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Reclaimé Collection by Quick-Step includes new White Washed Oak look

The Reclaimé Collection’s new line extensions offer the visual and charm of a floor constructed from reclaimed, vintage wood in a laminate flooring construction, according to Quick-Step.




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Basic Black: Cornel West and <em>Black Prophetic Fire</em>

Originally broadcast October 24, 2014 In the aftermath of his arrest protesting the killing of Michael Brown, a young black man shot to death by a white police officer, Cornel West sits down for a conversation with Callie Crossley about his new book Black Prophetic Fire, an examination of the lives of historic African American icons and how their courage to speak truth to power still resonates with contemporary activism from the events in Ferguson, MO to taking a stand against the policies of the Obama Administration. Panelists: - Callie Crossley, Host, Under The Radar with Callie Crossley, WGBH Radio - Kim McLarin, Assistant Professor of Writing, Emerson College - Peniel Joseph, Professor of History, Tufts University - Phillip Martin, Senior Reporter, WGBH News
Photo credit: Meredith Nierman, WGBH.




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Basic Black: An <em>urban agenda</em> for Massachusetts

January 9, 2015 This week Charlie Baker was sworn in as the 72nd governor of Massachusetts, with promises of bipartisanship and a renewed economic growth agenda for the Commonwealth’s urban communities. Later in the show we remember Senator Edward Brooke who died last week at the age of 95. Panelists:
- Callie Crossley, Host, Under The Radar with Callie Crossley, WGBH News
- Phillip Martin, Senior Reporter, WGBH News
- Darnell Williams, President and CEO, Urban League of Eastern Massachusetts
- Judge Joyce London Alexander Ford, formerly US District Court, Massachusetts
- Robert Fortes, Founder and President, The Fortes Group

Massachusetts Republican Gov. Charlie Baker, center, acknowledges applause after taking the oath of office, Thursday, Jan. 8, 2015, in the House Chamber of the Statehouse, in Boston. Mass. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)




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Basic Black: Selma and <em>the fierce urgency of now...</em>

January 16, 2015 Demonstrators shutdown 1-93 near Boston this week crippling traffic for hours, putting the black lives matter and I can't breathe protests back on the front page. The latest actions occurred days after the opening of the critically acclaimed movie Selma.Selma's social justice campaign is on the big screen just as current protests push the conversation about race and civil rights beyond the teachable moment to a more forceful, uncomfortable demand for change. We look at the artistry and history portrayed in Selma against a backdrop of contemporary social justice movements.


Panelists:
- Callie Crossley, host, Under the Radar with Callie Crossley, WGBH News
- Kim McLarin, Assistant Professor of Writing, Literature, and Publishing, Emerson College
- Brandon Terry, Prize Fellow in Economics, History, and Politics at Harvard University
- Sarah Jackson, Assistant Professor in Communication Studies, Northeastern University
- Brenna Greer, Assistant Professor of Social Sciences and History, Wellesley College (Italics: from Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King’s speech at the March on Washington 1963. Photo credit: Atsushi Nishijimi)




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Basic Black: <em>Portraits of Purpose</em>

January 30, 2015 The pictures and stories of Bostonians whose stories have been sidelined are now highlighted in a book more than 20 years in the making. Now in 107 portraits coupled with narrative profiles, the contributions of some notable Bostonians of color are preserved for all time. The book is Portraits of Purpose: A Tribute to Leadership and we’re joined by photographer Don West and writer, Kenneth Cooper.

Panelists:
- Callie Crossley, host, Under the Radar with Callie Crossley, WGBH News
- Phillip Martin, senior reporter, WGBH News
- Don West, photographer and photojournalist, Portraits of Purpose: A Tribute to Leadership
- Kenneth J. Cooper, journalist and writer, Portraits of Purpose: A Tribute to Leadership




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Basic Black: <em>A Change Is Gonna Come</em>

May 1, 2015

From anger, to resilience, to a call for calm, this week Basic Black looks at the lessons to be learned from the eruptions in Baltimore on race, class, and rebuilding community.

