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Magno Carreto e mudanças | Carreto em Santo Andre
Aqui na Magno transportes você encontra o melhor serviço de carreto e mudança em Santo André. Se precisa de um carreto pra fazer mudança aqui é o lugar ideal para você. Nosso trabalho é feito com muito cuidado para atender da melhor forma. Aqui na Magno Carreto e mudanças você encontra os melhores profissionais de Santo André e região. Atendemos a região do ABC. Entre em contato e faça seu orçamento sem compromisso. Magno Carreto e mudanças o seu Carreto em Santo Andre. R. Melo Palheta, 125 - Jardim Aclimacao, Santo André - SP, 09170-730 (11) 97827-7650 #carretoemsantoandre #carreto #mudança #carretoemudança #magnocarreto
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Sobre - Carreto São Paulo SP
A Carreto.BR faz carreto, frete e mudança residencial com qualidade e preço baixo desde 2001. Somos uma empresa situada na cidade de São Paulo SP. Fazemos transporte de cargas de no máximo 20 toneladas para toda a região de São Paulo, Litoral e Interior de SP. Disponibilizamos utilitários como Kombis, furgões, Fiorino, Master, HR Hyundai e caminhões 3/4. Oferecemos mudanças de longa distância com agendamento de 30 dias.
Acesse nosso site https://carreto.br.com/
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E-mail Marketing para Vender Frete e Transporte. Maior visibilidade para sua Transportadora Aprenda Sobre Chat Gpt Bing Bard AI Blog
Por fim, certifique-se de que o seu artigo seja original e forneça valor para seus leitores. Evite copiar e colar conteúdo de outras fontes, pois isso pode prejudicar sua classificação nos motores de busca e afetar a credibilidade do seu website. Em vez disso, faça pesquisas e crie um conteúdo único e significativo que ajude seus leitores a entender melhor o tema do seu artigo. Lembre-se que a…
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#ANTT DIGITAL#APRENDA#Bard#Bing#Blog#carreto#carretos e mudanças#Chat#clientes para transportadora?#Criação de chatbots para vendas#Desenvolvimento de estratégias de relações públicas#Email#email marketing#fiorino#Frete#fretebras#FRETEBRAS CARG#FRETES E MUDANÇAS#gerente de transporte#gpt#LOGISTICA#logística de transporte#Maior#Marketing#Marketing para automóveis e transporte#motorista carreteiro#Para#serviço de frete#Serviços de publicidade em blogs.#Sobre
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Memoria gráfica de la presentación del libro póstumo de Héctor Carreto en la FLUACM
#Dana Gelinas#Feria del Libro de la UACM#FLUACM#Francisco Trejo#Héctor Carreto#Iliana Rodríguez#Iliana Rodríguez Zuleta#Juan Joaquín Péreztejada#libros#poesía#Rosina Conde
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Los alumnos del Curso de Pastelería preparan más de 80 kilos de roscón para degustar esta tarde
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#centro de Formación El Soto de Guadarrama#Curso de Operaciones Básicas de Pastelería#Curso de Pastelería#Curso de Pastelería de Guadarrama#Mariano Carreto Manzanero#Peña “La Tradición”#roscón de Reyes
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incrível como ainda me sinto inseguro com tanta coisa ainda...
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Tentando ser forte
Me recuso deixar as minhas lágrimas caírem por sua causa. elas estão fáceis de descer é só piscar e a destruição começa. quero chorar, copiosamente, desesperadamente, bater os pés nos chão, gritar, espernear até esse amor sair de dentro de mim, mas também quero sair de casa, correr o mais rápido possível do jeito que me encontro agora, descabelada, cheia de olheiras, cabeça doendo e os olhos cheios de lágrimas. quero correr sem rumo ou talvez até a sua casa, bater no seu portão e fazer você enxergar o que realmente sou. sou feitas de danos, caos e sofrimento. sou feita de vazio, tormentas e escuridão, mas também sou feita de você e de nós. sou feita da nossa história que deu certo até certo ponto e de todas as promessas que fizemos quando estávamos juntos. sou feita do seu sorriso, dos seus olhos, traços, boca e voz. sou feita dos seus medos, traumas e arrependimentos, mas não sei lidar com tudo isso que carreto dentro de mim. saber que não estamos mais nada vida um do outro me apavora, acaba comigo e parece que me afundo a cada vez que vejo o seu rosto estampando em uma foto espontânea. A minha impulsividade cobra o preço por ir atrás de você e dizer palavras que jamais conseguirei dizer para outra pessoa e se um dia elas saírem da minha boca é tudo mentira. depois de você a minha vida virou uma mentira. queria que você olhasse para os meus olhos que um dia tanto amou, eles dizem tantas coisas que não consigo falar, eles são a minha alma que um dia achei que você tinha visto, mas não enxergou, simplesmente fechou os olhos e partiu. me sinto sufocada com tudo o que há de nós dentro do meu coração, quero arranca-lo do peito e entregar para qualquer pessoa porque não consigo mais lidar com tanta dor e saudade de nós.
