Joy Kayembe and George Andreas from The Warren School, Chadwell Heath, are part of a group making a film about the dangers of smoking.
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
11:25 AM
The Warren School is taking part in the Deborah Hutton Campaign’s Cut Films competition.
A group of pupils is determined to win a film competition to encourage young people to not take up smoking.
The Warren School, Whalebone Lane North, Chadwell Heath, is taking part in the Deborah Hutton Campaign’s Cut Films competition.
The contest, supported by the Post and its parent company Archant London, aims to get young people to make two minute films about the dangers of smoking.
Here pupil George Andreas, 14, part of a group of students producing a film, blogs about starting the process.
“Lights, camera, action! Our no smoking Deborah Hutton Campaign is “rolling”.
“Ideas have been thrown around the group and the creative juices are flowing so watch this space.
“We will win this competition and drive a hard hitting message to other young people.”
Teenagers were forced to flee from their beds after their family car erupted in flames which licked at the front of their home following an arson attack.
The four groups said London’s status as a multi-cultural city which “respects and celebrates diversity” is what makes it one of the most “dynamic, progressive and tolerant cities in the world”.
Residents are being asked for their views on the council’s efforts to tackle the large number of betting shops in the borough.
The four groups said London’s status as a multi-cultural city which “respects and celebrates diversity” is what makes it one of the most “dynamic, progressive and tolerant cities in the world”.
Brave young Scouts braced themselves for a night of ghoulish storytelling in a spooky mansion.
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