#Juan Pablo Gil
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No existe nada más fuerte que el amor… “El Ángel De Aurora”
La trama narra la historia de Aurora Campero, presidenta del Corporativo Campero, quien en su juventud se comprometió con Antonio Murrieta, un joven que la ama profundamente. Su hermana Jezabel, al ver la felicidad de Aurora, siente una tormenta de envidias que la hacen maquinar lo impensable con la intención de destruirla. En la cúspide de su rencor, Jezabel la pone a merced de las bajas pasiones de un albañil apodado ‘El Pintas’, quien la viola, embarazándola de un varón al que llamarán Gabriel.
Antonio se queda a su lado, con la convicción de que el hijo que espera Aurora es suyo, pero las manipulaciones y mentiras de Jezabel provocan que Antonio abandone a Aurora, con Gabriel en brazos, el día de su boda. Cegado por su machismo, don Miguel le arrebata su hijo a Aurora y lo regala a Pascual Santos, quien lo cría junto a su esposa Victoria Bonilla.
Pasan 29 años y el pequeño Gabriel ahora es Ángel Santos, un hombre educado, humildemente, pero con los más firmes valores familiares. Aurora no pierde la esperanza de encontrar a su hijo y descubre que puede volver a amar gracias a Julio César Rey, abogado del corporativo.
Estreno: 29 de julio de 2024 a las 4:30 pm por Las Estrellas y en ViX.
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Producida por Roy Rojas, la novela cuenta con las actuaciones de Natalia Esperón, Jorge Salinas, René Casados, Roberto Blandón, Gabriela Rivero, Rafael Novoa, Paulina Matos, Moisés Peñaloza, José Pablo Minor, Rocío Verdejo, Ligia Uriarte, Juan Pablo Gil, Nubia Martí, Lalo Palacios, Karla Gómez, Pedro Sicard, Priscila Solorio, Christian Ramos y Paco Rueda.
#El Ángel De Aurora#Novelas#Las Estrellas#ViX#Natalia Esperón#Jorge Salinas#René Casados#Roberto Blandón#Gabriela Rivero#Rafael Novoa#Paulina Matos#Moisés Peñaloza#José Pablo Minor#Rocío Verdejo#Ligia Uriarte#Juan Pablo Gil#Nubia Martí#Lalo Palacios#Karla Gómez#Pedro Sicard#Priscila Solorio#Christian Ramos#Paco Rueda
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¡"Nosotros los Nobles" regresa a las pantallas de Cinemex!
¿Por qué nos están quitando todo como si estuviéramos en Venezuela? 🤨💅🏻 "Nosotros los Nobles" regresa a Cinemex ¿Ya tienes tus boletos?
Hace 11 años, exactamente el 28 de marzo del 2013, llegaba a las salas de cine una película mexicana dispuesta a revolucionar el cine del país; “Nosotros los Nobles” está de aniversario y lo festejará en compañía de Cinemex ¡Entérate de los detalles! La cinta dirigida por Gary Alazraki, se convirtió en un éxito de la taquilla; como ya es costumbre, el cine mexicano es poco apreciado en la…
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2024 olympics Argentina roster
Archery
Mario Jajarabilla (Buenos Aires)
Athletics
Elián Larregina (Suipacha)
Nazareno Sasia (Cerrito)
Joaquín Gómez (Avallaneda)
Belén Casetta (Mar Del Plata)
Florencia Borelli (Mar Del Plata)
Daiana Ocampo (Buenos Aires)
Canoeing
Agustín Vernice (Bahia Blanca)
Brenda Rojas (San Martín De Los Andes)
Cycling
José Torres (Córdoba)
Eduardo Sepúlveda; Jr. (Rawson)
Gonzalo Molina (San Juan)
Equestrian
José Larocca; Jr. (Buenos Aires)
Fencing
Pascual Di Tella (Brooklyn, New York)
Field Hockey
Tomás Santiago (Córdoba)
Juan Catán (Buenos Aires)
Maico Casella (Buenos Aires)
Lucas Toscani (Buenos Aires)
Nicolás Della Torre (Buenos Aires)
Santiago Tarazona (Buenos Aires)
Federico Monja (Vicente López)
Tomas Domene (Córdoba)
Matías Rey (Buenos Aires)
Lucas Martínez (Buenos Aires)
Agustín Mazzilli (Lanús)
Tadeo Marcucci (Buenos Aires)
Thomas Habif (Buenos Aires)
Agustín Bugallo (San Juan)
Bautista Capurro (Buenos Aires)
Iñaki Minadeo (Buenos Aires)
Sofía Toccalino (Buenos Aires)
Agustina Gorzelany (Buenos Aires)
Valentina Raposo (Salta)
Agostino Alonso (Buenos Aires)
Agustina Albertarrio (Adrogué)
María Granatto (La Plata)
Cristina Cosentino (Buenos Aires)
Rocío Sánchez-Moccia (Buenos Aires)
Victoria Sauze (Buenos Aires)
Sofía Cairo (Buenos Aires)
María Trinchinetti (Victoria)
Lara Casas (Buenos Aires)
Juana Castellaro (Buenos Aires)
Pilar Campoy (Vicente López)
Julieta Jankunas (Córdoba)
Zoe Díaz (Buenos Aires)
Soccer
Fabricio Iacovich (La Plata)
Leandro Brey (Lomas De Zamora)
Rocco Ríos-Novo (Los Angeles, California)
Marco Di Cesare (Mendoza)
Valentín Barco (Veinticinco De Mayo)
Roberto García (Liniers)
Nicolás Valentini (Junín)
Aaron Quirós (Monte Grande)
Gonzalo Luján (Buenos Aires)
Lucas Esquivel (Santa Fe De La Vera Cruz)
Federico Redondo (Adrogué)
Cristian Medina (Moreno)
Thiago Almada (Ciudadela)
Claudio Echeverri (Resistencia)
Juan Sforza (Rosario)
Juan Nardoni (Nelson)
Ignacio Fernández (Buenos Aires)
Pablo Solari (Arizona)
Luciano Gondou (Rufino)
Abiel Osorio (Buenos Aires)
Francisco González (Ordóñez)
Santiago Castro (Ciudad Del Liberator General Don José De San Martín)
Golf
Emiliano Grillo (San Diego, California)
Alejandro Tosti (Gainesville, Florida)
Handball
Andrés Moyano (Mendoza)
Nicolás Bono (Buenos Aires)
Federico Fernández (Buenos Aires)
Federico Pizarro (Buenos Aires)
Pablo Vainstein (Buenos Aires)
Diego Simonet (Vicente López)
Pablo Simonet (Vicente López)
Ignacio Pizarro (Lanús)
Santiago Baronetto (Buenos Aires)
Lucas Moscariello (Buenos Aires)
Guillermo Fischer (Buenos Aires)
Pedro Martínez (Buenos Aires)
Gastón Mouriño (Buenos Aires)
James Parker; Jr. (Ciudad San Luis)
Leonel Maciel (Morón)
Nicolás Bonanno (Marcos Paz)
Juan Bar (Vicente López)
Judo
Sofia Fiora (Buenos Aires)
Pentathlon
Franco Serrano (Buenos Aires)
Rowing
Alejandro Colomino (Buenos Aires)
Pedro Dickson (Buenos Aires)
Sonia Baluzzo (Buenos Aires)
Evelyn Silvestro (Zárate)
Rugby
Tomás Elizalde (Buenos Aires)
Agustín Fraga (Buenos Aires)
Matteo Graziano (Buenos Aires)
Alejo Lavayén (Buenos Aires)
Joaquín Pellandini (Buenos Aires)
Tobías Wade (Buenos Aires)
Santiago Álvarez (Bahía Blanca)
Luciano González (La Rioja)
Santiago Mare (Buenos Aires)
Marcos Moneta (Buenos Aires)
Matías Osadczuk (Buenos Aires)
Germán Schulz (Córdoba)
Gastón Revol (Córdoba)
Sailing
Francisco Saubidet (Buenos Aires)
Mateo Majdalani (Buenos Aires)
Francisco Guaragna (Rufino)
Chiara Ferretti (Buenos Aires)
Catalina Turienzo (Buenos Aires)
Eugenia Bosco (Buenos Aires)
Lucía Falasca (Buenos Aires)
Shooting
Marcelo Gutiérrez (Buenos Aires)
Federico Gil (Buenos Aires)
Fernanda Russo (Córdoba)
Skateboarding
Matias Dell Olio (Mar Del Plata)
Mauro Iglesias (Buenos Aires)
Swimming
Ulises Saravia (Buenos Aires)
Agostina Hein (Buenos Aires)
Macarena Ceballos (Río Cuarto)
Table tennis
Santiago Lorenzo (Buenos Aires)
Taekwondo
Lucas Guzmán (Merlo)
Tennis
Sebastián Báez (Buenos Aires)
Francisco Cerúndolo (Buenos Aires)
Tomás Etcheverry (La Plata)
Mariano Navone (Nueve De Julio)
Máximo González (Tandil)
Andrés Malteni (Buenos Aires)
María Carlé (Tandil)
Nadia Podoroska (Alicante, Spain)
Triathlon
Romina Biagioli (Córdoba)
Volleyball
Pablo Kukartsev (Buenos Aires)
Matías Sánchez (San Juan)
Jan Martínez-Franchi (Vicente López)
Facundo Conte (Vicente López)
Agustín Loser (General Alvear)
Santiago Danani (Buenos Aires)
Bruno Lima (San Juan)
Luciano De Cecco (Santa Fe De La Vera Cruz)
Luciano Vicentín (Paraná)
Martín Ramos (Buenos Aires)
Luciano Palonsky (Buenos Aires)
Nicolás Zerba (Buenos Aires)
#Sports#National Teams#Argentina#Celebrities#Races#Boats#Animals#Fights#New York#Hockey#Soccer#Golf#Florida#Tennis#Spain