Por mais que o sentimento seja doloroso parece que é a única coisa que me deixa preenchida e afasta o vazio, caso um dia isso desapareça tenho certeza que entrarei em desespero porque perderei tudo sobre você e o que restou de nós, desaparecei junto com cada "eu te amo" que disse silenciosamente sem você saber. infelizmente não consegui segurar as minhas lágrimas até aqui, minhas vistas estão embaçadas ao escrever sobre nós, mas saiba que um dia você entenderá o amor que sinto por você, um amor que move oceano e puro mesmo estando a quilômetros de distância de mim, você irá entender e sempre entenderá, mas não será o suficiente pra você voltar e ficar.
Elle Alber
#usem a tag espalhepoesias em suas autorias 🌈#espalhepoesias#lardepoetas#escritos#versoefrente#pequenosautores#pequenos textos#pequenosescritores#pequenospoetas#autorias#pequenosversos#lardospoetas#pequenasescritoras
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Antonio Rodríguez Beltrán, attributed (Spanish, 1636-1691) María Luisa de Toledo e indígena, 1670 Museo Nacional del Prado
Doña María Luisa de Toledo y Carreto, Marquesa de Melgar de Fernamental, was the only daughter of Don Antonio Sebastián de Toledo Molina y Salazar, II Marquis de la Mancera and Viceroy of New Spain -between 1664 and 1673-, and of his first woman, D. Leonor de Carreto. And, therefore, she was also the granddaughter of another viceroy, in this case of Peru, D. Pedro de Toledo y Leiva, who held that position between 1639 and 1648. And also, she was the sister-in-law of a third viceroy, D. Gaspar de la Cerda y Sandoval, Count of Galve, her husband's brother, who held office in New Spain between 1688 and 1696. She was a great-great-granddaughter of the first Duke of Alba de Tormes, one of the leading noble houses in Spain, and her husband was the son of the Dukes of Pastrana and the Infantado, another of the main noble families. So, in her person, María Luisa combined an entire noble inheritance linked to some of the great Spanish aristocratic families and to the main positions in the American viceroyalties. She lived part of her childhood and adolescence in the city of Mexico, where, around 1670, she must have made this portrait of her. She returned to Spain, together with her father, in 1674.
She married Joseph de Silva, linking in this way with one of the most powerful houses in the Peninsula, which held the dukedoms of Pastrana, Infantado and Lerma among many other titles, although all of them were part of the inheritance of the eldest son, for which reason None of the consorts had, at the time of the marriage, a noble title. The title enjoyed by María Luisa and her husband, Marquises of Melgar de Fernamental, was granted as a marriage dowry by the Queen herself, Mariana of Austria, in the name of King Carlos II.
The dwarf woman who accompanies her would come from the Chichimeca area, due to the tattoos that adorn her. She has been represented wearing a long and straight huipil, which is superimposed over a green skirt or dress whose lower part protrudes from the previous one. The huipil has been arranged "a la española", that is to say, it seems to be cinched at the waist and has wide added sleeves and a bottom edge with an ova-shaped lace band. The presence of this small indigenous woman was highlighting the uniqueness and exoticism, and therefore the power and prestige of her family. The color of the complexion, the tattoo and even the type of clothing that the little woman wears reveal her connection with American places and the access that the protagonist of the canvas exhibited in relation to some networks of circulation of transoceanic goods and products. New Spain (modern day Mexico) came to be called Mexico in 1821, after the Mexican War of Independence. The viceroyalty was dissolved and the Mexican Empire was established.
#european history#european art#spanish art#spanish history#new spain#spain#spanish#female portrait#world history#the americas#america#americas#indigenous#art#historical art#mexico#west indies#history of mexico#oil painting#1600s#royal#royaly#noble#nobility#María Luisa de Toledo e indígena#María Luisa de Toledo#indigena#indigenos#north america
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Hey. If you ever feel insane, I guess you could say.
