-Messenger photo by Chad Thompson
Iowa Central Community College photography students pose in the college studio. Front row, from left to right: Karlee Ihde and Bethany Rice. Back row: Hannah Taylor and Evelin Bonilla. These students will be hosting a virtual camera workshop available to the public. -Messenger photo by Chad Thompson
Hannah Taylor, an Iowa Central Community College photography student, is pictured in front of some of the photos the group has captured. -Messenger photo by Chad Thompson
Evelin Bonilla, an Iowa Central Community College photography student, holds her camera next to a photo she shot that hangs on the wall at the college. Bonilla will be teaching about lighting during a virtual workshop the students will host.
Britain’s last remaining bellfoundry saved with £3.45m National Lottery funding
The last remaining major bellfoundry in Britain has been saved just in time for Christmas, thanks to £3.45m from the National Lottery.
Since 1859, the iconic Loughborough Bellfoundry, home to John Taylor & Co bellfounders, has cast more than 25,000 bells that are hung in over 100 countries, in churches, cathedrals, universities and public buildings. 20 million people in Britain, and hundreds of millions worldwide, hear a bell cast at the Loughborough Bellfoundry every day.
Bells from the foundry have even entered popular culture – the bells from St Thomas’s Church, in Fifth Avenue, New York, which can be heard on The Pogues and Kirsty McColl’s Christmas anthem Fairytale of New York, were cast at the site.
Credit https://www.flickr.com/photos/pennstatelive/
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Of the many side effects that COVID-19 has had on people s wellbeing, sleep often comes up in conversation as something that has been disrupted during the pandemic. We will talk with medical experts about how sleep is integrated with overall mental and physical health, what ways the pandemic is affecting people s sleep (and even their dreams), and approaches that can help foster healthy sleep patterns.
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Homes, businesses and trees were reduced to nothing but rubble and ash.
Locals say the town is still far from recovered.
But lucky for the animals at Mogo Wildlife Park, none were lost to the blaze and the zoo remained in tact.
This was thanks to dozens of zookeepers and volunteers who worked through the danger to protect the zoo animals, including holding some in their homes. (Mogo Wildlife Park/Chad Staples) / Mogo Zoo one year after the 2019 Black Summer Bushfires. (Mogo Zoo/ Supplied) (Mogo Wildlife Park/Chad Staples) / Mogo Zoo one year after the 2019 Black Summer Bushfires. (Mogo Zoo/ Supplied)
Britain’s last remaining bellfoundry saved with £3.45m National Lottery funding
The last remaining major bellfoundry in Britain has been saved just in time for Christmas, thanks to £3.45m from the National Lottery.
Since 1859, the iconic Loughborough Bellfoundry, home to John Taylor & Co bellfounders, has cast more than 25,000 bells that are hung in over 100 countries, in churches, cathedrals, universities and public buildings. 20 million people in Britain, and hundreds of millions worldwide, hear a bell cast at the Loughborough Bellfoundry every day.
Bells from the foundry have even entered popular culture – the bells from St Thomas’s Church, in Fifth Avenue, New York, which can be heard on The Pogues and Kirsty McColl’s Christmas anthem Fairytale of New York, were cast at the site.