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Poland Offers New Support for Belarus Civil Society, Media

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Popcorn and Inspiration: ‘Moonrise Kingdom’: Sweet Nostalgia for American Innocence

PG-13 | 1h 34min | Comedy, Drama, Romance | 29 June 2012 (USA) World-renowned acting coach Michael Chekhov (nephew of playwright Anton Chekhov) said that the main thing missing from most modern theater productions is “atmosphere.” By “atmosphere,” he meant that rare, mystical feeling generated by all great works of art. A work with atmosphere becomes a world unto itself and creates a longing in the soul, as well as a desire to revisit. It’s as if a living being with personality inhabits or overshadows that statue, play, book, painting, and so on. Director Wes Anderson created a bit of this type of atmosphere in 2012’s “Moonrise Kingdom.” Sam (Jared Gilman) is a gifted young draftsman in “Moonrise Kingdom.” (Focus Features)The time is 1965, and the location is mostly Rhode…

Poland Offers New Support for Belarus Civil Society, Media

WARSAW—Poland will seek to further support its neighbor Belarus by opening its borders and labor market while providing financial support to civil society, Poland’s Prime Minister said on Friday, after a violent crackdown on post-election protests.

The protests in Belarus pose the biggest challenge yet to strongman President Alexander Lukashenko’s 26-year rule. The protesters accuse Lukashenko of rigging last Sunday’s presidential election to win a sixth term.

Poland Offers New Support for Belarus Civil Society, Media Belarusian women, one of them carrying a poster reads “My brother is not a criminal”, rally in solidarity with protesters injured in the latest rallies against the results of the country’s presidential election in Minsk, Belarus, on Aug. 13, 2020. (AP Photo)

Poland’s multi-step plan, which would also provide scholarships for academics and funding for the independent media, will initially cost around 50 million zlotys ($13.45 million), Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki told the Polish parliament.

“Empathy is not enough—we need to take concrete action,” he said.

Poland’s support program comes after it demanded the European Union host a special summit on Belarus. Morawiecki called for the EU to take further action.

Poland Offers New Support for Belarus Civil Society, Media Police use truncheons on protesters during a mass protest following presidential election in Minsk, Belarus, on Aug. 10, 2020. (Sergei Grits/AP Photo)

“In this moment, you can’t don the mask of neutrality or indifference. If we don’t take steps as a united Europe now, then we will let it be known to all of our neighbors that when they are threatened, one can only count on oneself,” he said.

Earlier on Friday, Poland’s Deputy Foreign Minister Marcin Przydacz said Poland was bracing for an influx of Belarusian migrants.

“You need to consider support for people who need to pass the border quickly, but we must be responsible for our European partners, that is, the Schengen border,” Przydacz told the Catholic radio station Siodma9.

Poland Offers New Support for Belarus Civil Society, Media A couple hugs after being released from a detention center where protesters were detained during a mass rally following presidential election in Minsk, Belarus, on Aug. 14, 2020. (AP Photo)

Because Poland belongs to the EU’s Schengen area, anyone who enters legally from Belarus can travel freely within the other 25 Schengen countries.

EU foreign ministers on Friday discussed their response to the crackdown, and diplomats and officials say new sanctions are likely to be imposed as early as this month.

Morawiecki reiterated his government’s demand that Belarus rerun its elections with foreign observers present, echoing his Czech counterpart, Prime Minister Andrej Babis.

Poland shares a close history with Belarus, a country of 9.5 million people including between 300,000 and 1.2 million of Polish origin, according to different estimates.

By Marcin Goclowski, Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk, Joanna Plucinska, and Alan Charlish

Focus News: Poland Offers New Support for Belarus Civil Society, Media

Trini Lopez, 1960s-Era Singer Mentored by Sinatra, Dies

RIO RANCHO, N.M.—Trini Lopez, a singer and guitarist who gained fame for his versions of “Lemon Tree” and “If I Had a Hammer” in the 1960s and took his talents to Hollywood, died Tuesday. He was 83. Filmmaker P. David Ebersole, who just finished shooting a documentary on Lopez with Todd Hughes, confirmed that Lopez died from complications of COVID-19 at Desert Regional Medical Center in Palm Springs, California. Business partner and musician Joe Chavira said he and Lopez just finished recording a song “If By Now,” a tune meant to raise money for food banks during COVID-19. “And here he is dying of something he was trying to fight,” Chavira said. Lopez crossed over into acting, appearing in the World War II drama “The Dirty Dozen,” the comedy “The…