Podes dizer que estás "Pa-Zada dos carretos" (passada dos carretos)
TRANSLATE🙏
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❤🧡💛💚💙🤍💎💖 𝘽𝙚𝙛𝙤𝙧𝙚 𝙙𝙞𝙨𝙘𝙪𝙨𝙨𝙞𝙣𝙜 𝙩𝙝𝙚 𝙉𝙚𝙬 𝘾𝙤𝙡𝙡𝙚𝙘𝙩𝙞𝙤𝙣, 𝙖 𝙗𝙧𝙞𝙚𝙛 𝙨𝙪𝙢𝙢𝙖𝙧𝙮 𝙤𝙛 𝙩𝙝𝙚 𝙢𝙤𝙨𝙩 𝙨𝙞𝙜𝙣𝙞𝙛𝙞𝙘𝙖𝙣𝙩 𝙥𝙧𝙞𝙣𝙩𝙨 𝙩𝙝𝙖𝙩 𝙘𝙝𝙖𝙧𝙖𝙘𝙩𝙚𝙧𝙞𝙯𝙚𝙙 𝙩𝙝𝙚 𝙨𝙪𝙢𝙢𝙚𝙧 𝙖𝙣𝙙 𝙖𝙪𝙩𝙪𝙢𝙣.
The beauty of Andrezza Francelino gave us a colorful, lively, but also chic and sensual #DGCarretto look idea. In particular she wore multicolored short draped dress in Carretto print stretch tulle, chic jeweled sandals, elegant white blazer and to complete the look fashion yellow #DGLogoBag. A colorful mix, a concentration of energy and pure charm with a young, sophisticated and sensual attitude.
From Andrezza Francelino (@drefranlife Instagram)
...
Vestido Carreto DG, Sandália Carreto DG Swarovski, Lenço Carreto, Blazer DG, Bolsa DG #dolcegabbana #patio #dg #dolcegabbana
#dgcarretto#dglogobag#dgfw23#dgwomen#dgdress#dgshoes#dgsandals#dgblazer#dgbag#lamodaèbellezza#lamoreèbellezza#dgstyle#dgfamily#dolcegabbanafamily#dolcegabbana#dolcegabbanacommunity#domenicodolce#stefanogabbana
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tens words of advice e strength pra alguém à procura de emprego na sua área e a enviar currículo pra tudo quanto é sítio mas o raio das empresas 90% nem se dignam a dizer "decidimos não avançar desta vez, boa sorte" apenas radio silence. tou a tornar-me no joker. estou me a passar dos carretos
É enviar o máximo que conseguires para tudo o que é lugar, mesmo, se não acima de tudo, cargos aos quais não tens competências manda tudo que alguém vai dizer que sim e mais vale tentar aqueles que te fazem pensar é pá eu não tenho experiência para isto que é um gajo que tem menos experiência que tu que vai conseguir portanto tenta
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Te busqué en los textos de Neruda, García Márquez y Carreto, en la lógica de Descartes y en la búsqueda de la Libertad de Sartre. Te fijaste como un tatuaje en mis categorias mentales de Kant, en los procesos de Kafka, en el sarcasmo de Nietzche, en Dostoievski porque no sabía cuál era mi crimen para tanto castigo. Te busqué en Herrera Luque, en Rómulo Gallegos y en Borges, y casi me pierdo en el Aleph buscando tu mirada, y cuando pensé que nuestra historia no podía ser contada, te encontré en mi móvil, sentado en un parque donde voló la imaginación de Agatha Christie, mientras yo me perdía en los escritos de mi Orgullo y tú Prejuicio, tal como lo describió Jane Austen. Sólo entonces entendí nuestra historia, para buscarte sin miedos hasta el último rincón de tumblr, y allí encontrar tu sonrisa nuevamente en tu mirada. Ese día entendí que Cupido no sabe de números.
