san Cost-Effective, Energy Efficient Concrete Sandwich Panels By www.wconline.com Published On :: Thu, 04 Feb 2016 11:10:00 -0500 The energy saving contributions of thermal mass are well known but not always implemented in an ideal way. Full Article
san Basic Black: Urban Renaissance By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Sat, 11 Apr 2015 00:00:00 EST April 10, 2015 It wouldn't be a stretch to say that Dudley Square is experiencing something of a renaissance. The dedication of the Bruce C. Bolling Municipal Building and the re-opening of Tropical Foods grocery store are the latest examples of what is hoped to be the beginnings of an economic turnaround for Roxbury and Mattapan. We’ll talk about Mayor Walsh’s plans with two chiefs in his administration: John Barros and Daniel Koh. Later in the show, in South Carolina and closer to home, a shift in official police responses to the deaths of African American men at the hands of law enforcement. Panelists: - Callie Crossley, Host, Under The Radar with Callie Crossley, 89.7 WGBH - Daniel Koh, Chief of Staff, Mayor’s Office, City of Boston - John Barros, Chief of Economic Development, Mayor’s Office, City of Boston - Yawu Miller, Senior Editor, The Bay State Banner Full Article
san New Award Advances Sanders-Brown Director's Research on Inflammation's Role in Alzheimer's By www.newswise.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 14:40:55 EST The University of Kentucky Sanders-Brown Center on Aging Director Linda Van Eldik, Ph.D., hopes to shed light on how specific brain cells may contribute to the progression of Alzheimer's disease, paving the way for potential new therapeutic approaches.Van Eldik recently received a three-year, $300,000 award from the BrightFocus Foundation to support her research project, "Relationship between astrocyte p38 MAPK, neuroinflammation, and Alzheimer pathology. Full Article
san Shared tech workspaces spread beyond sands of Silicon Beach By www.scpr.org Published On :: Fri, 06 Feb 2015 05:00:02 -0800 People using a coworking space.; Credit: Cross Campus Brian WattIn a sign of increased desire of professionals to work remotely, the successful Santa Monica shared workspace Cross Campus is opening a second location in Pasadena later this month, and the company hopes to open eight others in Southern California and beyond in the next two years. Dubbed by one user as the “nerve center” of the Silicon Beach tech scene, Cross Campus opened its membership-based workspace facility in Santa Monica in 2012. But co-founder Ronen Olshansky said the shared workspace phenomenon isn't limited to coders. "Fewer and fewer people are making the traditional drive into the corporate office," Olshansky said. "They're working remotely as professionals, going off on their own as freelancers, or they're starting their own companies as entrepreneurs." A forecast from Forrester Research says that 43 percent of workers will telecommute by 2016, compared to estimates of about a quarter of the workforce telecommuting last year. Olshansky said that, for many people, working from home or in a coffee shop isn't productive. That's led shared workspaces to pop up in Los Angeles, Culver City and Santa Monica. Among them: Maker City L.A., WeWork, NextSpace, Coloft and Hub LA. Los Angeles-based tech investor David Waxman said these kind of shared spaces are crucial for the early stages of tech ventures. "When you’re just starting out, and capital is very scarce, having not to commit to an entire office but having part of an office is very important," Waxman said. “There comes a collective energy when a bunch of entrepreneurs get together in the same space, even if they’re not working on the same project." And he said Pasadena is a good choice for a shared workspace. "It is the home of Caltech, the Arts Center, and IdeaLab — probably the world’s first tech incubator — started there," he said. But he said the need isn't limited to Pasadena. "In Silver Lake, in South Pasadena, in Glendale, you see a lot of little pockets of people getting together, and as soon as there’s a critical mass, we’ll see co-working spaces like Cross Campus come into being," said Waxman, who named his investment firm TenOneTen after the two freeways that connect Santa Monica and the Westside to Pasadena. Alex Maleki of IdeaLab in Pasadena is happy a well-known company is opening up in his city. "Anything that helps attract talent and capital to the region," Maleki said, "is absolutely fantastic." This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
