instruction
stringclasses
60 values
input
stringlengths
15
174k
output
stringlengths
1
994
Can you summarize the following content in brief?
During Haveron's two months in charge the Glens have risen from 10th to seventh in the Irish Premiership table by taking 15 points from a possible 27. But on Saturday the east Belfast men face their toughest task of the season as they go to champions Crusaders. "We have got to compete with teams like Crusaders. We're Glentoran and this is what is expected of us," said Haveron. "Crusaders have been winning games with late goals and that is a sign of champions. "We have to get ourselves into a position to challenge for European football. "Last week against Ards we had three teenagers on the bench and therein lies our problem. We do not have a lot of strength in depth right now. "We have quality players at the club. It is just a matter of getting them fit and out on the park." Crusaders have won three in a row in the league - all by 1-0 - and have lost only one of their 18 games as they aim for a hat-trick of title successes. "Glentoran are playing well. The new manager has brought something to them in the last month or two," said Crusaders boss Stephen Baxter. "They are winning more than they are losing and have a lot of good players. At the start of the season I thought they would be there or thereabouts. They have just taken a bit of time to find their feet." Crusaders are seven points clear of second-placed Linfield who have a home fixture against Carrick Rangers. After the setback of losing at home to Cliftonville, David Healy's Blues responded with two resounding victories - 5-0 away to Portadown in the league last Saturday and then a midweek 6-1 hammering of Ards in the County Antrim Shield semi-final. "Carrick have picked up in the last couple of weeks. Everybody enjoys coming to Windsor Park and we will be ready for them on Saturday," said former Northern Ireland striker Healy. Ballymena's promising start to the season has faded in recent weeks, with back-to-back defeats at the hands of Dungannon Swifts and Cliftonville. David Jeffrey's men will look to bag three points at the expense of bottom club Portadown at the Showgrounds.
Gary Haveron says his Glentoran side have to get into a position to compete for European football next season.
Write a summary for the following excerpt.
A court heard Ryan York pointed the air pistol at Sarah McLeod's feet and ordered her to "dance, dance, dance". He then shot her in the leg and demanded that she cover up the attack when she went to hospital. A sheriff told York he had treated Miss McLeod "like dirt" during the "despicable" incident in December 2014. Depute fiscal Vicki Bell told Dundee Sheriff Court that staff at Ninewells Hospital had reported the injury to police as they believed it had been caused by a firearm. Miss Bell said: "She provided a statement attempting to cover up the incident by saying she had been shot in the leg at a party and did not remember where she had been or who was there. "The couple separated in October 2015 and after speaking to friends and family Miss McLeod decided to go to police." The court was told that prior to the shooting, Miss McLeod and York had an argument after she refused to get him a glass of water. Miss Bell said: "She saw him lean over the side of the bed and present an object which she knew to be a handgun at her. "She assumed it was a replica or fake gun. "However, he pointed the gun directly at her and shouted "get up and get water, you will go get it now". "She turned and walked towards the door and heard a loud pinging noise. "She looked down at her leg and observed heavy blood flow coming from her lower calf area." York, 25, admitted a charge of assault to injury. Sheriff Alastair Brown ordered York to be monitored in the community for a year after his release. He was also banned from contacting Miss McLeod for five years. Sheriff Brown said: "You did not simply assault her - you treated her like dirt, you treated her like your personal servant. "You told the social worker that you pointed the gun at her and told her to 'dance, dance, dance'. "That is despicable."
A Dundee man who shot his girlfriend when she refused to get him a glass of water in the middle of the night has been jailed for 32 months.
Summarize the following piece.
Andrew Dickinson, 37, was killed when his bike was involved in a collision with a black Mercedes on the northbound carriageway of the A308 Braywick Road. The accident happened on Wednesday at about 07:00 GMT. In a statement Mr Dickinson's family said he was "a much loved father, husband, brother and son". They added: "His death leaves a hole that will never be filled. He will be forever missed, but never forgotten by his wife, four-year-old son and 18-month-old twins." Thames Valley Police are appealing for witnesses to the accident to come forward.
The family of a man who died in a motorcycle accident in Maidenhead have said he will be "forever missed, but never forgotten".
Summarize the following content briefly.
Mae'n debyg bod tua 2,700 yn y ralïau yng Nghaerdydd, Abertawe, Aberystwyth a Bangor. Daw'r gwrthdystiadau wedi i'r arlywydd wahardd carfannau o bobl o saith gwlad sy'n bennaf Fwslemaidd rhag mynd i'r UDA am gyfnod. Mae Prif Weinidog Cymru, Carwyn Jones, wedi dweud y dylid oedi cyn gwahodd yr Arlywydd Trump ar ymweliad swyddogol i'r DU. Ond mae Ysgrifennydd Cymru, Alun Cairns, yn dweud y byddai'n croesawu'r arlywydd i Gymru. Cafodd gwahoddiad am ymweliad ei ymestyn gan Theresa May i arlywydd yr UDA pan roedd hi yn Washington yr wythnos ddiwethaf. Mae deiseb yn galw ar y Frenhines i beidio â'i wahodd ar ymweliad swyddogol bellach wedi denu dros 1.25 miliwn o lofnodion. Ymysg y rheiny sydd wedi beirniadu polisi diweddaraf Mr Trump mae'r Prif Weinidog, Carwyn Jones. Yn dilyn cyfarfod o'r Cyd-bwyllgor Gweinidogion ddydd Llun dywedodd Mr Jones y byddai ymweliad gan Mr Trump "yn anodd dan yr amgylchiadau presennol", a'i fod wedi codi pryderon am ymateb Llywodraeth y DU. Mae Downing Street wedi dweud bod penderfyniad ar fewnfudo i'r UDA yn "fater i Lywodraeth yr Unol Daleithiau", ond nad ydyn nhw'n cytuno â'r polisi. Cafodd y ddeiseb yn galw am israddio ymweliad Mr Trump, sydd wedi denu dros 47,000 llofnod o Gymru, ei lansio ddydd Sul. Ond pan ofynnwyd i Mr Cairns ar raglen y Post Cyntaf BBC Radio Cymru a fyddai'n croesawu'r arlywydd i Gymru ar ymweliad, dywedodd: "Yn sicr. Dim ond drwy weithio gyda'r Arlywydd Trump y gwnawn ni ddylanwadu. "Roedd ymweliad y prif weinidog i Washington yr wythnos diwethaf yn llwyddiannus ofnadwy achos roedd pryderon y gorllewin am beth oedd agwedd yr Arlywydd Trump tuag at NATO. "Gan bod ein perthynas yn adeiladol gyda Trump mi wnaeth Theresa May gadarnhau yn union beth oedd ei agwedd tuag at NATO, ac mae hynny'n ofnadwy o bwysig i ni ar gyfer sicrwydd tymor hir."