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Mercadona abre dia 24 em Rio de Mouro e colabora com Cruz Vermelha de Sintra
Ana Carreto, da Mercadona, e Marco Almeida, Presidente da Delegação de Sintra da Cruz Vermelha Portuguesa na assinatura do acordo de colaboração A Mercadona, empresa de supermercados, abrirá um novo supermercado na freguesia de Rio de Mouro, em Sintra, no dia 24 de outubro, às 9h. No âmbito desta abertura, a empresa assinou um protocolo de colaboração com a Delegação de Sintra da Cruz Vermelha…
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Actividades en la FLUACM
#El oleaje del Ponto#FLUACM#Grissel Gómez Estrada#Héctor Carreto#Iliana Rodríguez#Iliana Rodríguez Zuleta#libros#Lotería mexicana#poesía Feria del Libro UACM#Rosario Covarrubias
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Juana Barraza
Other Names:
Mataviejitas ( Little Old Lady Killer) and La Dama del Silencio (The Lady of Silence)
Childhood and Adolescence
Juana Barraza was born and raised in Mexico City, Mexico on December 27, 1957. Barraza's mother, Justa Samperio, was a stay at home mom but was an alcoholic. Juana grew up in poverty, North of Mexico City, and had never learned to read or write much. The main source of trauma in Juana’s life, it seems, was her mother, Barraza didn’t really know her biological father. When she was about thirteen her mother reportedly exchanged her for three beers to a man, Jose Lugo. He would repeatedly raped her in his care, and by whom she became pregnant with a son. Lugo tied her to his bed, and would continually rape her over and over, even when she had an abortion, or when she gave birth to a son. After five years, her uncles finally found her and rescued her. It turned out, Juana’s mother had been lying to the rest of the family this entire time, saying that Juana had just left with her rapist of her own free will.
Adult Life
Barraza finally left for Mexico City after her mother died of cirrhosis. She underwent several failed marriages, from which she had four children. Her firstborn died in a gang related shooting when he was 24 years old. During the 1980s and 1990s, Barraza held a variety of jobs. She also toured central Mexico as a masked wrestler named La Dama del Silencio ("The Lady of Silence"), which was an alias she chose in reference to her own shy, silent personality. After the birth of her fourth child in 1995, she was short of cash, she began to steal items from shops and later evolved to burglarizing homes. In 1996, she came up with a plan with a friend, Araceli Tapia Martínez, to steal from the elderly. The two of them dressed up in white clothes and pretended to be nurses. They did this in order to gain access to the homes of elderly people living alone. The two continued robbing them once they were inside, however, Tapia was also in a relationship with a corrupt Federal Police officer, Moisés Flores Domínguez, and they concocted a parallel plan to extort Barraza. Flores met Barraza after a burglary that she had committed alone and he demanded 12,000 pesos in return for not arresting her. In 2000, Barraza retired from wrestling, where she earned 300 to 500 pesos per fight, and her situation became desperate. This is when her crimes began to become more violent and rash.
Crimes
From the years 2002 to 2006, Juana Barraza continued her burglaries but she began stabbing, strangling, and murdering those whose houses she was breaking into. It is suspected that she had been responsible for as many as 40 deaths. All of Barraza's victims were women aged 60 or over, most of whom lived alone. She would bludgeon or strangle her victims, and afterward would rob them. It is said that Barraza would pose as a social worker or nurse offering medical services to earn the victims' trust and gain access to their homes without forced entry.
Alleged Victims and Timeline
November 25, 2002
Maria de la Luz Gonzalez Anaya, 64, was beaten and manually strangled.
March 2, 2003
Guillermina Leon Oropeza, 84, strangled.
July 25, 2003
Maria Guadalaupe Aguilar Cortina, 86, strangled.
October 9, 2003
María Guadalupe de la Vega Morales, 87, her arms were fractured, she was tied up, and fatally strangled.
October 24. 2003
María del Carmen Muñoz Cote de Galván, 78, strangled with a stethoscope.
November 4, 2003
Lucrecia Elsa Calvo Marroquín, 85, strangled with a cord.
November 19, 2003
Natalia Torres Castro, 85, strangled with a ligature.
November 28, 2003
Alicia Cota Ducoin, 76, strangled with a ligature.
February 20, 2004
Alicia González Castillo, 75, beaten and strangled.
February 25, 2004
Andrea Tecante Carreto, 74, beaten and strangled.
March 20, 2004
Carmen Cardona Rodea, 76, beaten and strangled with a cord.
March 26, 2004
Socorro Enedina Martínez Pajares, 82, beaten and strangled with a cord.
May 24, 2004
Guadalupe González Sánchez, 74, beaten, slammed, and strangled with two cords.
June 25, 2004
Esthela Cantoral Trejo, 85, strangled with a stethoscope.
July 1, 2004
Delfina González Castillo, 92, beaten and strangled.
July 3, 2004
María Virginia Xelhuatzi Tizapán, 84, strangled.
July 19, 2004
María de los Ángeles Cortés Reynoso, 84, beaten and strangled with a belt.
