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Summer camps are for getting kids outdoors, but more frequent heat waves force changes

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Fact Check   来源:Lifestyle  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:is for the 555 former postmasters who won their group lawsuit, but received relatively small payouts after legal costs were paid. The scheme is funded and managed by the government.

is for the 555 former postmasters who won their group lawsuit, but received relatively small payouts after legal costs were paid. The scheme is funded and managed by the government.

Kiss With A Fist became a sort of witchy hoedown, Blinding opened with a sinister cacophony of whispered incantations, and You Got The Love made ample use of the Royal Albert Hall's "Voice of Jupiter" pipe organ.Enhancing the eerie mood, the venue was bathed in blood-red lights throughout the concert, with Florence in a flowing claret dress, her sleeves swaying in time to the music.

Summer camps are for getting kids outdoors, but more frequent heat waves force changes

The audience got into the mood, too, wearing pre-Raphaelite dresses, Toreodor jackets, crowns of flowers and, in one case, dressing head-to-toe in fairy lights.It was the perfect marriage of material and setting. "Renaissance meets rock," as Radio 3 presenter Georgia Mann put it.Billed as Symphony Of Lungs, the concert was the most in-demand Prom of the 2024 season.

Summer camps are for getting kids outdoors, but more frequent heat waves force changes

The initial release of tickets in May was snapped up in a matter of hours, and more than 20,000 people joined the online queue for on-the-day tickets, which cost just £8, on Wednesday morning.The concert marked Florence + The Machine's only UK show of 2024, in what was supposed to be a year off.

Summer camps are for getting kids outdoors, but more frequent heat waves force changes

“When [the invitation] came in, they were like, ‘We know you’re off, but would you…?’ and I was like, ‘Yes!’”

The orchestral score was put together over several months of drafts, revisions, and rehearsals, overseen by Jules Buckley, the conductor who’s been charged with “ripping up the Proms’ rulebook”.Jayden, 16, is a beneficiary.

He started carrying a knife when he was 12 after a group of 20 boys started on him in a park in Coventry. One swung an axe at him."Ever since then I didn't step outside without a knife," he tells the documentary. "You're going to be scared after that, aren't you?… You're going to want to protect yourself some way and that was the only way I could think of."

He was eventually referred to the Community Initiative to Reduce Violence (Cirv), which is operated by West Midlands Police.They identify teenagers who might commit or become a victim of knife crime and intervene before a stabbing takes place.

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