Roedd protestiadau ar draws Cymru nos Lun i wrthwynebu polisïau'r Arlywydd Donald Trump.
Summarize the following content briefly.
Satnam Singh, 74, was found on Coronation Street, Derby in July 2015. Police originally thought he had been hit by a car. Further investigations revealed Mr Singh had, in fact, been assaulted, Derbyshire Police said. Sukhraj Atwal, of Pear Tree Crescent, Derby, appeared at Southern Derbyshire Magistrates' Court on Saturday. Mr Singh was found injured on a Friday morning, near the Sikh temple where he worked as a volunteer.
A 29-year-old has been charged with murder, a year after a man died from head and chest injuries.
What is the summary of the following article?
Those attending the Muslims Against Terror rally heard speeches denouncing the recent attacks in Manchester and London. A representative of the Muslim Council of Scotland told crowds that Muslims had a "duty to protect this country" and had worked with Police Scotland. "We cannot let a handful of people radicalised by social media divide us." Organiser Omair Manzoor, said he wanted to give ordinary muslims, appalled by the recent terror attacks on London and Manchester an opportunity to show their sympathy for all those affected. The attacks were condemned by a succession of speakers who emphasised the importance of all communities standing together against terrorism. Lawyer Aamer Anwar asked: "Muslims reported those who went on to be terrorists, what were secret services doing?" MSP Anas Sarwar added: "Real Muslims were at home with their families... or working in hospitals." Another speaker, the Rev Stuart MacQuarrie, told the crowd: "We stand together appalled by the attacks in London, Manchester, Kabul and elsewhere."
A demonstration condemning terrorists attacks has been held in Glasgow's George Square.
Can you provide a summary of this content?
Juli Inkster's team trailed 10-6 after the morning fourballs, but won eight and a half points from 12 singles to regain the title they last won in 2009. However, the contest was marred by controversy over the issue over the non-concession of a short American putt in the fourballs. "After this morning they were all fired up," Inkster said of the incident. "The girls were awesome. Everybody did their job. I couldn't be more proud of them." Annika Sorenstam, assistant to Europe captain Carin Koch, said: "The US came out very strong and played very solid. There were some crucial matches at the end." Click here for the full day-by-day results of the 2015 Solheim Cup. It was one of the great matchplay comebacks in recent golf history. The USA were fired up after the earlier fourballs, delayed from the second day, in which Alison Lee and Brittany Lincicome lost to Charley Hull and Suzann Pettersen by two holes in controversial circumstances. Michelle Wie, winner of the 2014 US Women's Open, led the way in the singles with a superb 6&4 victory over Caroline Hedwall, before Gerina Piller sank a nine-footer to win her match against Caroline Masson and deny Europe the half-point they needed to retain the Cup. Lee, Morgan Pressel, Lizette Salas, Angela Stanford and Cristie Kerr were also victorious before Paula Creamer secured overall victory with a 4&3 success over Germany's Sandra Gal. Karine Icher and Melissa Reid were the only Europe players to win their matches, while Carlota Ciganda halved her battle with Lexi Thompson. This was a tournament played in relatively good spirit - until the incident early on the final day that is now part of Solheim Cup folklore. The score was 8-5 overnight, with three of the four fourball matches carried over to early Sunday morning because of bad light at the course in southern Germany. After a victory apiece in the first two matches, the focus was on the contest between the USA's Lee and Lincicome and Europe pair Hull and the two-time major winner Pettersen. At the 17th, Lee missed her birdie putt to win the hole and picked up her ball as Hull walked away, assuming Europe had conceded because the follow-up was a formality. However, Pettersen spoke to the referee and said there had been no concession, which meant the Americans incurred a penalty stoke and therefore lost the hole. Both Hull and Lee, playing in her first Solheim Cup, had to be consoled by team officials amid claims Europe had broken the game's moral code by not conceding from such a short distance. Four-time major winner Laura Davies blamed Norwegian Pettersen, 34, and said England's Hull, 19, was not at fault. The Hall of Fame member told Sky Sports: "I am disgusted. Suzann has let herself and her team down." US captain Inkster thought Europe's action was "disrespectful". She added: "I couldn't believe it. I saw Suzann walk away. You don't do that to your peers. I expected Carin to do something afterwards but she didn't." Europe captain Koch said it was Lee's mistake, adding: "Our team didn't concede the putt. She picked it up. It broke the rules. "We considered changing the outcome but we would not have given the putt. They would have made her putt it. So, no. "We all feel bad for Alison but she made a mistake." American player Creamer added: "This game is about sportsmanship and unfortunately that was not shown there. I wasn't a part of that match, but it's a game of golf and we have to remember that."
The USA produced a stunning display in the singles to beat Europe 14½-13½ and win the Solheim Cup in Germany.
Give a brief overview of this passage.
