Wine Cellar

All this evolution talk had me thinking about a few things here. Atheists want us to produce God before they believe, HOWEVER, they beat us over the head with evolution but can Viticulture was introduced to this fertile region of Aquitaine by the Romans, and intensified in the Middle Ages. The Saint-Emilion area benefited from its location on the pilgrimage route to Santiago de Compostela and many churches, monasteries and hospices were built there from the 11th century onwards. It was granted the special status of a 'jurisdiction' during the period of English rule in the 12th century. It is an exceptional landscape devoted entirely to wine-growing, with many fine historic monuments in its towns and villages. El cultivo de la vi With Bodega and La Higuera The Tirajanas Mayor's stand Gran Canaria / / With Bodega and La Higuera The Mayor Tirajanas at Gran Canaria Tulum .- impressive mobilization of police, firefighters, paramedics and Civil Protection elements, then the report of a fire apparently caused by a short circuit in the hold workshop used by the Food and Beverage federal school "Itzamna" on this city ​​of Tulum. Through the emergency number 066, is made known to the Municipal Police, a fire inside of that school, located on East 4th Street between Osiris and Beta streets, so they moved to this place several units of emergency bodies, thinking they could be students at that time at school. Fortunately at that time there were no students in school facilities "Itzamna" where a gang of Fire direction, with the support of a car bomb and several reinforcements shall endeavor to extinguish the fire apparently caused by a short circuit , and wherein at least two tanks of gas were LP. In this situation he was ordained a partial closure of streets around the school to avoid civilian approach could be injured if an explosion arise, while education authorities were notified of the damage to, which so far not have been quantified. The wife, stepchildren, other relatives, friends and neighbors of the winemaker Miguel Angel Torres Dominican killed Tuesday of last week in Newark, during the vigil outside the winery JNC, where he was killed by a mugger. The family of Miguel Angel Torres Dominican winemaker (Chege), murdered on Tuesday last week by two African-Americans against the police in Newark (New Jersey), maintains a hunt to capture them, last Saturday held a vigil outside the business where was killed to demand justice. Torres 37 years old, was hit by several bullets in the 9mm pistol used by one of the two robbers, whose images have been broadcast video security camera that works in the warehouse. It was only six months that Torres, a native of San Jose de las Matas (municipality of Santiago de los Caballeros), had bought the establishment and was devoted entirely to his work for 16 hours a day, with whom she had her family in New Jersey and in the Dominican Republic. While preparing his funeral will be held in Newark before the body is repatriated to his native country, his wife Theodora, Clarissa the stepchildren and Sandy Azcona 17 and 15 years respectively and other relatives gathered outside the wine cellar designs displaying posters with a photograph of Torres and candles, candles and flowers to pay tribute to the Dominican businessman. The front of the winery still has dozens of drilling machine gun fire AK-47 Russian-made 9mm pistols and which were used by criminals in a gang confrontation in the area. After that shooting, Torres told his wife and children who planned to sell the business for fear of being attacked in a robbery. That shooting occurred on July 14, 2011. "He thought that the site where the warehouse was too dangerous," said Clarissa. His brother Sandy said they supported the decision of his stepfather and asked him to sell the winery, but the grocer replied that the settlement was that they would grow and make money to solve the problems and the future of the family. The robber, but Torres gave all the money that was in the box, fired at close range against the Dominican anyway. The surveillance camera captured the hold time of the murder, but that image has not been delivered to the media by the police and the Essex County Prosecutor's Office is limited to the dissemination of African-American figures of the two. One of them appears in vigilance outside the warehouse and the other inside the hood business. Torres, who emigrated decades ago from San Jose de las Matas to the United States was, according to community activists and political leaders of Newark the type of person that neighborhoods as dangerous as the southern part of the city, they need to recover the bad image crime and drugs that have the village. He managed to save money to get the business and was about to buy another business. In the midst of progress and success of their hard work as a Dominican immigrant, met Theodora, a South American single mother who has two children from a previous relationship to which Torres grew up. Clarissa said the winery was the only father she knew. "He married my mom when I was 2 years old and assumed responsibility for raising us," he added. Before becoming a winemaker, Torres worked for years in the Port Newark Container unloading ships and in the company U-Haul moving trucks ready. When not working in an area, worked in the other. Clarissa said that every day, her stepfather went to the warehouse at 6:30 in the morning and returned at 10:30 pm. "I worked 16 hours a day, seven days a week, until the day he was murdered," said the girl choked by tears. "I wanted everything to us, including university. He did not want to work in a warehouse, "said Sandy. Torres had acquired a first winery in the Irvington neighborhood a few years ago, but because the neighborhood is considered a "war zone" sold it and tried again, opening another business in Oakwood Avenue in the town of Orange a business called "Monteverde Mini Market." That was about 2 ½ years. He continued working on U-Haul to save money and buy a second winery, which turned out to be JNC Mini Market, where he was killed on Tuesday last week at Avenue 14 and Calle 18 in the south of Newark. Finished pay it to his cousin Juan Rodriguez (Johan), two weeks before being killed by the robber. Sandy said that he, his sister and his mother, Torres asked not to buy the winery for their dangerous area. "In the previous business Oakwood Avenue, we were much safer, but here, everybody loved him, the area is too dangerous, but Dad was apparently very confident that nothing would happen," said the young man. Torres never let their employees go alone to their homes and transported in your vehicle to either take the bus, aware of the danger in the area. Clarissa explained that her stepfather spent a lot of money to remodel the warehouse and keep it stocked JNC to feel the pleasant neighborhood setting. The winemaker, as in many other cases of Dominican workers, paid with his life the effort to build a promising future and raise a family.



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