Panelists:
- Callie Crossley, host, Under The Radar with Callie Crossley, 89.7 WGBH Radio
- Phillip Atiba Goff, President, Center for Policing Equity, UCLA; Visiting Scholar, Harvard Kennedy School of Government
- Kim McLarin, Associate Professor of Writing, Literature and Publishing, Emerson College
- Peniel Joseph, Professor of History, Tufts University
- Phillip Martin, Senior Reporter, WGBH News
Photo: A man makes a heart shape with his hands during a peaceful protest near the CVS pharmacy that was set on fire on Monday in Baltimore. Credit Andrew Burton/Getty Images for NPR.

Show title from A Change is Gonna Come by Sam Cooke, 1964.




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Rob Marshall's 'Into the Woods' gets lost in Sondheim's Irony

R.H. Greene

Rob Marshall is either the bravest director in Hollywood or the most foolhardy. Three of his five theatrical films — the musicals "Chicago," "Nine" and now "Into the Woods" — don't just invite comparison to the eccentric genius of other artists, they insist on it.

Originally a Bob Fosse stage project, "Chicago" was so imbued with Fosse's vitriolic spirit that even in Marshall's more straightforward hands the movie version felt like the missing piece in a triptych with Fosse's "Cabaret" and "All That Jazz."

"Nine" is the musical created from Fellini's masterpiece "8 1/2."

(Marcello Mastroianni in Fellini's "8 1/2")

Odd enough that someone thought Fellini's intimate but epic fugue on his own creative doubts and sexual fantasies should be adapted by others for Broadway; stranger still to re-import the hybrid back to the screen, in the workmanlike form Marshall gave to it.

And now we have "Into the Woods," a film placing Marshall in the long line of moviemakers defeated by Sondheim's difficult musical brilliance and penchant for challenging material. It's distinguished company, reaching back all the way to "A Hard Day's Night" director Richard Lester's re-invention of "A Funny Thing Happened (On the Way to the Forum)" as a kind of psychedelic Keystone Cops movie, and forward to Tim Burton's more adept but still wrong-headed Murnau-meets-Hammer-Horror approach to "Sweeney Todd."

Even director Hal Prince, the principal theatrical collaborator during Sondheim's most fertile and formative period, made an absolute hash of their shared stage success "A Little Night Music" in a film version later disavowed by both men, and mostly remembered for Elizabeth Taylor's chirpy and discernibly flat rendition of "Send in the Clowns."

Liz singing "Send in the Flat Clowns"

It's just possible that the real problem is that Sondheim's self-reflexive and deconstructive impulse (his musicals are almost always and to varying degrees commentaries on the Musical itself) makes his projects unfit for screen adaptation. In movies, we miss the artifice of the proscenium, the sweat on the actor's brow. But if any of Sondheim's late-period projects held out the hope of a successful movie version it was surely "Into the Woods," a droll recombination of the fairytale form's literary DNA into something like Sondheim's masterpiece "Company," set in a realm of magic beanstalks and slippers made of glass.

The characters are straight out of the Disney pantheon (or "Shrek"): Cinderella meets Rapunzel meets Red Riding Hood meets Jack and his Beanstalk, with a generic Wicked Witch, a couple of not so charming Prince Charmings, plus a peasant couple thrown in. But the issues at stake — marital fidelity, raising children, the fear of aging and death — are complicated, and filled with gray tones which Sondheim and librettist James Lapine masterfully etched across the fairytale's Manichean black and white.