san Getting from Los Angeles to San Francisco in 30 minutes By www.scpr.org Published On :: Tue, 13 Aug 2013 12:15:33 -0700 Business Update with Mark LacterYesterday, we heard about the hyper-loop, a system that could get you from L.A. to San Francisco in about 30 minutes without losing your eyeballs. Steve Julian: Business analyst Mark Lacter, that might come in handy given how crowded California's air corridor has become... Mark Lacter: We'll talk about the hyper-loop in a moment, Steve, but yes, the L.A.-to-San Francisco air route is the busiest in the U.S., and it's already the most competitive. We're talking about more than 50 flights a day, which - if you spread them out between six in the morning and 10:30 at night - there'd be one flight every 20 minutes. But, Delta obviously thinks there's room for more because it's announced an hourly shuttle between the two cities. That's another 14 daily flights beginning September 3. The airline will be using a somewhat smaller jet, and it sounds as if the focus will be on the business traveler, with free newspapers, wine, and beer. Julian: How much will it cost, do we know? Lacter: As usual, it's a lot cheaper if you make an advance purchase, but if you're buying your tickets at the last minute - which is what a lot of business travelers do - roundtrip runs a hefty $430. Actually, this Bay Area shuttle is just the latest effort by Delta to expand out of LAX, which is different from other major airports in that it doesn't have any one airline that dominates (United has a slight edge in market share over American, with Delta about three percentage points behind). American also has been adding flights out of LAX. Julian: Sounds like the airline business is improving... Lacter: That's what happens when you pack planes to the absolute max, which is bad news for travelers being crammed into coach seats. But it's good news for LAX, which continues to be the airport of choice among airlines looking to add service - matter of fact, domestic passenger traffic was up almost 8 percent in June compared with a year earlier. Some of those gains might be at the expense of service elsewhere - most especially Ontario Airport, which has seen a big exodus among airlines and passengers. Ontario city officials have been trying to regain control of the airport, which has been operated by the city of Los Angeles. Julian: Back to the hyper-loop - is this kind of transport possible? Lacter: Well, it's the brainchild of billionaire Elon Musk, and you never say never with this guy. He started the electric car company Tesla and the private space company Space X. The hyper-loop is a high-speed system of passenger pods that would travel on a cushion of air (think of air hockey table). The pods would travel at more than 700 miles per hour, but they wouldn't result in sonic booms that severely restricted the Concorde aircraft. Of course, anything that promises super-speed travel is bound to get people talking - and, from what the physics professors are saying, the Musk idea seems feasible. Julian: How would its cost compare to the bullet train? Lacter: He says a lot cheaper. The price tag on the train is $70 billion at last check; Musk says he can do his for $6 billion. But, the issue isn't so much the cost or even the technology, but the politics. As a rule, governments do not think outside the box, and that's what a project like this is all about. Already, you have bullet train supporters saying that the hyper-loop is impossible, but what they're really saying is we have a lot riding on the train, and we don't want this guy to mess it up. Julian: But, how much demand is there for high-speed transport? Lacter: You'd think there would be a lot, but when Boeing came up with a nifty idea for a souped-up plane that would shave almost an hour from L.A. to New York, the airlines said no because it would require more fuel - and that would mean raising fares. Musk says his system would be a lot cheaper than traveling by plane, which could be a game changer in the attitudes about going places. But, those attitudes won't change until the thing is actually built, and that can't realistically happen until attitudes change. That's the ultimate problem. Julian: Hence, why we're content to squeeze into coach. Lacter: Yep. Mark Lacter is a contributing writer for Los Angeles Magazine and writes the business blog at LA Observed.com. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
san The challenges of debate moderating have grown along with partisan differences By www.scpr.org Published On :: Mon, 22 Oct 2012 11:06:08 -0700 US President Barack Obama and Republican Presidential nominee Mitt Romney debate on October 16, 2012 at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York. Undecided voters asked questions during a town hall format.; Credit: STAN HONDA/AFP/Getty Images Larry MantleThere continue to be questions about how moderators approach Presidential debates and about whether the extra time President Obama has received in the first two debates indicates moderator bias in his favor. I had chalked up the concerns to Republican hyper-partisanship, such as we saw with many Democrats criticizing Jim Lehrer for his moderating — as though Obama would’ve won the first debate if only Lehrer had