Marcelle O'Brien was sent to a home in Pinjarra, western Australia, run by the Fairbridge Society, at the age of four. The then-Queen, wife of George VI, later intervened to ask whether she could return to the UK to be adopted. But Fairbridge said it would not be in her "best interests", the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse heard. Mrs O'Brien said she suffered "mental cruelty" and "sadistic" treatment at the home where she was forced to do "slave labour". She was molested by her school's deputy principal and caned, the hearing was told. The abuse scandal of the British children sent abroad 'Name the villains', abuse inquiry told How will the inquiry work? The inquiry, which covers England and Wales, heard Ms O'Brien had lived in a "loving and caring" home with a foster mother in Lingfield, Surrey, immediately before being sent abroad. The foster mother later wrote to the Queen in an effort to get Ms O'Brien back to the UK so she could adopt her, the inquiry was told. Subsequent correspondence between the Queen's Lady in Waiting and the Fairbridge Society was read out at the hearing. A letter from the society to the Queen's Lady in Waiting said Ms O 'Brien was "happily settled at our school in Pinjarra - and which Her Majesty may remember visiting in 1928". It went on to say Ms O 'Brien had many friends and to uproot her would "not be in the child's best interests". The palace was apparently reassured by the Fairbridge response. A letter from the Lady in Waiting to the society said "the Queen was pleased to hear" that it was considered to be in Ms O'Brien's interests to remain at the school. Ms O'Brien told the inquiry panel: "They didn't take any notice. The Royal Family just didn't want to know anything. They stopped you from going back to your own original home." Analysis by Tom Symonds, home affairs correspondent After the tortured two-and-a half-year birth of this inquiry, it has been hard to remember the reason it was set up: namely, to allow victims of sexual abuse the opportunity to give their accounts. The hurt and anger with which British child migrant Marcelle O'Brien has been left was plain to see. Much of the inquiry's detailed work is being done out of the public eye, so occasions like this are significant. It was also clear that the inquiry is interested in links between child abuse and power. The Fairbridge Society, in whose care Marcelle was trusted, had royal and establishment supporters. The evidence shows it was prepared to discredit the birth parents of its children. But the names of the Fairbridge deputy principal that Marcelle O'Brien says indecently assaulted her, and the "cottage mother" who treated her so badly were not given, despite calls for the "guilty to be named". This is not a court. The inquiry has no powers of prosecution, only the remit to make "findings of fact". It is trying to avoid reaching conclusions about wrongdoing by individuals, unless they are required to show wrongdoing by institutions. But that will not satisfy some of its critics. The inquiry later heard from a 70-year-old British man who was sent to live at an Australian "farm school", where he was repeatedly sexually abused and raped. Giving evidence anonymously, he said he was targeted by a group of older boys who would drag him into the bathroom or into scrub land and "make you do what they wanted you to". He was also sexually abused by a priest and told the panel: "When he attacked you it was when you got dressed for the choir, he would make sure you were on your own and that's when he would attack you or abuse you." The witness lives on his own and says the sexual abuse has made it difficult for him to build relationships with women. "I've had to live with this for 62 years now. I live it 7 days a week, 24 hours a day. But you can't get it out of your mind because it's imprinted on your mind. There's no way you can get away from it," he said. Another witness, Peter Bagshaw, told the inquiry he had been sexually abused both at homes in England and after he was migrated. In Australia, he was sexually abused by a large man "who could easily beat me up if he wanted" and he felt powerless to do anything because "I was in a strange country and knew nobody," the panel heard. "I still feel angry and disgusted that any kid would be put through that," his statement said. The first phase of the child sexual abuse inquiry is looking at the way organisations have protected children outside the UK. Between 7,000 and 10,000 children were moved to Australia after World War Two. They were recruited by religious institutions from both the Anglican and Catholic churches, or charities, including Barnardo's and the Fairbridge Society, with the aim of giving them a better life.
A woman who was sent from England to Australia as a child was molested and left so hungry she ate grain meant for pigs, an inquiry has heard.
What is a brief summary of the information below?
Guptill, 28, scored more than half of the tourists' second innings runs on the way to setting Worcestershire a target of 246 in 50 overs. At 169-2 with 20 overs remaining, the hosts looked the more likely winners. But Worcestershire lost six wickets for 22 runs to subside to 230 all out. Opener Guptill was one of the Black Caps' stars in their impressive recent World Cup campaign, scoring a competition record 237 not out in the semi-final against West Indies to help New Zealand reach the final. However, Tom Latham and Hamish Rutherford are the Test incumbents at the top of the order, leaving New Zealand head coach Mike Hesson with a selection quandary before the first Test against England begins at Lord's on Thursday.
New Zealand opener Martin Guptill improved his prospects of selection for next week's first Test against England with an impressive 150 in the tour win at Worcester.
Summarize the following content briefly.
Mark Sands, 50, pleaded guilty to sending the "grossly offensive" threat on Facebook against Caroline Ansell, MP for Eastbourne and Willingdon. Factory worker Sands, of Upperton Gardens in Eastbourne, wrote he would stab Ms Ansell "to death," Hastings Magistrates' Court heard. He is due to be sentenced on 12 April at Brighton Magistrates' Court. The hearing was told Sands had posted on Facebook: "If you vote to take £30 off my money, I will personally come round to your house... and stab you to death." In a statement read in court, Ms Ansell said the threats were "chilling" and she had now closed her personal Facebook account. Her statement said: "It felt like a brush with something sinister." Speaking after the hearing, she said she felt Sands' threat was "very real". It had been difficult to tell her children about the threat on her life, she added. "How do you find the words to make it okay?" she said. The drones, called Octocopters, could deliver packages weighing up to 2.3kg to customers within 30 minutes of them placing the order, he said. However, he added that it could take up to five years for the service to start. The US Federal Aviation Administration is yet to approve the use of unmanned drones for civilian purposes. "I know this looks like science fiction, but it's not," Mr Bezos told CBS television's 60 Minutes programme. "We can do half-hour delivery... and we can carry objects, we think, up to five pounds (2.3kg), which covers 86% of the items that we deliver." The service will be called Prime Air and comes as Amazon is looking to improve its efficiency to boost growth. Amazon also posted a video on its website showing a drone picking up a package from one of its warehouses and delivering it to the doorstep of a customer's house. However, it still has to wait for permission from US regulators. The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has approved the use of drones for police and government agencies, issuing about 1,400 permits over the past several years. Civilian air space is expected to be opened up to all kinds of drones in the US by 2015 and in Europe by 2016. Existing regulations are in place to minimise the risk of injury to people on the ground, said Dr Darren Ansell, an expert on unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) from the University of Central Lancashire. "The UAVs do not currently have the awareness of their environment to be able to avoid flying into people. To deliver goods to people's homes for example in residential areas, the UAVs must overfly densely populated towns and cities, something that today's regulations prevent. "Other things to consider are security of the goods during the transit. With no one to guard them the aircraft and package could be captured and stolen," he said. Amazon said: "from a technology point of view, we'll be ready to enter commercial operations as soon as the necessary regulations are in place." The FAA was "actively working on rules for unmanned aerial vehicles", the company said, adding that it hoped the green light would be given as early as 2015. "One day, Prime Air vehicles will be as normal as seeing mail trucks on the road today." Zookal, an Australian textbook rental company, announced earlier this year that it would start using drones to make deliveries from 2015 if approved by Australia's Civil Aviation Safety Authority. Australian law allows the use of unmanned aircraft for commercial use.
A man has admitted making threats on social media to kill a Sussex Conservative MP. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Amazon, the world's largest online retailer, is testing unmanned drones to deliver goods to customers, chief executive Jeff Bezos has said.
Please provide a concise summary of the following section.
For the home match against MK Dons on 4 April, half of the ticket sales and Charlton's players' match fees will be donated to PC Palmer's family. Addicks players will also wear a special shirt for the match with his warrant number on. The club have placed a scarf over PC Palmer's seat up until the game. They have also announced they will create a memorial stone at The Valley, which will be located near a statue of their record appearance-holder Sam Bartram. An online donation page set up to support PC Palmer's family recently passed £700,000.
Charlton have announced plans to pay tribute to season ticket holder PC Keith Palmer, who was killed in the recent Westminster terror attack.
Summarize the passage below.
