Jersey City charter school one of two in the state to receive Lighthouse Award from NJ DOE hudsoncountyview.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hudsoncountyview.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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To be the best at making delicious breads, pastries and pies, you have to pour your heart and soul into it.
That is according to Kim Hogan, who together with her husband Colin, owns and operates the bakery Whitsunday Times readers voted as the best in the Whitsundays.
Walking into their Proserpine Pies and Pastries shop, your stomach’s rumbling kicks up a notch and your sense of smell is aroused as you take in the glorious array of treats such as the lovingly handmade apple turnovers with fresh cream bigger than your face. Proserpine Pies and Pastries owners, husband and wife team Kim Hogan and Colin Hogan. Picture: Kirra Grimes
Minister Martin announces the addition of a body of artworks to the National Collection Image: Alice Maher Mnemosyne Alice Maher, installation image of Mnemosyne as part of Becoming IMMA, Earlsfort Terrace 2012. Photo credit: Colin Hogan
Today, Minister Catherine Martin announces that 422 artworks by 70 artists will be added to the National Collection thanks to the €1m fund provided to the Irish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA) and the Crawford Art Gallery in October 2020.
The Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media has been working with the National Cultural Institutions through the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic to develop meaningful ways to support artists across the country at this challenging time. In October 2020, Minister Martin committed €1m from her department to IMMA and the Crawford Art Gallery to fund the purchase of artworks by artists living and/or working in Ireland. The investment enabled the two institutions charged with collectin
How four independent production companies kept going during COVID-19 mdjonline.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mdjonline.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
After the COVID-19 pandemic forced Hollywood and the rest of the world to a standstill in mid-March, the entertainment industry is still seeking its return to normalcy.
Although California restarted issuing shooting permits in mid-June, filmmakers first had to adjust to a new normal that includes considerable new safety protocols and workflows that allow for as much socially distant filming and remote work as possible.
Initially, the productions allowed to go on were either short shoots with minimal crew, classified as essential (as in the case of educational film shoots), or commercial shoots, which had been exempt from many of the safety protocols required of bigger productions. (They’ve adopted more rigorous testing as cases surge.)