What seemed audacious when Sondheim and Lapine conceived it in 1987 ought to fit comfortably into the era of "Sleepy Hollow" and "Maleficent," but in Marshall's hands, it does not. The good news is that though populated by what old school TV shows used to call a Galaxy of Today's Brightest Stars (Anna Kendrick as an appealingly unglamorous Cinderella; Chris Pine as the nymphomaniac Prince who stalks her; Meryl Streep quite moving in the Wicked Witch role made famous on Broadway by Bernadette Peters) this is mostly a very well-sung movie. There have been controversial excisions and revisions (enabled by Lapine, who is Marshall's screenwriter), but as an introduction to one of Sondheim's more beloved scores, "Into the Woods" makes for a solid musical primer.

WATCH: The "Into the Woods" trailer

But though Marshall has taken a lot of flack for daring to cut out characters (most notably the stage production's Narrator, who served as a kind of Greek Chorus in the original) and for softening plot points (Rapunzel died onstage), the big problem is that Marshall isn't nearly ruthless enough in rethinking "Into the Woods" as an honest-to-God movie. There are many moments (Johnny Depp ending a scene with a stagy howl at the Moon that virtually screams "and... fade out!;" the unseen death of a major character) where Marshall embraces the limitations of stagecraft when something bigger and more cinematic is needed, as if afraid to mar the pedigree of Broadway with Hollywood's debased visual stamp.

"Giants in the Sky," Jack's coming-of-age number, where he describes finding manhood in the sexual and physical dangers available above the clouds in the Giant's Castle, is a showstopper onstage, where we're willing to accept rhetoric in place of physical immediacy. Onscreen, it's simply frustrating for a character to suddenly appear and tell us he's just had the adventure of a lifetime, and that it's too bad we missed it.

The Woods themselves — both character and symbol onstage, a kind of living maze representing moral confusion — are lush here and geographically nondescript, like a particularly plush unit set, done up in a generic Lloyd Webber-meets-Disney house style.

Perhaps most unfortunately of all, Marshall seems constitutionally incapable of conveying the pervasive satiric impulse at the heart of the Sondheim/Lapine original, which could have been called "What Happens After Happily Ever After." Without ironic distancing, the film's second half, where the characters betray each other in decidedly contemporary sexual and self-interested terms, plays as non-sequitur.

It's possible to imagine a more idiosyncratic movie director who both understands and embraces the arsenal of cinematic effects available through editing, camera movement and design transforming "Into the Woods" into a rousing cinematic triumph — the young Terry Gilliam comes to mind. But Hollywood doesn't really embrace its daring cranks and visionaries very often, as Gilliam's difficult career demonstrates. Whenever possible, today's studios like to import genius at a safe remove, and then hand it off to a reliable journeyman who won't make waves or piss off the suits. The limitations of that approach are visible in every scene of "Into the Woods," and perhaps they explain its failure best of all. It's one thing not to be up to the task of adapting a work of odd brilliance. It's something else again to not even take it on.

This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org.




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PM's 2007 Pipe Trades Giants

Nonresidential construction - education, healthcare, hospitality, etc. - keeps the industry afloat.




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DCM&B Tools and Technology Seminar (November 14, 2024 12:00pm)

Event Begins: Thursday, November 14, 2024 12:00pm
Location: Palmer Commons
Organized By: DCMB Tools and Technology Seminar


This presentation will be held in 2036 Palmer Commons. There will also be a remote viewing option via Zoom.




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BDO Executive is Winner of CPA.com's 2017 Innovative Practitioner Award

CPAs from SC&H and Cherry Bekaert LLP Named Runners-Up

NEW YORK (Sept. 7, 2017) –  BDO executive Kelly Johnson, CPA, is the winner of CPA.com’s 2017 Innovative Practitioner Award, which recognizes innovation in process, services or technology implementation in public accounting firms.

Johnson, BDO’s national leader of business services and outsourcing, led the development of BDODrive, a cloud-based, integrated solution for financial management, accounting services and business intelligence. The platform provides real-time, streamlined accounting information via dashboards for clients, operational efficiencies and access to the Top 10 accounting firm’s specialized expertise for businesses. While CPA.com administers the voting process online, winners of the Innovative Practitioner Award are chosen by their peers.