New Scotland women's head coach Kerr previously managed Stirling University's men's team in Scotland's Lowland League. Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger said recently he expected a woman to take charge of a Premier League club. "I think he's right, I think there's lots of females that could do it," said Kerr. "There's lots of females globally that have the capabilities and the skill-set to do it. "Everything depends on success. It's a results-driven business. "As part of your journey, you need to try and develop that skill-set, you need to have different experiences and when you're successful with all the experiences that you have then that puts you in a great position to go to the top." Scotland women play their first match under Kerr away to Hungary in a friendly on 14 September. Kerr's squad features most of the player pool that went to Euro 2017, with Scotland's opening World Cup qualifiers against Belarus and Albania following in October. The Scots will also face Switzerland and Poland in qualification Group 2. "The ultimate goal is to repeatedly play on the European and the world stage," Kerr told BBC Scotland. "It's the only way that we're going to develop as a nation. We've already achieved success in terms of reaching the Euro finals. So now it's about trying to do one better and go to the World Cup finals. "The first thing is you have to be realistic. The format in comparison with the Euros is different. It's only one team that automatically qualifies. "Within our group, Switzerland are a Pot A team, we're the Pot B team, so it's going to be difficult, but we have the players, we have the capabilities. "A key word that I would use in everything that we do moving forward is to have a professional approach in everything that we do. "We're in a situation right now where we have about 17 or 18 players that are playing outwith Scotland in a professional environment, but we also need to make sure that our domestic product is good as well and that we can try and retain our best players. "That might mean that the clubs can't do that initially, but certainly that's an aspirational goal - to have a professional environment. "It's not just finances, it's human resource that's really, really important. To get all the clubs to buy in to having a women's section, a women's team would be fantastic."
Shelley Kerr believes the worldwide talent available could lead to more women managing men's teams.
Can you summarize the following information?
A weak pound is expected to make the UK a more attractive holiday destination, especially with American and Canadian holidaymakers. But Prof Brian Garrod said more spending in marketing was needed along with improving Wales' tourism offer. The Welsh Government said Wales' tourism had seen record-breaking years. But Prof Garrod said: "We have really good hotels here in Wales but we don't have the best. "While we have some good theme parks in Wales, we don't have the best and we're always competing against our neighbours in England and Scotland." Prof Garrod from Aberystwyth University's Business School added: "We need to do a bit more to attract people to Wales, especially from overseas. "We need to redouble our marketing efforts. We need to think a bit more about investing in making Wales known." Prof Garrod, a member of the Tourism Society, the group representing the sector, claimed Visit Wales spent about £10m on marketing each year whereas Scotland invested about £55m. "A lot of foreign visitors know a lot about Scotland and head up to Edinburgh and Glasgow and the Highlands and leave Wales out of their itinerary," he said. "They just don't know about us." Economy Secretary Ken Skates said "tourism in Wales was in a strong position". He highlighted the International Passenger Survey, published by the Office for National Statistics, which showed Wales received 856,000 overseas visitors in the first nine months of 2016, up 12% on 2015. Wales also recorded a 9% increase in expenditure compared to 2015. Mr Skates also highlighted opportunities this year with the launch of the 2017 Year of Legends campaign, a Welsh Government promotion to sell Wales' culture and heritage. "Campaign work continues to convert early interest and opportunities from the weak pound into bookings for the summer," he said. Prof Garrod said the Year of Legends was an opportunity to cash in on Wales' castles with research showing over 40% of overseas visitors knowing about them. "This is a good move," he added, referring to the campaign. The island council says Solo Promoters Ltd has asked the authority to waive its hire fee for part of the venue. A council report says: "There is a real risk that unless Solo can reduce its costs and or increase ticket sales that the event may be cancelled." The council is considering reducing its fee by £42,000. The authority said an increase in the number of major festivals had led to falling tickets sales at most established events, with some being cancelled. It said: "Solo has made it clear that unless costs can be reduced the event may not be viable to stage in 2017." Solo currently pays £55,000 a year for the hire of Seaclose Park in Newport. A council meeting on 13 October will consider reducing the fee to £13,000 in exchange for giving Solo more responsibility for security and other duties. The authority said the cost of the duties was £42,000, equivalent in value to the fee reduction. The revised terms would not apply if ticket sales exceeded 45,000, excluding day tickets. The report added that Solo had been unwilling to provide its detailed accounts for the event for "reasons of commercial confidentiality". The Isle of Wight Festival, which was re-established in 2002, is thought to generate about £10m a year for the local economy, the council said. Solo Promoters Ltd has been approached for comment. Robert Bryan, 43, died in hospital after he was attacked by Kieron Simpson, 26, at HMP Doncaster on 27 February. A post-mortem examination found the cause of death was a blow to the head. Simpson, from Dodworth, was serving a sentence for burglary when he attacked Bryan. He admitted manslaughter at Sheffield Crown Court on 30 April. The court heard Bryan, who was serving a sentence for manslaughter, was knocked unconscious when he fell to the floor after being struck by Simpson. He died later the same day. Det Sgt Andrew Knowles said: "This case clearly shows how dangerous and devastating just one punch can be. "Simpson attacked Bryan for no apparent reason - he may not have intended to kill him but anyone who makes the decision to strike another with force must consider the potential shattering consequences a single punch can have."
Wales could miss out on a large increase in overseas tourists expected to visit the UK in the coming months, according to an expert. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The organisers of the Isle of Wight Festival have threatened to cancel the event in 2017 unless fee changes are agreed, the council has said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man has been jailed for four years for killing an inmate with a single punch at a South Yorkshire prison.
What is a brief summary of the information below?
Traffic filled up three lanes for several days on the island of Java. Crowds travelling to their home villages to mark the end of the holy month of Ramadan converged around a single traffic junction, where building work forced them to wait. Most victims were elderly and died in hot cars, officials say. One toddler was poisoned to death by exhaust fumes. Daytime temperatures in the city of Brebes, where the jam occurred, have been close to 30C (86F) all week. The authorities have set up a hotline for stranded drivers to call in a medical emergency but correspondents say it is unclear how help would reach anyone in trouble. Transport officials said the deaths happened between Sunday and Tuesday. The traffic jam was more than 13 miles (21km) long. "There's no space on the road," transport ministry spokesman Hemi Pramuraharjo told the Agence France-Presse news agency. "We don't have a solution." The Indonesian health ministry said people who were planning a long car journey should rest along the way and take necessary precautions. Local media reported that roads in to the capital Jakarta are expected to be busy over the weekend as people return from the Eid al-Fitr festival that marks the end of Ramadan. The batsman and wicketkeeper, 33, has spent 16 years at Durham and will miss his own benefit game in order to finish the season with Gloucestershire. A finger injury to 24-year-old wicketkeeper Gareth Roderick led the club to pursue Mustard. Head coach Richard Dawson told the club website: "Phil brings vast experience and match-winning abilities which I'm sure he will show at Gloucestershire." Mustard has played in all of Durham's major trophy-winning sides and helped Lancashire to promotion while on loan in 2015. He is also Durham's leading appearance maker in both first-class and T20 cricket. Gloucestershire hope Mustard will be eligible for their One-Day Cup match against Surrey at the Oval on 27 July. He would not be eligible if Gloucestershire and Durham were to meet in the knockout stages of either limited-overs competition.
