Drains being cleared in Ocho Rios to minimise impact of hurricanes jamaicaobserver.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jamaicaobserver.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Dr. Glen Laman, a faculty member at University of Management and Technology, has just come out with a new book, titled The Hero of Fern Gully and Other Jamaican
Published on 1 Jun, 2021
Stonefly has offered an ideal experience so far. The action game about piloting bug-sized mechs was announced via an exciting and stylish trailer and now, three months later, it s out. That s it. I wish all videogames were as instantly captivating and swiftly released.
Developers Flight School Interactive describe Stonefly as Rogue One shrunk down to Fern Gully size . You play Annika Stonefly, a young mechanic and mech pilot searching for her father s lost mech. That search takes the form of exploration and combat in a mech of your own, interspersed with conversations with the members of Acorn Corp.
Come back next week to catch more of “Culture War with The Federalist’s Chris Bedford.”
America has been fighting a war on drugs for decades now, and for almost as long we’ve been told by the left and many libertarians on the right that the best way to end the war is to surrender. Legalizing drugs, they say, would solve a bunch of our country’s problems, including high rates of imprisonment, fatherlessness, crime, cartel activity, excess overdose deaths, budget deficits. The list goes on.
Over the past few years, a strange alliance has formed to push the legalization agenda. It includes committed left-wingers eager to better society by freeing all its criminals, like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, Democratic Machiavellis looking to rev up the youth vote, like foreign billionaire George Soros, and big tobacco lobbyists looking to take advantage of all their arable land and industrial rolling machines, like former Speaker of the House John Boehner.
10 Animated Films That The World Inexplicably Forgot
Others aren’t so lucky.
For every
Beauty and the Beast, there’s a
Once Upon a Forest. And with traditionally animated films at the brink of extinction, it’s nice to know that there are still a few unexplored ones to enjoy or critique.
Featured photo credit: Paramount Pictures
10
1989
Before we knew Nemo as an adorable clownfish, there was Little Nemo, the boy who dreams of adventure and gets more than he bargained for. He’s whisked away to Slumberland, a world of kings and flying ships, where an inky darkness lurks beneath the razzle-dazzle.