Superior Plans To Have All 4th Of July Activities Back This Year
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Superior plans to go 100% on Fourth of July festivities
superiortelegram.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from superiortelegram.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Give me more movies like these!!!!!
Posted: Feb 20, 2021 9:13 AM
Updated: Feb 20, 2021 9:21 AM
Posted By: Mike Bunge
Movies can be more than a mere distraction…but do they need to be? Should grown men and women feel a little embarrassed to watch a super-hero flick involving characters and concepts originally intended for children instead of serious stuff made for adults? Should Hollywood be embarrassed it can’t made serious stuff many adults want to watch? Does it have to be one or the other?
This edition of KIMT’s Weekend Throwdown will examine two films on opposite sides of that divide. One is a precise moral argument wrapped up in the trial of a man’s soul. The other is an emotional rollercoaster where you always know you’re perfectly safe. It’s “Ransom!” (1956) vs. “Ransom” (1996) in a battle between a timeless story and the different eras in which it is told.
What to Read This February: 5 Hawai‘i Book Picks Recommended by Local Experts
We reached out to our friends at Da Shop: Books + Curiosities to ask their community of writers and readers for their picks: a Newbery-winning Korean folk tale, a memoir, a murder case and more.
February 2, 2021
by Juliet S. Kono
Anshu is a singular achievement, a novel that captures better than most the unique suffering of a people, a place and a time through the experience of a single character. Himiko Aoki’s life is a study of woe, from her humble Big Island beginnings and an out-of-wedlock pregnancy that leads to challenges in Japan, culminating in her joining the ranks of the hibakusha, the survivors of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. Throughout her trials, you will suffer along with Himiko, but gradually, almost imperceptibly, you will eventually find peace with her at the peak of her misfortune at the end of a quintessentially Buddhist journey. Juliet S. Kono has given me in