asserted himself more. However, even CNN has been doing significant follow-up on its own Candy Crowley’s performance in debate number two. Maybe it’s not just hardcore GOP loyalists who are questioning Crowley’s decision-making on when to cut in and when to allow the candidates to take more time. I thought she did pretty well, but there are plenty of critics. As someone who has moderated hundreds of debates, I thought I’d share my thoughts on what we’ve seen so far in this election. Though I’ve never moderated a Presidential debate, with its incredible level of attention, concern about rules, and demands by campaigns, there are certain fundamentals regardless of the office or issue at stake. Time Doesn't Matter...Too MuchFirst, as strange as this may sound, the time taken by each candidate has little to do with who has an advantage. Yes, it’s always possible for a candidate to use another minute to fire off the defining line of the night. However, the well-practiced zingers or essential policy explainers are not left to the end of a candidate’s statement, as the clock is running out. I’m sure Mitt Romney wasn’t thinking after the last debate, “If only I would’ve had that extra 90-seconds, and Obama hadn’t gotten 90 more than he deserved.” Both men front-loaded their major talking points and were going to get them in. Neither man could legitimately say he didn’t have a chance to make his strongest points. At some point, a time advantage could make a difference in who wins or loses, but an extra 90-seconds in a debate longer than 90-minutes isn’t going to do it. Serving The AudienceAs a moderator, you also have to think about what best serves your audience. I never guarantee candidates equal time, as it’s my job to serve the listeners, not their campaigns. I strive to get close to equal time, but can’t make any guarantee. Some speakers get to the point succinctly and have their points well put together. Others are messier in their arguments and eat up time just building up any head of steam. If the moderator holds to a strict time limit, you run the risk of frustrating listeners by cutting off the rambler just as the candidate is getting to the point. There are methods a moderator can use to help guide the speaker toward being more succinct, but there’s no guarantee the person will be able to comply. Isn’t this inherently unfair to the succinct speaker? No. The purpose of the debate is to allow the ideas to compete. It’s not a boxing match that’s about landing punches in a given time. The succinct debater has a big advantage, regardless of how much time the candidate has. That’s why Mitt Romney’s victory in the first debate was so lopsided — he won on the conciseness and clarity of his answers, coupled with Obama’s inability to get to his central points. Obviously, there are those who thought Obama’s arguments were still more compelling than Romney’s, and that Romney lacked essential details. However, for most viewers of the first debate, it was stylistically no contest. Equal Time Is Not A GuaranteeWhen candidates are allowed to talk to each other directly, it’s very difficult to assure equal time. Even CNN’s clock that registers elapsed time for each candidate is subject to squishiness. Unless a debate is extremely formal, with carefully controlled time limits and a ban on candidates following-up with each other, you’re only going to have an approximation of time balance. I thought Crowley did pretty well to land the second debate with the balance she did. I’m not sure I could get it that close for a debate of that length. She had the added challenge of trying to determine when to cut in on President Obama’s lengthier answers. Also, Romney’s speaking rhythm allows more space for interruption. It’s tougher to break in on Obama. Moderating Is A Balancing ActModerators are always trying to balance a need to move on to the next topic with allowing a candidate to answer an opponent’s charge. Sometimes, you open that door for a candidate, only to regret it later when the politician starts into a monologue, instead of confining the response to the previous challenge. Sometimes moderators, having gotten burned, will become less tolerant of such expansive rebuttals, as the debate goes on. Moderators are always juggling competing goals, and it’s a difficult job (at least for me). Unfortunately, there are those who think debate moderators attempt to influence the outcome of the debate and the performances of the candidates. Maybe I’m naïve, but I can’t imagine any journalist who’s worked hard enough to get to the position of Presidential debate moderator subordinating his or her career in an effort to getting someone elected. Mainstream political journalism is like national sports reporting. You really don’t care who wins the Super Bowl, you want great story lines to explore with your audience. Yes, sports reporters have affinities for the hometown teams of their youth, but that can’t compete with the professional goal of covering great stories. Yes, most journalists in mainstream media probably have a stronger cultural and political affinity for Obama, as he’s more like them. However, it doesn’t mean a journalist is going to sacrifice the better story to intentionally provide a benefit to the President. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