“The tangible growth in client accounting services that’s been documented in research by the AICPA and CPA.com is due to the kind of fully realized offerings being developed by BDO and others,” said Erik Asgeirsson, president and CEO of CPA.com. “Kelly is a deserving standard-bearer for our Innovative Practitioner Award, and I want to thank all our finalists in the competition who are helping drive innovation in the profession. It was a strong field this year.”

Johnson will be recognized as the award winner at the 2017 Digital CPA Conference, which she will be invited to attend as a guest. The event will be held Dec. 4-6, 2017, at the Marriott Marquis in San Francisco.

Among the finalist group, two other runners-up were recognized for their innovative work. They are:

First Runner Up

  • Michael Lynch, CPA, principal of SC&H Group’s CFO Advisory Services practice, developed an outsourced accounting practice focused in part on emerging life science and software-as-a-service companies. He uses technology to automate workflow and transactional processing, and acts as a trusted advisor for management on business development, financial leadership and strategy.

Second Runner-Up

  • Jonathan Kraftchick, CPA, managing director, Cherry Bekaert LLP, developed training programs to educate auditors on coming changes in artificial intelligence and machine learning and how these innovations might impact the profession. Within his firm, he is also involved with two beta projects with vendors to improve data analytics and machine learning in audit applications.

To read more about these practitioners, please visit the award page. More information about the Digital CPA Conference can be found at digitalcpa.com.

About CPA.com

CPA.com offers a growing list of products and services for practice management, client advisory services and professional development. The company has established itself as a thought leader on cloud technology and has been a driving force around the reemergence of virtual CFO/controller services by firms.

The RIVIO Clearinghouse, a joint venture between CPA.com and Confirmation.com, is an online financial document clearinghouse that enables private businesses to exchange key financial information with lenders and investors.

CPA.com is a majority-owned subsidiary of the American Institute of CPAs, the world’s largest member body representing the accounting profession. For more information, visit CPA.com.

CPA.comSep 7th, 2017Press Releases




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Solidigm's Monster 122-Terabyte SSD Is Here For Copious Data Center Storage

You remember yesterday, when we wrote about Micron's new 6550 ION SSD and how it wasn't exactly the biggest SSD we'd seen? Well, that was yesterday. Today, Solidigm is announcing a new model in the D5-P5336 SSD family with a whopping 122.88 terabytes of storage in a single drive, finally topping the Nimbus Exadrive. Micron still holds the




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Sánchez amplía el Concierto vasco al facilitar que las haciendas vascas regulen 14 impuestos más y tengan presencia internacional

El Gobierno vasco celebra haber conseguido la "demanda histórica de participar y tener presencia enel ámbito internacional". La ampliación de la soberanía fiscal vasca se produce en vísperas de la cita entre Sánchez y Pradales a finales de noviembre Leer



  • Mundo
  • Artículos Josean Izarra

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Los mártires

"Poliuto" es una ópera olvidada de Donizetti que ha adquirido una insólita actualidad por  que la ha rescatado estos días el Festival de Glyndebourne y porque ha aparecido el disco de su versión francesa, "Les martyrs" a iniciativa del maestro Mark Edler en el sello Opera Rara.




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Economía y Unespa firman un acuerdo para agilizar la tramitación de expedientes de los afectados de la DANA

El convenio busca proceder con más rapidez en la valoración de los siniestros y e el cobro de las indemnizaciones por parte de los asegurados Leer




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Las tarifas de luz más baratas de noviembre de 2024

La factura energética es un gasto fijo en la economía familiar: elegir la más adecuada supone un importante ahorro mensual Leer




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El baloncesto en Silla de Ruedas doblega la crisis diplomática

Pese a la crisis sin precedentes en las relaciones bilaterales, israelíes y turcos se encuentran y elogian en Israel con motivo del Europeo en Silla de Ruedas.