At least 12 people have died of dehydration and exhaustion while sitting in traffic in Indonesia. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Gloucestershire have signed Durham stalwart Phil Mustard on loan.
Please summarize the passage below.
The MP for Richmond in Yorkshire will also leave Parliament at the next election. His departure from the Foreign Office was revealed during a reshuffle that has also seen the departure of senior Conservative MP Ken Clarke and Welsh Secretary David Jones from the front bench. In his political career, Mr Hague has seen the extremes of public life. There was astonishing early success, followed by bitter failure and a rise to the top of national - and even international - politics. Mr Hague first came to wider attention aged just 16, when he gave the 1977 Conservative Party conference a barnstorming speech on the perils of a too-powerful state. The blond-haired boy with the Yorkshire accent wowed with his anti-Labour rhetoric, joking to his middle-aged and elderly audience: "It's all right for you. You won't be here in 30 or 40 years' time." Thirty-three years later, Mr Hague was the holder of one of the great offices of state, a close ally of Conservative leader David Cameron and the UK's new representative on the world stage. Recently he has led a high-profile campaign to end sexual violence in war zones, a role that has united him with Hollywood star Angelina Jolie. He is set to carry on this work as the prime minister's special envoy. An exponent of the almost lost art of Parliamentary wit, Mr Hague is an accomplished public speaker, who earned a very good living on the after-dinner circuit after he stood down as leader of the party after its hefty defeat at the 2001 general election. He is one of the few speakers in modern politics that journalists and other politicians can listen to expecting a few good jokes. But his bruising experience as leader of the Conservative Party from 1997 to 2001 added a sense of gravitas to his public persona. As a member of Mr Cameron's cabinet, his northern accent and relatively modest background have provided an invaluable counterpoint to the public school, upper middle-class backgrounds of much of Mr Cameron's top team. William Jefferson Hague was born in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, on 26 March 1961. His parents ran a soft drinks company - Hague's Dandelion and Burdock and Lemonade were two local favourites. The young Hague used to help out with deliveries to shops and pubs in university holidays - an experience which led to one of his most famous gaffes, when he boasted to a men's magazine that because he used to be offered a drink at every stop on the route he would sometimes drink 14 pints of beer in a day. He attended a comprehensive school, before going to Magdalen College, Oxford, where he attained a first-class degree in Politics, Philosophy and Economics. While at Oxford, Mr Hague was president of the Union and the Conservative association. Publicity Afterwards he attended a business school in France and worked for five years as a management consultant. Politics, though, was his vocation. At a by-election in 1989, Mr Hague became MP for the ultra-safe Conservative seat of Richmond, in North Yorkshire. He rose quickly, becoming an aide to Chancellor Norman Lamont and then a social security minister. In 1995, when John Major's Conservative Party was tearing itself apart over Europe, Mr Hague reached the cabinet, as Welsh secretary. He stayed in the job until the massive defeat to Labour at the 1997 general election. As soon as Mr Major quit, Mr Hague was mentioned as a likely successor. He won the contest and began with a couple of publicity stunts aimed at showing the Conservative Party was being reborn in a more youthful image. Mr Hague was pictured sipping a drink with fiancee Ffion - whom he had met at the Welsh Office - from a hollowed-out coconut at the Notting Hill carnival. Another image of the Tory leader saw him on a log flume, wearing a baseball hat and accompanied by a youthful entourage. As opposition leader, he frequently mocked Tony Blair at prime minister's questions, winning plaudits for his witty performances. Yet, with Labour enjoying a massive Commons majority, he had little power and was making little impact with the wider electorate. Content As tends to happen to parties trailing badly in the polls, the press turned on him - there were constant jokes about his beer-drinking boast - with one tabloid newspaper running the headline "Billy Liar" - and his baseball cap wearing stunt. And his own party - still smarting and rancorous after their 1997 defeat - also began to make life difficult for him, as he was reduced to chasing headlines to shore up his fragile position rather than concentrating on long-term policy formation. Mr Hague's 2001 election campaign, with the slogan "Save the Pound", which came to be regarded by his successors at the top of the Tory party as too right-wing and old-fashioned to compete with New Labour's slick push for the centre ground. And so it proved. The Tories only managed to cut Labour's majority to 167, from 179 in 1997. Mr Hague went immediately and returned to the backbenches to enjoy a lucrative career as a speaker, also writing a popular biography of William Pitt, the UK's youngest prime minister - possibly with a few thoughts about what might have been. He stayed quietly away from frontline politics for the next four years, seemingly content. Coalition However, when David Cameron took over as Tory leader in 2005, with a determination to make the party electable after three defeats in a row, he offered a return. Mr Hague was persuaded to come back as shadow foreign secretary. He grew close to Mr Cameron and was effectively regarded as the Conservatives' deputy leader. In this role he came back to the Commons spotlight, sparring with Labour's deputy leader Harriet Harman when the party leaders could not make it to prime minister's questions. Mr Hague, having recovered from his 2001 disappointment, seemed to be in love with politics once more. Conservative grassroots activists seemed equally in love with him, with his conference speeches receiving a rapturous reception. After the recent election delivered a hung parliament, he led negotiations with the Lib Dems, which resulted in the first UK coalition government since the 1940s. When Mr Cameron announced his team, it was no surprise that Mr Hague was made foreign secretary. He was also given the title of First Secretary, previously held by Labour's Lord Mandelson - a sign that he was right back at the top. Setting out his vision for foreign policy in a speech in July 2010 he said the UK must have more "global reach and influence" or face decline in a fast-changing world. In his first major speech as foreign secretary, he said the UK must build its influence in Europe and create stronger links with new economic superpowers such as China, India and Brazil. Announcing his departure four years on, he said: "[the] Role of leader of the House means I will finish in politics as I began - speaking in parliament and campaigning among the voters".
William Hague has announced he is leaving his post as foreign secretary to take over as leader of the House of Commons.
Provide a concise overview of the following information.
