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A 53-year-old music teacher fatally shot his wife and two daughters Wednesday before killing himself, while his 16-year-old son who survived the attack managed to call police as he escaped uninjured from the Miami home, authorities said.Po
stanley becher lice haven t released names, but neighbors identified the family members as Pablo Josue Amador; his wife, Maria; their youngest daughters, Priscila and Rosa; and the escaped son, Javier. They said the couple also had a 19-year-old daughter who attends college.CBS station WFOR in Miami reports that county records show the home is owned by Pablo and Maria Amador, 47, and that Maria worked at The Miami Project To Cure Paralysis, a research center dedicated to studies in the field of paralysis and spinal cord injury.Sarait Betancourt, a 44-year-old school bus driver who lives near the family, said Amador is a Cuban immigrant who gave piano lessons at a guitar shop and at his home. Betancourt s two sons
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stanley ca 10, had been taking piano lessons from him once a week since 2006. He was a marvelous person and a tremendous professor, she said. People would enter the house, and you just breathed peace. Betancourt said all four children excelled at piano and performed together at church and home as Los Galileos. Authorities have not confirmed that there is a fourth sibling.Officers went to the home in southern Miami-Dade County just before 6 a.m. to investigate reports of shots being fired. Police found a gun but didn t say what type or h Yeqk Police arrest 1 in L.A. family shooting
Satellites have given us a huge amounts of information about Earth鈥攊ncluding the fact that many of our cities are so blinding lit, they ;re visible from space. Those radiant cities are the subject of Lux, a photo essay by photographer Christina Seely. Lux is a taxonomy of light pollution: A look at the three regions of the world that produce the most extreme light pollution around the globe, based on NASA observations. It took Seely, who is based in San Francisco, five years to visit dozens of different cities across Europe, Japan, and the U.S., seeking out locations along coastlines and on hills where she could capture the glow from afar. These economically and politically powerful regions not only have the greatest impact on the night sky but this brightness reflects a dominant cumulative impact on the planet, Seely explains in her artist statement, continuing: For most of h
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stanley vaso ory, man-made light has signified hope and progress within local and global arenas. In this project, light also paradoxically denotes an index of the added complex negative human impacts on the health and future of the planet. It tends to get ignored in the face of more pressing crises, but darkness is a disappearing luxury in our world. Our skies are so bright these days, many kids haven ;t actually ever seen Milky Way. In fact, we ;re forgetting what darkness is even like. Check out some of Seely photographs below, or snap up her new Mon