
Aurora Martinez
Articles
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Jan 3, 2025 |
nycitynewsservice.com | Aurora Martinez
Along Fifth Avenue in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, the smells of tacos and fried rice mix with those of Guatemalan tamales and pepián stew. The commercial area, dominated by Mexican and Chinese businesses, is now infused with the flavors of a growing Guatemalan community that is transforming the neighborhood one storefront at a time. To serve this growing population, Juan Chuc and his brothers, Miguel and Rafael, opened a second Totopan Bakery on Fifth Avenue.
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Jan 2, 2025 |
nycitynewsservice.com | Aurora Martinez
When Josefa de Jesús Juárez, 68, reunited with her family in the United States after two decades apart, she did not want to focus on the tears. “I don’t want to see you cry, just hug me,” Juárez told her children and grandchildren as they embraced her, including her daughter, Eufemia Neri, now 48. Juárez was one of the 22 elders of Indigenous descent from the Mexican states of Guerrero, Oaxaca and Hidalgo who arrived in New York City Dec. 9 on tourist visas to reunite with their children.
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Dec 12, 2024 |
nycitynewsservice.com | Aurora Martinez
Raising a glass for rescue, a Brooklyn tasting room and bar recently made dog adoption the new happy hour. In partnership with Barrow’s Intense NY Tasting Room, Hearts & Bones hosted its monthly dog adoption event at Barrow’s courtyard on Dec. 7. The event is designed to facilitate dog and potential adopter interactions as shelters across the country face overcrowding and rising dog populations.
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Sep 27, 2024 |
nycitynewsservice.com | Aurora Martinez
This week, visitors to Bryant Park interacted with 11 shiny, silvery sculptures modeled after real water droplets. The droplets, located at the Fountain Terrace on the park’s west side, were part of “Every Drop Counts,” a public art installation that looks like a mini garden with artificial hills and flowers. It showcased how water is used on a large scale – for example, in food production and AI development.
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Sep 27, 2024 |
urldefense.com | Aurora Martinez
This week, visitors to Bryant Park interacted with 11 shiny, silvery sculptures modeled after real water droplets. The droplets were located at the Fountain Terrace on the park’s west side, and were part of “Every Drop Counts,” a public art installation that looked like a mini garden with artificial hills and flowers. It showcased how water is used on a large scale – for example, in food production and AI development.
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