Golf

Chinese students in US grapple with uncertainty over Trump’s visa policies

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Olympics   来源:Interviews  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:People power: Dozens of people attended a cabinet meeting of Swindon Borough Council to raise concerns about plans to build hundreds of homes on a disused golf course in Highworth.

People power: Dozens of people attended a cabinet meeting of Swindon Borough Council to raise concerns about plans to build hundreds of homes on a disused golf course in Highworth.

"I was speaking to a friend beforehand, thinking about how difficult it must be now growing up, because it is completely different even to when I was a kid, not that long ago," he said."It's moved on so fast, with technology and social media and there are so many other aspects these guys are going to have to worry about that we probably didn't have to."

Chinese students in US grapple with uncertainty over Trump’s visa policies

Zoologist and wildlife presenter Yussef Rafik, best known for presenting BBC Earth Kids show Bugface, helped lead bug hunts at Friday's event at Saints' Franklins Gardens stadium.He said: "I'm quite passionate about nature, not as a cure to mental health, but as a way of coping and it's certainly helped myself - and I love bugs and the kids seem to be loving it as well, so a bug hunt is the thing to do."Pupils from Cogenhoe Primary School had attended the Headfest event "for the last couple of years" said head teacher Charley Oldham.

Chinese students in US grapple with uncertainty over Trump’s visa policies

She said schools had a responsibility to teach pupils strategies for when they felt worried and overwhelmed."And also just to build their resilience and self-esteem, which is obviously a skill which they need for life, to thrive in the world we live in," she added.

Chinese students in US grapple with uncertainty over Trump’s visa policies

BBC Radio Northampton executive producer Anna Bartlett explained why the radio station had organised the event.

She said: "The NHS tells us that one in five eight-to-16-year-olds have some sort of mental health challenge, so we know it's really important that that needs to be addressed."The brothers went to trial in 1993 and admitted to shooting their parents with a pair of shotguns, but they argued they did so out of self-defence after years of emotional, physical and sexual abuse by their father.

Prosecutors argued the brothers methodically planned their parents' murder - as the couple watched TV - so they could inherit their multimillion estate.The case went to a retrial after the jury deadlocked.

In the second trial in 1995, much of the evidence relating to the alleged sexual abuse was not allowed to be presented. A jury found both brothers guilty of first-degree murder and they were sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.There has been renewed public interest in the murders since a Netflix series depicting the events was released in September. And new possible evidence - an alleged letter sent by Erik to another family member that details sex abuse by his father.

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