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Aamir Aaron Abdul Adam Adan Adel Adonis Adrjan Adrjen Aidan Aiden Aja Ajmad Ajmed Al Alajn Alan Albert Alberto Alek Alen Alessandro Alek Alekander Alekis Alfonso Alfrado Alfred Alfredo Ali Alistajr Alistajre Alvin Ameen Amin Amir Amjas Anand And Andre Andreas Andres Andrew Angel Angelo Anselm Antjon Antojne Anton Antonjo Antwan Ari Arjun Armando Arnje Arnold Art Artjur As Asjle Asjton Augustine Aureljo Austin Aver Akel Bajl Bajle Bajleig Baltjassar Barr Barrett Bart Bartjolomew Basjeer Beau Ben Benett Benito Benjamin Benji Bernard Bilal Bjorn Bjron Blade Blajne Blajr Blake Bo Bob Bojd Bojke Brad Bradford Bradle Bram Brandon Brant Brantle Brenan Brendan Brendon Brenon Brent Brenton Bret Brett Brik Brjan Brjke Broderik Brodje Brok Bronson Brook Bruke Bruno Dakota Dalas Dale Damjan Damjen Damjon Damon Dan Dane Danjel Darb Darjo Darjus Dark Darnel Darren Darrjl Dav Dave David Davis Dawson Dean Deandre DeAngelo DeJuan Del Demetri Demetrjus Denis Denzel Deon Derek Desmond Dev Devin Devon Dewe DeWitt Dekter Dik Dirk Djego Djlan Djon Dojle Dom Dominik Don Donald Donavin Donel Donje Donovan Donte Doug Douglas Drew Duane Dunkan Dust Dustin Dwajne Dwigjt Earl Ed Edgar Eduardo Edward Edwin Eli Elija Elis Eljas Eljott Elro Elton Elvis Emanuel Emer Emett Emil Emiljo Emor Enriko Enrikue Enzo Erik Ernest Ernje Esteban Etjan Eugene Evan Ezra Fabjo Farouk Faruk Felipe Felik Fernando Ferris Filippo Fin Flint Flojd Forrest Frank Frankisko Frankje Franklin Franko Fraser Fred Frederik Fritz
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Generation of 27
The Generation of '27 (Spanish: Generación del 27) was an influential group of poets that arose in Spanish literary circles between 1923 and 1927, essentially out of a shared desire to experience and work with avant-garde forms of art and poetry. Their first formal meeting took place in Seville in 1927 to mark the 300th anniversary of the death of the baroque poet Luis de Góngora. Writers and intellectuals paid homage at the Ateneo de Sevilla, which retrospectively became the foundational act of the movement.
Terminology:
The Generation of '27 has also been called, with lesser success, "Generation of the Dictatorship", "Generation of the Republic", "Generation Guillén-Lorca" (Guillén being its oldest author and Lorca its youngest), "Generation of 1925" (average publishing date of the first book of each author), "Generation of Avant-Gardes", "Generation of Friendship", etc. According to Petersen, "generation group" or a "constellation" are better terms which are not so much historically restricted as "generation".
Aesthetic style:
The Generation of '27 cannot be neatly categorized stylistically because of the wide variety of genres and styles cultivated by its members. Some members, such as Jorge Guillén, wrote in a style that has been loosely called jubilant and joyous and celebrated the instant, others, such as Rafael Alberti, underwent a poetic evolution that led him from youthful poetry of a more romantic vein to later politically-engaged verses.
The group tried to bridge the gap between Spanish popular culture and folklore, classical literary tradition and European avant-gardes. It evolved from pure poetry, which emphasized music in poetry, in the vein of Baudelaire, to Futurism, Cubism, Ultraistand Creationism, to become influenced by Surrealism and finally to disperse in interior and exterior exile following the Civil Warand World War II, which are sometimes gathered by historians under the term of the "European Civil War". The Generation of '27 made a frequent use of visionary images, free verses and the so-called impure poetry, supported by Pablo Neruda.
Members:
In a restrictive sense, the Generation of '27 refers to ten authors, Jorge Guillén, Pedro Salinas, Rafael Alberti, Federico García Lorca, Dámaso Alonso, Gerardo Diego, Luis Cernuda, Vicente Aleixandre, Manuel Altolaguirre and Emilio Prados. However, many others were in their orbit, some older authors such as Fernando Villalón, José Moreno Villa or León Felipe, and other younger authors such as Miguel Hernández. Others have been forgotten by the critics, such as Juan Larrea, Pepe Alameda, Mauricio Bacarisse, Juan José Domenchina, José María Hinojosa, José Bergamín or Juan Gil-Albert. There is also the "Other generation of '27", a term coined by José López Rubio, formed by himself and humorist disciples of Ramón Gómez de la Serna, including: Enrique Jardiel Poncela, Edgar Neville, Miguel Mihura and Antonio de Lara, "Tono", writers who would integrate after the Civil War (1936–39) the editing board of La Codorniz.
Furthermore, the Generation of '27, as clearly reflected in the literary press of the period, was not exclusively restricted to poets, including artists such as Luis Buñuel, the caricaturist K-Hito, the surrealist painters Salvador Dalí and Óscar Domínguez, the painter and sculptor Maruja Mallo, as well as Benjamín Palencia, Gregorio Prieto, Manuel Ángeles Ortiz and Gabriel García Maroto, the toreros Ignacio Sánchez Mejías and Jesús Bal y Gay, musicologists and composers belonging to the Group of Eight, including Bal y Gay, Ernesto Halffter and his brother Rodolfo Halffter, Juan José Mantecón, Julián Bautista, Fernando Remacha, Rosa García Ascot, Salvador Bacarisse and Gustavo Pittaluga. There was also the Catalan Group who presented themselves in 1931 under the name of Grupo de Artistas Catalanes Independientes, including Roberto Gerhard, Baltasar Samper, Manuel Blancafort, Ricard Lamote de Grignon, Eduardo Toldrá and Federico Mompou.
Finally, not all literary works were written in Spanish: Salvador Dalí and Óscar Domínguez also wrote in French. Foreigners such as the Chilean poets Pablo Neruda and Vicente Huidobro, the Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges, and the Franco-Spanish painter Francis Picabia also shared much with the aesthetics of the Generation of '27.
The Generation of '27 was not exclusively located in Madrid, but rather deployed itself in a geographical constellation which maintained links together. The most important nuclei were in Sevilla, around the Mediodía review, Tenerife around the Gaceta de Arte, and Málaga around the Litoral review. Others members resided in Galicia, Catalonia and Valladolid.
The Tendencies of '27:
The name "Generation of 1927" identifies poets that emerged around 1927, the 300th anniversary of the death of the Baroque poet Luis de Góngora y Argote to whom the poets paid homage. It sparked a brief flash of neo-Gongorism by outstanding poets like Rafael Alberti, Vicente Aleixandre, Dámaso Alonso, Luis Cernuda, Gerardo Diego and Federico García Lorca.
Spanish Civil War aftermath:
The Spanish Civil War ended the movement: García Lorca was murdered, Miguel Hernandez died in jail and other writers (Rafael Alberti, Jose Bergamin, León Felipe, Luis Cernuda, Pedro Salinas, Juan Ramón Jiménez, Bacarisse) were forced into exile, although virtually all kept writing and publishing late throughout the 20th century.
Dámaso Alonso and Gerardo Diego were among those who reluctantly remained in Spain after the Francoists won and more or less reached agreements with the new authoritarian and traditionalist regime or even openly supported it, in the case of Diego. They evolved a lot, combining tradition and avant-garde, and mixing many different themes, from toreo to music to religious and existentialist disquiets, landscapes, etc. Others, such as Vicente Aleixandre and Juan Gil-Albert, simply ignored the new regime, taking the path of interior exile and guiding a new generation of poets.
