16 March 2021
Share with:
Bold.org, the scholarship platform committed to fighting student debt through philanthropy, continues its Year of Giving Campaign with a new $10,000 scholarship. For the campaign’s March chapter, Bold.org partners with Grammy-winning band, Imagine Dragons, for a $10,000 Imagine Dragons Origins Scholarship. $2,500 will be awarded to four first generation, refugee or immigrant students in the US.
The Imagine Dragons Origins Scholarship celebrates a decade together and the launch of their two new singles “Follow You” and “Cutthroat.” The scholarship’s inspiration comes from their experience performing in countless countries spanning all languages. Over the last decade, the band has witnessed the power of music as an international language connecting people from all backgrounds, cultures and walks of life. Imagine Dragons has gained a deep empathy for those who come from different cultures, specifically those who have bravely started a new life
by Chuck Abbott (Successful Farming) U.S. ethanol production plunged 13% last year due to the pandemic, costing the industry around $4 billion in sales. But it may recover fully by 2023, on the strength of larger exports and rising domestic use of higher blends of ethanol into gasoline, said the Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute.
Farm income will be $112 billion this year, far above the 10-year average, with generally strong commodity prices more than offsetting a $22-billion decline in farm subsidies from the record $46 billion of 2020, said the University of Missouri think tank. With farm finances on healthier footing, land values are forecast to rise 5% this year. The debt-to-asset ratio, a widely watched indicator of financial health, would decline for the first time since 2012.
Gwen Stefani: 'Not a lot of people are making albums these days' - The Number One music magazine feat. band & artist news, reviews, interviews, videos & gossip UK & worldwide.
Julian Casablancas: Anyone who says rock is 'dead' has lost their imagination - The Number One music magazine feat. band & artist news, reviews, interviews, videos & gossip UK & worldwide.
16 March 2021
Share with:
Fans of late singer/actress Naya Rivera and Broadway star Nick Cordero were left outraged after they were left out of the Grammys In Memoriam tribute on Sunday.
The former Glee star died aged 33 after accidentally drowning during a boating trip with her young son Josey, five, last July at Lake Piru in California.
During her lifetime, Naya received two Grammy Awards nominations as part of the Glee cast - for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals for Don t Stop Believin (Glee cast version) in 2011 and Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media for Glee: The Music, Volume 4 in 2012.