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Page 11 - சீனா மருத்துவ பல்கலைக்கழகம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Frank Gehry: I m just free to build, now I don t have to worry about fees

  It is mid-afternoon on a Monday and Pritzker Prize-winning architect Frank Gehry – despite having just turned 92 in a pandemic, completed the top floor of his building in the Grand Avenue development, and prepared for a show of new sculpture at the Gagosian Gallery – has little interest in sitting back to reflect on this potentially meaningful moment in his life and career. Instead, he is on the move – giving his first studio tour since the Covid-19 outbreak, far more eager to discuss the myriad designs he has underway, most of which have been proceeding. (Only a high-rise in Manhattan’s Hudson Yards stalled, and his office laid off eight of 170 employees as a result.)

What would I do? Frank Gehry, 92, is too busy to retire

What would I do? Frank Gehry, 92, is too busy to retire Frank Gehry looks out from behind a model of the King Street project in his native Toronto, at his architecture studio in Los Angeles, April 6, 2021. At 92, the Pritzker-winning architect is focusing on social justice projects and dismisses the idea of scaling back. “What would I do?” he said. “I enjoy this stuff.” Erik Carter/The New York Times. by Robin Pogrebin (NYT NEWS SERVICE) .- It was midafternoon on a Monday and Pritzker Prize-winning architect Frank Gehry — despite having just turned 92 in a pandemic, completed the top floor of his building in the Grand Avenue development, and prepared for a show of new sculpture at the Gagosian Gallery — had little interest in sitting back to reflect on this potentially meaningful moment in his life and career.

Salmon Dream in Taiwan changes name back after promotion | Taiwan News

2021/04/14 16:57 (CNA photo) (CNA photo) TAIPEI ( Taiwan News ) Salmon Dream, the China Medical University student from Taiwan known for changing his name to take advantage of an all-you-can-eat promotion, has reportedly changed his name back, per UDN. A marketing gimmick by Japanese restaurant Shushiro brought international media attention to Taiwan last month, with 305 people rushing to change their names to something fishy to take advantage of a two-day free sushi promotion. The craze was dubbed the “Salmon Chaos.” The frenzy ended after most of the Salmoners changed their names back, including the student who claimed to have used up his last legal name change and expressed remorse for the decision. In a departure from his eye-catching behavior, such as charging strangers NT$400 (US$14.05) to dine with him under his new moniker, he changed his name back without fanfare.

Doctor cautions families over prenatal depression

Doctor cautions families over prenatal depression DETECTABLE SYMPTOMS: To identify the condition early, family members should use a questioning technique developed at National Taiwan University By Su Chin-feng and Jake Chung / Staff reporter, with staff writer A doctor urged family members to pay more attention to symptoms of prenatal depression, a condition less widely known than postpartum depression and which one in 10 pregnant women experiences. Chang Pei-chen (張倍禎), a doctor at China Medical University’s Department of Pediatric Psychiatry, said that she early this year treated a pregnant woman whose symptoms ranked 15 out of 20 on the Brief Symptom Rating Scale, which measures emotional stress.

Taiwanese are changing their name to Salmon to get free sushi, and the government isn t happy about it

Taiwanese are changing their name to Salmon to get free sushi, and the government isn t happy about it
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