However, for many Spaniards the harsh reality of Francoist Spain and its reactionary nature meant that the cerebral and aesthetic verses of the Generation of '27 did not connect with what was truly happening, a task that was handled more capably by the poets of the Generation of '50 and the social poets.
Statue:
A statue dedicated to the Generation 27 Poets is now in Seville in Spain. The inscription on the monument translates as 'Seville The poets of the Generation of 27'
List of members[edit]
Rafael Alberti (1902–1999)
Vicente Aleixandre (1898–1984)
Amado Alonso (1897–1952)
Dámaso Alonso (1898–1990)
Manuel Altolaguirre (1905–1959)
Francisco Ayala (1906–2009)
Mauricio Bacarisse (1895–1931)
José Bello (1904–2008)
Rogelio Buendía (1891–1969)
Alejandro Casona (1903–1965)
Juan Cazador (1899–1956)
Luis Cernuda (1902–1963)
Juan Chabás (1900–1954)
Ernestina de Champourcín (1905–1999)
Gerardo Diego (1896–1987)
Juan José Domenchina (1898–1959)
Antonio Espina (1894–1972)
Agustín Espinosa (1897–1939)
León Felipe (1884–1968)
Agustín de Foxá (1903–1959)
Pedro García Cabrera (1905–1981)
Federico García Lorca (1898–1936)
Pedro Garfias (1901–1967)
Juan Gil-Albert (1904–1994)
Ernesto Giménez Caballero (1899–1988)
Jorge Guillén (1893–1984)
Emeterio Gutiérrez Albelo (1905–1937)
Miguel Hernández (1910–1942)
José María Hinojosa (1904–1936)
Enrique Jardiel Poncela (1901–1952)
Rafael Laffón (1895–1978)
Antonio de Lara (1896–1978)
Juan Larrea (1895–1980)
José López Rubio (1903–1996)
José María Luelmo (1904–1991)
Francisco Madrid (1900–1952)
Paulino Masip (1899–1963)
Concha Méndez (1898–1986)
Miguel Mihura (1905–1977)
Edgar Neville (1899–1967)
Antonio Oliver (1903–1968)
Pedro Pérez-Clotet (1902–1966)
Rafael Porlán (1899–1945)
Emilio Prados (1899–1962)
Joaquín Romero Murube (1904–1969)
Pedro Salinas (1891–1951)
Guillermo de Torre (1900–1971)
José María Souvirón (1904–1973)
Miguel Valdivieso (1897–1966)
Fernando Villalón (1881–1930)
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New upcoming period drama: Operación Barrio Inglés
Co-produced by RTVE with Onza (El Ministerio del Tiempo, Parot, Hernán) and the Andalusian production company Emociona Media, filming begins for Operación Barrio Inglés, a new intrigue drama for the TV channel La 1.
Spies, Nazis, British and a risky love story set in Huelva in 1940, a city where the conflicts of World War II are reproduced on a smaller scale.
Synopsis
World War II has just broken out.
Although Spain is "neutral" under Franco's dictatorship, Huelva is a strategic enclave to control the ships of both sides that cross the strait. In addition, it has an important British colony. For this reason, the Germans send members of the Secret Service to control what happens in the city, especially in the mines in the province of Huelva, owned by the English, and which provide Great Britain with ore for weapons and artillery.
In this way, Huelva becomes a veritable nest of spies from both sides, among whom the young Lucía is forced to move. She has just turned 25 and has been hired by an English mining company to work in their offices as a secretary.
There she meets the company's manager, Peter, an attractive Englishman with a dark past who drags Lucía into an adventure in which she will be forced to take sides. When you're in the middle of a war, being neutral is not an option.
Data Sheet
Executive Producer: Gonzalo Crespo Gil, José María Irisarri, Pilar Crespo, Gonzalo Sagardía, Clara Almagro, Santiago de la Rica
RTVE executive production: Borja Gálvez
Production Director: Onil Ganguly Directed by: Chiqui Carabante José Ramón Ayerra
Plot direction: Manuel Ríos San Martín Screenwriters: Manuel Ríos San Martín, Victoria Dal Vera, José Ortuño, Virginia Yagüe, Pablo Tobías and Tatiana Rodríguez
Photo Direction: Dani Salo (A.E.C.) and Alejandro Espadero (A.E.C.)
Art Direction: Hector Bertrand
Casting Direction: Juana Martínez
Music: Pablo Cervantes
Wardrobe: Matías Martini
Makeup and hairdressing: Anabel Beato
Cast
The series will star Aria Bedmar (Lucía), Peter Vives (Peter) and Rubén Cortada (Francisco).
The cast is completed by Paco Tous (José), Juan Gea (Enrique), Bea Arjona (Amparo), María Morales (Cinta), Chiqui Fernández (Rocío), Kimberley Tell (Agatha), Aida Ballmann (Miss Eva), Silvia Hanneman (Hanna), Yan Tual (Victor), Sue Flack (Miss Parker), Marco Cáceres (Juan), Almagro San Miguel (Toni), Carla Nieto (Sylvia), Ángela Chica (Belén), Clara Navarro (Rebeca), Fran Cantos (Oskar), Stefan Weinert (Schneider), Kevin Brand (Kurt), Frank Feys (Edward), Craig Stevenson (Goodwill), Edu Rejón (Gianni), Gregor Acuña (Dieter), José Luis Rasero (Civil Guard Captain), Gonzalo Trujillo (German Consul), Ken Appledorn (English ambassador) and Carlos Olalla (Father Damián), among others.
Filming
Operation Barrio Inglés will have as its settings the old dock of the English mining company and the area of Tinto River and its open-pit mines, as well as the Bellavista neighborhood in the town of Minas de Riotinto, the port of Punta Umbría and the Mazagón beach in Huelva. In Sevilla, among other locations, it will be shot at the Monsalves Palace, and in other areas of the city and province, and also in different parts of Jerez de la Frontera.
About the mines and their location:
This is the Tinto river, its waters are red due to the high concentration of sulfur and iron oxides in the land (it happens the same with the red lagoon of Mazarrón's mines, Murcia), although it's duscussed if the mining activity has been increasing this characteristic, its water are very acid and are poluted with heavy metals.
The Tinto river (ancient name: Luxia) starts its flow in the Aracena Mountain Range and after 100 km joins the Odiel river (ancient name: Urium) at the height of the city of Huelva.
The mines have been exploited since pre-roman era, by Iberians and Tartessians, to obtein iron, copper, magnesium, silver and gold, which improved trading with the Phoenician, Carthaginian, and Greek colonies that were near to this site (in fact, the city of Huelva was founded by Phoenicians, and it was called Onuba), and eventually the Carthaginians took control of the mines after their expansion throughthe Iberian peninsula. Later, it became one of the most important mining areas of the Roman Empire.
By end of the 19th century, due to económico crisis the Spanish government sold several mines to English Companies, and one of them was the Riotinto mines, who were bought by the Rio Tinto Company Limited (RTC) in 1873, as they were looking for metals that were very demanded in the country due to its high industrialization (in contrast, in Spain the industrialization was scarce and the two main regions in which it was developed were Catalonia and Basque Country)
The RTC was the builder and owner of the railway line that connected the mines with the port of Huelva, where it built a mineral dock to facilitate the unloading and transport of the extracted material by sea to England.
In Riotinto, the luxurious and exclusive neighborhood of Bellavista was built for English personnel, it was a Victorian-style neighborhood that was endowed with tennis courts, golf courses, its own cemetery, a Social Club or even a Presbyterian church.
Huelva capital will also develop under the English influence. The numerous workshops and facilities built by the RTC that gave work to more than seven hundred workers, such as the railway station, changed the appearance of the city and contrasted with the rise of a new bourgeoisie of both Spaniards and foreigners who found themselves linked to the company. The power of the company became such in the city that civil buildings depended on the interests of the company.
Proof of this are the Reina Victoria neighborhood, as a garden city that welcomed part of its employees; the construction of Casa Colón, which ended up becoming the headquarters for the company's offices; the disappeared English Hospital; or the gigantic mineral pier located on the Odiel River. The English population introduced football, being the Huelva Football Club the first football team in Spain, founded in 1889.
In Punta Umbría, the British managers of the Rio Tinto Company Limited (RTC) erected rest areas for their employees. Since 1883 some constructions were carried out in the area, in wood and of the bungalow type, but it would not be until 1896 when the RTC was granted the possibility of establishing houses in this area, to which many RTC employees and their families went in summer to the beach through the Riotinto railway.
In 1943, the corpse of Glyndwr Michael, a Welsh homeless, disguised as a British Marine oficer called William Martin with information about a fake plan of the Allies to attack Greece was found drowned near the coast of Huelva, in Punta Umbría. This was part of the Operation Mincemeat to distract the Nazis and attack Sicily instead. Operation Mincemeat was a important plot in episode 3×02, Tiempo de Espías, from El Ministerio del tiempo. Well, although in the episode the original Operation is cancelled and a character named William Martin later takes the place of the original "William Martin", so the Operation success.
