Page 13 - கொலராடோ நீரூற்றுகள் அடிப்படையிலானது News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Fraudulent unemployment claims swamping Colorado employers
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Climbing bolts found on ancient petroglyphs in Utah - New York Daily News
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Climbing bolts found on rock-art images left by Indigenous people in Utah more than 1,000 years ago © Provided by New York Daily News
Rock art left by Indigenous people in Moab, Utah more than 1,000 year ago has been permanently damaged after a climber inserted a line of bolts into the images.
The damage was discovered last week by the climber Darrin Reay, who was climbing around the Sunshine Slabs just north of Arches National Park, when he saw the bolts.
“I started climbing,” Reay told the Colorado Springs Gazette. “And I look up, and all of a sudden I’m standing before a giant petroglyph with a line of bolts going right through the middle of it.”
Ancient petroglyphs permanently damaged by Colorado Springs man
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A picture of the now-Colorado-Springs-based Chung family not long after their grandmother arrived in Arkansas to live with them. The Oscar-nominated movie “Minari” is inspired by their experiences. (Provided by Leisle Chung)
You wouldn’t know it from watching “Minari,” the award-laden film that could walk away with its biggest prize yet at the 93rd Academy Awards on April 25, but the Korean-American family that inspired it lives in Colorado Springs.
That’s because “Minari,” directed by Denver native Lee Isaac Chung, picks up before the film’s Yi family (based on Chung’s own) made it back to Colorado. Instead, it focuses on events inspired by Chung’s rural upbringing, tracing the story of his youth along with his parents, older sister and grandmother as they eked out a living and adjusted to small-town life on an unforgiving patch of Arkansas farmland.