Ben & Jerry s and PRX Announce Blackberry Jams
gratefulweb.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gratefulweb.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
You go girl! Flora gets wave of good luck messages
royalgazette.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from royalgazette.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Photo Exhibit Commemorates Juneteenth and Black Music Month
By Sentinel News Service
Published June 10, 2021
Albert Lord, Community Build, Inc. vice president of Governmental Relations and Arts Program, puts final touches on the African American Heritage Month Legacy Project on display an exhibit along Degnan Blvd. and 43rd Street in Leimert Park Village through July 31.
(Ian Foxx photo)
In honor of Juneteenth and Black Music Month, Community Build, Inc. will host the African American Heritage Month Legacy Project, a retrospective exhibit showcasing over 100 pictures, memorabilia and documents on emancipation, civil rights, writers, inventors, Motown and the presidency of Barack Obama.
The outdoor self-guided walking exhibit is open daily, free to the public and can be viewed through the months of June and July at the offices of Community Build, Inc. along Degnan Blvd. and 43rd Street in Leimert Park Village.
Published:
12:31 PM May 11, 2021
Updated:
1:25 PM May 11, 2021
The current building is run down and is often dogged by reports of antisocial behaviour and drug use at night
- Credit: Google
A Norfolk developer is planning to regenerate a dilapidated building plagued by antisocial behaviour and doorway drug use into a striking office and residential space near Norwich s Prince of Wales Road.
FW Properties Ltd, owned by Norfolk boys Julian Wells and Ian Fox, is awaiting decision on submitted plans to Norwich City Council to redevelop the building at 1 Ferry Road near Norwich Train Station.
Despite being the head office of Feilden+Mawson Architects since 1970, the plans say the building in its current form desperately needs improvement.