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Aztec spirit lives on in Mexico after 500 years

Mask recommendations could return to the Central Coast

Mask recommendations could return to the Central Coast Share Updated: 1:31 AM PDT Jul 17, 2021 Share Updated: 1:31 AM PDT Jul 17, 2021 Hide Transcript Show Transcript FACE MASKS WILL BE REQUIRED INDOORS STARTING THIS WEEKEND. # WITH THE SPIKE IN COD VI CASES AND NEIGHBORING COUNTIES TAKING ACTION.. QUESTION IS WHAT WILL COUNTY HEALTH OFFICERS HERE ON THE CENTRAL COAST ??? DO WITH SOME ANSWERS WE TO GO ACTION NEWS 8 REPORTER FELIX CORT LEZIVE IN HOLLISTER.### SO FAR NO DECISIONAS H BEEN MADE TO RECOMMEND PEOPLE MASK UP WHEN GOING INDOORS HE IREN SAN BENITO COUNTY.. BUT ACCORDINTOG THE HEALTH OFFICER.. THE COUNTY MAY NOT BE FAR BEHIND .. (zoom 4:51 there s still a potential for lotsf o spread, serious illnes s, and sadly even death :57) that health warning coming from san benito county public health officer doctor david ghilarducci.. and it comes as counties begin to see an uptick in covid cases.. (CATHY 2:45 I mean I continue

Webinar explores worldview collision when missionaries go to the Amazon

Kukama boys watch boats on the Amazon s Maranon River near Dos de Mayo in Peru s Loreto region. (CNS/Barbara Fraser) Several years ago, Rodrigo Pedroso began noticing an unusual pattern in the Indigenous villages he visited in the Amazon rainforest: Next to small, often abandoned Catholic chapels were newer, often larger evangelical churches. The observation led Pedroso, a Brazilian journalist, to examine what might be leading people in Indigenous communities to essentially swap Christian faiths. It became the focus of a project he reported in the fall of 2019 for the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting s Rainforest Journalism Fund, titled River Missionaries: The Catholic Counteroffensive in the Amazon.

No Chavismo here : Peru socialist candidate Castillo seeks to calm jittery markets

3 Min Read LIMA (Reuters) - Peruvian socialist presidential front-runner Pedro Castillo assured the Andean nation on Thursday he would not nationalize companies and would honor the rule of law, a move aimed at calming jittery markets after a second opinion poll showed his lead growing against right-wing rival Keiko Fujimori. Slideshow ( 5 images ) Castillo remains in pole position to win the presidency in a second round ballot set for June, according to a Datum International poll that showed him garnering 41% against 26% for former lawmaker and three-time presidential candidate Fujimori. Peru’s sprawling mining industry, the world’s No.2 copper producer, has expressed some alarm about Castillo, who has gained increasing support in Peru’s rural hinterlands and has proposed to redraft the country’s constitution.

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