Season 3, Episode 5 Details Featured Guest: Anh Nguyen, Head of Customer Success, twine; Principal & Founder, Spark Event Collective How many topics can we cover in one podcast, you ask? Anh Nguyen, head of customer success at twine and principal and founder of Spark Event Collective, discusses the lost art of critical thinking, redesigning the business model for career women who are caretakers, and the importance of community support to advance and succeed.
Chobi Mela Shunno goes virtual
UNB
27th February, 2021 08:59:41
Great news pouring on for connoisseurs of art. International photography festival s 11th edition Chobi Mela Shunno has now gone virtual.
Organised by Drik Picture Library and Pathshala South Asian Media Institute, the special hybrid edition of the biggest photo festival kicked off in the capital on February 12 and concluded on February 21.
Now, the festival will be on the web for the next six months, all thanks to renowned art agency ARTcon. The virtual exhibition was launched on the closing date of its physical edition in Dhaka.
Art enthusiasts from home and abroad have lauded the online initiative.
Register Staff
Despite the challenges of the pandemic shut-downs, Napa Valley students have continued to create art. Arts Council Napa Valley (ACNV) began 2021 by recognizing 11 students from Calistoga to American Canyon for excellence in the arts.
Each student was singled out by their teacher for âgoing beyond,â âalways showing up,â and most importantly, âinspiring others.â
ACNV judges agreed two studio art students at the high school and middle/elementary levels were deserving of honor, resulting in two ties in that category. Other students were recognized for excellence in choir, theater, digital media, instrumental music and dance.
Here are Februaryâs Student of the Month winners:
These were the key changes in consumer behaviour last year.
Supporting local shops
Local, independent shops benefited from more people working and socialising at home during the pandemic.
Research by Aviva showed 33 per cent of people shopped more at local stores, while a fifth bought more items from charity shops, as Brits explored their neighbourhoods.
The report published today reflects changing shopping habits, which have had a dramatic impact on fashion retailers.
Dresses out, trackies in
The focus on independent, local shopping came at the detriment of high streets in major cities. The plight of chain retailers has been well publicised following the high profile collapse of brands such as Arcadia and Debenhams.