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Rural pharmacies fill a health care gap in the US. Owners say it's getting harder to stay open

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Basketball   来源:Lifestyle  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Sthal offers an unsparing look at the grim side of arranged marriage in India—often romanticised on screen with song and dance. It's also part of a wave of Marathi films earning global acclaim this year.

Sthal offers an unsparing look at the grim side of arranged marriage in India—often romanticised on screen with song and dance. It's also part of a wave of Marathi films earning global acclaim this year.

The next thing, the nine-year-old was on stage in front of a huge crowd singing along to Hungry Heart with the star he had been listening to since he was a baby.Haydn said he was really nervous, saying: "I remember looking up and seeing like 40,000 people there.

Rural pharmacies fill a health care gap in the US. Owners say it's getting harder to stay open

"And I can remember him lifting my hood up, and I remember my ears sticking out of the hood and going, 'right, this is going to be viewed for the rest of your life, sort your hood out, because your ears will be sticking out'."Then when he actually gave me the mic, I remember a big panic, because you can't hear yourself at all either."But I knew the words. It was all just the most surreal thing, like you actually can't explain, it's so weird."

Rural pharmacies fill a health care gap in the US. Owners say it's getting harder to stay open

For Sally, it was a dream come true to see her little boy singing with the family's hero."I describe it as the happiest day of my life, and I apologise to my husband that it's not our wedding day," she said.

Rural pharmacies fill a health care gap in the US. Owners say it's getting harder to stay open

"Bruce Springsteen, singing with my son, the happiest day of my life."

It has been 50 years since the American singer first performed in the UK, giving his new Born To Run album its European premiere.The contrast between the insect's slender form and the leaf's textured surface underscores the intricate beauty of nature's hidden wonders.

Sebastião Salgado, regarded as one of the world's greatest documentary photographers, has died at the age of 81.The Brazil-born photographer was known for his dramatic and unflinching black-and-white images of hardship, conflict and natural beauty, captured in 130 countries over 55 years.

His hard-hitting photos chronicled major global events such as the Rwanda genocide in 1994, burning oilfields at the end of the Gulf War in 1991, and the famine in the Sahel region of Africa in 1984."His lens revealed the world and its contradictions; his life, the power of transformative action," said a statement from Instituto Terra, the environmental organisation he founded with his wife, Lélia Wanick Salgado.

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