The Telegraph said the X Files star gave "the performance of her career" as faded Southern belle, Blanche DuBois. The play opened on Monday at the Young Vic, near London's South Bank. "I staggered out of this shattering production of Tennessee Williams's bruising modern classic feeling shaken, stirred and close to tears," wrote the Telegraph's Charles Spencer. "Never have I seen a production of the play that was so raw in its emotion, so violent and so deeply upsetting," his five-star review continued. "The show lasts three and a half hours, but there isn't a moment when the tension slackens or attention lapses. It is an absolute knock-out." The 1947 play has been given a twist by Australian director Benedict Andrews who sets it in a modern apartment which revolves almost constantly in front of the audience. The story sees an already fragile DuBois completely break down after she moves in with her sister Stella (Vanessa Kirby) and is tormented by her violent brother-in-law, Stanley Kowalski (Ben Foster). "There's no doubt that Gillian Anderson gives a stellar performance as Blanche DuBois," said The Guardian's Michael Billington. "[She] captures both Blanche's airy pretensions to grandeur and her desolate loneliness." But he had some reservations about keeping the acting space in perpetual motion. "The shifting focus sometimes becomes a distraction and makes the dialogue hard to hear: Just as you're getting into a scene, the characters float out of view." Michael Coveney, in his WhatsonStage review, observed: "As the cage-like rectangle moves, so does our perspective on the characters, whom we can see now in close-up, now in longshot, through a doorway, in the bathroom. "It's the best sort of theatre-in-the-round, turning the style's disadvantages and drawbacks to aesthetic triumph." The Hollywood Reporter's Stephen Dalton said that Andrews had approached an American classic "with gravitas and grit". "In a world where feminism, gay rights and post-modern parodies on The Simpsons are now ingrained in popular culture, the feverish netherworld that Williams depicts perhaps inevitably feels more like shrill melodrama than groundbreaking drama. "Fortunately, Blanche is the saving grace here, a hugely alluring car-crash heroine in any decade. Top marks to Anderson, who gives great diva and appears to enjoy every minute of it." A Streetcar Named Desire is at the Young Vic, London, until 19 September. It will be broadcast via NT Live to more than 550 UK cinemas on 16 September.
Gillian Anderson has been praised for her "stellar" turn in a new production of A Streetcar Named Desire.
Please summarize the passage below.
King has been in talks with the club over the proposed investment. "We wish to appoint an equal number of members to the board and have the key say regarding the appointment of the chairperson," King said in a statement. "We will not invest funds and let the existing board determine how these funds are spent." King is returning to South Africa following a series of meetings with the Ibrox club's hierarchy. The former Rangers director revealed he, Paul Murray and George Letham are keen to invest the cash "as soon as is practically possible" but admitted there are "numerous regulatory and compliance requirements that have to be dealt with," as well as SFA compliance issues. "An obvious further complication in Rangers' case is the seeming lack of authority of the Rangers board to make decisions without reference to key shareholders who appear to be 'the power behind the throne'," King's statement continued. "Prior to commencing the implementation issues referred to above it is necessary to reach an in-principle agreement with the board that can then be put to shareholders. "In this regard it is important to recognise that the so-called Easdale Block represents more than 25% of the shares in issue and could therefore block the implementation of our proposal even if recommended by the board. "Likewise, a combination of other shareholders could veto our proposal. I attempted to meet with Mr [Mike] Ashley on my visit but neither he, nor his colleague, Mr Bishop, acknowledged my request for a meeting. "This is their right but is unfortunate given the present concerns from supporters that Mr Ashley is using his shareholder status to put pressure on the board to alienate the rights and trade mark of the club in favour of his personal interest. I will make a separate announcement and appeal to fans on this topic at the appropriate time. "Our initial proposal to the board was to invest the full £16m by way of equity at 20p per share. The board requested that we consider a debt/equity mix that would reduce dilution for existing shareholders and allow the debt component to be advanced prior to the extended time-frame required for the approval of additional equity. "We are amenable to this and to working with the board on the mechanics necessary to ensure that this is achieved provided that the full investment is recognised by way of board representation. "The board has apparently engaged constructively on our proposal while advancing its own points as to what it believes is in the best interest of the club and its shareholders. "Sandy Easdale has similarly apparently engaged constructively including highlighting some concerns. I have today responded to these concerns in writing. He will now consult with his co-shareholders and hopefully revert soonest so that we can proceed to agreement and the earliest possible implementation thereof. "We have a lot of work to do over the next few months to regain the club. I would not be here without the support of the fans and neither would my co-investors. We are going to need to draw on your support again over the coming months." The 19-year-old becomes the 10th player to join Falcons for the 2016-17 season and along with fellow new signings Nick Civetta, Evan Ormstead and Harrison Orr offers depth to the second-row options. "He is a major talent," Falcons director of rugby Dean Richards said of the Glasgow Hawks player. "He has a lot to offer and we are extremely happy he has agreed to join." Davidson, who can also play back-row, attended Falcons' game with London Irish before signing with the club and has been impressed by what he has seen. "I love the attitude of the club and its supporters - the atmosphere inside the ground was tremendous," he said. "To play in front of that would be an honour, but I know I have to earn my place through hard work and showing to the coaches that I am worthy of selection."
Dave King remains hopeful his group's proposal to invest £16m in Rangers will be accepted, but they want to help decide how the cash is spent. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Newcastle Falcons have signed Scotland Under-20 lock Andrew Davidson from the Scottish Rugby Academy set-up.
Please summarize the given passage.
New admissions to the unit at University Hospital of Wales (UHW) stopped on Thursday because of a "cluster of infections". Cardiff and Vale Health Board said the babies' conditions were improving. But microbiologist Prof Hugh Pennington told BBC Radio Wales it is hard to tell where the bug came from. "Usually they come into a unit one way or another," he said. "They might have come in via a person or they are common in the environment as well. "Very often we can't trace the place where they came in. All we know is that they are challenging places like neo-natal care units and intensive care units all the time. "For most people these are quite harmless so we don't need to bother about them. It's when they get into these units is where they can cause these outbreaks." Prevention control measures have been put in place to prevent the infections - Acinetobacter baumanii and Enterobacter - spreading. Prof Pennington, an emeritus professor of bacteriology at Aberdeen, added: "They are difficult to treat in the sense they are resistant to antibiotics by their very nature, not because they've developed resistance." There are 15 babies at the unit, which has 30 cots for intensive care, high dependency and special care. Other babies who need neonatal care will be referred to other hospitals. 14-year-old Harrison Cushing was found hanged at his home in Peel and died later at Noble's hospital in Braddan. An inquest in Douglas on Friday heard that the child, a Year 9 student at Queen Elizabeth II High School, died from "asphyxia due to hanging". A school spokesman said Harrison was an "articulate and confident young man" and a "pleasure to teach". He added: "Harrison had a very keen and quick sense of humour, appreciated by his classmates and teachers alike. "Anyone who knew Harrison could not fail to like him and he will be very deeply missed by his close friends, his classmates in Year 9, his teachers and the wider school community. "Our thoughts and prayers go out to Harrison's family at this very sad and difficult time". Coroner John Needham has adjourned the inquest to a date yet to be fixed. Education psychologists are providing professional support at the school for students and staff. Andrew Pullan was kayaking at Whorlton Lido near Barnard Castle, County Durham, in October 2013. The 47-year-old was flown to James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough where he was later pronounced dead. Appearing at Durham Crown Court, Christopher Hackett, 27, of Darlington, pleaded guilty to two offences and will be sentenced on 17 February. Hackett admitted a breach of duty as a self-employed person, exposing another to health and safety risks and failing to make a suitable risk assessment. Col Pullan, a married father of two, commanded the former 3rd Battalion the Yorkshire Regiment between 2006-2008. He had recently retired.
