Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Maria de"


25 mentions found


Six Ways to Avoid the Tourist Logjams in Venice
  + stars: | 2023-08-02 | by ( Anna Momigliano | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Venice is so congested that it has become the embodiment of overtourism. Yet visiting Venice doesn’t always require taking what Italians call “un bagno di folla” — a bath in the crowd. The city offers plenty of fascinating attractions spared from the congestion, in fact, some of them could use more visitors. Here are some ways travelers can minimize the inconveniences even while visiting the most popular sites. “It’s not crowded, and there’s so much to enjoy,” said Cinzia Trevisan, co-founder of Venice Guides for Sustainable Tourism.
Persons: Mark’s, Venice doesn’t, , Cinzia Trevisan, Trevisan, della, Peggy Guggenheim, Titian, Tintoretto, Canaletto Organizations: Venice, Italians, Venice Guides, Sustainable Tourism, Santa, Campo Margherita Locations: Venice, Marco, San Polo, Dorsoduro, Campo
While searching for tuna last week, a helicopter pilot spotted something bobbing in the vast blue expanse of the Pacific Ocean, more than 1,200 miles from land. It was a small white catamaran, badly damaged. When a small boat sent by the helicopter caught up with him, he said his name was Timothy Shaddock and that he and his dog, Bella, had been at sea for about three months. He said he had survived in part by fishing for tuna, which he ate raw, and drinking rainwater. On Tuesday, Mr. Shaddock, 54, walked down the gangway of the Maria Delia, the Mexican tuna trawler that had rescued him, and began to recount his remarkable story of survival.
Persons: Timothy Shaddock, Bella, Shaddock, Maria Delia
This culminated with the Ukrainian leader, Volodomyr Zelenskyy, saying Tuesday that the absence of a timeline for his country to join NATO was "absurd." Even if some members were very keen to follow Ukraine's request, the United States in particular isn't supportive of immediate membership for Kyiv at this time. But I promise you, the United States is doing everything we can to get you what you need as rapidly as we can get it to you." watch nowThe 31 members of NATO did not commit to a date for when Ukraine can join the group. However, Valtonen disregarded claims that Ukraine has not shown gratitude, arguing that aid should not be seen as charity.
Persons: Volodomyr Zelenskyy, Joe Biden, Sean Gallup, Jacob Kirkegaard, Jake Sullivan, Ben Wallace, Rishi Sunak, Maria Demertzis, Zelenskyy, Biden, we're, Elina Valtonen, Valtonen Organizations: Getty, NATO, CNBC, Kyiv, German Marshall Fund of, Diplomat, . Defense, Reuters, European Union, Financial Times, Twitter Locations: Ukraine, Vilnius, Lithuania, Kyiv, United States, U.S, Washington, China, British, Russia, Finland
Now it is at the epicentre of a property crash that threatens to engulf the Nordic state's economy. It has said it plans on selling roughly 6 billion Swedish crowns worth of assets this year. Speculators are betting that the stock price has further to fall. SBB shares are subject to more short-selling - a bet that the stock price will drop - than any other Swedish company, according to data from the financial regulator. "If, on the other hand, the SBB will be bought up, then the small shareholders will probably lose everything."
Persons: Maria De Geer, who've, Ilija Batljan, Batljan, Robert Bergqvist, SEB, Leiv Synnes, pare, De Geer, Pablo Mayo, Elaine Hardcastle Organizations: SBB, Swedish Shareholders Association, Organisation for Economic Cooperation, Development, Asset Management, SBB Treasury Oyj, Reuters, Thomson Locations: STOCKHOLM, FRANKFURT, Sweden, Swedish, Cerqueiro, London
Erdogan surprised many on Monday by linking Sweden's bid to join NATO with his country's accession to the EU. "I was quite surprised he linked this," Maria Demertzis, senior fellow at the Brussels-based think tank Bruegel, told CNBC Tuesday. The EU deemed that Turkey was putting forward a lot of political reforms that actually moved it "further away" from the bloc. One of the policy changes that infuriated the EU was a 2017 referendum that gave Erdogan more executive powers. "He needs money," an EU official, who did not want to be named due to the sensitive nature of the topic told CNBC Tuesday, regarding why Erdogan brought up this issue again now.
