From Thursday, April 17 2008 - 9:00am To Sunday, April 20 2008 - 7:30pm Each week
“Youth Media Training with Royer Studios”
June 17,18,19,20, 2008 (Times listed below)
Locations To Be Determined
Tues 6/17, 12:30 pm-4:30 pm, Location: To Be Determined
Wed 6/18, 12:30 pm-4:30 pm, Location: To Be Determined
Thurs 6/19, 9:00 am-5:00 pm, Location: To Be Determined
Fri 6/20, 6:30 pm-7:30 pm, (Film Screening, Location To Be Determined)
Participants: Youth Media Training is designed for youth from middle schools and high schools (ages 12 to 18) to increase their knowledge, talent, skills, and abilities in creating films (public service announcements), and other media, in live action and animation. Up to 42 youth can participate in this exciting training and experiential program. We hope to have a mix of youth with no experience, as well as youth who have experience in filmmaking.
Purpose: All youth will help create films for public screening by families, friends, and community members on Friday, June 20th at 6:30 pm. Completed films will be shown on Cable TV, at community events, and each participant will have their own DVD. See Preliminary Flyer.
Prospective and current graduate business students who used a Web site to cheat on entrance examinations over the past five years could have their scores thrown out.
School counselors, teachers and families of students the principal said made a pact to get pregnant and have babies together have no information to back the claim, the mayor of Gloucester said Sunday.
Where do MBA students most want to work when they get out of school? Investment banks and consulting firms are still popular choices, but for the second straight year, the most coveted employer is Google, a recent survey found.
Dan Berger, a 26-year-old aide to New York Congressman Charles Rangel, knew he wanted to get an MBA but, he says now, he was overwhelmed by the number and variety of programs available: "I knew I needed to gather a lot of information before choosing a school, but I really didn't know where to start."
Wake Forest University will no longer require applicants to take the SAT and ACT exams, boosting a movement to lessen the importance of standardized tests in college admissions