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Dans cet extrait, Rose nous parle de Sucre, leurs 3 premiers jours dans le Sud Lipez en Bolivie, à la découverte de Laguna Verda, Laguna Negra et Laguna Colorado.Pour écouter l'épisode en entierLa Bolivie en famille, de Copacabana au salar d'Uyuni------------
En, Suisse a lieu aujourd'hui une vente aux enchères un peu spéciale. Un squelette de T-Rex est mis en vente à la maison Koller à Genève, estimé entre six et huit millions d'euros. L'occasion de rappeler les meilleures découvertes archéologiques et surtout, les plus insolites. Avis aux amateurs de fromage corsé, celui-ci peut concurrencer le casu marzu, ce fromage aux vers italien. Un fromage vieux de 3.200 ans a été découvert en 2018 dans la nécropole de Saqqara, près du Caire ... Selon les chercheurs, ce serait la première fois que du fromage d'Egypte ancienne est découvert, et ce pourrait être le fromage le plus vieux sur Terre. Autre découverte planante, un sac au contenu insolite a été découvert en 2019 en Bolivie dans la région de l'Altiplano du Lipez, à 4.000 mètres d'altitude. Des chercheurs ont mis la main sur un sac en cuir pas tout jeune qui en dit beaucoup sur les pratiques ancestrales des Boliviens ...
In Bolivia, in a mine that eats people, Cerro Rico, conditions are so unsafe, there is no room for God inside. Instead, mine workers worship an entity known as "El Tio" and leave him offerings to stay safe. San Antonio de Lipez is a former mining town, left abandoned and only spirits are said to remain. We, Cristina & MJ, share these tales, along with a haunted mine in New Jersey and we start the episode with a listener story. If you have spooky stories you want us to share on the podcast, please email Espookytales@gmail.com. For more spooky stories, watch us on Tiktok https://www.tiktok.com/@espookytales (https://www.tiktok.com/@espookytales) For pictures on the places we discuss each episode, check out our Instagram page: https://www.instagram.com/espookytales/ (https://www.instagram.com/espookytales/) Tweet us https://twitter.com/EspookyTales (https://twitter.com/EspookyTales) Like us on Facebook and join our facebook group https://www.facebook.com/EspookyTalesPodcast/ (https://www.facebook.com/EspookyTalesPodcast/) https://www.espookytales.com/support/ (Support Espooky Tales) on Patreon and receive bonus episodes, shoutouts, stickers and more! https://www.patreon.com/Espookytales (https://www.patreon.com/Espookytales) Music Credit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=REk9Ia6eYXk (Silent Night (Dark Piano Version)-Myuu) I, Crime Scene (Piano Version)-Ghost Stories Incorporated Visit http://www.marcvdmeulen.com/royalty-free-horror-music (http://www.marcvdmeulen.com/royalty-free-horror-music) for royalty free horror music Link for https://www.espookytales.com/blog/ (sources)
Ep:105 Richard Stevenson Lipez, 83, of Becket, died peacefully in his sleep on March 16, 2022, after a long exceptional life, and then an all-too-quick cancer. He would have liked to have lived longer, but considered himself lucky, nonetheless. - The opening above ccomes from an obituary written by Richard's son Zach for The Berkshire Eagle. A link to the full obituary is below.Queer Writers of Crimes is rated by Buzzfeed as one of the 20 Best Queer Podcasts to Tune in to While Going About Your Daily Queer Life.Dick" Lipez known most as Richard Stevenson, the author of the Donald Strachey Mysteries Series which began in 1981. his last novel in the series will publish by ReQueered Tales in fall 2022.Here is the link to Richard Stevenson's obituary: https://legcy.co/34UEdVXDisclosure: To cover the cost of producing Queer Writers of Crime, some of the links below are affiliate links. This