san Shogun Santa Returns to Little Tokyo After Tragic Loss By www.scpr.org Published On :: Thu, 19 Dec 2019 01:06:00 -0800 Mike Okamoto poses as Shogun Santa with visitors to Japanese Village. ; Credit: Chava Sanchez/KPCC Josie HuangLA’s Asian Santa tradition is back. Shogun Santa has returned to Little Tokyo after a big loss in the community last year. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
san Intesa Sanpaolo partners with BlackRock By thepaypers.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 12:22:00 +0100 Fideuram Intesa Sanpaolo Private Banking (FISPB), Intesa Sanpaolo Group’s private bank, has partnered with BlackRock to advance the expansion of its Digital Wealth Management solution in Italy and Europe. Full Article
san Sandi Gibbons on journalism, working for the DA, and why she's retiring By www.scpr.org Published On :: Mon, 08 Apr 2013 12:30:11 -0700 Robert F. Kennedy's speech at the Ambassador Hotel. Sandi Gibbons the woman in the white dress on the bottom right. Patt MorrisonShe’s spent her life on both sides of the microphone. For half of her career she was a reporter, finding herself in places like the Ambassador Hotel ballroom on the night Robert F. Kennedy was shot, and in the courthouse covering Charles Manson. For the other half of her professional life, she spent a lot more time in L.A.’s courthouses as the spokeswoman for the L.A. County District Attorney’s office. She served three DAs, and now she’s hanging it up. Her retirement lunch was attended by three past and present DAs, with a fond message from a fourth, and as many of her reporter and DA friends could fit in the restaurant. RELATED: Veteran reporter, DA spokesperson Sandi Gibbons is retiring Sandi Gibbons has tales to tell, and here she recounts a few funny, moving and plain old perplexing ones from her life in court. And I can tell you from knowing her, she is one great dame. Correction: Original headline spelled Sandi Gibbons' name "Sandy" This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
san Conveyor Cleaning and Sanitation Made Easier By www.snackandbakery.com Published On :: Wed, 26 Mar 2014 00:00:00 -0400 Cleaning and sanitizing time is greatly reduced with the patent pending removable retaining walls on DynaClean Food Processing Conveyors from Dynamic Conveyor Full Article
san Why Super Micro Computer Stock Sank Today By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T22:16:33Z Full Article
san Ampersand, the Aftermath By jontangerine.com Published On :: Wed, 22 Jun 2011 12:28:38 PDT The first Ampersand web typography conference took place in Brighton last Friday. Ampersand was ace. I’m going to say that again with emphasis: Ampersand was ace! Like the Ready Brek kid from the 80s TV ads I’m glowing with good vibes. Imagine you’d just met some of the musicians that created the soundtrack to your life. That’s pretty much how I feel. Nerves and all… Photo by Ben Mitchell. For a long, long time I’ve gazed across at the typography community with something akin to awe at the work they do. I’ve lurked quietly on the ATypI mailing list, in the Typophile forum, and behind the glass dividing my eyes from the blogs, portfolios, and galleries. I always had a sneaking suspicion the web and type design communities had much in common: Excellence born from actual client work; techniques and skills refined by practice, not in a lab or classroom; a willingness to share and disseminate, most clearly demonstrated at Typophile and through web designer’s own blogs. The people of both professions have a very diverse set of backgrounds from graphic design all the way through to engineering, to accidentally working in a print shop. We’ve been apprenticed to our work, and Ampersand was a celebration of what we’ve achieved so far and what’s yet to come. Of course, web design is a new profession. Type design has a history that spans hundreds of years. Nevertheless, both professions are self-actualising. Few courses exist of any real merit. There is no qualifications authority. The work from both arenas succeeds or fails based on whether it works or not. Ampersand was the first event of its kind. Folks from both communities came together around the mutal fascination, frustration, challenge and opportunity of web type. Like Brooklyn Beta, the audience was as fantastic as the line up. I met folks like Yves Peters of the FontFeed, Mike Duggan of Microsoft Typography, Jason Smith, Phil Garnham, Fernando Mello, and Emanuela Conidi of Fontsmith, Veronica Burian of