Word: ye
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...Ye Gods, who could regret the cloning of the high street when you grew up with all that? Turn your nose up at cappuccinos, lattes, pain au raisins, proper muffins with proper fruit - even if you have to pay through the nose for it? (And let me tell you, all those stories you've heard about how expensive London is? They don't come close to the ghastly truth.) Shed a tear for the "genuinely local coffee shops"? Don't think so. Mine's a triple grande skim latte, and the only regret is that I had to wait until...
...that exceeded that of most campus performing art groups. Their great skill suggested that they could have performed a more intricate and complicated piece.“Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24” was also a great holiday season treat. Featuring a compilation of “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” and “Carol of the Bells,” this piece truly showcased the skills of the THUD members. The ability to recreate these popular melodies using only percussion instruments was amazing. It was as if they were able to create the sound...
...Well, web-seek and ye shall web-find. eBible.com (that's with a "B." It's not a food site), a free service owned by Godspeed, Inc., was launched last week, and according to Godspeed President and CEO Mark Sears, had almost 1 million hits the following Monday. It allows you to highlight your verses, and-even more sexy, in web terms- enables you to add and share your marginal notes with other users, initiating a kind of "Web 2.0" text-based community-building. However, if you don't happen to be evangelical you may not want to toss away...
BANNED. Lou Ye, 41, controversial Chinese director; from filming on the mainland for five years, by the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television; in Beijing. Lou reportedly failed to seek approval from government censors for his film Summer Palace-set in the days leading up to the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre, a topic Beijing considers taboo-before screening it at the Cannes Film Festival in May. Lou called the ban "ridiculous" and said it would not stop him from working...
...five-year filmmaking ban imposed by Chinese authorities on director Lou Ye is just the latest signal from Beijing that its tolerance for even minor signs of dissent has shrunk dramatically. According to state media reports, the director entered his latest movie, Summer Palace,at the prestigious Cannes Film Festival earlier this year without seeking approval from Chinese authorities. Although the film is a romance, it is set during the 1989 Tiananmen demonstrations, still very much a sensitive topic in Beijing...