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Las líneas rojas de López Simón




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'José Jamás', el 'Malagradecido'




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El "número mágico" de la Lotería de Navidad desborda a una administración de El Escorial gracias a la Inteligencia Artificial

 Leer



  • Lotería de Navidad

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El inspector corrupto cazado con 20 millones de euros en su casa empaquetaba los sobornos con la máquina de la Policía

El millón de euros en billetes de 500 que se encontró en el despacho de este agente, apodado 'El Anodino', era su comisión por el último gran envío de droga. Los investigadores sospechan que aún queda dinero por encontrar Leer




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El 'sermón del CIS': ¡Felices los jodidos!

Hemos pasado del "España va bien" al "España es feliz". Pese al paro, la corrupción y los políticos, el 69,6% dice ser notable, sobresaliente o "completamente feliz" frente a un exiguo 3% que se declara desdichado.




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Margallo o el elogio de la desobediencia diplomática

El ministro de Exteriores se apunta a la tesis de que la actuación de algunos diplomáticos durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial estuvo guiada por sus convicciones personales, tomadas al margen de las órdenes que se les dieron.




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De cuando Máximo era amigo de Carlos Robles Piquer

En 1964, durante la gran campaña de propaganda lanzada por el Régimen para celebrar los XXV Años de Paz, Carlos Robles Piquer, cuñado de Franco y director general de Información encontró un colaborador fiel y leal: Máximo.




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"El más consecuente atraco homicida de la Historia"

El Holocausto sólo es entendible si se aborda de forma desapasionada. Nada ayuda la indignación. Sólo los datos son útiles. Y entender, a la manera del clásico.




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Los errores que se cuentan sobre el cambio climático

Si no se conoce la naturaleza del clima, se yerra cuando se intenta hablar de el.




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Mentes caducas: El problema del cambio climático

Ideas reviejas en un mundo moderno.




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"Siempre ha habido cambios climáticos"

Si siempre ha sido así, seguiriamos como carroñeros en las sabanas.




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Neumáticos, Contaminación, Responsabilidad y Coste

La responsabilidad, de otros, la porquería, para nosotros.




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La polución y el cambio climático tienen arreglo.

Morimos por desidia administrativa: La polución que no cesa.




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Algunos médicos patinan: Contaminación y deporte.

El diesel nos está matando, lentamente.




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¿Es hora de que Draghi haga algo más que decir que va a hacer algo?

El anuncio del BCE podría quedar en un nuevo juego de palabras de Draghi para mantener alto el ánimo de unos mercados que reclaman acción




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Grecia es hoy más europea y Europa más alemana

A falta de conocer la letra pequeña del acuerdo entre Grecia y las instituciones, y de que el Parlamento heleno apruebe las reformas exprés que exigen los acreedores, la larga negociación pone en evidencia la supremacía alemana en Europa y lanza un aviso a las nuevas formaciones políticas de izquierda.




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Una asociación de fiscales denuncia ante el Supremo que García Ortiz manipuló un móvil junto a su 'número dos' durante su registro

El pasado día 30, el juez Hurtado ordenó a la UCO registrar el despacho del fiscal general con el objetivo de incautarse de sus dispositivos electrónicos Leer



  • Álvaro García Ortiz
  • Artículos Ángela Martialay
  • HBPR
  • Justicia

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El último imposible de 'El Chino' Méndez después de 100 catástrofes: la búsqueda de Izan y Rubén

A sus 78 años, todavía busca desaparecidos en tragedias. Lleva en el mono las banderas de los 41 países a los que ido a ayudar: estuvo en el 11-S, en el 'tsunami' de Indonesia y en los terremotos de Japón Leer



  • DANA
  • Artículos Ana María Ortiz

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El principal acusado del crimen de Samuel Luiz pide perdón y reconoce: "Si no fuese por mí, estaría vivo"

Diego Montaña contextualizó la agresión en una noche en la que bebió "casi entera" una botella de whisky Johnnie Walker rojo con Red Bull Leer




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Cuba: Imágenes y Palabras de Pedro Juan Gutiérrez

A propósito de la salida del filme 'El Rey de La Habana', dirigida por Agustí Villaronga, basada en la novela del mismo nombre escrita por Pedro Juan Gutiérrez, y ante la salida de su reciente libro, le entrevistamos brevemente.




