Canberra’s Luminescence Chamber Choir with Sydney’s The Australian Voices. Photo: Peter Hislop.
Canberra International Music Festival / Concert 20, “Far and Near”, Australian Centre for Christianity and Culture, Sunday, May 9. Reviewed by HELEN MUSA.
THERE are few more pleasurable human experiences than sitting with other people listening to beautiful voices raised in song.
So it was when Canberra’s Luminescence Chamber Choir collaborated with Sydney’s The Australian Voices to perform 11 original compositions created specifically for them, as conductor Amber Evans explained, under the covid-related theme, “Far and Near”.
The songs related both literally and figuratively to this idea so that while some composers focused on human separation, physical and emotional, one reflected on musical issues and others looked to the sea and the sky for inspiration.
Protest Against Police Dogs at Tuscaloosa County Sheriff s Office 953thebear.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from 953thebear.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Echoes of Black lives matter and Justice for Derek reverberated through the streets of downtown Tuscaloosa Friday afternoon. A group of about 20 protestors had gathered at the corner of 7th Street and Greensboro Avenue with the intent to make a statement against the use of police dogs in the city.
Organized by local community activists, the protestors held handmade signs demanding that police dogs should be pets, not weapons. After a quick prayer, using a bullhorn and a chorus of supporters behind her, organizer Deanna Reed marched the group down 7th Street toward the front of the Tuscaloosa County Sheriff s Office.
Protesters rally in Tuscaloosa after police dog bite almost cost man his arm
Updated May 07, 2021;
Facebook Share
About 20 people gathered Friday afternoon at the Tuscaloosa County Sheriff’s Office to protest the department’s use of police dogs on a suspected shoplifter that nearly cost the man his arm.
A handful of protesters wore shirts saying “Dogs are pets, not weapons,” and carried signs saying “Black Lives Matter,” and “Stop Police Brutality.” Several cars honked in show of support while driving up the busy thoroughfare in downtown Tuscaloosa.
The btie occurred on March 5, 2021, when Derek Stokes was accused of shoplifting at the Walmart on Skyland Boulevard in Tuscaloosa. Stokes fled from an off-duty Tuscaloosa police officer but was bitten by a dog from the Tuscaloosa County Sheriff’s Office.