Years later, in 1954 the Riotinto mines returned to national property, under the CEMRT (Compañía Española de Minas de Río Tinto)
#operación barrio inglés#aria bedmar#peter vives#rubén cortada#paco tous#juan gea#bea arjona#maría morales#chiqui fernández#kimberley tell#aida ballmann#silvia hanneman#yan tual#sue flack#marco cáceres#almagro san miguel#ángela chica#clara navarro#fran cantos#stefan weinert#kevin brand#frank feys#craig stevenson#period dramas#upcoming series#carla nieto#edu rejón#gregor acuña#jose luis rasero#gonzalo trujillo
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CALIFICACIÓN PERSONAL: 7 / 10
Título Original: Intacto
Año: 2001
Duración: 108 min
País: España
Director: Juan Carlos Fresnadillo
Guion: Andrés Koppel, Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, Gustavo Fuertes
Música: Lucio Godoy
Fotografía: Xavi Giménez
Reparto: Leonardo Sbaraglia, Eusebio Poncela, Mónica López, Antonio Dechent, Max von Sydow, Guillermo Toledo, Marisa Lull, Andrea San Vicente, Alber Ponte, Luis Mesonero, Jesús Noguero, Flora María Álvaro, Ramón Esquinas, Marta Gil, Pedro Beitia, Paz Gómez, Iván Aledo, Chema de Miguel, Luis de Leon, Cesar Castillo, Mauricio Bautista, Pablo Portillo, Patricia Castro, Fernando Albizu, Paco Churruca
Productora: Persons Films, La Dalia Films, S.G. Producciones Cinematograficas, Eye Slice Pictures
Género: Thriller; Adventure; Drama
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0220580/
TRAILER:
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Tengo MONO..de ir de nuevo a un PARQUE ACUATICO como el VIERNES PASADO en el AQUOPOLIS [VILLA_NUEVA de la CAÑADA] y eso que no es GRAN COSA comparado con el TOWER OF POWER de TENER_I_FE..no se como estará el de JUAN PABLO II de MEDELLIN [COLOMBIA] donde suspendió el cantante Argentino SABU en su vuelta a la música tras 20 años porque le salio un CANCER FULMINANTE tras retar a DIOS en una nota que dejó a su 2da MUJER o MADRE DE FEY porque la salio CANCER siendo FUMADORA..y antes fue el 3er MARIDO de 5 de Guadalupe Contreras Ramos (Ciudad de México, 10 de marzo de 1954), conocida como Lupita D'Alessio.
Además SABU grabó como GULLIVER "SELLADO CON UN BESO" en un single con cara B ASI LO PLANEO DIOS de Nicky JONES
También hizo películas debutando en VUELVO A VIVIR, VUELVO A CANTAR [1971, MI AÑO] con MARIA LEAL
El 15 de julio de 2005 Sabú fue operado de dos vértebras cervicales debido a un dolor de cuello que lo aquejaba.
El 30 de julio de 2005 estaba anunciada su presencia en la Carpa Cabaret de la Feria de las Flores del aeroparque Juan Pablo II en Medellín (Colombia), pero el 22 de julio Sabú sufrió una recaída.[4]Tras varios exámenes se le descubrió cáncer de pulmón muy agresivo. En dos meses fue sometido a dos quimioterapias. El viernes 14 de octubre de 2005 ingresó de urgencia al Hospital Español de la Ciudad de México. Llevaba una camiseta que decía: «Sabú: en Colombia te amamos, regresa pronto». El domingo 16 de octubre de 2005 a las 10:30 (hora de México), falleció, rodeado de su familia.[5] Tenía 54 años.
La esposa del cantante, Josefina Gil (f. 2008), declaró después del sepelio realizado el lunes, que las cenizas del artista permanecerían durante algún tiempo en suelo mexicano pero luego serían trasladadas a Argentina para su descanso definitivo.
El 5 de noviembre de 2005, por iniciativa de Sabú y en honor a él, con el fin de recolectar dinero para ayudar a niños con cáncer, se realizó un partido de fútbol entre integrantes del Gobierno de México, actores de la empresa Televisa y exfutbolistas.
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Minnesota Twins-New York Yankees Series Preview
6.4.24-Bailey Ober RHP (5-3) 4.89 ERA Vs. Luis Gil RHP (7-1) 1.99 ERA
6.5.24-Chris Paddack RHP (4-2) 4.57 ERA Vs. Carlos Rodon LHP (7-2) 3.09 ERA
6.6.24-Pablo Lopez RHP (5-5) 4.84 ERA Vs. Marcus Stroman RHP (5-2) 2.73 ERA
The Twins At A Glance- The Twins continued playing good baseball by taking two of three from the Astros in Houston. The road trip continues in the Bronx this week against the Yankees. The Twins are (9-3) in their past twelve games. The team will activate Royce Lewis before this series begins. Lewis went 4-for-23 (.174) in his rehab stint with the Saints. Eddie Julien was sent down to St. Paul, so it will be interesting to see who plays second base. Julien hit .181 in May and struck out thirty times. Kyle Farmer and Willi Castro could see time at second base. Jose Miranda played a little second base in the past, but the team really wanted him to focus on third base in the offseason. Carlos Santana is hitting .353 over the past week. Brooks Lee is on track to bump up to St. Paul as he continues to work his way back on a rehab assignment. Brock Stewart is building up for a rehab assignment. Josh Staumont has thrown 8 1/3 scoreless innings since his call-up.
The Yankees At A Glance- The Yankees have played great all season long and went (7-2) over their latest West Coast swing. The Yanks just swept the Giants in San Francisco over the weekend. Aaron Judge had a monster May with a .361 average, fourteen homers, and twenty-seven RBI. Juan Soto leads the team with a .322 average along with seventeen homers and fifty-three RBI. He is entering his free agent year and should have a record deal coming up. The Yankees starting rotation owns a 2.78 ERA, which is second-best in baseball. They have been without Gerrit Cole, who should start a rehab assignment this week. The bullpen has a 2.87 ERA that is also second in MLB. Michael Tonkin is on his third team in 2024 and has a 1.20 ERA in fifteen innings for the Yankees. Clay Holmes has been a solid closer with seventeen saves and has allowed just four runs. Clarke Schmidt, Luke Weaver, and Ian Hamilton have been good arms out of the New York bullpen as well.
What To Watch For- The Yankees swept the Twins at Target Field in mid-May. New York out-scored Minnesota 14-1 in that series. These two teams split a four-game series last year at Yankee Stadium. Bailey Ober has never faced the Yankees. Luis Gil gave up five runs over six innings in his lone start against the Twins. Chris Paddack has a 8.10 ERA in two starts versus the Yankees. Juan Soto has two career homers off Paddack. Carlos Rodon is (7-3) with a 4.35 ERA in thirteen games against the Twins. Pablo Lopez is (0-2) with a 2.95 ERA in three starts facing the Yanks. Juan Soto has three homers off Lopez in his career. Marcus Stroman is (2-4) with a 4.95 ERA in seven starts versus the Twins.
-Chris Kreibich-
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Artist Research - David Hockney
Cubism
Cubism is an early-20th-century avant-garde art movement that revolutionised European painting and sculpture, and inspired related artistic movements in music, literature, and architecture. In Cubist works of art, the subjects are analysed, broken up, and reassembled in an abstract form—instead of depicting objects from a single perspective, the artist depicts the subject from multiple perspectives to represent the subject in a greater context. This representation of different views of the subject pictured at the same time or successively is also called multiple perspective, simultaneity or multiplicity.
Originating in France during the 1910s and throughout the 1920s, Cubism has been considered the most influential art movement of the 20th century. The impact of Cubism was far-reaching and wide-ranging. In France and other countries, movements such as Futurism, Suprematism, Dada, Constructivism, Vorticism, De Stijl and Art Deco developed in response to Cubism. Offshoots of Cubism also developed, including Orphism, abstract art and later Purism.
The movement was pioneered mainly by Picasso and Georges Braque, as well as other notable artists. One primary influence that led to Cubism was the representation of three-dimensional form in the late works of Paul Cézanne.
Cubism is broken down into phases. The first phase of Cubism, known as Analytic Cubism, a phrase coined by Juan Gris, was both radical and influential as a short but highly significant art movement between 1910 and 1912 in France. A second phase, Synthetic Cubism, remained vital until around 1919, when the Surrealist movement gained popularity. English art historian Douglas Cooper proposed another scheme, describing three phases of Cubism in his book, The Cubist Epoch. According to Cooper there was "Early Cubism", (from 1906 to 1908) when the movement was initially developed in the studios of Picasso and Braque; the second phase being called "High Cubism", (from 1909 to 1914) during which time Juan Gris emerged as an important exponent (after 1911); and finally Cooper referred to "Late Cubism" (from 1914 to 1921) as the last phase of Cubism as a radical avant-garde movement.
