About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 42. Chapters: Project Gutenberg, List of digital library projects, Mutopia Project, Rosetta Project, BBC Young Musician of the Year, Google Books Library Project, F1 in Schools, World Oral Literature Project, Create a Comic Project, Paper Project, BBC Domesday Project, Rome Consensus for a Humanitarian Drug Policy, Ask A Biologist, National Educational Technology Standards, The Nutcracker, International Television Contest for Young Musicians, Project 211, Project Rastko, Digital Classicist, Project 985, Intercontinental Dictionary Series, The Speaker, Eye2eye Software, QED manifesto, Flying Start Challenge, W.T. Stead Resource Site, U4energy, Perseus Project, Nizkor Project, ETwinning, Starshine, Web-based Inquiry Science Environment, Ovation Press, Wisconsin Idea Theatre, Digital Library for Dutch Literature, Taught Course Centre, Mexico Link, Schools 4 Schools, UK Chess Challenge, Nordic Summer University, European Democratic Education Community, I-maestro, Kohl McCormick StoryBus, Harvard Project Physics, MAGIC, Workshop on building top-class universities, Norwegian Writers for Children, International Children's Book Day, Repositories Support Project, Takamul. Excerpt: The BBC Young Musician of the Year is a televised national music competition. It is broadcast on BBC Two and BBC Four biennially, despite the name, and hosted by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). The competition, a member of European Union of Music Competitions for Youth, is designed for British percussion, keyboard, string, brass and woodwind players, all of whom must be eighteen years of age or under on 1 January in the relevant year. The competition was established in 1978 by Humphrey Burton and Walter Todds, both of whom are former members of the BBC Television Music Department. Michael Hext, a trombonist, was the inaugural winner. In 1994, the usa...