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How to get Peter Pan in Disney Dreamlight Valley
How to get Peter Pan in Disney Dreamlight Valley

Time of India

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

How to get Peter Pan in Disney Dreamlight Valley

Image via Disney Dreamlight Valley Peter Pan has arrived in Disney Dreamlight Valley as a part of the Mysteries of Skull Rock update; the game brings whimsical adventures to the Valley. To unlock this iconic character, players have to complete a series of quests tied to the Forgotten and Skull Rock, a mysterious location on Dazzle Beach. Players have to progress through the main storyline, solve puzzles, and gather resources to unlock Peter Pan and welcome as a villager. Steps to unlock Peter Pan in Disney Dreamlight Valley Disney Dreamlight Valley -- Mysteries of Skull Rock Update Trailer Here are the steps to unlock Peter Pan in Disney Dreamlight Valley: 1. Finish the main storyline & "A Forgotten Name" quest. Players have to finish the game's main questline to unlock the 'Forgotten' as a character. Wait for the 'A Forgotten Name' quest to appear as this may take up to 45 minutes after the update. Then speak to the 'Forgotten' near the 'Skull Rock' and assign them a permanent name to progress. 2. Start the "Shadows on the Wall" quest. Players have to enter 'Skull Rock' with the 'Forgotten' and search for three broken lanterns, these lanterns will be found in the following locations: 1 lantern will be buried near the winches, players need to dig up the shining mound. 2 lanterns will be submerged in water, players need to use the fishing rod near the dock to obtain them. Collect the following materials in order to repair the lanterns: 3 Gold Ingots. 9 Glass. 9 Vitalys Crystals. 3. Craft and place Pixie Dust Lanterns Players need to catch three Pixie Dust Orbs in these locations: Glade of Trust, near Mother Gothel's house. Forest of Valor, on the bridge. Forgotten Lands, by the pond. Players then can craft the lanterns at a workbench and place them on the winches inside Skull Rock. 4. Solve the 'Jade Skull' riddles. Players need to answer these three riddles to proceed: 1. "A swaying home atop the sea-foam" (Pirate ship). 2. "A winged creature with magic dust" (Pixie). 3. "An instrument of wind for Peter Pan" (Pan flute). 5. Finish the "A Ship of Gold" quest . Players need to follow the Shadow and Forgotten deeper into Skull Rock. Break rocks in order to find a Pixie Dust Orb and then collect six Pixie Dust drops. Players should use the dust to make the pirate ship fly, then solve the barrel puzzle: Match symbols: Hook + Clock, Sewing Needle + Shadow, Pixie + Bell. Retrieve the Captain's Key and unlock the cabin to meet Peter Pan. Through following the above steps players can unlock Peter Pan. This requires lots of patience and resourcefulness, from repairing lanterns to solving riddles. Game On Season 1 kicks off with Sakshi Malik's inspiring story. Watch Episode 1 here

Forgotten: Searching for Palestine's Hidden Places and Lost Memorials review
Forgotten: Searching for Palestine's Hidden Places and Lost Memorials review

