The final deadline for candidates to withdraw from Mashpee’s Annual Town Election passed on Monday, April 4, leaving 13 people running for nine open spots on town boards.
Arco hosts annual Atomic Days Parade Published
ARCO, Idaho (KIFI) - The Butte County community came out this weekend to celebrate its history.
On Saturday, Arco held its annual Atomic Days Celebration Parade. The celebration is in honor of Arco becoming the first city in the world that was powered by nuclear energy.
Arco used nuclear energy from the BORAX-3 reactor to power its lights for more than an hour on July 17, 1955.
BORAX-3, which stood for Boiling Water Reactor Experiment, was located about a half-mile from the Experimental Breeder Reactor (EBR-I) at what was then called the National Reactor Testing Station.
Mashpee MA nip ban goes into effect Thursday liquor stores object capecodtimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from capecodtimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
It is now “apparently racist” to sponsor a child in a third world country and help to improve their life, according to Sky News host Paul Murray.
His comments come after an article in The Guardian revealed Carol Sherman - an independent humanitarian consultant – said the international child sponsorship schemes perpetuate “racist and paternalistic thinking” similar to “poverty porn” images of poor black children used by charities in the past.
Mr Murray said this is “peak crazy for 2021”.
“Madness in all forms.”
International child sponsorship schemes have come under attack for perpetuating racist thinking, as an apology by a charity to thousands of children in Sri Lanka has sparked a debate over the money-raising schemes.
Plan International last week said that it had made “mistakes” in its exit from Sri Lanka last year, following criticism from donors and former employees that it had failed 20,000 vulnerable children in the country.
It apologized to sponsored children, as well as to communities and partners, some of whom felt that the organization had left “abruptly” and without sufficient communication.
The controversy has reignited debate over international child sponsorship