Persons: Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, aren't, Erdogan, Maria Demertzis, Erdogan's Organizations: European Union, NATO, EU, CNBC Locations: Turkish, Turkey, Sweden, Brussels, Ankara
Mine collapse kills at least 12 in southern Venezuela
  + stars: | 2023-06-04 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
PUERTO ORDAZ, Venezuela, June 4 (Reuters) - Flooding collapsed a gold mine in southern Venezuela, killing at least 12 miners, local authorities said on Sunday, adding that the victims' bodies were returned to their families. The Talavera mine, located in El Callao, in Venezuela's Bolivar state, flooded on Wednesday due to heavy rains but rescue workers could not finish recovery efforts before Saturday. Another 112 people survived the mine collapse, said Edgar Colina, the secretary for Citizen Security in Bolivar, adding that authorities will return to the site on Sunday to check for other survivors or victims. Advocacy groups and other organizations have issued warnings about the region, with the UN last year reporting that human rights violations take place in Venezuela's mining regions. Reporting by Maria de los Angeles Ramirez in Puerto Ordaz Writing by Oliver Griffin; Editing by Lisa ShumakerOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Edgar Colina, Maria de, Angeles Ramirez, Oliver Griffin, Lisa Shumaker Organizations: Citizen Security, UN, Thomson Locations: PUERTO ORDAZ, Venezuela, Talavera, El Callao, Venezuela's Bolivar, Bolivar, Puerto
How Biden's climate plan could steal business from Europe
  + stars: | 2023-03-20 | by ( Silvia Amaro | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
U.S. President Joe Biden has a plan to boost clean energy in the United States, but European politicians worry it could drive companies and investment away from Europe. The U.S. Inflation Reduction Act has promised $369 billion – an unprecedented amount – on climate and energy policies, including, among many other things, tax credits for consumers getting new electric vehicles. "The Inflation Reduction Act represents a historic investment in clean energy and green technology. We urge other countries to follow the United States' lead and pass their own versions of this legislation," the spokesperson said. CNBC heads to Sweden to find out how these trade tensions are making businesses reconsider their investment plans.
Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History/Handout via REUTERSMEXICO CITY, Feb 21 (Reuters) - The remains of 28 human bodies buried at least four hundred years ago in Mexico indicate the comingling of pre-Hispanic and Catholic cultures that Spanish colonizers introduced, local researchers told Reuters. The discovery took place during the construction of a scenic pavilion in Mexico City's Chapultepec park in February, when researchers stumbled across a cemetery from the early viceregal period of 1521 to 1620 AD. Maria de Lourdes Lopez Camacho, the head of archeological salvage and National History Museum, said what is most striking is that, although the bodies originate from distinct populations, they were buried in the same period. Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) led the study. Reporting by Carlos Carillo; Writing by Carolina Pulice; Editing by Josie KaoOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
When Ivy Berubes, 22, orders a Shirley Temple at the Sarapes Mexican Restaurant bar, they make it for her even though it’s not on the menu. The menu also doesn’t list “The Tommy Bowl” — a deconstructed burrito — but Tommy Agramonte, 20, gets to order it; after all, it is named after him. Located in Enfield, a quiet Connecticut suburb near the border of Massachusetts, Sarapes is owned and operated by the Chavez Mellado family, who immigrated from Mexico in the 1980s. “It’s one of the reasons why we’ve been able to maintain ourselves in this country,” said Adrian Martinez Chavez, the photographer for this story, whose grandparents Eduardo Chavez Solano and Cutberta Mellado de Chavez started the restaurant. When they come home to Sarapes, they can return to where they started.
MEXICO CITY/LIMA — Peru declared Mexico’s ambassador to Lima “persona non grata” and ordered him to leave the country on Tuesday, Peru’s foreign minister announced, in the latest escalation of tensions between the two nations after Peru ousted Pedro Castillo as president. The abrupt order, a severe measure in the world of diplomacy, gives Mexico’s envoy to the South American country just 72 hours to exit. Speaking at a news conference earlier in the day, Mexican Foreign Minister, Marcelo Ebrard, said the government was negotiating safe passage for the family of Castillo, who were inside Mexico’s Embassy in Lima. Ana Cecilia Gervasi, Peru’s foreign minister, announced later on Tuesday that safe passage for Castillo’s wife and the couple’s two children had been formally approved. Also on Tuesday, a Peruvian court struck down a request from prosecutors to prohibit Paredes from leaving the country.