Bacterial infections which have closed a neonatal unit in Cardiff after 12 babies tested positive are difficult to treat, an expert has said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] An Isle of Man school has paid tribute to an "articulate and confident" teenager who died last Sunday. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A kayak instructor has admitted breaching health and safety regulations after a pupil capsized and later died.
Summarize the following piece.
Nos Lun ar raglen Panorama BBC1 bydd dau ffermwr o Gymru yn rhannu dwy farn wahanol - y naill am adael yr UE a'r llall am aros. "Un o'r prif resymau y gwnes i bleidleisio o blaid gadael yr UE oedd oherwydd fy mod yn ffermwr ifanc yn edrych tua'r dyfodol," meddai Jacob Anthony. Mae'r ffermwr 24 oed yn byw ym Mhen-y-bont ac yn ffermio gyda'i dad a'i dadcu ar fferm sy'n cadw gwartheg a defaid. "Rwy'n credu bod nifer ohonom yn y diwydiant amaeth ddim yn hapus gyda'r ffordd oedd pethau'n mynd ac felly roedd y bleidlais llynedd yn cynnig cyfle oes i ni am newid realistig," ychwanegodd. Mae Mr Anthony yn mynnu nad yw penderfyniadau Ewrop ar ffermio yn gweithio. "Ar y funud, dim ond un polisi amaethyddol sydd 'na a mae hwnnw i fod yn addas i'r 28 cenedl sydd oddi fewn i'r UE," dywedodd. "Mae'r polisi amaethyddol i fod yn addas i wledydd sy'n ffermio ceirw yn y Gogledd a ffermwyr sy'n tyfu olifau yn y Canoldir." Ychwanegodd ei fod yn credu fod ffermwyr Prydain yn "helpu gwledydd tramor" ac yn gwella eu sgiliau amaethu er mwyn iddynt ddod yn "gystadleuwyr gwell". Mae Mr Anthony hefyd yn awyddus i anfon ei wartheg i farchnadoedd newydd - er enghraifft gwledydd fel Tsieina. "Rwy'n teimlo bod gadael yr UE nawr yn rhoi cyfle newydd i ni drafod a sefydlu cysylltiadau masnachol newydd. "Beth am gael cytundebau busnes newydd - cytundebau nad oedd yn bosib i'w cael tra'n rhan o'r Undeb Ewropeaidd?" Ond barn wahanol sydd gan John Davies, sy'n ffermio ym Merthyr Cynog, ger Aberhonddu. Mae Mr Davies yn rhedeg fferm sydd wedi bod yn ei deulu ers dros ganrif ac mae e'n llai optimistaidd am fywyd y tu allan i'r Undeb Ewropeaidd. "Mae 'da fi gyfrifoldeb i'r genhedlaeth nesaf. Wedi'r cyfan, gofalwyr ŷn ni ar gyfer y genhedlaeth nesaf," meddai. Mae Mr Davies yn byw ar y fferm gyda'i wraig, eu dau blentyn a'i dad ac mae pawb yn helpu gyda'r gwaith o gynnal y cannoedd o ddefaid sydd ar y fferm. Fe bleidleisiodd e dros aros yn yr UE gan ei fod yn gweld peryg i ffermwyr petai cytundeb Brexit gwael yn dod i rym. "Mi allai Brexit gael effaith andwyol ar ein gallu i gynhyrchu bwyd ac mae cymorthdaliadau cyson yn hanfodol i ffermwyr mynydd," meddai. Mae Ysgrifennydd yr Amgylchedd Michael Gove wedi addo cynnal yr un lefel o gymorthdaliadau tan 2022 ond mae gan Mr Davies bryderon eraill. "Mae masnach mor bwysig i ffermwyr mynydd gan bod oddeutu 40% o'n hŵyn yn cael eu hallforio - ac y mae bron i 95% o'r rheiny yn mynd i'r UE. "Rhaid i ni gael masnach rydd gydag Ewrop - a rhaid i safon y bwyd sy'n cael ei fewnforio a'i allforio fod gystal â'i gilydd." "Heb safonau," meddai Mr Davies, "rwy'n ofni mewnforion, hormonau, safon y bwyd sydd wedi'i roi i'r anifeiliaid - mae'n anifeiliaid ni yn cael porfa dda ac mae safonau amgylcheddol yn uchel ac ry'n yn falch o hynny." Mae Mr Davies yn credu bod angen polisi amaethyddol sy'n adlais o gyfnod y rhyfel, sef y dylid tyfu y bwyd ry'n yn ei fwyta. Mae'n ofni y bydd Brexit yn newid cefn gwlad a thynged ffermwyr Prydain am byth. Bydd y rhaglen Panorama - Britain's Food & Farming: The Brexit Effect i'w gweld ar nos Lun, 10 Gorffennaf ar BBC1 am 20:30 ac wedi hynny ar BBC iPlayer.
Wrth i'r camau nesaf i adael yr Undeb Ewropeaidd gael eu trafod mae rhai ffermwyr yn ofni y byddai Brexit caled yn lladd eu busnes.
Can you provide a summary of this content?
