- Hillary Clinton and Donald J. Trump bore down on Ohio and the Democrats sent top surrogates to drive enthusiasm among core voting blocs like labor and progressives.
- Not to be outdone, Mr. Trump invited reporters onto his personal plane, where he sought to clarify his views on immigration.
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta bookbinding. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta bookbinding. Mostrar todas las entradas
jueves, 20 de octubre de 2016
ESPECIALISTAS EN RESTAURACIÓN DE LIBROS ANTIGUOS, ENCUADERNACIÓN INDUSTRIAL DE PRIMERA CALIDAD, SUS LIBROS PÓNGALOS EN MANOS EXPERTAS, CONTÁCTENOS HOY MISMO: 829-333-3981
martes, 6 de septiembre de 2016
FROM THE NEW YORK TIMES: Clinton and Trump Begin Final Sprint to Election Day
ABROAD IN AMERICA
No Holiday Pause in Frenzied Campaign
By DECLAN WALSH
Labor Day is barely over, and already the air is thick with insults exchanged by two of the least popular presidential candidates in modern American history.
MORE IN POLITICS
Growing Fleet of U.S. Drones Depends on Private Pilots
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT
The military’s extensive use of drones against terrorist groups has led to a shortage of Air Force pilots, and private contractors are filling in the gaps.
Drug Linked to Ohio Overdoses Can Kill in Minuscule Amounts
By JACK HEALY
Carfentanil, an animal tranquilizer, was believed responsible for many of more than 200 overdoses in the Cincinnati area over the past two weeks.
NASA Aims at an Asteroid to Study the Solar System’s Roots
By KENNETH CHANG
The robotic spacecraft Osiris-Rex, to be launched Thursday, will chase down Bennu and then, hopefully, return with a sample from its surface.
Caught in the Crush
Rashid Siddiqui survived one of the
deadliest accidents ever at the hajj.
deadliest accidents ever at the hajj.
By SARAH ALMUKHTAR and DEREK WATKINS
Smarter Living: Tips for Daily Life
What to Cook This Week
Your Portfolio Needs Stocks, Whatever Your Age
Smarter Living features stories about health, food, tech, travel and more. What do you want to see here? smarterliving@nytimes.com
PHYLLIS SCHLAFLY | 1924-2016
Phyllis Schlafly, Conservative Leader, Dies at 92
By DOUGLAS MARTIN
Angered by the cultural transformations of the 1960s, Mrs. Schlafly led grass-roots campaigns against Communism, abortion and the Equal Rights Amendment.
‘I’ve Become a Racist’: Migrant Wave Rattles Denmark
By DAVID ZUCCHINO
The thousands of Muslim asylum seekers pouring into Denmark have spawned a backlash, and questions over whether the country has a latent racial hostility at its core.
Researchers Confront an Epidemic of Loneliness
By KATIE HAFNER
Researchers have linked loneliness to physical illness and to functional and cognitive decline. Yet an unspoken stigma makes it harder for people to accept.
REDWOOD CITY JOURNAL
In Silicon Valley, No ‘For Sale’ Sign Is No Deterrent
By DAVID STREITFELD
So few homes are on the market that buyers are getting more aggressive and innovative in approaching owners who haven’t officially decided to sell.
California Today
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jueves, 1 de septiembre de 2016
FROM, THE NEW YORK TIMES: Trump, on Two Sides of Border, Mixes Message on Immigration
By PATRICK HEALY
- Donald J. Trump shelved his plan to deport 11 million undocumented residents and said a Trump administration and Mexico would secure the border together.
- But his dual speeches in Mexico City and Phoenix were so jarring that his true vision and intentions were hard to discern.
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NEWS ANALYSIS
Trump Resorts to Political Gymnastics
By ALEXANDER BURNS and MAGGIE HABERMAN
Mr. Trump is trying to avoid discussion of his former campaign pl
SPECIAL REPORT
Russia Often Benefits When WikiLeaks Reveals Secrets
By JO BECKER, STEVEN ERLANGER and ERIC SCHMITT
- American officials say Julian Assange and WikiLeaks probably have no direct ties to Russian intelligence services.
- But WikiLeaks’ disclosures often benefit Russia, our examination found — whether by conviction, convenience or coincidence.
Georgetown to Offer Edge in Admissions to Slave Descendants
By RACHEL L. SWARNS
The university, which in 1838 sold 272 slaves in order to stay afloat, also plans to offer a formal apology, create an institute for the study of slavery and erect a public memorial to the slaves whose labor benefited the institution.
