Scallywags Indoor Play & Party
Scallywags Indoor Play & Party
Scallywags Indoor Play & Party
Scallywags Indoor Play & Party
Scallywags Indoor Play & Party
Scallywags Indoor Play & Party
Scallywags Indoor Play & Party
Phone:+44 1384 77004
Hours:Sunday | 11am - 5pm |
Monday | 9:30am - 6pm |
Tuesday | 9:30am - 6pm |
Wednesday | 9:30am - 6pm |
Thursday | 9:30am - 6pm |
Friday | 9:30am - 6pm |
Saturday | 9:30am - 6pm |
Attraction Location
Scallywags Indoor Play & Party Videos
Zig Zags Indoor Soft Play & Party Area
Zig Zags Play Area is a fun filled soft play area with:
ballpits, slides, trampolines, football pitch, toddler area & disco party room.
We provides a safe, stimulating environment for your child and a relaxing environment for you.
We take great pride in hosting children’s parties, fun-filled from beginning to end.
2 min drive from Merry Hill shopping centre,
01384485065
zigzagsplayandparty.co.uk
Woodside School Concert December 1991
Woodside School Concert December 1991
DUDLEY ZOO & VALLEY WITH FAMILY - Weekly Vlog 9
DUDLEY ZOO & VALLEY WITH FAMILY!
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Join me on my journey! Where I post a new weekly vlog every Sunday! I hope you stick around! Show me some love by leaving me a like and comment, also subscribe to my channel to follow me!
Kirsty x
We are the Pirates - Kids Pirate Song | Songs for Children
Ahoy there matey! Let's go on a pirate adventure on the high seas! Help us dig for treasure, and do the pirate dance. Can you find Pirate Will's parrot? Sing and dance with Bounce Patrol! A fun children's song about pirates. Arrr!
Visit BouncePatrol.com to get Bounce Patrol merch!
More Videos:
Watch Old MacDonald had a Farm:
Watch The Ice Cream Song:
Watch The Animal Sounds Song:
Bounce Patrol make videos for kids - from toddlers and preschool, through to kindergarten and elementary school age.
See more of Bounce Patrol's nursery rhymes:
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We are Pirates written by Ace Baker and Clair Marlo
Thanks for watching!
The River War: An Account of the Reconquest of the Sudan by Winston S. Churchill
When the self-proclaimed Mahdi (“Guided One”) gathered Islamic forces and kicked the Anglo-Egyptians out of the Sudan, he unleashed a backlash. With the image of the heroic General Charles Gordon dying at Khartoum, the British public was ready to support a war to reclaim the lost territories. And when the political time was right, a British-Egyptian-Sudanese expedition led by the redoubtable Herbert Kitchener set out to do just that.
The river involved was the Nile. For millennia, its annual flood has made habitable a slender strip, though hundreds of miles of deserts, between its tributaries and its delta. Through this desolate region, man and beast struggled to supply the bare essentials of life. Though this same region, the expedition had to find and defeat an enemy several times larger than itself.
The young Churchill was hot to gain war experience to aid his career, and so he wangled a transfer to the 21st Lancers and participated in the last successful cavalry charge the world ever saw, in the climactic battle of Omdurman. He also had a position as war correspondent for the Morning Post, and on his return to England he used his notes to compose this book.
Chapter 01. The Rebellion of the Mahdi - 00:00
Chapter 02. The Fate of the Envoy - 1:24:09
Chapter 03. The Dervish Empire - 2:45:41
Chapter 04. The Years of Preparation - 3:33:13
Chapter 05. The Beginning of the War - 4:15:26
Chapter 06. Firket - 5:00:59
Chapter 07. The Recovery of the Dongola Province - 5:21:57
Chapter 08. The Desert Railway - 6:15:20
Chapter 09. Abu Hamed - 7:04:52
Chapter 10. Berber - 7:46:23
Chapter 11. Reconaissance - 8:22:42
Chapter 12. The Battle of the Atbara - 8:52:56
Chapter 13. The Grand Advance - 9:21:50
Chapter 14. The Operations of the First of September - 9:50:47
Chapter 15. The Battle of Omdurman - 10:17:57
Chapter 16. The Fall of the City - 11:34:01
Chapter 17. The Fashoda Incident - 11:55:29
Chapter 18. On the Blue Nile - 12:28:57
Chapter 19. The End of the Khalifa - 13:12:58
Appendix - 13:54:27
Palestinians tell their story through drama and dance on Scottish tour 2013 - Lajee
Palestinians tell their story through drama and dance at a performance by the Lajee dabke dancers in Glasgow, Scotland on June 16th 2013. The Scottish part of the Lajee tour includes Edinburgh, Aberdeen, Dundee, Perth then they will be touring the north of Ireland in Derry and Belfast. The Lajee Centre is situated in the Aida Refugee Camp in Bethlehem where Palestinians were forced to flee to in 1948 when they were driven off their land in historic Palestine. The Lajee Centre is a cultural centre for youth where they can learn and practise music, dance, photography and other creative skills. Young people get the chance to express themselves and enjoy themselves in what is otherwise a difficult life under occupation. Not only were three quarters of a million Palestinians driven out of their land in 1948 but ever since then the Zionist state has been acquiring more and more of their land by force and anyone who resists is shot dead or their houses are bulldozed with the occupants still in them. Foreign observers have also been killed when trying to prevent demolitions. The Zionist state tries to make life as difficult as possible for those who remain in what is left of Palestine to encourage Palestinians to leave. Harrassment by troops is a daily occurrance for Palestinians. People are routinely arrested and flung in jail without charge or trial. Children also suffer arrest and harrassment and Palestinian adults and children are frequently shot dead for no reason by troops or in areas where there are illegal Zionist settlers, the settlers often harrass and kill people, backed up by troops. Two people were recently killed in the Aida Refugee Camp including a 15 year old boy. Photographer Mohammed Alazza was shot in the face while photographing troops that were invading the camp. The Lajee group that is currently touring Scotland and Ireland is showing exhibitions of photographs and films as well as dancing. There are two exhibitions by Mohammed whose photos are on display and one of them shows the soldier who shot him.
The dance-drama in this video depicts what daily life is like for Palestinians. It is not safe for people to greet their friends or children to play in the streets in case some soldiers take a notion to kill some people when they feel like it. Totally mindless killings are carried out by trigger-happy occupying forces. Or if soldiers start bullying children and they retaliate with stone-throwing the children are often shot dead. In this tragic drama a man greeting his friend is shot dead and the dancers cover the body with a Palestinian flag as mournful music plays with a wailing flute. At the end his body draped in the flag is carried out and a couple of the dancers give the Palestinian V sign.
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