REUTERS/Liz TasaMEXICO CITY/LIMA, Dec 20 (Reuters) - Peru declared Mexico's ambassador to Lima "persona non grata" and ordered him to leave the country on Tuesday, Peru's foreign minister announced, in the latest escalation of tensions between the two nations after Peru ousted Pedro Castillo as president. The abrupt order, a severe measure in the world of diplomacy, gives Mexico's envoy to the South American country just 72 hours to exit. Mexico's foreign minister took to Twitter on Tuesday night to blast Monroy's expulsion, deriding it as "unjustified and reprehensible." Speaking at a news conference earlier in the day, Mexican Foreign Minister, Marcelo Ebrard, said the government was negotiating safe passage for the family of Castillo, who were inside Mexico's Embassy in Lima. Ana Cecilia Gervasi, Peru's foreign minister, announced later on Tuesday that safe passage for Castillo's wife and the couple's two children had been formally approved.
Factbox: COP27: Counting the rising cost of climate disasters
  + stars: | 2022-11-16 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
How to get money to poorer countries after climate disasters has been a dominant theme at the COP27 climate talks in Egypt, and insurance is seen as one way to do that. On Monday, a G7-led plan dubbed "Global Shield" to provide pre-arranged insurance and disaster protection funding to countries suffering climate disasters was launched at the climate conference. Worst fires: Tubbs Fire Oct 2017, Camp Fire Nov 20182017 loss: $180 billion2017 deaths: 402018 loss: $148.5 billion2018 deaths: 103Total loss: $328.5 billion2. Harvey loss: $125 billionHarvey deaths: 88Irma loss: $65 billionIrma deaths: 134Maria loss: $107 billionMaria deaths: 4,600Total loss: $297 billion3. Hurricane Ian, Florida, Sept 2022The hurricane hit southwestern Florida and South Carolina, with a 4-metre high storm surge on the west coast of Florida.
[1/5] People carry a Peruvian flag, during a protest against the government of Peru's President Pedro Castillo, in Lima, Peru November 5, 2022. REUTERS/Sebastian CastanedaLIMA, Nov 5 (Reuters) - Thousands of people took to the streets across Peru on Saturday to demand the resignation of embattled President Pedro Castillo, a leftist whose government is under investigation for corruption. Castillo, who took office in July last year, has already survived two impeachment attempts. Opposition legislators are seeking a fresh trial against the president even though Congress recognized it would not gather sufficient votes. In October, Peru's attorney general filed a constitutional complaint against Castillo with Congress that the right-wing opposition hopes will end in his removal from office.
Since his death more than 500 years ago, multihyphenate genius Leonardo da Vinci and his spectacular works have inspired respect and wonder in generation after generation the world over. “Likewise in painting, I can do everything possible as well as any other, whosoever he may be,” da Vinci offered, not incorrectly. Today, his engineering genius and the advancements it inspired are showcased at Milan’s Museo Nazionale Scienza e Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci, the largest science museum in Italy. The museum’s Leonardo da Vinci Galleries, reimagined for the 2019 celebrations, use more than 170 historical models, artworks, codexes and installations to bring the artist’s story to life. Leonardo da Vinci's "The Last Supper" in the Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan.
REUTERS/Henry RomeroMEXICO CITY, Oct 16 (Reuters) - Mariachi bands have long been a staple of Mexican culture, and now their lively songs are finding a new use: reawakening the memories of people suffering from Alzheimer's disease. The Mexican Alzheimer's Center is promoting the therapy, hoping the music will stir up recollections of times past among patients with the degenerative illness, encouraging them to sing or even dance to familiar old tunes. Originally developed in Germany 11 years ago, the therapy was given a mariachi twist to adapt it for Mexican use. Camacho, who has had Alzheimer's for five years, is one of an estimated 1.8 million people with dementia in Mexico. Since Camacho began the mariachi therapy, Maria del Rocio said her mother had become livelier, and taken up a more active role in family life again.