means that, at zero cost to you, Brad will earn an affiliate commission if you click through the link and finalize a purchase.Knock of the Hat: A Clifford Waterman Gay Philly Mystery: available on AmazonLink to the novel: https://amzn.to/3qf09THIS last Donald Strachey novel will publish in the fall 2022. In addition, he mentions in this episode he is looking for a publisher for a private investigator series located in Philadelphia in in the 1940s. Amble Press, where Michael Nava is manager, welcomed Dick's book Knock Off The Hat publishes April 26 2022.I mentioned Chasing Rembrandt is available for pre-order. That was my mistake. However ReQueered Tales is republishing all the Strachey novels with better formatting and beautiful new covers. Check requeeredtales.com periodically to see when it publishes, or make life easier by signing up for their newsletter. Here is their link: requeeredtales.comHelp Support This Podcast buymeacoffee.com/queerwriters Queer Writers of Crime website: queerwritersofcrime.comLeave a Review https://lovethepodcast.com/queerwritersofcrimeBrad's Website: bradshreve.comSupport Requeered Tales re-publishing award-winning, post-Stonewall gay and lesbian fiction — with a focus on mystery, literary and horror/sci-fi genres.requeeredtales.com
Zac Lipez reads a piece on his chimera of a world in which grunge rock had never existed. Zac proposes a culture “where rock is not pronounced ‘rawk’ and where everybody without interruption or irony, does The Hump.” Recorded July 18, 2017 at Hi-Fi Bar in New York City. Words & Guitars is hosted by […]
Recorded in March 2017 - Claudia Carvajal Lopez ’18 is a third-year law student at NYU School of Law. She is an AnBryce scholar and is on the Law Review, and she previously served as executive co-chair of the Latino Law Students Association (LaLSA) during the 2016-17 academic year. Carvajal Lopez was born in Sinaloa, Mexico, and moved to Oakland, California, when she was five years old. She graduated from the University of California at Berkeley with a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science in May 2012. After graduating from college, Carvajal Lopez spent a few years working as a paralegal at an immigration law firm. She was an SEO scholar the summer before she started law school and spent the summer after her first year of law school at Davis Polk & Wardwell in New York. She worked this past summer at Morrison & Foerster in San Francisco. Alina Das ’05 is a Professor of Clinical Law at NYU School of Law, where she co-teaches and co-directs the Immigrant Rights Clinic. She and her clinic students represent immigrants and community organizations in litigation and advocacy to advance immigrant rights locally and across the country. In addition to her teaching, Das engages in scholarship on deportation and detention issues, particularly at the intersection of immigration and criminal law. Das also serves as faculty director of the NYU Latinx Rights Scholars Program. Prior to joining the Law School, Das was a Soros Justice Fellow and staff attorney with the Immigrant Defense Project, and clerked for Judge Kermit V. Lipez of the US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. Das graduated magna cum laude with an AB in government from Harvard University, and graduated cum laude from NYU Law as a Root-Tilden-Kern Scholar with a joint MPA from NYU’s Wagner School of Public Service. Das is a recipient of the LexisNexis Matthew Bender Daniel Levy Memorial Award for Outstanding Achievement in Immigration Law, the NYU Law Podell Distinguished Teaching Award, the NYU Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Faculty Award, and the NYU Center for Multicultural Education & Programs Nia Faculty Award.