Justices Block North Carolina Voting Law From Being Revived
By ADAM LIPTAK
A deadlocked Supreme Court refused to revive parts of the law that a federal appeals court had struck down as an effort to “target African Americans with almost surgical precision.”
A Silicon Valley Dream Falls Amid Fraud Allegations
By KATIE BENNER
The disintegration of WrkRiot has gripped Silicon Valley, though it is a familiar tale to many who arrive with the dream of creating the next tech juggernaut.
Your Thursday Briefing
By ADEEL HASSAN
Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
Smarter Living: Tips for Daily Life
12 Tips for Living a Longer Life
Why Your Eye Is Twitching (and What to Do About It)
Smarter Living features stories about health, food, tech, travel and more. What do you want to see here? smarterliving@nytimes.com
With Impeachment Over, Brazil’s Next Hurdle Is Economy
By SIMON ROMERO
The new president, Michel Temer, must navigate his own controversies and a quarrelsome Congress to lead Latin America’s largest nation out of a deepening fiscal crisis.
After ‘Brexit’ Vote, Britain’s Push to Leave E.U. Is a Muddle
By STEPHEN CASTLE
Between turf wars and competing interests, the government is having trouble devising a coherent plan for ending four decades of integration with Europe.
One of the Best Athletes You’ve Never Heard Of
By KELLY WHITESIDE
Tatyana McFadden, who is on a Phelpsian medal quest at the Paralympics in Rio, has fought for students with disabilities to participate in sports.
California Today
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Etiquetas:
bookbinders,
bookbinding,
flags factories,
LABELING SERVICES,
Mixes Message on Immigration,
on Two Sides of Border,
SINGS AND PRINT FACTORIES,
Trump
miércoles, 31 de agosto de 2016
FROM: THE NEW YORK TIMES, Trump to Visit Mexico Hours Before Speech on Immigration
By NICK CORASANITI and AZAM AHMED
- Donald J. Trump said he would fly to Mexico on Wednesday to meet with President Enrique Peña Nieto and then fly back to the United States for an immigration speech.
- In his speech, Mr. Trump is expected to clarify his stance on immigration, which has plagued his campaign over the past few weeks.
MORE COVERAGE
Critics Say North Carolina Is Curbing Black Vote. Again.
By MICHAEL WINES
Voting rights advocates charge that local election boards are staging an end run around a federal court ruling by writing rules that discourage African-Americans from voting.
U.S., Angry at Apple Tax Dodge, Doesn’t Want E.U. to Collect
By ALAN RAPPEPORT
Lawmakers have criticized companies that avoid taxes by moving overseas. But they’re rallying to Apple’s defense after an E.U. demand for $14.5 billion in back taxes.
THE INTERPRETER
Does Killing Terrorist Leaders Make Any Difference?
By MAX FISHER
Scholars doubt that it does, saying terrorist organizations have features that make them resilient in the face of a senior officer’s death.
FROM THE MAGAZINE
Making House: Notes on Domesticity
A home is something both looked at and lived in, but that duality can be difficult to reconcile.
By RACHEL CUSK
Your Wednesday Briefing
By ADEEL HASSAN
Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
Santiago Mejia/The NYT
Smarter Living: Tips for Daily Life
Hesitant to Make That Big Life Change? Permission Granted
Which Devices to Take to College
Smarter Living features stories about health, food, tech, travel and more. What do you want to see here? smarterliving@nytimes.com
U.S. Reaches Goal of Admitting 10,000 Syrian Refugees
By HAEYOUN PARK and RUDY OMRI
Some refugees have reached large cities like Chicago and Houston, but most have been sent to more affordable, medium-size cities.
Before Every Game, the National Anthem. But Why?
By SAM BORDEN
Few forms of mass-consumed entertainment have the anthem ingrained into every performance, and a protest by Colin Kaepernick has ignited passions over a tradition with no clear origin or mandate.
ISLE OF MULL JOURNAL
A 600-Year-Old Money Pit in the Scottish Highlands
By KIMIKO DE FREYTAS-TAMURA
The Maclean clan’s castle, with its leaky walls and collapsed ceilings, sits on an island where blustery, rainy weather makes a need for repairs constant.
California Today
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Etiquetas:
and bookbinders,
bookbinding,
BOOKS FACTORIES,
theological and schatologic authors,
Trump to Visit Mexico Hours Before Speech on Immigration
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