டஸ்னீம் ராஜா News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Stay updated with breaking news from டஸ்னீம் ராஜா. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Top News In டஸ்னீம் ராஜா Today - Breaking & Trending Today
The Oaklandside Live-ish at Online - Virtual Event in San Francisco - June 15, 2021 sfstation.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sfstation.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
How a century-old mental hospital in Nagpur is being prepped as the city’s exemplar institution 27 A hospital that is accessed by 50,000 people a year from all over Vidarbha, Nagpur Regional Mental Hospital is getting a makeover to address the region’s growing mental health needs. One of Nagpur’s oldest mental hospitals was started in 1884 but was then functioning under a pejorative name of lunatic asylum . The hospital slowly transformed with time as an out-patient’s department was introduced in 1959 and was subsequently renamed Nagpur Regional Mental Hospital. This hospital is now accessed by 50,000 people a year coming from eight districts of Vidarbha. ....
Pamela Turntine will join Berkeleyside as editor-in-chief on April 19 . Photo: Amir Aziz The founders of Cityside, Berkeleyside’s nonprofit parent organization, are delighted to announce that Pamela Turntine, a veteran journalist and Pulitzer Prize winner with deep roots in Berkeley, will become Berkeleyside’s new editor-in-chief. A longtime editor for the Oakland Tribune, East Bay Times and The Mercury News, Turntine brings to the post decades of editing experience, a stellar knack for breaking news, a profound understanding of reporting at a local level and a high regard for Berkeleyside and the community it has fostered since its launch in 2009. She will join the newsroom on April 19. ....
On being part of the story Reporters in Texas have navigated a year full of high-impact stories. Last March, when the country was seized by the coronavirus, Governor Greg Abbott encouraged residents to stay home but refused to issue a “stay-at-home order”; local outlets worked to help people navigate the confusing guidelines. In the summer, amid protests against racism and police brutality, George Floyd was buried in Houston; the local ABC affiliate told viewers how to prepare if they planned to attend services. In February, when a winter storm hit and the power went out, the Austin Texas Tribune sent out text messages to readers, providing information about water shortages and nearby warming stations. And this past week, when Abbott removed public health restrictions, including a statewide mask mandate, the ....
A year to turn the page The year 2020 has been humbling in the face of nature. The coronavirus pandemic rattled the earth and revealed just how unstable the ground beneath us was. For journalists, the avalanche of life-or-death news crashed into an industry already beset by acute financial strain, the warping effects of disinformation, and long-standing inequity. In the print pages of the Columbia Journalism Review, we’ve looked at a media ecosystem confronting the realities of our distressed planet and the people who inhabit it. First, in the spring, was the climate issue. E. Tammy Kim turned her attention to the ....