Juan Carlos Romero Venturaqa Oploca-Tupiza, Boliviamanta. Cochabambaman chayaspa Gladys Camachowan Jaramanta parlarin, kay Jaraqa unay pacha jaqay Oruro chanta Potosí chirupi ruwakuq ñin. Juan Carlosqa sumaqta kay Jara ruwaymanta riqsin. Kay Podcaspi imaynatachus unay pacha puquykunata jaywanakuq kasqanku chaymanta willariwanchik. Pay ñiwanchik, Oruropiwan Potosipiwanqa clima ñisqa mana kikinchu kasqanta, chayraykutaq runaqa tukuy laya puquykunata puquchin. Lipezwan Uyuniwanqa astawan chiri chantataq runaqa papata kinuwata ima tarpun. Chantapis kay chirupiqa alpaka, llama, vicuña ima kawsanku. Tupizari astawan q’uñi, runaqa sarata tarpun, chantapis uwijata, carwata ima uywanku. Chiri pachapiqa Lipezmanta chanta Uyunimanta runaqa Tupiza chiruman achkha llama qhatirisqa kachaykukuq kasqanku. Unay ajinallata mikhunata, kachita, millmata apaykachaq kasqanku, ñanpitaq puraq puraq jaywanarikuq kasqanku. Jarawan kachaykukuqkunaqa karuta riq kasqanku, ch’isiyaytataq maypipis puñukullaq kasqanku. Chanta kay Jara ruwayqa kunan pachapi pisimanta pisi chinkapuchkan. Juan Carlos wawa kachkaptinqa sapa kuti Jara ruwayta rikuq ñin, kunanta manaña anchatachu. // Juan Calos Romero Ventura, es de Oploca-Tupiza, Bolivia. A su llegada a la ciudad de Cochabamba, conversa con Gladys Camacho acerca de la tradicional “Jara” que antiguamente se realizaba en Oruro y Potosí. Juan Carlos conoce detalladamente el proceso de la Jara. En este Podcast nos detalla cómo la gente intercambiaba sus productos antiguamente. El cuenta que en Oruro y Potosí debido a la diversidad climática la gente cultiva diferentes tipos de hortalizas y granos. En Lipez y Uyuni el clima es frio por ende la gente siembra papa y quinua. Los animales que viven en esta región son la alpaca, la llama y la vicuña. En cambio en Tupiza el clima es más cálido. La gente cultiva maíz. Se dedica al pastoreo de ovejas y cabras. Durante el invierno la gente de Lipez y Uyuni viajaba hacia Tupiza con una caravana de llamas. Era una costumbre ancestral de transportar alimentos, sal, lana, y hacer un intercambio en las comunidades que atravesaban durante su viaje. Los viajeros con caravanas emprendían viajes largos, cada noche acampan en diferentes regiones y es ahí donde intercambiaban sus productos. Sin embargo esta tradición esta desapareciendo poco a poco, cuando Juan Carlos era niño se realizaban con frecuencia pero ahora ya no. // In this podcast, Juan Carlos Romero Ventura, from the Oploca community in Tupiza, Bolivia, speaks about the traditional “Jara” that used to take place between Oruro and Potosi. In this interview conducted in Cochabamba by Gladys Camacho, Juan Carlos explains how travellers in caravans undertook long journeys, camping along the way in different regions where they exchanged their products. He says that because of the diverse climate in Oruro and Potosi people grow different kinds of vegetables and grains. In Lipez and Uyuni where the wheather is very cold people plant potatoes and quinoa. The animals that live in these regions are the alpaca, llama, and vicuna. But in Tupiza where the weather is warmer, people plant maize, and they breed sheep and goats. During the winter, people form Lipez and Uyuni travelled to Tupiza with a caravan of llamas. This was an ancient tradition to transport food, salt, wool. But this tradition is disappearing little by little since Juan Carlos was a child and is performed less often now. Gladys Camacho Rios is an MA student at CLACS-NYU. She recorded this podcast in Bolivia in 2015 as member of the Quechua Outreach Committee. For more visit: clacsnyublog.com/category/rimasun
Oh boy. In this episode we hang out with the wonderful and kind Zachary Lipez, who has had words all over the internet in places like Hazlitt, Noisey, the revamped MySpace, The Talkhouse, and many others. Lipez is becoming one of the most well-enjoyed voices out there in the ones and zeros of music writing, and his background as former vocalist in the sadly defunct Freshkills informs that writing. We talk with Zack about how he ended up writing for Noisey, the art of criticism, Twitter activism, political correctness, Williamsburg then and now, the derogatory and unnecessary use of the word "hipster," his new musical project Publicist UK, and so much more. Zack is one of the brightest and best we know. Check him out. We know you'll dig him.
Freshkills frontman and VICE scribe Zach Lipez paints a grimy portrait of pre-Strokesian New York and all of the beer-soaked and drug-fueled insanity that comes with being an incredibly charming journeyman rock dude. Plus his take on partying too hard before shows, playing benefit shows for meth heads, and vomiting into a bucket onstage. There's plenty of pigfuck on this week's WORST GIG EVER.