The Guardian

time13-04-2025

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

Forgotten: Searching for Palestine's Hidden Places and Lost Memorials review

Raja Shehadeh – lawyer, activist and Palestine's greatest prose writer – has long been a voice of sanity and measure in the fraught, tendentious world of Arab-Israeli politics. His first non-academic book, When the Bulbul Stopped Singing, chronicled the 2002 siege of his hometown, Ramallah, while Palestinian Walks, which won the Orwell prize, traced how Israel's de facto occupation of the West Bank had fundamentally altered both its geography and its history. Last year, Shehadeh published What Does Israel Fear from Palestine?, his first book since the attacks of 7 October. It was a work in two parts: the first, a characteristically measured analysis of how history led us to this point; the second, a bitterly furious record of the devastation wrought upon Gaza. The overwhelming impression was of a man who, after decades of engagement, had finally, tragically, succumbed to despair. So it is an unexpected relief to find in Forgotten something different: a Shehadeh who is engaged, forensic, alert to history's weight but unwilling to let it crush him. Perhaps this is due to the presence of his co-author, his wife, the academic Penny Johnson. The prose remains lawyerly, precise to the point of fastidiousness, but the collaboration lends it a quiet strength. The first-person plural voice used throughout the book is intimate yet resolute, while the occasional references to 'Raja' and 'Penny' in the third person suggest a certain distance – a recognition that they, too, are subjects in this vast historical tragedy, just as much as its narrators. The project of Forgotten echoes Palestinian Walks, but this time there is a clear objective to Shehadeh and Johnson's wanderings. They are searching for evidence of Palestinian history in the West Bank – traces both ancient and recent of the thriving culture that has endured here for millennia, and the memorials that bear witness to the suffering of those who call this place home. Again and again, I thought of WG Sebald as I read Forgotten. The resemblance lies not only in the mournful elegance of the prose but also in its method: a meditative excavation of history embedded in the landscape. Readers of The Rings of Saturn, in which Sebald wanders the East Anglian coast uncovering the buried violence of empire, will recognise the impulse. But here, in occupied Palestine, the violence is neither buried nor historical. It is immediate, ongoing. 'How many human lives and how many futures would have been preserved … had the Israeli government … prevented further settlements?', the authors ask. 'Thousands have died since, and so here we were, on our way to see how Palestinians memorialise their dead in Nablus.' At the heart of Shehadeh's work – and the conflict itself – is the idea of biopolitics, as explored by thinkers such as Michel Foucault and Giorgio Agamben. Forgotten, like Palestinian Walks, examines the way geography and history are manipulated, controlled and erased. To move through Palestine is to navigate a web of restrictions – permits, checkpoints, detours – designed not only to obstruct but to exhaust. It is a book about memory and memorials, but also about the sheer difficulty of reaching them. 'Checkpoints, closures and a regime of exclusions have deprived new generations from gaining an impression of the country as a geographical unit,' write Shehadeh and Johnson. And that, of course, is precisely the point. The writers seek out the ruins of Kafr Bir'im, a Palestinian village in Galilee destroyed by the Israeli army in 1953, and the tomb of Mahmoud Darwish, Shehadeh's friend and Palestine's great poet. They visit Ottoman khans – way stations for desert caravans – and search for the remnants of ancient Gibeon and Qasr al-Yahud on the River Jordan, the site of Christ's baptism. They find a monument to a squadron of Turkish aeronauts and the only public memorial to the Nakba, the 1948 expulsion of 750,000 Palestinians. Everywhere, history is distorted or obliterated, rewritten by Israeli power. And yet, for all this, Forgotten is a book of resistance – not just political, but existential. Shehadeh and Johnson, now in their 70s, offer a vision of Palestinian heritage that refuses to be erased, tracing a lineage that stretches back millennia and persists today despite the relentless attempts to efface it. History, like the land itself, cannot be so easily obliterated. Even after bulldozers and bombs, flowers bloom, trees reclaim razed earth, red anemones push through rock. Shehadeh and Johnson remain awed by the hills, by vultures and eagles wheeling above them, by the annual clouds of almond blossom. All this layered past, Forgotten insists, holds within it the promise of a future just as rich, just as enduring. In previous reviews, I wrote that Shehadeh's books are like beacons held up against the darkness of Israeli oppression. Forgotten is perhaps the brightest light of all. Forgotten by Raja Shehadeh and Penny Johnson is published by Profile (£14.99). To support the Guardian and Observer order your copy at Delivery charges may apply

North Las Vegas veteran nonprofit closes doors; city leader calls on community to act
North Las Vegas veteran nonprofit closes doors; city leader calls on community to act

Yahoo

time02-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

North Las Vegas veteran nonprofit closes doors; city leader calls on community to act

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) – Their call to action went largely unheard, but leaders of an award-winning North Las Vegas nonprofit said they will continue to find a way to save veterans' lives. Kelly and Peter Guidry, co-founders of Forgotten not Gone, said their veteran suicide prevention nonprofit has helped save thousands of Las Vegas-based veterans. Their organization received high acclaim from the City of Las Vegas and North Las Vegas. 'We were blessed to receive a grant from the city of North Las Vegas for two years in the amount of $1.6 million and that grant covered everything,' Kelly said. The nonprofit immediately started work on finding bicycles that could accommodate a vast array of veterans—suffering from a variety of afflictions. Some of the modded vehicles cost as high as $23,000, with the typical bikes ranging around $8,000. Once the grant ran out in September, Kelly said the biggest hurdle was paying rent to keep the nonprofit open. 'We're too big now where we can just go work out of our home and stuff like that,' she said. 'But we're just not big enough where we can afford the type of overhead that's just going on in the community right now.' 8 News Now reached out to North Las Vegas Councilman Scott Black who has visited the nonprofit multiple times. He asked the community to help the nonprofit, pointing to their impact on the city so far. 'The City of North Las Vegas is committed to helping our local veterans through various programs and community partnerships, such as Forgotten Not Gone, who offers great programs to those who have served. During the pandemic, the City was able to direct $1.6 million in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds to Forgotten Not Gone, the largest grant the City issued. The nonprofit has helped more than 23,000 local veterans with those funds through its Veteran Trike Brigade. We urge anyone interested to get involved with this tremendous organization so they can continue empowering our veteran community.' -North Las Vegas Councilman Scott Black Peter said he also received a call from Black who discussed potential warehouse options for the nonprofit. 'He found out about, you know, the dire need that we're in right now,' Peter said. 'And he said he was going to make a few phone calls see about warehouse spaces.' The donations to Forgotten not Gone will go directly to help pay the rent for a potential site and the cost for storing many of the specialty 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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