Workers with Luma Energy attempt to restore power on a flooded street in Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico, on Sept. 24. Since the hurricane, fuel and diesel have become essential to daily life in Puerto Rico, mainly to power the generators. People play pool in a bar on Sept. 20, in Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. 'Puerto Rico is completely devastated'When asked what she would want to see from the federal response and from President Joe Biden, she said she wanted Biden to come to Puerto Rico and see the extent of the damage. A house that was washed away by Hurricane Fiona at Villa Esperanza in Salinas, Puerto Rico, on Sept. 21.
JAYUYA, Puerto Rico — When Hurricane Fiona completely knocked out power and water to the mountain town of Jayuya, in the heart of Puerto Rico, it quickly became a life-or-death matter for Luis De Jesús Ramos, who has throat cancer and a tracheostomy. Luis De Jesús Ramos, 63, and his daughter Ashly Pérez, 26, in their home in Jayuya, Puerto Rico. Members of the company LUMA work restoring energy on Sept. 20, 2022 in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The Direct Relief Puerto Rico team came to the neighborhood to bring 10 portable oxygen concentrators and other supplies to partners in the area. Edwin Quiles Martínez, 66, and his wife Graciela Pérez Alvarado, 73, in their home in Ponce, Puerto Rico.
President Joe Biden has approved a major disaster declaration for Puerto Rico as it reels from Hurricane Fiona, Gov. The administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Deanne Criswell, began touring affected communities in Puerto Rico on Tuesday, conducting initial damage assessments to support the governor's request. A man on Tuesday collects donated water bottles for drinking after Hurricane Fiona damaged water supplies in Toa Baja, Puerto Rico. Hurricane Fiona is the first major hurricane to directly hit Puerto Rico since it was ravaged by Hurricane Maria five years ago. "With regard to Hurricane Maria, the people of Puerto Rico, we believe, were treated in a manner inconsistent with the mandate toward equality, fairness and impartiality," Yaki said.
The National Hurricane Center said Puerto Rico could get 12 to 18 inches of rain, with 30 inches possible in some areas. Nelson Cirino secures the windows of his home Sunday as the winds of Hurricane Fiona blow in Loiza, Puerto Rico. He said the first responders were prepared to be in Puerto Rico for as long as two weeks. Biden was briefed on the situation in Puerto Rico during his trip abroad, a senior administration official said. Nelson Cirino looks in his bedroom Sunday after Hurricane Fiona tore the roof off his house in Loiza, Puerto Rico.
For Quiñones and other Puerto Ricans, the continuing fragility of Puerto Rico's power grid five years later is a constant source of concern in a region that expects the possibility of hurricanes every fall. “Five years later, we are still exposed to the same risk,” Marxuach, who recently completed an analysis on the state of Puerto Rico’s electric power system, said. On Sunday afternoon, an islandwide blackout was reported as the eye of Fiona neared Puerto Rico's southwestern coast. Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico on Sept. 20, 2017. In the meantime, residents were getting ready for another tropical storm, albeit one less destructive than Hurricane Maria.
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico/SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic, Sept 18 (Reuters) - Hurricane Fiona left most of Puerto Rico without power on Sunday, causing catastrophic flooding and landslides on the island before barreling toward the Dominican Republic, a government agency said. "This has been catastrophic," Puerto Rico Governor Pedro Pierluisi said at a news conference in the capital San Juan. The center of the storm made landfall on the southwestern coast of Puerto Rico near Punta Tocon at 3:20 p.m. Electricity had been out completely across the island of 3.3 million people, said LUMA Energy, operator of the island's grid, and the Puerto Rico power authority. 1/16 A man walk past an electricity pole that was damaged by Hurricane Fiona in Yauco, Puerto Rico September 18, 2022.
Read Your Way Around the World is a series exploring the globe through books. Lisbon has long been marked by a certain wistfulness. But for those who come with that vision, the city today will surprise with its diversity and color. What should I read before I pack my bags? The literary critic George Steiner wrote that the book “gives to Lisbon the haunting spell of Joyce’s Dublin or Kafka’s Prague.”
