Le Journal

Incendie de Crans-Montana : issues de secours, signalétiques, capacité du lieu… La sécurité du bar au cœur de l’enquête

Trump donne un coup de pouce à la manifestation contre le WEF
Près de 600 manifestants ont quitté Küblis (GR) samedi pour se rendre au Forum économique mondial (WEF) de Davos. La participation du président américain Donald Trump à cette rencontre économique rend la contestation encore plus importante, selon une porte-parole. Cela montre l'importance des manifestations contre le WEF, a déclaré Maeva Strub, porte-parole du collectif "Strike-WEF", […]

"Une représentation du vivre-ensemble" : le projet "Salam Shalom Salut" encourage le dialogue entre jeunes juifs et musulmans à travers la France

Biathlon | Madona : le Tchèque Vladimir Kocmanek domine la mass-start 60 de la Junior Cup

Bien s’entendre, c’est bon pour la santé : médecins libéraux et salariés cohabitent au Vigan
Un dispositif original est en place au Vigan dans le Gard : les médecins libéraux travaillent aux côtés des médecins salariés dans une entente intelligente.
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12 restaurantes nuevos de Madrid que todo el mundo quiere probar

Affaire Jubillar : "Je n’avais jamais vécu une émotion pareille" L’un des avocats du procès se raconte dans une autobiographie

Republican dissent as key figures warn Trump against Greenland pursuit

Zahawi defection pushes Reform’s vaccine scepticism into spotlight
The views of the former Tory vaccines minister clash with those of high-profile members and the party faithfulThere was no shortage of ammunition for reporters seeking to pepper Nadhim Zahawi with questions when the former Conservative chancellor was unveiled as Reform’s newest recruit on Monday.But one persistent line of questioning seemed to draw a flash of real anger from the defector: did he reject the views of a doctor who was permitted by Reform to use the main stage at its annual conference to claim that the Covid vaccines, which Zahawi had himself rolled out as vaccines minister during the pandemic, were responsible for King Charles and the Princess of Wales’ cancers? Continue reading...

The hill I will die on: Stag and hen dos should be fun, not bankrupting endurance tests | Liam Pape
Multi-day benders that deplete your mates’ annual leave and wallets are a no-no. Keep it cheeky, cheap and – crucially – enjoyableA stag or hen do should be a straightforward, fun night celebrating a good friend moving into a new chapter of their life. Instead, thanks to films such as The Hangover and Bridesmaids, as well as the general Americanisation of what a “bachelor” or “bachelorette” party should be, we’ve ended up with too many overindulgent, wildly inconvenient and quite frankly underwhelming send-offs to our friends who are getting married.Somewhere along the way, they’ve morphed into three-day tests of stamina and disposable income. Groomsmen bankrupting themselves on long weekends in Vegas that are billed as obligatory for anyone who wants to keep calling themselves a friend. Injuries sustained during ill-advised human pyramids on Spanish beaches. Weddings called off after drunken lapses of judgments in strip clubs. To add insult to injury, in 2023, a survey by Aviva found the average person spends £779 attending a stag or hen in the UK – and that goes up to £1,208 when it’s held abroad. Consequently, they’ve become gruelling and – crucially – not even fun any more. Continue reading...

‘There is a moment of clarity that life would be better without alcohol’: what we can learn from addiction memoirs
After losing her father to alcohol addiction, author Sophie Calon turned to writing – and found clarity, connection and hope in other stories of relapse and recoveryOn the night of Boxing Day 2021, my dad’s body was found near a Cardiff hostel. His death, at 55, was as sudden as it was not. For years, alcoholism had been changing the shape of his heart.He died less than a mile from his old office; top law firm, equity partner. Four miles from our once tight-knit home in a leafy neighbourhood. He had lost both his family and his job in 2019. Raised in Barry, working class, he had been proud of the beautiful life he had built for us. Others thought he “had it all”. He was widely adored, but drinking made him volatile. He was homeless and often behind bars in his final two years. Continue reading...

