comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Kate mcintosh - Page 7 : comparemela.com

Vingt-trois créations pour le Festival TransAmériques

Vingt-trois créations pour le Festival TransAmériques
journaldemontreal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from journaldemontreal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

The Durham Union Society: allegations of bigotry, bullying, and malpractice

A Palatinate investigation has revealed accusations of sustained malpractice and abuses of power within the Durham Union Society (DUS), including bullying, unaddressed bigotry, and the mishandling of complaints. The Union Society has been described by some members as a ‘zero-sum political game’, afflicted by systemic failings, cronyism, and negligence in holding wrongdoers to account.  The Union Society is the largest and oldest student society at Durham, and holds regular debates and addresses. It is also responsible for managing the bar at 24 North Bailey.  The Union Society is an independent organisation, with its own trustees. It is not run by Durham University or even, as with many student societies, run in conjunction with Durham Students’ Union (Durham SU).

Top 5 things to do this weekend in Cincinnati: April 9-11

Top 5 things to do this weekend in Cincinnati: April 9-11 1. Art Openings at CAC There s a lot going on this week at the Contemporary Arts Center (44 E. Sixth St., Downtown). First up, the This Time Tomorrow Festival continues through Sunday. The festival brings together cutting-edge work from international, domestic and local artists, with this year s festival featuring a diverse assembly of time-based works. Begum Erciyas Letters from Attica takes over Sawyer Point Park; Kate McIntosh s Worktable installation is at Buddy s Place (1300 Vine St., Over-the-Rhine) and For the Love of Black Women, curated by Lex Nycole and MoveX, takes place at the CAC Black Box Theatre. Tickets for the festival run from $8-$12.

Photos of the Struggle for Environmental Justice in Louisiana's Cancer Alley in 2020

DeSmog The disproportionate toll that COVID-19 is taking on the Black community brought environmental justice issues to the forefront during 2020. Calls for dealing with climate change and environmental justice were elevated by president-elect Biden, who spoke about endangered communities in the last presidential debate and on his campaign website, calling for environmental justice and “rooting out the systemic racism in our laws, policies, institutions, and hearts.” That toll is apparent in Louisiana where I continued to document the struggle for environmental justice for DeSmog throughout 2020. These photos are part of an ongoing DeSmog series on the industrial corridor between Baton Rouge and New Orleans known as ‘Cancer Alley’ which hosts more than 100 petrochemical plants and refineries. Environmental racism and pollution have left fenceline communities especially vulnerable to COVID-19.

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.