TypeTogether, Adam Twardoch of Fontlab and MyFonts, Nick Sherman of of Webtype, Mandy Brown of A Book Apart and Typekit, and many, many others. (Sorry for stopping there, but wow, it would be a huge list.) Rich Rutter Rich Rutter opened the day on behalf of Clearleft and Fontdeck at the Brighton Dome. Rich and I had talked about a web typography conference before. He just went out and did it. Hats off to him, and people like Sophie Barrett at Clearleft who helped make the day run so smoothly. Others have written comprehensive, insightful summaries of the day and the talks. Much better than I could, sitting there on the day, rapt, taking no notes. What follows are a few snippets my memory threw out when prodded. Vincent Connare Who knew the original letterforms for Comic Sans were inspired by a copy of The Watchmen Vincent Connare had in his office? Or that Vincent, who also designed Trebuchet, considers himself an engineer rather than type designer, and is working at the moment on the Ubuntu fonts with colleagues at Dalton Maag. Jason Santa Maria declared himself a type nerd, and gave a supremely detailed talk about selecting, setting, and understanding web type. Wonderful stuff. Jason Santa Maria Jonathan Hoefler talked in rapid, articulate, and precise terms about the work behind upcoming release of pretty-much all of H&FJ’s typefaces as web fonts. (Hooray!) He clearly and wonderfully explained how they took the idea behind their typefaces, and moved them through a design process to produce a final form for a specific purpose. In this case, the web, as a distinct and different environment from print. Jonathan Hoefler Photo by Sean Johnson. I spoke between Jason and Jonathan. Gulp. After staying up until 4am the night before, anxiously working on slides, I was carried along by the privilege and joy of being there, hopefully without too much mumbling or squinting with bleary eyes. After lunch, David Berlow continued the story of web fonts, taking us on a journey through his own trials and tribulations at Font Bureau when re-producing typefaces for the web crude media. His dry, droll, richly-flavoured delivery was a humorous counterpoint to some controversial asides. David Berlow Photo by Jeremy Keith. John Daggett of Mozilla, editor of the CSS3 Fonts Module, talked with great empathy for web designers about the amazing typographic advances we’re about to see in browsers. Tim Brown of Typekit followed. Tim calmly and thoroughly advocated the extension of modular scales to all aspects of a web interface, taking values from the body type and building all elements with those values as the common denominator. Finally, Mark Boulton wrapped up the day brilliantly, describing the designer’s role as the mitigator of entropy, reversing the natural trend for things to move from order to chaos, and a theme he’s exploring at the moment: designing from the content out. Mark Boulton The tone of the day was fun, thoughtful, articulate, and exacting. All the talks were a mix of anecdotal and observational humour, type nerdery, and most of all an overwhelming commitment to excellence in web typography. It was a journey in itself. Decades of experience from plate and press, screen, and web was being distilled into 45-minute presentations. I loved it. As always, one of the most enjoyable bits for me was the hallway track. I talked to heaps of people both in the pre- and after-party, and in between the talks on the day itself. I heard stories, ideas, and opinions from print designers, web designers, type designers, font developers, and writers. We talked late into the night. We talked more the next day. Now the talking has paused for a while, my thoughts are manifold. I can honestly say, I’ve never been so filled with positivity about where we are, and where we’re going. Web typography is here, it works, it’s better all the time, and one day web and type designers everywhere will wonder, perplexed, as they try to imagine what the web was like before. Here’s to another Ampersand next year! I’m now going to see if Rich needs any encouragement to do it again. I’m guessing not, but if he does, I aim to provide it, vigorously. I hope I see you there! Furthermore Rich Rutter back in May on The Ampersand Story Eye Magazine: Web typography comes of age at Brighton’s Ampersand conference Anthony Stonehouse: Ampersand 2011 Laura Kalbag: Notes from Ampersand Dave Bushell: Ampersand Conference! Last but not least, did I mention that Rich Rutter, Mark Boulton, and I are writing a book? We are! More on that another time, but until then, follow @webtypography for intermittent updates. Full Article
