident the government would protect him.
Fox News

Rittenhouse said he plans to take legal action amid what he felt were media misrepresentations and people who called him a white supremacist.

“I have really good lawyers who are taking care of that right now,” Rittenhouse said. ”So, I’m hoping one day there will be some, there will be accountability for the actions that they did.”

Carlson replied, “You’re intent you’re not going to let that go?”

Kyle Rittenhouse sits for an interview with Fox News host Tucker Carlson.
Courtesy of Fox News via AP

“Like I said, I have really good lawyers handling that,” Rittenhouse said.

Early in the interview, Rittenhouse described his version of events throughout the night and his experiences in a juvenile detention facility and jail as he awaited trial. He said even after his deadly confrontation and walking to police to tell them he had shot people, he didn’t expect the charges against him.

“I didn’t know I was gonna be arrested for defending myself because everything was on video,” he claimed. “But part of the reason I think I was arrested is because of the mob mentality. And they were like, ‘oh yeah we’re just gonna arrest him’ even though there was videos already out showing I was attacked and having to defend myself.”

Kyle Rittenhouse carries a weapon as he walks along Sheridan Road in Kenosha, Wis., during a night of unrest following the weekend police shooting of Jacob Blake, Aug. 25, 2020.
Adam Rogan/The Journal Times via AP

He described telling his parents about the confrontation, saying his mother “was in shock.”

“She wanted to go into hiding and I said no the right thing to do would be to turn myself in, I didn’t do anything wrong,” Rittenhouse said.

He blamed his original legal team, who he later dropped, for pushing a narrative that he was in an unorganized militia, a claim he denied.

Kyle Rittenhouse also told Tucker Carlson that he felt President Joe Biden had “defamed” him.
Fox News

“I’m not a racist person, I support the BLM movement,” Rittenhouse said. “I support peacefully demonstrating and I believe there needs to be changed. I believe there’s a lot of prosecutorial misconduct not just in my case but in other cases.

“It’s just amazing to see how much a prosecutor can take advantage of somebody,” he added. “Like if they did this to me, imagine what they could have done to a person of color who maybe doesn’t have the resources I do or is not widely publicized like my case.”

Rittenhouse also told Carlson that he felt President Joe Biden had “defamed” him when he tweeted out a video implying that he was a white supremacist.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/11/22/kyle-rittenhouse-claims-hes-looking-into-legal-action/

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/09/01/cow-stuck-louisiana-tree-hurricane-ida/5687494001/

Noticias Telemundo’s “Inmigración, Trump y los Hispanos” (Immigration, Trump and the Hispanic Community) Town Hall broadcast on Sunday, February 12 at 7PM/6 C, ranked # 1 in Spanish-language TV in primetime across all key demographics, averaging 1.57 million total viewers, 708,000 adults 18 to 49 and 325,000 adults 18 to 34, according to Nielsen. The news special moderated by Noticias Telemundo News Anchor José Díaz-Balart also positioned Telemundo as the #1 Spanish-language network during the entire primetime on Sunday, across all key demos.

“Noticias Telemundo is empowering millions of Latinos with reliable and TRANSPARENT information at a time of change,” said José Díaz-Balart. “Viewers trust us because they know our only commitment is to present the facts the way they are, with professionalism and a total commitment to our community.”

“Immigration, Trump and the Hispanic Community” also reached 1.6 million viewers on Facebook, generating 23,000 global actions on the social network.

The Town Hall answered viewers’ questions about the impact of President Trump’s immigration policy on the Hispanic community. The news special featured a panel of experts, including immigration lawyer and Telemundo contributor Alma Rosa Nieto; Telemundo conservative political analyst Ana Navarro; the Deputy Vice President of the National Council of La Raza (NCLR), Clarissa Martínez, and CHIRLA’s Executive Director, Angélica Salas. In addition, “El Poder en Ti”, Telemundo’s robust community initiative, launched an Internet site for Hispanics looking for information, tools and resources on immigration in parallel to the Town Hall.

“Inmigración, Trump y los Hispanos” is part of a series of Noticias Telemundo specials, including “Trump en la Casa Blanca,” produced the day after the elections, and “Trump y los Latinos,” which aired on Inauguration Day. All of these programs share an emphasis on allowing audiences to express their views and empower them by giving them access to trustworthy, rigorous and relevant information presented under Noticias Telemundo’s banner “Telling It Like It Is” (“Las Cosas Como Son” in Spanish).

Noticias Telemundo is the information unit of Telemundo Network and a leader provider in news serving the US Hispanics across all broadcast and digital platforms. Its award-winning television news broadcasts include the daily newscast “Noticias Telemundo,” the Sunday current affairs show “Enfoque con José Díaz-Balart” and the daily news and entertainment magazine “Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste.” The rapidly-growing “Noticias Telemundo Digital Team” provides continuous content to US Hispanics wherever they are, whenever they want it. Noticias Telemundo also produces award winning news specials, documentaries and news event such as political debates, forums and town halls.