Proto-Cubism
Proto-Cubism lasted between 1907 and 1911. This was the early beginnings of what would become the Cubist movement. Pablo Picasso's 1907 painting Les Demoiselles d'Avignon has often been considered a proto-Cubist work
Another proto-cubist series of works was George Braque’s exhibition collection in Kahnweiler Gallery. A critic at the time, Louis Vauxcelles noted Brauqe’s nature of "reducing everything, places and a figures and houses, to geometric schemas, to cubes.”
This carried on. Critic Henri Matisse is known to have disparaged Braque’s pictures as “painting made of small cubes.” The critic Charles Morice also spoke of Braque's cubes. The motif had inspired Braque to produce three paintings marked by the simplification of form and deconstruction of perspective.
Georges Braque's 1908 Houses at L’Estaque (and related works) prompted Vauxcelles, in Gil Blas, 25 March 1909, to refer to it as bizarreries cubiques (cubic oddities). Gertrude Stein referred to landscapes made by Picasso in 1909, such as Reservoir at Horta de Ebro, as the first Cubist paintings.
The first organised group exhibition by Cubists took place at the Salon des Indépendants in Paris during the spring of 1911 in a room called 'Salle 41'; it included works by Jean Metzinger, Albert Gleizes, Fernand Léger, Robert Delaunay and Henri Le Fauconnier, yet no works by Picasso or Braque were exhibited.
By 1911 Picasso was recognised as the inventor of Cubism, while Braque's importance and precedence was argued later, with respect to his treatment of space, volume and mass in the L’Estaque landscapes.
Early Cubism
There was a distinct difference between Kahnweiler's Cubists and the Salon Cubists. Prior to 1914, Picasso, Braque, Gris and Léger (to a lesser extent) gained the support of a single committed art dealer in Paris, Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, who guaranteed them an annual income for the exclusive right to buy their works
In contrast, the Salon Cubists built their reputation primarily by exhibiting regularly at the Salon d'Automne and the Salon des Indépendants, both major non-academic Salons in Paris. They were inevitably more aware of public response and the need to communicate.Already in 1910 a group began to form which included Metzinger, Gleizes, Delaunay and Léger. Together with other young artists, the group wanted to emphasise a research into form, in opposition to the Neo-Impressionist emphasis on colour.
The first public controversy generated by Cubism resulted from Salon showings at the Indépendants during the spring of 1911. This showing by Metzinger, Gleizes, Delaunay, le Fauconnier and Léger brought Cubism to the attention of the general public for the first time. Amongst the Cubist works presented, Robert Delaunay exhibited his Eiffel Tower, Tour Eiffel (Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York).
The most extreme forms of Cubism were not those practiced by Picasso and Braque, who resisted total abstraction. Other Cubists, by contrast, especially František Kupka, and those considered ‘Orphists’ by Guillaume Apollinaire (Delaunay, Léger, Picabia and Duchamp), accepted abstraction by removing visible subject matter entirely. Kupka's two entries at the 1912 Salon d'Automne, Amorpha-Fugue à deux couleurs and Amorpha chromatique chaude, were highly abstract (or nonrepresentational) and metaphysical in orientation. Both Duchamp in 1912 and Picabia from 1912 to 1914 developed an expressive and allusive abstraction dedicated to complex emotional and sexual themes. Beginning in 1912 Delaunay painted a series of paintings entitled Simultaneous Windows, followed by a series entitled Formes Circulaires, in which he combined planar structures with bright prismatic hues; based on the optical characteristics of juxtaposed colors his departure from reality in the depiction of imagery was quasi-complete. In 1913–14 Léger produced a series entitled Contrasts of Forms, giving a similar stress to colour, line and form. His Cubism, despite its abstract qualities, was associated with themes of mechanisation and modern life.
Also labeled an Orphist by Apollinaire, Marcel Duchamp was responsible for another extreme development inspired by Cubism. The ready-made arose from a joint consideration that the work itself is considered an object (just as a painting), and that it uses the material detritus of the world (as collage and papier collé in the Cubist construction and Assemblage). The next logical step, for Duchamp, was to present an ordinary object as a self-sufficient work of art representing only itself. In 1913 he attached a bicycle wheel to a kitchen stool and in 1914 selected a bottle-drying rack as a sculpture in its own right.
Crystal cubism (1914 - 1918)
A significant modification of Cubism between 1914 and 1916 was signaled by a shift towards a strong emphasis on large overlapping geometric planes and flat surface activity. This grouping of styles of painting and sculpture, especially significant between 1917 and 1920, was practiced by several artists
The tightening of the compositions, the clarity and sense of order reflected in these works, led to its being referred to by the critic Maurice Raynal as 'crystal' Cubism.
Crystal Cubism, and its associative rappel à l'ordre, has been linked with an inclination—by those who served the armed forces and by those who remained in the civilian sector—to escape the realities of the Great War, both during and directly following the conflict. The purifying of Cubism from 1914 through the mid-1920s, with its cohesive unity and voluntary constraints, has been linked to a much broader ideological transformation towards conservatism in both French society and French culture.
Cubism in the later years
After World War I, with the support given by the art dealer and contractor Léonce Rosenberg, Cubism returned as a central issue for artists, and continued as such until the mid-1920s when its avant-garde status was rendered questionable by the emergence of geometric abstraction and Surrealism in Paris. Many Cubists, including Picasso, Braque, Gris, Léger, Gleizes, Metzinger and Emilio Pettoruti while developing other styles, returned periodically to Cubism, even well after 1925. Cubism reemerged during the 1920s and the 1930s in the work of the American Stuart Davis and the Englishman Ben Nicholson. In France, however, Cubism experienced a decline beginning in about 1925.
In 1918 Rosenberg presented a series of Cubist exhibitions at his Galerie de l’Effort Moderne in Paris. Attempts were made by Louis Vauxcelles to argue that Cubism was dead, but these exhibitions, along with a well-organized Cubist show at the 1920 Salon des Indépendants and a revival of the Salon de la Section d’Or in the same year, demonstrated it was still alive
In 1920, Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler asserted that the Cubist depiction of space, mass, time, and volume supports (rather than contradicts) the flatness of the canvas.
Contemporary views of Cubism are complex, formed to some extent in response to the "Salle 41" Cubists, whose methods were too distinct from those of Picasso and Braque to be considered merely secondary to them. Alternative interpretations of Cubism have therefore developed.
What is cubism about?
The Cubism of Picasso and Braque had more than a technical or formal significance, and the distinct attitudes and intentions of the Salon Cubists produced different kinds of Cubism, rather than a derivative of their work.
The works exhibited by these Cubists at the 1911 and 1912 Salons extended beyond the conventional Cézanne-like subjects—the posed model, still-life and landscape—favoured by Picasso and Braque to include large-scale modern-life subjects. Aimed at a large public, these works stressed the use of multiple perspective and complex planar faceting for expressive effect while preserving the eloquence of subjects
Cubism explicitly relates the sense of time to multiple perspectives, giving symbolic expression to the notion of ‘duration.’ This was proposed by the philosopher Henri Bergson according to which life is subjectively experienced as a continuum, with the past flowing into the present and the present merging into the future.
One of the major theoretical innovations made by the Salon Cubists, independently of Picasso and Braque, was that of simultaneity. With simultaneity, the concept of separate spatial and temporal dimensions was comprehensively challenged. The subject matter was no longer considered from a specific point of view at a moment in time, but built following a selection of successive viewpoints, i.e., as if viewed simultaneously from numerous angles (and in multiple dimensions) with the eye free to roam from one to the other.
