When I was a kid, the top cop in New York City was Kojak. He was a bald detective who loved lollipops, his Greek heritage and solving crimes. Most of the time, Kojak was out roaming the city, tracking down suspects and closing cases. He did most of this by the gut. He didn’t spend episodes bogged down with the boys from the lab with their scientific evidence. He was cutting edge in the ’70s. That all changed in the 21st Century when the guys in the lab refused to be taken for suckers.
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation became a massive hit in the Fall of 2000. The Las Vegas-based series nearly immediately triggered a spin-off when
Best animated short film
Best live action short film Feeling Through Doug Roland and Susan Ruzenski The Present Farah Nabulsi
Best documentary short subject A Love Song for Latasha Sophia Nahli Allison and Janice Duncan
13News spoke with Doug Roland, the writer and director of Feeling Through, which made history featuring the first deafblind actor, Robert Tarango, in a film. It s been amazing to not only experience Robert s joy of getting to fulfill his boyhood dream of becoming an actor, but also to be one piece of the growing movement of authentic representation and having more roles for people who are disabled and casting disabled actors in those roles, Roland said.
153K subscribers
When Nazi forces invaded Holland in 1940 and began rounding up Jews, Corrie ten Boom, her sister Betsie, and their elderly father risked their lives to save as many as possible. A hidden room was secretly built in their home where the oppressed Jews took refuge until a Gestapo raid put an end to their operation. Corrie ten Boom: a Faith Undefeated recounts this unforgettable story for a new generation. When Nazi forces invaded Holland in 1940 and began rounding up Jews, Corrie ten Boom, her sister Betsie, and their elderly father risked their lives to save as many as possible. A hidden room was secretly built in their home where the oppressed Jews took refuge until a Gestapo raid put an end to their operation. For their “crimes,” Corrie and Betsie were sent to the notorious concentration camp at Ravensbruck, where they suffered relentless cruelty. Struggling to reconcile God’s goodness with the terrible realities of the camp, the sisters clung desperately
Author of the article: Edmonton Journal
Publishing date: Feb 27, 2021 • February 27, 2021 • 3 minute read • Hundreds of people with vaccination appointments queued outside of an Alberta Health Services clinic at Skyview Power Centre in Edmonton, on Thursday, Feb. 25, 2021. People said that they had waited two hours for a shot. Photo by Ian Kucerak /Postmedia
Article content
I took my elderly friend to the South Park Centre on the first day for a vaccine shot. I got out of my truck and went to ask the security guard how it works; he told me to stay in your vehicle until 10 minutes before your appointment time. Then you come out and he lines you up according to your appointment time.