san Susan Farrell (2010) By iwmw.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2010-07-12 Susan Farrell is a web consultant with a background in information science. Her career has spanned everything from abstracting and editing to website development and content management system implementations. Having spent the last few years as Head of Web and Portal Services at King's College London, Susan set up her own company, Susan Farrell Consulting Ltd, in January 2010. The company specialises in helping clients to maximise the effectiveness of their web presence and does this by: developing and implementing web, digital and content strategies; driving website redesign and development projects; ensuring the optimum user experience through stakeholder engagement and user research; and aiming for high levels of usability through excellent content management. Susan gained a BSc in Biology from Durham University many years ago, and an MSc in Information Science from Sheffield University almost as long ago, and certainly long before the web was even dreamed about! Susan will be giving a plenary talk entitled "Are web managers still needed when everyone is a web 'expert'?". Full Article
san IHS Sanitation Facilities Construction Virtual Career Fair (November 14, 2024 2:00pm) By events.umich.edu Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 00:32:41 -0500 Event Begins: Thursday, November 14, 2024 2:00pm Location: Organized By: University Career Center We are excited to inform you that we will be hosting a Sanitation Facilities Construction Virtual Career Fair Event, on Thursday, November 14, 2024 at 2:00 pm (ET) - 3:00 pm (ET). This presents a great opportunity for us to engage with talented candidates who are eager to learn more about our organization and potential careeropportunities. Thank you and we look forward to meeting with you! Thank you. SFC Hiring Team Full Article Careers / Jobs
san Feeding The Thousands By www.thecollectionshop.com Published On :: 8/29/2004 Feeding The Thousands by Master Peace Collection is a(n) Open Edition. The Edition is Limited to N/A pcs Full Article
san OSCE PA human rights committee Chair Ignacio Sanchez Amor follows up on developments in Turkey By feeds.osce.org Published On :: Mon, 25 Jul 2016 10:29:28 +0000 COPENHAGEN, 25 July 2016 – In response to the measures taken by the Turkish authorities following the attempted coup, Ignacio Sanchez Amor (MP, Spain), Chairperson of the OSCE PA Committee on Democracy, Human Rights and Humanitarian Questions, issued the following statement today: “I remain concerned by the developments which have been taking place in Turkey since the attempted coup, as expressed in an earlier statement. As I joined the rest of the international community in offering strong support to the restoration of constitutional order, I also warned against reprisals and hasty purges and underscored the need to safeguard democratic institutions. “Unfortunately, the sudden dismissal of thousands of judges, prosecutors, academics, and journalists across the country has challenged human rights standards, due process, the right to a fair trial, and freedom of expression. As underlined by the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), and the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, Turkey’s response to these unconstitutional events should seek to reinforce, not undermine, the rule of law, the independence of the judiciary, and media freedom. “I once again call on the Turkish authorities to follow a responsible approach to ensure that the constitutional order is reinforced through the respect of human rights and the independence of democratic institutions in line with OSCE commitments.”Related StoriesChristine Muttonen of Austria elected OSCE PA President, Vice-Presidents and Committee Officers also electedAssembly’s work on migration presented to OSCE ambassadors by Ad Hoc Committee Chair Lombardi at special Permanent CouncilOSCE PA human rights committee Chair Ignacio Sanchez Amor issues statement on developments in Turkey Full Article Parliamentary Assembly Democratization Human rights Press release
san Reflex (YC W23) Is Hiring Software Engineers (San Francisco) By www.ycombinator.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 21:18:13 +0000 Comments Full Article
san A San Isidro le gustan 'curvies' By www.elmundo.es Published On :: 2016-05-09T19:31:00Z El hierro francés de Robert Margé se queda sin su histórico debut en San Isidro por falta de kilos. ¿Qué tipo de toro quiere Madrid? Full Article
san Pillada sangrienta de dos adolescentes en Carabanchel: "Estábamos solos en casa de ella... Y llegó su padre con un cuchillo. Me quiso cortar el cuello y la cara" By www.elmundo.es Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 00:37:16 +0100 Un joven de 16 años relata su cita frustrada que terminó en Urgencias: "Sentí que moría esa tarde" Leer Full Article Artículos Daniel Somolinos
san Los socialistas europeos acusan a Weber de poner "en riesgo" la elección de todos los comisarios y el PPE insiste en que la solución es sustituir a Teresa Ribera By www.elmundo.es Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 14:29:02 +0100 El S&D tacha a Weber de "irresponsable" por seguir la "agenda destructiva" del Partido Popular español, mientras Von der Leyen refrenda su confianza en la candidata española a vicepresidenta de la Comisión Leer Full Article Teresa Ribera PP PSOE Parlamento Europeo Artículos Daniel Viaña