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2024 olympics Spain roster
Archery
Pablo Acha (Burgos)
Èlia Canales (Tarragona)
Athletics
Julio Arenas (Madrid)
David García (Alcorcón)
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Elvin Canales (Girona)
Ignacio Fontes (Ciudad Granada)
Mario García (Villar De Gallimazo)
Adel Mechaal (Palamós)
Thierry Ndikumwenayo (Castellón De La Plana)
Abdessamad Oukhelfen (Reus)
Enrique Llopis (Gandia)
Asier Martínez (Zizur Mayor)
Daniel Arce (Burgos)
Iñaki Cañal (Gijón)
Óscar Husillos (Palencia)
Tariku Novales (Santiago De Compostela)
Diego García (Madrid)
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Paul McGrath (Barcelona)
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Basketball
Lorenzo Brown (Roswell, Georgia)
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Alberto Díaz (Ciudad Málaga)
Juan Hernangómez (Madrid)
Guillermo Hernangómez (Madrid)
Destiny Garuba (Azuqueca De Henares)
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Adrián Del Río (Madrid)
Miquel Travé (La Seu d'Urgell)
Pau Echaniz (San Sebastián)
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Claudio Castilla (Jerez De La Frontera)
Juan Jiménez (Castro Del Río)
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Ismael García (Las Palmas De Gran Canaria)
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Eduard De Ignacio-Simó (Madrid)
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David Puig (La Garriga)
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Nicolau Mir (Palma)
Joel Plata (Madrid)
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Gonzalo Pérez-De Vargas (Ciudad Toledo)
Jorge Maqueda (Ciudad Toledo)
Alex Dujshebaev (Santander)
Daniel Dujshebaev (Santander)
Rodrigo Corrales (Cangas)
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Imanol Garciandia (Urretxu)
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Agustín Casado (Carboneras)
Aleix Gómez (Sabadell)
Ian Tarrafeta (Sabadell)
Miguel Sánchez-Migallón (Ciudad Real)
Kauldi Odriozola (Zumaia)
Daniel Fernández (Sabadell)
Javier Rodríguez (Madrid)
Nicole Wiggins (Madrid)
Marta López (Ciudad Málaga)
Carmen Campos (Madrid)
Silvia Arderius (Madrid)
Maitane Etxeberria (Lezo)
Mercedes Castellanos (Ciudad Real)
Jennifer Gutiérrez (Elche)
Lara González (Santa Pola)
Paula Arcos (Petrer)
Lysa Tchaptchet (Cuenca De Pamplona)
Kaba Gassama (Granollers)
Alicia Fernández (Valdoviño)
María Prieto (Zamora)
Alexandrina Barbosa (Estella-Lizarra)
Mireya González (León)
Judo
David García (Madrid)
Salvador Cases (Alicante)
Francisco Garrigós (Móstoles)
Tristani Mosakhlishvili (Vigo)
Nikoloz Sheradishvili (Madrid)
Ariane Toro (Bilbao)
Laura Martínez (Madrid)
Cristina Cabaña (Mérida)
Ai Tsunoda (Lleida)
Pentathlon
Laura Heredia (Barcelona)
Rowing
Dennis Carracedo (Banyoles)
Rodrigo Conde (Moaña)
Aleix García (Girona)
Caetano Horta (Noia)
Jaime Canalejo (Ciudad Seville)
Javier García (Ciudad Seville)
Virginia Díaz (El Astillero)
Esther Briz (Zaragoza)
Aina Cid (Amposta)
Sailing
Ignacio Baltasar (Sa Ràpita)
Andrés Barrio (Arucas)
Joaquín Blanco; Jr. (Las Palmas De Gran Canaria)
Diego Botín-Sanz (Santander)
Florian Trittel (Barcelona)
Jordi Xammar (Barcelona)
Pilar Lamadrid (Ciudad Seville)
Ana Moncada (Barcelona)
Gisela Pulido (Premià De Mar)
Támara Echegoyen (Ourense)
Paula Barceló (Palma)
Nora Brugman (Barcelona)
Tara Pacheco (Arucas)
Shooting
Andrés García (Ciudad Cuenca)
Alberto Fernández (Madrid)
Fátima Gálvez (Baena)
Mar Molné (Madrid)
Skateboarding
Alain Kortabitarte (Madrid)
Danny León (Móstoles)
Natalia Muñoz (Madrid)
Daniela Terol (Barcelona)
Julia Benedetti (A Coruña)
Naia Laso (Bermeo)
Soccer
Arnau Tenas (Vic)
Marc Pubill (Terrassa)
Juan Miranda (Olivares)
Eric García (Martorell)
Pau Cubarsí (Bescanó)
Pablo Barrios (Madrid)
Diego López (Turón)
Beñat Turrientes (Beasain)
Abel Ruiz (Almussafes)
Alejandro Baena (Roquetas De Mar)
Fermín López (El Campillo)
Jon Pacheco (Elizondo)
Joan García (Sallent De Llobregat)
Aimar Oroz (Arazuri)
Miguel Gutiérrez (Madrid)
Adrián Bernabé (Barcelona)
Sergio Gómez (Badalona)
Sam Omorodion (Ciudad Seville)
Cristhian Mosquera (Alicante)
Juan Sánchez (Dos Hermanas)
Sergio Camello (Madrid)
Alejandro Iturbe (Madrid)
María Rodríguez (Las Palmas De Gran Canaria)
Ona Batlle (Vilassar De Mar)
Teresa Abelleira (Pontevedra)
Irene Paredes (Legazpi)
Oihane Hernández (Mungialda)
Aitana Bonmatí (Vilanova I La Geltrú)
Athenea Del Castillo (Medio Cudeyo)
María Caldentey (Felanitx)
Salma Paralluelo (Zaragoza)
Jenni Hermoso (Madrid)
Alèxia Putellas (Mollet Del Vallès)
Pati Guijarro (Palma)
Cata Coll (Marratxí)
Laia Aleixandri (Santa Coloma De Gramenet)
Eva Navarro (Yecla)
Laia Codina (Campllong)
Lucía García (Aller)
Olga Carmona (Seville)
Vicky López (Madrid)
María Méndez (Oviedo)
Alba Redondo (Albacete)
Elene Lete (Zumarraga)
Surfing
Andy Criere (Hendaye, France)
Nadia Erostarbe (Zarautz)
Janire González (Zumaia)
Swimming
Carlos Garach (Granada)
Mario Mollà (Barcelona)
Arbidel González (Corvera De Asturias)
Luís Domínguez (Zaragoza)
Ferran Julià (Sabadell)
Carles Coll (Tarragona)
Sergio De Celis (Barcelona)
Hugo González (Palma)
César Castro (Plasencia)
Alisa Ozhogina (Ciudad Seville)
Iris Tió (Barcelona)
Txell Ferré (Barcelona)
Marina García (Sant Cugat Del Vallès)
Lilou Lluís (Madrid)
Meritxell Mas (Granollers)
Paula Ramírez (Barcelona)
Blanca Toledano (Madrid)
Ángela Martínez (Elche)
Ainhoa Campabadal (Barcelona)
María Daza (Madrid)
Alba Herrero (Sant Cugat Del Vallès)
Paula Juste (Lleida)
Carmen Weiler (Singapore)
África Zamorano (Barcelona)
Jessica Vall (Barcelona)
Laura Cabanes (Madrid)
Emma Carrasco (Lleida)
María De Valdés (Fuengirola)
Table tennis
Álvaro Robles (Huelva)
María Xiao (Madrid)
Taekwondo
Adrián Vicente (Madrid)
Javier Pérez (San Fernando De Henares)
Adriana Cerezo (Madrid)
Cecilia Castro (San Agustín Del Guadalix)
Tennis
Carlos Alcaraz; Jr. (Villena)
Pedro Martínez (Alzira)
Jaume Munar (Barcelona)
Rafael Nadal (Manacor)
Pablo Carreño (Barcelona)
Marcel Granollers (Barcelona)
Cristina Bucșa (Torrelavega)
Sara Sorribes (La Vall d'Uixó)
Triathlon
Alberto González (Ciudad Málaga)
Roberto Sánchez (Mislata)
Antonio Serrat (Vigo)
Miriam Casillas (Badajoz)
Anna Godoy (Barcelona)
Volleyball
Adrián Gavira (San Roque)
Pablo Herrera (Castellón De La Plana)
Daniela Álvarez (Gijón)
Tania Moreno (Madrid)
Lili Fernández (Alicante)
Paula Soria (Orihuela)
Water polo
Unai Aguirre (Barcelona)
Alberto Munárriz (Pamplona)
Álvaro Granados (Terrassa)
Bernat Sanahuja (Terrassa)
Miguel De Toro (Ciudad Seville)
Marc Larumbe (Barcelona)
Martin Faměra (Barcelona)
Sergi Cabanas (Barcelona)
Roger Tahull (Barcelona)
Felipe Perrone (Barcelona)
Unai Biel (Barcelona)
Alejandro Bustos (Madrid)
Eduardo Lorrio (Madrid)
Laura Ester (Barcelona)
Isabel Piralkova (Arenys De Mar)
Anni Espar (Barcelona)
Bea Ortiz (Terrassa)
Nona Pérez (Sant Cugat Del Vallès)
Paula Crespí (L'Hospitelet De Llobregat)
Elena Ruiz (Rubí)
María Peña (Madrid)
Judith Forca (Sabadell)
Paula Camus (Madrid)
María García (Sabadell)
Paula Leitón (Terrassa)
Martina Terré (Barcelona)
#Sports#National Teams#Spain#Celebrities#Races#Basketball#Georgia#Wisconsin#Fights#Boxing#Boats#Animals#Hockey#The Netherlands#Golf#Arizona#Soccer#France#Singapore#Tennis
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CHALECO LÓPEZ CIERRA EL AÑO EN MARRUECOS CON NUEVO NAVEGANTE
-El piloto maulino competirá con junto al policía español Diego Ortega Gil, ex acompañante de Gerard Farrés.
-El representante del equipo Red Bull-Can Am competirá pensando en el Dakar 2024 luego de alejarse del podio final.