August 31, 2004
Margarita Martell Vázquez, 72, strangled with a cord.
September 29, 2004
Simona Bedolla Ayala, 79, beaten, smothered with a pillow, and fatally strangled.
October 24, 2004
María Dolores Martínez Benavides, 70, beaten and strangled with a stethoscope until her neck snapped.
November 9, 2004
Margarita Arredondo Rodríguez, 83, beaten and strangled.
November 17, 2004
María Imelda Estrada Pérez, 76, beaten and strangled.
January 11, 2005
Julia Vera Duplan, 60, strangled with a pantyhose.
February 10, 2005
María Elena Mendoza Vallares, 59, killed by unknown causes.
April 13, 2005
María Elisa Pérez Moreno, 76, strangled with a pantyhose, then fatally beaten when she put up a fight.
April 14 , 2005
Arturo Patiño Barranco, 74, strangled.
April 19, 2005
Carolina Robledo, 79, stabbed.
April 20, 2005
Ana María Velázquez Díaz, 62, strangled with a wire.
June 17, 2005
Celia Villaliz Morales, 78, beaten and strangled with a wire.
June 29, 2005
María Guadalupe Núñez Almanza, 78. strangled with a stethoscope.
July 5, 2005
Julia Vargas, 64, killed by unknown causes.
Mario Cruz Flores, 84, killed by unknown causes.
July 20, 2005
Emma Armenta Aguayo, 80, beaten and strangled with a bathrobe belt.
August 9, 2005
Emma Reyes Peña, 72, beaten and strangled with a ligature.
August 11, 2005
Carmen Sánchez Serrano, 76, bludgeoned.
August 15, 2005
Dolores Concepción Silva Calva, 91, strangled with a bandanna and set on fire post-mortem.
September 28, 2005
María del Carmen Camila González Miguel, 82, beaten and strangled.
Guadalupe Oliver Contreras, 85, beaten and strangled with a pantyhose.
October 18, 2005
María de los Ángeles Repper Hernández, 92, beaten and strangled with a scarf.
January 25, 2006
Ana María de los Reyes Alfaro, 84, strangled with a stethoscope.
Arrest and Capture
Relying on eyewitnesses and the nature of the crimes, Mexican police believed their suspect was a cross-dressing man or transgender male with broad shoulders, large hands, and a muscular build. Under intense pressure from the media and concerned residents, authorities incorrectly arrested several innocent people, including a nurse, a slew of transgender men, and prostitutes who they believed resembled the suspect. By late 2005, the number of deaths linked to the serial strangler reached 47. Mexican officials had no leads or potential suspects. The Governor of Mexico City, Alexandro Encinas, reached out to the National Autonomous University of Mexico neuropsychologist Dr. Feggy Ostrosky to study the murders. It wasn’t until January 25, 2006, when there was a break in the case when Barraza was seen by a tenant as she left the murder scene of landlady Ana María de los Reyes Alfaro. She ended up being arrested by a passing police patrol. Though Barraza was illiterate, a search of her home found a trophy room with newspaper clippings of the murders. The police also found objects taken from the victims and an altar to Jesús Malverde and Santa Muerte. These were two folk saints commonly venerated by Mexican criminals.
Trial and Conviction
In 2008, Barraza was tried for 30 murders and was found guilty of 16 of them. She admitted to one murder, that of Alfaro, and told the police her motive was lingering resentment regarding her own mother's treatment of her. Aside from the murders she was also involved in 12 robberies. The convictions were mostly for murders she could be tied to through fingerprint evidence. Barraza was sentenced to 759 years in prison, but she will be paroled regardless in 2058, at the age of 100.
Where is Barraza Now?
Barraza received multiple long sentences, all of which adds up to 759 years if served consecutively, but if they are served simultaneously, it’s possible she wouldn’t spend more than 60 years in prison. This is the highest sentence ever given to a criminal in Mexico. She was sentenced at 51 years old, so it’s unlikely she’d be alive after 60 years behind bars. In 2015, Barraza married fellow inmate Miguel Ángel, a 74-year-old man who was serving a sentence for murder in the men's sector of the Santa Martha de Acatitla prison. The marriage lasted only a year after they met just three times. Barraza now sells tacos in the prison courtyard to support her family and works as a gym instructor. One of her main activities at the prison is walking older women around.
Interviews and Additional Resources
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https://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/26/world/americas/woman-held-in-mexico-city-serial-killings.html
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