Source: Nielsen L+SD IMP, 2/12/17. TEL #1 SLTV (vs UNI, UMA, AZA, ETV). Shareablee, 2/6/17-2/12/17.

Image courtesy of Telemundo.

Source Article from http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwtv/article/Noticias-Telemundos-IMMIGRATION-TRUMP-AND-THE-HISPANIC-COMMUNITY-Ranks-1-IN-Spanish-Language-TV-Sunday-212-20170214

‘);eIFD.close();
var s = eIFD.createElement(‘SCRIPT’); s.src = ‘http://’ + (eS2?eS2:eS1) +’/layers/epl-41.js’;
eIFD.body.appendChild(s);
if (!eS2) {
var ss = eIFD.createElement(‘SCRIPT’);
ss.src = ‘http://ads.us.e-planning.net/egc/4/1b7f’;
eIFD.body.appendChild(ss);
}
eplLL = true;
return false;
}
}
eplCheckStart();
function eplSetAdM(eID,custF) {
if (eplCheckStart()) {
if (custF) { document.epl.setCustomAdShow(eID,eplArgs.custom[eID]); }
document.epl.showSpace(eID);
} else {
var efu = ‘eplSetAdM(“‘+eID+'”, ‘+ (custF?’true’:’false’) +’);’;
setTimeout(efu, 250);
}
}

function eplAD4M(eID,custF) {
document.write(‘

‘);
if (custF) {
if (!eplArgs.custom) { eplArgs.custom = {}; }
eplArgs.custom[eID] = custF;
}
eplSetAdM(eID, custF?true:false);
}
function eplSetAd(eID) {
if (eplCheckStart()) {
var opts = (eplArgs.sOpts && eplArgs.sOpts[eID]) ? eplArgs.sOpts[eID] : {};
if (opts.custF) { document.epl.setCustomAdShow(eID,opts.custF); }
document.epl.setSpace(eID, opts);
} else {
setTimeout(‘eplSetAd(“‘+eID+'”);’, 250);
}
}
function eplAD4(eID, opts) {
document.write(‘

‘);
if (!opts) opts = {t:1};
if (!eplArgs.sOpts) { eplArgs.sOpts = {}; }
eplArgs.sOpts[eID] = opts;
eplSetAd(eID);
}


‘;
}

function govideo(idvideo,id,image,file,tipo,titulo,creditos)
{
document.getElementById(‘incrustado’+id).className=’news_media_b’;
if (tipo==’video’ || tipo==’audio’)
{
var bgplayer=image;
var skinplayer=’swf/rpp.zip’;
var h=413;
var w=550;
if (tipo==’audio’){ h=123; bgplayer=”tmp/img/player_audio-dummy_mm.jpg”; }

var fileyt = file.replace(‘v/’,’watch?v=’);




jwplayer(idvideo).setup({
height: h,
width: w,
autostart: ‘true’,
image: bgplayer,
file: fileyt,
modes: [{
type: ‘flash’,
src: ‘swf/player.swf’
},{
type: ‘html5’,
config: {
file: fileyt,
‘provider’: ‘http’,
}}]
});

$(‘#incrustado’+id).prepend(‘X‘);
$(‘#’+idvideo+’_wrapper’).css(‘float’, ‘left’);

} else
if (tipo==’galeria’)
{
document.getElementById(idvideo).innerHTML=’X‘;
}
}







Jueves, 10 de Julio 2014  |  11:10 pm



Créditos: Televisa

La polémica conductora peruana generó rechazo tras ser anunciada como conferencista en un curso para estudiantes de comunicación y periodismo de la Universidad Nacional de México.






La conductora de televisión, y abogada, Laura Bozzo, generó una ola de rechazo a través de Twitter cuando su nombre fue mencionado para dictar cátedraen el curso “Procesos Creativos en Televisión” que anunció Televisa para estudiantes de Comunicación y Periodismo de la Universidad Nacional de México (UNAM).

La peruana compartiría roles con Pedro Damián, Enrique Segoviano, Miguel Ángel Fox, Carla Estrada y Roberto Gómez Fernández. El encargado de dar el nombre de la polémica conductora fue el director de Televisa, Emilia Azcárraga.

En redes sociales, la respuesta fue masiva y una gran cantidad de personas cuestionó la participación de Bozzo Rotondo y rechazó que dicte una cátedra a estudiantes y futuros periodistas.

La estrella de Televisa se convertiría así en una de las celebridades nacionales que dicta cátedra en países extranjeros.