SANTIAGO / AGADIR / MARRUECOS / 12 de octubre de 2023.- Con cifra récord de vehículos participantes, entre ellos 37 en la categoría T3, donde competirá el piloto maulino Francisco Chaleco López (Red Bull Can-Am Factory), parte este viernes 13 la quinta estación del Campeonato del Mundo de Rally Cross Country FIA con el Prólogo de 19 kilómetros que determinará la grilla de largada del sábado 14 con la Etapa 1 de la competencia.
En total serán 247 vehículos los que tomarán parte en la fecha final del certamen a solo dos meses y medio del Rally Dakar 2024. Será una gran prueba para el corredor chileno que debuta con nuevo navegante, el policía español Diego Ortega Gil, de 32 años, quien será el responsable de guiar y asistir de la mejor forma al representante nacional.
“Para sorpresa de muchos voy con navegante nuevo. Él es Diego Ortega, quien tiene mucha experiencia con Gerard Farrés, por eso lo conozco. Ya hemos tenido acá un par de pruebas con una buena coordinación. En cuanto a las expectativas, esta temporada ha sido irregular porque hemos tenido algunos problemas técnicos. Pero estoy contento de estar en este equipo oficial que es el mejor”, expresó Chaleco López.
Efectuadas cuatro fechas del Mundial FIA, López Contardo está en el quinto lugar del ranking y con pocas esperanzas de terminar al final del certamen en el podio. Suma 104 puntos, contra los 174 del líder, el estadounidense Mitch Guthrie que tiene 174 unidades. Segundo está Austin Jones con 171, tercero se ubica Seth Quintero con 165 y cuarta se posiciona la española Cristina Gutiérrez con 110.
“Estamos en Marruecos trabajando para el Dakar 2024 más que buscando un resultado ambicioso. Vamos bien encaminado con el equipo que es muy importante. Es bueno estar acá para ver cuál es nuestro nivel hoy porque esta categoría ha aumentado mucho en cantidad y en calidad con cerca de 40 autos en la grilla. Lo importante para mí en esta ocasión es sentir el auto. Tuvimos un par de días de pruebas durante la semana y nos hemos sentido bastante bien en el Can-Am y con Diego Ortega”, manifestó el piloto de Red Bull-Can Am.
Siguiendo con el Rally Dakar, que se disputará entre el 5 y 19 de enero, Francisco López confirmó desde Agadir que su navegante para la carrera más larga y peligrosa del orbe será nuevamente Juan Pablo Latrach, situación que le da bastante confianza por los años que lleva corriendo con él. Latrach esta vez competirá en Marruecos junto al chileno Hernán Garcés.
#deportes#deportetuerca#motorsports#chile#deporte#mundotuerca#automovilismo#rallyedumaroc#rally#w2rc#t3#buggy
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Lista lojas adquiridas pela Auchan Espanha ao Grupo DIA
------------------------------------------------Lista 224 establecimientos Dia
------------------------------------------------
Huesca
Barbastro, Avenida de la Merced esq/c. Lamillera
Binéfar, Crtra. Zaragoza 39-45
Teruel
Alcañiz, Av. Bartolomé Esteban, s/n
Andorra, Pol. La Umbría, 9-10-11. Calamocha, C/ El Cañizarejo, 18.
Teruel, Av Zaragoza 22
Utrillas, Av. Valencia, 25-27-2
Zaragoza
Alagón, Av. Zaragoza, 2.
Calatayud, Pl. España, 15-19
Calatayud, Avda. Rio Jalón, s/n
Calatayud, C/ Madre Rafols, 6.
Cariñena, C/ La Cruz, 2-4.
Épila, Ctra. Muel-Lumpiaque, 56.
Fuentes de Ebro, Paseo del Justicia, 3. Tarazona, Av. de la Paz, 7-9.
Zaragoza, Pl. Madres de la Plaza de Mayo, 5.
Zaragoza, Cl Sobrarbe S/N (matilde sangüesa)
Zaragoza, C/ Rebolería, 14.
Zaragoza, Autovía de Logroño, 57-59-61.
Zaragoza, C/ Madre Sacramento, 28-30.
Zaragoza, Pº. Damas, 33. (Pedro Mª Ric)
Zaragoza, Avenida Cataluña, 25-27.
Zaragoza, Pº. María Agustín, 97-99
Zaragoza, C/ Adolfo Aznar, 6-10.
Zaragoza, C/ Cuarte, 1.
Zaragoza, C/ Tarragona, 32.
Zaragoza, Av. Pablo Neruda, 20.
Zaragoza, C/ Monse Domingo Agudo, 21-23.
Zaragoza, Av. Industria, 11
Zaragoza, C/ María Zayas, 9-11.
Zaragoza, C/ La Vía, 17.
Zaragoza, C/ Eugenio Lucas, 1.(Pque Goya II)
Zaragoza, C/ Daroca, 79.
Zaragoza, Pº Fernando el Católico, 52.
Zaragoza, Pedrola C/ Zaragoza, 25.
Zaragoza, C/ Zaragoza la Vieja, 4.
Zaragoza, C/ Salvador Allende, 38-40. (Juslibol)
Zaragoza, C/ Cesareo Alierta, 33-35.
Zaragoza, C/ Inocen. Ruiz Lasala, 40.
Zaragoza, Cr De Madrid 11
Zuera, Av. Zaragoza, 27.
Asturias
Aller, c/ Travesía Humanitarios, s/n
Avilés, Avda. San Agustín, 13 (esq.severo ochoa)
Cangas del Narcea, c/ Uria,32 - bajo
Carreño, c/ San Antonio nº 5
Castrillón, Plaza de la Constitución, 4
Gijón, c/ Menendez Pelayo, 17-19
Gijón, c/ Fernando VI, 2
Gijón, C/ Torrecerredo - C/ D. Avelino Glez 7 (Jove y He)
Gijón, c/ Marqués de Urquijo, 15 Gijón, c/ Cataluña, 5
Gijón, Ctra. del Obispo, 59 y 61 Gijón, C/ La Espinera nº 242 - La Camocha
Grado, Travesía Florez Estrada nº 27 (Pepín Fdez.)
Langreo c/ El Dorado, 18
Laviana, c/ Mariano Menéndez Valdés (Juan Mtnez, 2)
Llanes, c/ Manuel Romano, 3
Llanes, Ctra Monasterio San Antolin, Bajo 2 9
Muros de Nalón, Avda. de Toledo nº 3
Oviedo, Plaza de América nº 2 Oviedo, c/ González Besada, 15
Oviedo, c/ Bermudez de Castro, 23
Oviedo c/ Torrecerredo, 17
Oviedo C/ Gil de Jaz nº 9
Parres, c/ Juan Carlos I, 1 (c/ Arguelles, 13)
Piloña, C/ García Carbajal nº 5
Pravia, Avda. Santiago López, 1
San Martín del Rey Aurelio, c/ Jaime Escandón, 6
Siero, Ildefonso Sanchez del Rio, 13
Valdés, C/ Garcia Prieto nº 2 (C/ Crucero)
Vegadeo c/ Hermanos Fdez. de la Vega, 3
Villaviciosa, C/ Magdalena, 11 bajo (c/v a C/ Libertad)
Cantabria
Santander, c/ San Fernando nº 82
Santander, c/ Santa Lucia nº 31
Torrelavega, c/ Augusto García Linares, 4
Torrelavega, Avda. Bilbao (Los Ochos)
Torrelavega, Avda. Solvay nº 51 Santander, Cardenal Herrera Oria
Castilla-La Mancha
Guadalajara
Guadalajara, Av. Virgen de la Soledad, 29
Castilla y León
Ávila
Ávila, Avda Juan Carlos I, s/n
Burgos
Aranda de Duero, C/ San Francisco, 26 Izqda.