san Artesanía para espantar turistas By www.elmundo.es Published On :: 2015-09-03T19:39:00Z Espero, sinceramente, es que si Obama viene a Cuba, no le muestren la nave en la que miles y miles de turistas se llevan una patética imagen de la creación artística cubana. Full Article
san Streisand, armada y peligrosa By www.elmundo.es Published On :: 2018-08-02T13:24:00Z Full Article
san La sangre y las manos mexicanas salvaron a José Tomás By www.elmundo.es Published On :: 2010-04-28T03:34:00Z José Tomás tenía sangre mexicana antes y después de la trágica corrida del sábado. La llevaba antes de enfrentarse a 'Navegante' después de que una grave cogida, precisamente en Aguascalientes cuando tenía 18 años, le uniera definitivamente a esta tierra gracias a la sangre azteca que corría por sus venas y de la que siempre presumía. Full Article
san Sangre de nabo By www.elmundo.es Published On :: 2010-02-03T17:35:00Z Desayunando frente al mercado de Maravillas, mojo los churros en el periódico empeñado en amargarme el té con el infortunado soldado colombiano que ya es... Full Article
san Come sano, come nabo By www.elmundo.es Published On :: 2010-07-20T12:37:00Z No, no es el título de la nueva canción de Dantés. Entra y descúbrelo... Full Article
san El hechizo de Susan Tedeschi o como dormir bien en verano By www.elmundo.es Published On :: 2010-07-26T15:15:00Z ... El sueño de una noche de verano Full Article
san ¿La joya de San Blas¿ o la solución de la crisis. By www.elmundo.es Published On :: 2010-09-25T11:39:00Z Hay tantas fiestuquis en Madrid, que parece que hemos salido de la crisis... ¡Y arriba la Esteban! Full Article
san Los Punsetes dicen las cosas que nadie dice (y muchos piensan) By www.elmundo.es Published On :: 2010-02-08T09:35:00Z Sea como sea, se van a cabrear viendo 'Tus amigos', el nuevo vídeo del grupo madrileño Los Punsetes. Full Article
san Thousands of protesters march in Paris ahead of tense football match between France-Israel By www.euronews.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 04:33:05 +0100 Thousands of protesters march in Paris ahead of tense football match between France-Israel Full Article
san ‘Wine and Cereal’: Susan Luzader takes back power with humor By www.tucsonweekly.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 01:00:00 -0700 After her divorce, Susan Luzader was, in her own words, “going feral.” One night, she was fixing her dinner: a bowl of Cheerios and a glass of wine… Full Article News & Opinion/Currents Feature
san Justice Dept. employees stunned at Trump's 'insane,' 'unbelievable' choice of Matt Gaetz for attorney general By www.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-14T04:42:12Z Full Article
san Rival Sons Preview 'A Pair Of Aces: Live From Santa Catalina Island' By www.antimusic.com Published On :: So Cal rockers Rival Sons have announced that they will be releasing their 2021 performance from Catalina Island Full Article
san Keeler: What has Deion Sanders meant to CU Buffs? Ask this fan who’s returning to Folsom Field for first time in 20 years By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 12:45:18 +0000 When Deion Sanders and his CU Buffs host Utah, Folsom Field will welcome an old friend home. Full Article College Sports Latest Headlines Sports Sports Columnists CU Buffs CU Buffs football Deion Sanders Jeremy Bloom Sean Keeler Travis Hunter University of Colorado
san MP Susan Jackson On Taxi Payroll Relief By bernews.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 20:29:22 +0000 “This year’s PLP Throne Speech promised taxi owners a payroll tax relief, but legislation still has to be tabled and passed before the relief can be meted,” Shadow Transport Minister Susan Jackson said. Ms Jackson said, “Taxi owners expected the tax relief in September, but were met with resistance from TCD staff. Now there’s confusion […] Full Article All News Politics #2024ThroneSpeech #BermudaPolitics #Taxi
san Joel Klatt explains why Deion Sanders deserves Coach of the Year | The Herd By www.foxsports.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 20:41:40 +0000 FOX Sports' Joel Klatt joins Colin Cowherd to discuss why Deion Sanders deserves Coach of the Year. Full Article college-football
san Should Deion Sanders guide his son Shedeur Sanders' NFL draft journey? | Speak By www.foxsports.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 00:29:04 +0000 Keyshawn Johnson discusses whether Deion Sanders should play a key role in guiding his son, Shedeur Sanders, through the NFL Draft process. He breaks down the potential impact of Deion’s involvement in Shedeur’s future as a top draft prospect. Full Article college-football