<!–

–>











<!– –>



Avisos
PERRED
Anuncia aqu

<!–%

if (data && data.searchResult && data.searchResult.spaces && data.searchResult.spaces[0] && data.searchResult.spaces[0].ads) {
var ads = data.searchResult.spaces[0].ads;
for (var i = 0; i < ads.length; i++) {
var ad = ads[i];

if (ad.creative && ad.creative.content && ad.creative.content.length && ad.creative.images) {
var titularText = '';
var cuerpoText = '';
var displayUrlText = '';

var content = ad.creative.content;
for (var j = 0; j < content.length; j++) {
var contentItem = content[j];
if (contentItem.key === 'Titulo')
titularText = cX.library.getAllText(contentItem.value);
if (contentItem.key === 'Cuerpo')
cuerpoText = cX.library.getAllText(contentItem.value);
if (contentItem.key === 'DisplayUrl')
displayUrlText = cX.library.getAllText(contentItem.value);
}
var images = ad.creative.images;
var imgSrc = '';
var textWidth = 295;
for (var k = 0; k









{{cuerpoText}}


{{displayUrlText}}










Source Article from http://www.rpp.com.pe/2014-07-10-laura-bozzo-genera-polemica-por-conferencia-para-estudiantes-en-mexico-noticia_707076.html

Óscar Acuña sobrevivió al ataque y se encuentra fuera de peligro, pero su guardaespaldas fue asesinado y la Policía sospecha que se trató de un ajuste de cuentas.

Óscar Acuña Peralta, hermano del alcalde de Trujillo y líder del partido Alianza Para el Progreso (APP), César Acuña, fue baleado esta tarde y resultó herido de consideración, mientras que uno de sus guardaespaldas, Alex Maximiliano Pretel Cabrera, resultó muerto.

De acuerdo a la información policial, Pretel Cabrera, intentó defenderlo ante la aparición de dos sujetos que descendieron de sendos vehículos.

Las primeras impresiones apuntan a que se trataría de un ajuste de cuentas, pues los autores del atentado dispararon directamente contra Acuña Peralta y no se llevaron objeto de valor alguno.

El hecho ocurrió en la cuadra 1 de la calle Pasaje Hernández, en la ciudad de Trujillo. El cuerpo herido del hermano del alcalde fue trasladado a la Clínica Sánchez Ferrer, donde es atendido. Por su parte, los médicos confirmaron el deceso del guardaespaldas.

Hasta el momento, el alcalde de Trujillo, César Acuña, no se ha manifestado por este atentado. Él, según se ha informado, no se encontraría en el país.

Por último, se conoció que Óscar Acuña está fuera de peligro. Hasta la clínica llegaron agentes de la División de Criminalística de la Policía Nacional para investigar el atentado.

Source Article from http://trome.pe/actualidad/1681810/noticia-hermano-cesar-acuna-fue-baleado-trujillo

An Arizona tourist died and his wife was rescued Friday after their vehicle got two flat tires and they went missing in Death Valley National Park in California.

Alexander Lofgren, 32, and Emily Henkel, 27, were found on a steep ledge near Willow Creek in the desert park, but Lofgren was dead, according to a statement from the Inyo Creek Sheriff’s Office.

Henkel was flown to Lemoore Naval Air Station for treatment, and there was no immediate word on her condition.

The Tucson residents, described as experienced campers, failed to return Sunday from a camping trip and were reported missing Tuesday.

Authorities searched hotels and major tourist attractions along a highway and checked Lofgren’s back-country itinerary.

On Wednesday, park staff found the couple’s missing Subaru. According to the Sheriff’s Office, a note in the car stated: “Two flat tires, headed to Mormon Point, have three days’ worth of water.”

That proved to be “a crucial tip in directing search efforts,” the Sheriff’s Office said.

On Thursday, the couple was spotted from the air, but crews couldn’t hoist them up and weren’t able to reach them in the remote area until shortly after 11:30 a.m. Friday, authorities said.

The cause of Lofgren’s death is under investigation.

“This has been a tremendously difficult operation in a very unforgiving geographic area of Inyo County, I sincerely hope for healing and recovery for all involved,” Sheriff Jeff Hollowell said in the statement.

Death Valley, in the Mojave Desert in eastern California, is one of the hottest and driest places in the world. It had highs in the 90s this week.

The rugged park has claimed several lives over the years. In January, an experienced climber who was descending a canyon plunged to his death when he was caught in a rockslide.

Source Article from https://ktla.com/news/california/camper-found-dead-wife-hospitalized-after-note-led-authorities-to-missing-couple-in-death-valley-national-park/


Top row from left, Luciana Fuller, Carla Damian-Gomes and Renata Barros were the first Brazilians to enroll in MVRHS. Also pictured, Simonica Oliveira, bottom right, and Lilian Macedo, center. — Juliana Germani

A tradução deste artigo se encontra no nosso site: mvtimes.com/category/portuguese—translation/.