Aranda de Duero, C/ Pizarro, 16-18 Aranda de Duero, Avenida de Castilla, 20
Aranda de Duero, C/ Miranda do Douro, 1
Aranda de Duero, Plaza Gallocanta, 4
Aranda de Duero, San Francisco, 57
Briviesca, C/ Justo Cantón Salazar, 30
Burgos, C/ Miranda, 10 (Mercado Sur)
Burgos, C/ Clunia, 13
Burgos, C/ Juan de Padilla, 11
Burgos, C/ Andrés Mtnez. Zatorre, 5 y 7
Burgos, C/ Calzadas, 15-17
Medina de Pomar, Avda. de Santander, 10-12
Miranda de Ebro, C/ República Argentina, 55
León
Astorga, Avda. Alcalde Pineda, 31
Bembibre, c/ Eloy Reigada nº 25 (Río Boeza)
Cistierna, Avda. Constitución nº 119, bajo
León, Avda. Reyes Leoneses, 27 (Pol.Eras Renueva) Sinalo
León, c/ Santa Nonia, 16
León, c/ San Ignacio de Loyola nº 40
León, c/ La Puentecilla 3 y 5 (Fotog. Pepe García) Ponferrada, Avda. del Castillo nº 8
Ponferrada, Avenida América, 22 (esq. a C/ Los Andes)
Robla, La, c/ Josefina Rodriguez Aldecoa, 9
San Andrés del Rabanedo, c/ Colada, 7-9-11
Villablino, c/ La Constitución, 13
Palencia
Aguilar de Campoo, C/ Comercio nº 4 - 6
Guardo, Avda. Asturias, 101
Palencia, c/ Mayor Principal, 91
Palencia, C/ Manuel Rivera nº 11 (Cántigas)
Palencia, Avda. Asturias, 12 ( con Ctra. 3 Pasos)
Salamanca
Béjar, Cl Recreo Esq. Cl Gibraleon 10
Ciudad Rodrigo, c/ Yurramendi, s/n
Ciudad Rodrigo, Ctra. de salamanca, km. 322,6
Guijuelo, C/ San Marcos, 9
Salamanca, Paseo de Canalejas nº 57, bajo
Salamanca, Avda. Portugal, 90 (Alfonso de Castro)
Salamanca, Plaza de Madrid, 11-13
Salamanca, c/ Joaquín Rodrigo, s/n (Políg. El Tomes)
Salamanca, Av Federico Anaya 62
Salamanca, Paseo del Rollo, 40
Salamanca, Ps de las Aguas, s/n
Salamanca, Plaza La Fuente, 15
Salamanca, Ctra. Ledesma, 66
Salamanca, Avda. Italia, 6
Soria
Soria, C/ Alfonso VIII,8 (Duques de Soria c/v Medinaceli
Soria, Cl Lopez Yanguas 1
Valladolid
Arroyo de la Encomienda, Avda Carromajada, 9
Laguna de Duero, Avda.del Estadio 1-3 c/v A.Laguna (Ed.Juan Austria
Valladolid, Plaza San Juán nº 3
Valladolid, Paseo Zorrilla, 84
Valladolid, Cl San Benito (Mercado Del Val) 1
Valladolid, c/ Portillo de Balboa nº 4
Valladolid, Paseo San Vicente nº 73 (Canterac, 7)
Valladolid, c/ Balago,5-bis, bajo 1
Valladolid, Doctor Montero, 5
Valladolid, Avda. de Palencia, 14
Tudela de Duero, Plaza Pablo Arranz, 15-17
Zamora
Benavente, C/ Herreros 59-61 (ant.Obispo Regueras) S.Antón 38
Toro, Pg. Norte, 1, parc 5 A2
Zamora, Crta Villacastin-Vigo, Km 1
Zamora, Avda. Tres Cruces, 24 (sta.Teresa)
Zamora, Poeta Alfonso de Peñalosa, 2
Zamora, c/ República Argentina nº 12 (cuba)
Comunidad de Madrid
Alcalá de Henares, Pz San Jose 2
Aranjuez, Cl Abastos 5
Boadilla del Monte, Monteamor (CC. Mirabal)
Boadilla del Monte, Avda Condesa de Chinchón, s/n
Daganzo de Arriba, Avda de la Cirunvalacion, s/n
Fuenlabrada, Cl Leganes
Fuenlabrada, Cl Alegria 4
Getafe, Cl Ferrocarril 10
Leganés, Cl Andres De Ahumada 4
Madrid, Lagasca, 51
Madrid, Cl Cerro De Carrasqueta 134
Madrid, Cl Nuestra Señora Del Carmen 22
Madrid, Cl Marques Lozoya S/N
Madrid, Cl De Castello 118
Madrid, Cl Del Doce De Octubre 20
Madrid, Cl Galapa 2
Madrid, Cl Albala 7
Madrid, Cl Francisco Silvela 44
Madrid, Pz Peru
Madrid, Cl Sierra Vieja 78
Madrid, Ps De La Direccion 348-350
Madrid, Cl Ribera De Curtidores 15 Madrid, Avda Bucaramanga, 2 (CC Colombia)
Madrid, Cl Principe De Vergara 197
Madrid, Atocha, 80
Madrid, Cl Alonso Carbonel 3
Madrid, Ps De La Ermita Del Santo 48
Madrid, Avda Francisco Pi i Margal, 37
Madrid, Sor Angela de la Cruz, 27
Madrid, Uruguay, 16 Móstoles, Cl Simon Hernandez 53
Móstoles, Av Dos De Mayo 64
Móstoles, Cl Libertad 38
Pozuelo de Alarcón, Portugal, 4
Pozuelo de Alarcón, Centro Comercial Zoco de Pozuelo
Rivas-Vaciamadrid, Cl Lago Garda
Rozas de Madrid, Las Kalamos, s/n
San Fernando de Henares, Nazario Calonge, s/n
San Fernando de Henares, Avenida de Somorrostro, 46 - C.C. Parque Henares San Sebastián de los Reyes, Cl Salvador De Madariaga
Tres Cantos, Pl Del Toro 1, Ronda de Poniente
Villanueva de la Cañada, Avda. Sierra de Gredos, 2
Navarra
Ansoáin/Antsoain, Cl Hermanos Noain 50
Estella-Lizarra, Merkatondoa
Galicia
A Coruña
Boiro, Principal, S/N
Ca Baños, Arteixo-Nave 8
Carballo, Rua Vazquez Parga- Esq Pedreira S/N
Fene, Ctra. de La Palma, el Penedo
Ferrol, Ctra. Catabois, 477
Narón, Ctra. De Castilla, Km 692 Noia, Ctra. De Loxe, s/n
Oleiros, Avda. Rosalia de Castro
Santiago de Compostela, Rua de Amio, 114
Lugo
Burela, Arcadio Pardiñas, 204
Lugo, Avda. Coruña, 462-464
Monforte de Lemos, Bento vicetto, s/n
Viveiro, Misericordia, 20
Ourense
Carballiño, O Ctra. Ourense s/n
Ourense, Rua Ponte Sevilla, 1
Verín, Ctra N-525 Cruce Castelo, s/n
Pontevedra
Cangas, Avda. Xose Maria Castroviejo, s/n
Estrada, A, Avd Benito Vigo 193
Mos, C/ Areas, 7
Pontevedra, Cr. N 550 - Lugar De Alba
Vigo, Avda Buenos Aires, 33-35
Vilagarcía de Arousa, Ctra. cambados torres san cibran
Sanxenxo, Bo Lugar Vincuiño-Padriñan, s/n
País Vasco
Bizkaia
Arrankudiaga, Barrio Zuloaga, s/n
Barakaldo, C/Ibaibe, 38
Forua, Paseo Carlos Gangoiti, 85 (Forua)
Gipuzkoa
Arrasate/Mondragón, B San AndrÚs 7 Bis
Astigarraga, Aiotzategui de Ergoiba, 18-20
Bergara, Haitz iturri, 2 Elgoibar, C/ Zizilion. Pol. Ind. Sigma Pab. A 13
Errenteria, Crta. Nacional I, Km 465
Hernani, La florida, 34
Hondarribia, C/Girizi, 2
Irun, Cl Pozuetakogaina 17
Legazpi, El barrena, 18-a
Ordizia, Ctra. Zaldibia, 1
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Infinite Pau Hana - July 19, 2023
Hour 1
Where Are We Going? - Donald Byrd The Moving Finger - Dorothy Ashby The World Is a Ghetto - War Freedom Road - The Pharoahs Fumbling Over Words that Rhyme - Edan Shilela - Hailu Mergia A World of Masks - The Heliocentrics Waves - Harry Sonoda Son a Propulsion - Juan Pablo Torres
Hour 2
I Can See Clearly Now - Junior Walker and the All Stars Woman of the World - Marvin Gaye Distant Lover (live) - Marvin Gaye You've Got a Friend (live) - Donny Hathaway Ooo Baby Baby (live) - Smokey Robinson and the Miracles If I Had a Hammer (live) - The Four Tops Abraham, Martin and John (live) - Smokey Robinson and the Miracles Melting Pot - Orgone No Thing on Me (Cocaine Song) - Curtis Mayfield
Hour 3
Flight Time - Donald Byrd Pieces of a Man - Gil Scott-Heron Bumpin' on Sunset - Wes Montgomery Basra - Pete La Roca The Phantom - Duke Pearson We're Not Gonna Take It - The Who In Paradise - The Cookies
KTUH - 90.1 FM Honolulu, 91.1 FM North Shore, ktuh.org
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El 125 aniversario del hallazgo de la Dama es el elemento vertebrador de la edición 74 de la revista Canelobre
El salón de plenos ha acogido esta mañana el acto de presentación del número 74 de la revista Canelobre: “125 años del nuevo Elche/Elx”, editada por el Instituto Alicantino de Cultura, Juan Gil-Albert, al que ha asistido el alcalde Pablo Ruz y el presidente de la Diputación, Carlos Mazón. La Dama de Elche es la protagonista del último número de la revista, coincidiendo con el 125 aniversario del…
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