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Added on the 12/01/2021 13:00:00 - Copyright : EFE Inglés
Miami (Florida, USA), Jul 28 (EFE).- Artifacts of the Tequesta culture, old posters warning that whoever loots risks being shot, shiny outfits by Walter Mercado and Celia Cruz and objects from Santeria. All this and much more are part of the exhibition "It's a Miami Thing" that celebrates the 125 years of the city.FOOTAGE BY CRISTOBAL HERRERA.
Miami (Florida, USA), Jul 28 (EFE).- Artifacts of the Tequesta culture, old posters warning that whoever loots risks being shot, shiny outfits by Walter Mercado and Celia Cruz and objects from Santeria. All this and much more are part of the exhibition "It's a Miami Thing" that celebrates the 125 years of the city.FOOTAGE BY CRISTOBAL HERRERA.
Paris, Oct 17 (EFE) .- (Camera: Ana Ayesa González) Largo Winch, the adventurous comic book character, helps us understand the great issues of the economy in an exhibition that opened on Saturday in the Cité de l'Economie of Paris (Citéco) to commemorate the character's 30th anniversary.FOOTAGE OF THE EXHIBITION.SOUNDBITES OF DIDIER PSAMONIK, CURATOR.Translation:“Largo Winch is not a book on economics. It is an introduction to adventure, an adventure with an exceptional universe and journey. It has relationships, lovers. It also serves as a pretext to talk about economics, because many years have happened, computers came to homes in the late 80s, then the internet, the emergence of China and the economy of Brazil or Turkey. It can all be found in the Largo Winch story through gripping adventures. The economy is not the centre, it is the adventure, the character who is charismatic and who questions how we live.”
The victims all aged over 60 were treated in hospital in the Indian Amritsar district, where conditions were severely unhygienic.
Dozens of anti-Cuban regime activists chant "maximum penalty for Rocha" outside a federal courtroom in downtown Miami ahead of the sentencing at trial of former US ambassador to Bolivia, Victor Manuel Rocha, who is charged with spying for Cuba. IMAGES
U.S. President Barack Obama attends an outdoor arrival ceremony in heavy rain, as the first sitting U.S. president to visit Laos. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).