san Seven & i investor Artisan says it supports both offers for Japanese retailer By biztoc.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 04:39:37 GMT Artisan Partners, an investor in Japanese retail giant Seven & i Holdings, called on the company's special committee to consider a formal bidding process of competing takeover proposals to secure the highest offer. Seven & i received a buyout proposal from a member of its founding Ito family, it… Full Article
san ‘Get Ready for the Next Leg Up,’ Says Piper Sandler About Nvidia Stock By biztoc.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 04:50:24 GMT Full Article
san How the West’s Russian energy sanctions are failing and what can be done about it? By biztoc.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 05:13:03 GMT The West’s failure at phasing out Russian oil and gas sales has helped Russia's economy rebound, write Martin Vladimirov, Isaac Levi and Sergiy Makogon. Full Article
san 14 Ways Santa Could Die in the North Pole By www.cracked.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 18:00:00 -0800 By Jesse Published: November 13th, 2024 Full Article
san Report: Drug Gangsters Sending Thousands of Illegal Across Border to Beat Trump Inauguration By lidblog.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 22:16:47 +0000 The criminal drug cartels in Mexico are reportedly rushing thousands of illegals across the southern U.WS. border in an effort to get as many criminal operatives inside the country as possible ahead of Donald Trump’s inauguration. With more than 11 million illegals already having crossed into the U.S. thanks to Joe Biden’s disastrous border policies, […] The post Report: Drug Gangsters Sending Thousands of Illegal Across Border to Beat Trump Inauguration appeared first on The Lid. Full Article Crime Immigration
san Horse abuse sanctions strengthened after scandals By www.bbc.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 15:44:06 GMT Punishments for those found to have abused horses are being strengthened by the body which governs equestrian sports globally. Full Article
san Arsenal and Man Utd eye Sane - Thursday's gossip By www.bbc.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 22:50:18 GMT Manchester United battle for Bayern Munich's Leroy Sane, Liverpool some way off with Mohamed Salah contract, La Liga giants interested in Nottingham Forest's Murillo. Full Article
san Kanguva Box Office Day 1 Prediction: Start Of Over 20 Crores Is Locked But It Might Struggle To Beat Kamal Haasan’s Indian 2! - Koimoi By news.google.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 06:14:30 GMT Kanguva Box Office Day 1 Prediction: Start Of Over 20 Crores Is Locked But It Might Struggle To Beat Kamal Haasan’s Indian 2! KoimoiReview : Kanguva – High-voltage action drama that works only in parts 123teluguKanguva first reviews: Suriya ‘shed his blood and sweat’ but the movie ‘is tiring’, say fans Hindustan TimesKanguva Movie Review Rating and Release LIVE Updates: Netizens Call Suriya Film 'Pure One Man Show' Times NowKanguva Movie Review: An earnest Suriya gives his all for a Siva film that doesn’t give him enough The Indian Express Full Article
san Transgender activist commits theft, assault before Chloe Cole event at San Francisco State University By libertyunyielding.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 20:38:36 +0000 “A transgender activist at San Francisco State University assaulted a group of conservatives, including Chloe Cole, and stole a sign ahead of a Turning Point USA event last night,” reports The College Fix. By the end of the night, police arrested the activist after he showed up at Cole’s event. Cole had her breasts removed at […] The post Transgender activist commits theft, assault before Chloe Cole event at San Francisco State University appeared first on Liberty Unyielding. Full Article Education
san News24 | Lack of maintenance forces thousands of Khayelitsha families to use dirty toilets By www.news24.com Published On :: Wednesday Nov 13 2024 21:09:54 More than 3 000 families in Silver Town, Khayelitsha, have been forced to either use filthy, damaged toilets or relieve themselves in a field. Full Article
san News24 | DRIVEN | Nissan's popular Magnite arrives in SA with fresh design and tech upgrades By www.news24.com Published On :: Thursday Nov 14 2024 09:01:28 The Nissan Magnite is one of the most popular compact SUVs in South Africa. Now, the Japanese automaker has unveiled its facelifted version. We have specifications and pricing. Full Article
san Oakland airport ordered to stop using 'San Francisco' in its name By www.upi.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 00:44:12 -0500 A judge has temporarily ordered Oakland International Airport in California to stop using the name "San Francisco Bay Oakland International Airport" as the cities' legal battle plays out. Full Article