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More colleges are launching courses in entrepreneurship but founders question their value

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Movies   来源:Cricket  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Dr Simon Baker, of Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, said meetings were held after she overdosed on medication and after an incident of self-harm but that no changes were made to her care on either occasion.

Dr Simon Baker, of Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, said meetings were held after she overdosed on medication and after an incident of self-harm but that no changes were made to her care on either occasion.

"They’ve had a bit of a break, the excitement has built up, its probably at the greatest its ever been... so I think the timing is probably absolutely perfect right now."A guitar signed by Noel and Liam Gallagher is to go on display in Manchester ahead of the band's return to their home city this summer.

More colleges are launching courses in entrepreneurship but founders question their value

The Epiphone Riviera guitar will be on show in Selfridges before it is auctioned in September to raise money for grassroots music projects and venues across the city.News of the donation came as Manchester City Council predicted that 1.3 million tourists would flock to the city in "the summer of all summers" for live music, with Oasis's homecoming gigs the centrepiece.An Oasis spokesperson said: "We're delighted to donate this guitar signed by Liam and Noel to help support Manchester's grassroots music projects and kickstart the series of celebrations."

More colleges are launching courses in entrepreneurship but founders question their value

Oasis are to play Heaton Park in Manchester on 11, 12, 16, 19 and 20 July as part of their world tour.Bev Craig, leader of Manchester City Council and local councillor for the Burnage ward where the Gallagher brothers grew up, said: "This promises to be the summer of all summers in Manchester as we get set to welcome music fans from every part of the globe for a massive three months of non-stop live music.

More colleges are launching courses in entrepreneurship but founders question their value

"To have the legends that are Oasis back in town for a supersonic string of homecoming gigs front and centre of Manchester this summer is going to be epic.

"A huge thank you also to Liam and Noel for getting behind our end-of-summer guitar auction to help up-and-coming young artists and raise money for our fantastic grassroots music projects and venues across the city."Over the last week, as part of a series on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, we traced the path of migrants from Turkey to Bulgaria to the rest of Europe - the “biggest growth route” for those travelling into Europe, according to the University of Oxford’s Migration Observatory - in search of what it will really take to “smash the gangs”.

When we talk about smuggling gangs, we tend to focus on the end of the process, such as the UK's relations with France, and on the movement of people across the English Channel, but our route marks the start of the journey: it’s where migrants first enter Europe.Along the way, we spoke to migrants who shared their complicated reasons for putting their lives in the hands of people smugglers. What soon became clear was the sheer magnitude of the government’s task.

The crowded shopping bazaar in the Istanbul district of Esenyurt is popular with the thousands of Syrian refugees who live in the region. “You can see Syrian shops here,” Husam, a Syrian refugee, told us as he showed us around after Friday prayers. “Many were not here in 2015. You have falafel, shawarma - many shops for Syrian food. It was a comfortable, safe place for Syrians.” But now the mood is darkening.“In the past few years it’s not safe any more,” he explains. “There are groups of racist people who don’t like refugees. On public transportation you cannot speak comfortably in Arabic on your phone. People are attacked [for] speaking Arabic.”

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