Starting with this column, I would like to begin introducing some members of the Brazilian community, in addition to writing about events, opportunities, and other pertinent topics. This week, meet Carla Beatriz Damian-Gomes, the first Brazilian to attend the Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School (MVRHS) and the first female Brazilian court officer in Dukes County.

Where did you live in Brazil?

I lived in Santa Catarina, one of the three states in south Brazil.

How was MVRHS when you enrolled in 1994? How was your first day?

I was so scared on my first day because I didn’t know the language. I was in a private school in Brazil, and when I did a placement test [at MVRHS], I did really well, and the school offered me to be a sophomore instead of a freshman, but we ultimately decided that it was best to remain a freshman, as it was the best option because I didn’t speak English. Back in 1994, I felt a little lonely because I didn’t have anyone since I was the first Brazilian.

There were no apps to translate among all of the other technology that makes our lives easier nowadays. I had a dictionary. People didn’t really talk to me, but we got the point across. It took me six to seven months to begin to feel comfortable speaking in English. My ESL teacher, Jacquie Callahan, helped me a lot in the first year. She had books, little kids’ books, that she used to help me. She had only me as a Brazilian student among her American students. The second year got better because two other Brazilians joined the high school. I believe it was Genaina Pereira and Renata Barros.

How would you say that the Island has changed regarding the Brazilian community? In your opinion, what have been the big changes?

There weren’t as many options as far as Brazilian stores and restaurants. Helio da Silva had a little store we used to go to for all things Brazilian and to rent Brazilian soap opera tapes, because at that time Comcast didn’t offer Brazilian channels, as they do now. We had to put our names on a waiting list to have access to these tapes and had two days to watch and return them. I don’t know exactly how many Brazilians lived on the Island back then, but not as many as today. They didn’t own houses or anything. If two Brazilians back then owned houses, that was a lot.

What happened after you graduated high school in 1998?

I was not legal when I graduated high school, and despite having a full scholarship to college through a lady who lives in Chilmark (her name is Ms. Steiner), I couldn’t attend because I didn’t have a social security number. I had to accept that as difficult as it was, that was my reality at the time. I tried to change that though. I took the ferry and a bus by myself and went to the immigration office in Boston and explained my situation, and the opportunity I had, and asked if they could do anything to help me. However, they laughed at my face and told me to go home, that no one was going to bother me as long as I didn’t do anything wrong. I had to, at the very least, try to do something about it. I remember thinking that it just wasn’t my time. God knew when my time would be.

What did you do after high school?

I worked as a dental assistant for 10 years and as a counter person at a no longer existing deli on the Island. Ultimately, I got my papers through one of the last immigration reforms that opened in the U.S., the Legal Immigration Family Equity Act of 2000 (the LIFE Act), but actually ended up finalizing the process through marriage, and now I am a naturalized American citizen.

Where is home for you?

It is so strange the feeling of not truly being able to answer that question. Sometimes I am in the U.S., and it doesn’t feel like home, and I feel the same when in Brazil. It is as if I am perpetually lost between both worlds and cultures.

How does it feel to be Brazilian on the Island?

Well, I believe that when you move out of your country in pursuit of a better life, you have the responsibility to live your life in a way that doesn’t jeopardize other members of your community. Sometimes it can be hard because I feel that if something bad happens on the Island, some people say that it is probably a Brazilian, and that is challenging. I understand some frustrations expressed regarding immigration, fairness, and so forth. However, one thing that concerns me is the lack of something to allow immigrants to have a driver’s license in a way that other states have done it. For me, it is a way to provide public safety. As of now, because the state refuses to do something about it, the state doesn’t really know or control anything regarding the immigrants living in Massachusetts. To me it makes no sense. All cars would have insurance, and people would be accountable for maintaining their license, perhaps preventing some behaviors that right now clog our court system.

Why did you become a court officer?

I had always wanted to be a police officer because of the way things are in my country. I wanted to feel less powerless. I became a court officer in 2011.

Why do you love the Island? What makes this place so special for you?

The Island’s landscape is similar to where I come from, and this is such a beautiful and safe place, especially for my kids. I would have stayed here even if I couldn’t live here legally. That would have been a sacrifice worth making for the safety of my family as well as my own.

How do you feel about the current state of immigration in the U.S. right now?

We never stop being an immigrant, regardless of becoming a naturalized citizen. It is so sad because there are so many great people from all over the world just trying to make a good living for their kids; the American dream is an idea that will never die. The lack of a reform hurts everyone. People tend to forget that they will become responsible for costs associated with trying to send people home when, in reality, immigrants, since the birth of this nation, have only made this country better. I hope that eventually a bipartisan bill reaches the Congress. It is needed because we, as a country, would only benefit for that to become a reality.


Source Article from https://www.mvtimes.com/2017/10/04/saudade-news-brazilian-communitynoticias-de-e-para-comunidade-brasileira-16/