Persons: Victor Palla, Costa Martins, Fernando Pessoa, José Maria de Eça de Queiroz, Bernardo Soares, Pessoa, George Steiner, Organizations: Cidade Locations: Lisbon, Europe, “ Lisboa, e Alegre, Costa, Sintra, Pessoa’s, Dublin, Kafka’s Prague
„Este vorba despre tentativele de construcție a unui bloc la Botanica, într-o curte, chiar la interesecția străzilor bulervardul Decebal și Dacia. La 1 martie 2021 apare înregistrarea în Registrul bunurilor imobile a dreptului de superficie pe o construcție care se află pe acest teren. Această se consideră construcție capitală - un sarai, care cândva a fost un bar, o construcție care poate fi demolată cu mâinile. Acesta a menționat că a depus o plângere la Procuratura Anticorupție, iar recent a fost înștiințat că dosarul a fost recepționat și transmis către Centrul Național Anticorupție (CNA). Conflictul dintre Ceban și Chironda nu a fost rezolvat.
Persons: Ion, Victor Chironda Organizations: Dacia, Anticorupție, CNA, Lux Locations: sarai, Procuratura Anticorupție, Primărie
Cine sunt câștigătorii și câștigătoarele Concursului Național „Cel mai bun plan de afaceri” ediția a VIII-aMinisterul Agriculturii, Dezvoltării Regionale şi Mediului, în parteneriat cu Ministerul Educației, Culturii și Cercetării, a organizat joi cea de-a VIII-a ediție a Concursului Național „Cel mai bun plan de afaceri”, elaborat în cadrul disciplinei „Bazele Antreprenoriatului”. Câștigătorii Concursului Național „Cel mai bun plan de afaceri”, ediția a VIII-a sunt:locul I. Dintiu Veronica de la Colegiul Tehnologic din Chișinău cu ideea de afaceri: „Confecționarea pungilor ECO cu dimensiune reglabilă din materiale textile”, profesoară Tarlev Angela;locul II. Drelea Irina de la Centrul de Excelență în Horticultură și Tehnologii Agricole din Țaul cu ideea de afaceri: „Creșterea și comercializarea germenilor”, profesoară Guțuleac Violeta;locul III. Constantinova Elvira de la Colegiul Tehnic Agricol din Svetlîi cu ideea de afaceri: „Cultivarea și comercializarea alunelor”, profesoară Sîpciu Tatiana. Ministerul Educației Culturii și Cercetării a stabilit următoarele premii pentru învingătorii concursului.
Persons: Tarlev Angela, Irina, Elvira, Chiriac Doina, Vicol Constantin, Popa Organizations: Ministerul Agriculturii, Regionale, Ministerul Educației, Culturii, Cercetării, Educației Culturii, Agriculturii, Mediului, Medicină Locations: Chișinău, Soroca, Bălți, Uzun Piotr, Comrat, Căușeni
Ajutoare de Paști, de 100, 500 și 1000 de lei
  + stars: | 2021-04-22 | by ( ) www.ipn.md   time to read: +1 min
Ajutoare de Paști, de 100, 500 și 1000 de leiCu prilejul sărbătorilor de Paști, peste 33 de mii de persoane defavorizate din municipiul Chișinău vor primi ajutoare financiare din partea autorităților publice locale, transmite IPN cu referire la un comunicat al Primăriei. Potrivit unei decizii recente a Comisiei de acordare a ajutorului material, de ajutoare a câte 500 lei vor beneficia 1537 de persoane în etate, singuratice, beneficiari ai Serviciului de îngrijire socială la domiciliu, 909 persoane cu deficiențe de auz, membri ai Asociației Surzilor din Republica Moldova, filiala teritorială Chișinău, și 820 de persoane cu deficiențe de vedere, membri ai Organizației Teritoriale Chișinău a Asociației Nevăzătorilor din Moldova. De ajutoare materiale unice a câte 1000 de lei fiecare vor beneficia 110 oameni de cultură aflați în situații de risc, 31 de asistenți parentali profesioniști din cadrul Direcției generale pentru protecția drepturilor copilului și 285 de angajați din sistemul educațional. Totodată, Primăria de Chișinău va acorda bătrânilor cu cele mai mici pensii ajutoare a câte 100 de lei, pentru 30 de mii de persoane. În prezent autoritățile municipale conlucrează cu Casa Națională de Asigurări Sociale în vederea perfectării listelor de beneficiari ai ajutorului menționat.
Organizations: Teritoriale Chișinău, Națională de Asigurări Locations: Chișinău, Republica Moldova, Moldova
Total: 25