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Blinken promete más apoyo a Ucrania antes de que Trump sea investido y avisa a Corea del Norte: su entrada en la guerra "tendrá una respuesta firme"

El secretario de Estados Unidos se reúne con Mark Rutte, y ambos inciden en que el conflicto se ha convertido ya en algo global que afecta "al teatro Euroatlántico, al Indo-Pacífico y a Oriente Próximo" Leer



  • Artículos Daniel Viaña
  • Guerra Ucrania Rusia
  • Estados Unidos
  • Especial Guerra de Ucrania

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Marco Rubio, confirmado como nuevo secretario de Estado: el hispano que logra el puesto más alto en una Administración en EEUU

Al contrario que el presidente electo, es un neoconservador republicano tradicional en política exterior y un firme partidario de la OTAN. Aunque habla español perfectamente no suele hacerlo en público. Leer




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Trump escoge como fiscal general a Matt Gaetz, ídolo del mundo Maga y el congresista más populista y odiado en Washington

Piensa para reformar la Justicia en alguien que fue investigado por sexo con menores y tráfico de personas y al que el Congreso le ha abierto un expediente por conducta sexual inapropiada, consumo de drogas o uso inapropiado de fondos de su campaña Leer




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La nueva cruzada contra el abuso del móvil




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China ya no compra móviles




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La guerra más tonta del mundo

Suponiendo que esto sea la guerra, es difícil encontrar una más tonta. Suponiendo que algún bando la gane, sería difícil encontrar recompensa más exigua: la disputa es por un territorio de 4,6 kilómetros cuadrados. 




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El castaño milenario venerado por reyes que puedes visitar a una hora de Málaga

El árbol tiene más de 20 metros de altura y casi 14 de perímetro Leer




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Los 10 pueblos de la provincia de Málaga con más habitantes

Los municipios del litoral siguen siendo los más poblados y ocupan los primeros puestos Leer




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Suspendido en el techo o atrapado en un cuadro: el museo de Málaga que revoluciona la imaginación y está en pleno centro

La pinacoteca, que acaba de cumplir seis años, ofrece una experiencia basada en ilusiones ópticas Leer





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La segunda DANA provoca en Málaga las peores inundaciones en 35 años

Varios ríos desbordados obligan a desalojar a más de 4.000 personas en toda la provincia, al tiempo que se suspendía la circulación ferroviaria, los autobuses urbanos y se cancelaban varios vuelos Leer




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El agente multamamás

Me había topado hasta ahora con agentes policiales, de la Local, la Nacional o la Benemérita, de toda condición y facilidad de trato, pero lo que viene sucediendo en la pedanía valenciana de Benimàmet con uno de los policías locales allí designado es denunciable. 




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Médicos: salvar o dejar morir

Mi madre no sólo no va a hacer más gasto de las instalaciones del hospital, sino que también se van a ahorrar el dinero del traslado en la ambulancia. Pero a mí y a toda mi familia nos quedan dos preguntas: ¿Es eso un médico que debe mirar por la salud de sus pacientes? Y, doctor B, si su madre, esposa o hija hubiera estado en la situación en la que estaba mi madre, ¿qué hubiera hecho usted, pedir que se quedara en el hospital con todos los recursos o enviarla a casa?




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Música y Educación

La música vuelve a encontrarse en situación peligrosa, desaparece de los planes de estudio al punto de convertirse en asignatura 'maría' para nuestros hijos. Por no hablar del recorte de subvenciones. La historia nos dice que dar tan poca importancia a la formación musical es un error.