comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - ரிச்சர்ட் ஷா - Page 15 : comparemela.com

Aspiring film-makers given grants for Bradford shorts | Bradford Telegraph and Argus

UNTOLD stories from Holme Wood, a British-Bangladeshi love story set on Leeds Road, and the ‘Beast of Bradford’ are among the films about life in the district made by people who live and work here. Film-makers across the district have received Make: Film grants to create original short films and documentaries as Bradford prepares to bid to be UK City of Culture 2025. More than 94 submissions were received from people who live, study or work in Bradford, through an open process launched earlier this year. The brief was to explore stories that challenge perceptions of the district and its communities. A total of 37 projects was selected by a panel from Bradford Council, Bradford 2025, Bradford City of Film and the National Science and Media Museum. The films will be screened on digital platforms and potentially in public, subject to Covid safety guidelines, and a selection will be considered for the BFI National Film and Television Archive collection.

Open mike 24/12/2020

mac1 3 73 of an intake of 1200 cadets at West Point cheat in a calculus online exam. That s 6%. Wikipedia says Candidates for admission must apply directly to the academy and receive a nomination, usually from a member of Congress. Other nomination sources include the president and vice president ! The academic program grants a bachelor of science degree. Cadets are required to adhere to the Cadet Honor Code, which states that a cadet will not lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United States Military Academy The worst scandal in 45 years! I wonder how many of these cheats debasing university qualifications and heading for high office in the US military were nominated by Republicans, and how many by Democrats?

Open mike 23/12/2020

Ad 5.2 The conclusion of the article you cite is that …with the spirit of ‘60s utopianism: maybe we should ask not what other countries can do for us, but what we might do for them … And yet – when the alternative is watching with pity and smugness as infection rates rise elsewhere, when nationalism has led us into the binary of winners and losers in a pandemic that affects us all, perhaps that spirit is precisely what we need. New Zealand will start 2021 with an economic acceleration greater than most other countries in the world. It s a socialist moment because we have been united together in common cause. And it s a conservative moment because we have given up just the minimum degree of temporary freedom in order to gain the greatest liberty.

Open mike 22/12/2020

This is the latest ride on the merry-go-round of legal shit-fuckery that penalises community groups who dare to face off in opposition to the rape and pillage of the environment. Less than a decade ago, voluntary community organisations were able to apply for Government financed grants, now no longer available, when challenging the likes of Councils, big-moneyed developers, international consortiums and Government agencies in respect of environmental concerns. In almost all but the most frivolous of cases, legal costs were never awarded against community groups but left to lie where they may. This was in the interests of justice being seen to be done in both quasi and full legal proceedings that were being tested by those who were committed to upholding the incrementally unfolding joke of ‘A Clean Green New Zealand’ by their works and deeds. Up and down the country, these communities of voluntary environmental workers and supporters of the notion that we are only caretakers of t

In New Zealand, Hello Has Become Kia Ora Will That Save the Māori Language?

In New Zealand, Hello Has Become Kia Ora. Will That Save the Māori Language? Time 12/21/2020 Amy Gunia © Marty Melville AFP/Getty Images People walk past Maori language signs in Wellington, New Zealand, on Sept. 13, 2018. Kenny Williams began to study the Māori language during his second COVID-19 lockdown. Williams, 36, lives alone and the isolation made him yearn to feel closer to his identity as an indigenous New Zealander an identity he had spent most of his childhood trying to hide. After he ordered some Māori language books, he found his studies helped him build a connection to his Māori history. “I didn’t know it was a gap that was missing in my life,” he says.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.