The retail boss, who voted in favour of Brexit, said he still believed it would boost trade and the British economy. But he also warned that it could cause high unemployment if managed badly. To avoid that, he called for an "orderly transition" when the UK leaves the EU single market and customs union. "We can't go careering along hell for leather. There is a huge amount of complex work to be done," he wrote in the Mail on Sunday. Brexit Secretary David Davis said on Sunday that a transition of "one to two years" would probably be needed. "We've discussed with them [the EU] and we think that there will be a transition period," he told BBC One's Andrew Marr Show. Mr Davis added that he understood the concerns of businesses that leaving the EU without interim arrangements could affect financial stability and customs arrangements. Lord Wolfson expressed some of those concerns, saying: "The UK government and EU need to rethink the timetable for negotiation and set out options for a realistic transition period." The Next chief executive, whose clothing and home goods retail chain employs 49,000 staff, said he was in favour of a Brexit that "focused on prosperity and jobs". He said that would involve "pro-economic" immigration, an open approach to trade, and allowing more than two years to leave the EU. Meanwhile, the prime minister is set to create a new Brexit council for business leaders, according to reports. The group will involve business groups and be co-chaired by Mr Davis and Business Secretary Greg Clark, the Sunday Times reported. Mr Davis told the BBC he was "pretty sure", but not "certain", that he will be able to get a free trade deal with the EU. The side from the NASL - the second tier division below the MLS - fielded three goalkeepers during the game, with Brian Sylvestre, Macklin Robinson, and Matias Reynares all making good saves. Leroy Fer, Jordan Ayew, Mike van der Hoorn and Oli McBurnie all went close to breaking the deadlock for Swansea. "We made hard work of the game at times tonight," Swans boss Paul Clement said. "We got in behind them early on, but for some reason our level of play deteriorated. "In the second half we started okay. Then I made the changes and it became very stretched and disorganised in the end - it was almost like a basketball game with it going end to end. "It is unbelievable we didn't convert any of our chances. "We limited them to one good opportunity in the first half and a half chance in the second half, so that was an encouraging element of our game." Swansea will return home to continue their pre-season, with a match at Birmingham City on Saturday, 29 July next up.
Lord Wolfson, chief executive of Next, has warned that failing to secure a "smooth" departure from the EU could result in "years of economic decline" for the UK. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Swansea City ended their pre-season tour to America with a goalless draw against North Carolina in Raleigh.
Please provide a short summary of this passage.
Panorama has obtained police emails sent shortly after Mr Watson's statement to the Commons in 2012. They concluded that there was no evidence the minister was guilty of any criminal complicity. Mr Watson has made no immediate comment on the emails' dismissal. He has been criticised for allegations made during his campaign on behalf of victims of child abuse. The statement concerning the current minister came during prime minister's questions in October 2012. Mr Watson said a file of evidence seized in the early 1990s contained "clear intelligence of a widespread paedophile ring". He added: "One of its members boasts of his links to a senior aide of a former prime minister, who says he could smuggle indecent images of children from abroad. "The leads were not followed up, but if the file still exists I want to ensure that the Metropolitan Police secure the evidence, re-examine it and investigate clear intelligence suggesting a powerful paedophile network linked to Parliament and No 10." The claim dates back to the 1970s, when the political aide was in his teens. However, he later entered politics and is now a government minister. Following Mr Watson's statement, police obtained the files from Metropolitan Police archive and examined them for evidence of any offences. In December 2012 the police emails seen by the BBC concluded there was "no evidence of offending linked to [the minister] held within the files". They went on: "There is not any further material in the file to support the inference to any level of criminal complicity on behalf of [the minister]." This conclusion has never been made public. The Metropolitan Police had said in a statement that it did not publish an announcement on every allegation it investigated, adding that it was "checking records to ascertain the circumstances of the allegation". The files on which Mr Watson based his Commons statement were seized as part of an investigation into the paedophile ring and centred on senior social worker Peter Righton in the early 1990s. Mr Watson was briefed on their content, before making his statement, by Peter McKelvie, a former child protection manager who has described himself as a "whistleblower". Mr McKelvie has told the BBC he did not claim to Mr Watson that there had been a "Westminster paedophile ring". He also pointed out that the police investigations which followed the Commons statement had led to convictions of two men who were part of the original paedophile ring.
Claims by Labour Deputy Leader Tom Watson of a link between a paedophile group and a current government minister were dismissed by police within two months, the BBC has learnt.
Summarize the passage below.
"Well, we previously called him 'babyface', because of his boyish features as a youngster but, once he hit lower sixth, he just shot up!" recalls Kennedy. "His physical demeanour completely changed. That's where 'Shoots' comes from." Centre Stuart McCloskey is now the same weight and height as back row Stephen Ferris was when he first started playing for Ulster. "He's not just about power and strength. Stuart is creative," says Kennedy. "And that reflects what he was like at school. In modern rugby that creativity is beaten out of players, it can be seen as a weakness, too dangerous, too loose." The rise of McCloskey was not unexpected in the corridors of Bangor Grammar. For three years, he played for the college firsts, not as a centre but at fly-half. Then, while still at school, he appeared for the Dungannon senior side in the Ulster League. "We have these conversations all the time in the staff room - who will make it? It genuinely isn't a surprise. "Stuart always had it. I firmly believe his career is only starting. I believe he can go further." In the Ireland camp this week, coach Joe Schmidt recalled the first time McCloskey grabbed his attention: "When I first saw him squaring up and carrying ball and getting behind a defensive line." McCloskey's Ulster and now Ireland team-mate Andrew Trimble adds: "He's got confidence, but it's the right kind of confidence. "I can't wait to see him play on Saturday night." And, of course, as McCloskey's old teacher can verify, there's a great buzz around the Bangor school for the former pupil. "Stuart is a guy that the students here all feel they know. We're all very proud. He's a role model for our students." There's very little the teacher can do now except, like the rest of the rugby world, sit back and watch his old pupil 'Shoots' do his thing. Twitter: @thomasniblock The UK government wants smart meters fitted in all homes by 2020, putting an end to estimated bills. The company promoting the roll-out, Smart Energy GB said it was working to let people know about the changes. The Department of Energy and Climate Change said energy suppliers had made a "good start" on installation. Figures obtained by BBC Wales showed British Gas, which has 375,000 customers in Wales, had installed 90,000 so far. SSE said it was committed to installing them in about a million Welsh homes and was currently at 27,000. EDF Energy, which has about 115,000 Welsh customers, has yet to begin rolling out the new meters in Wales. A spokesperson said the company was waiting for "industry-wide shared systems" to be in place. EON said it had been focusing mainly on the midlands, north west England and East Anglia while Npower said it was trialling the technology. ScottishPower said it has installed a small number of meters as part of technical trials with a roll-out set to begin this year. A central communications system for smart meters is due to be up and running in October 2016 after which time energy companies say mass roll out will be more straightforward. SSE told BBC Wales that by the time the roll out was in full swing it expected to fit 800 meters in Welsh homes per day to meet the target. A report from the Institute of Directors last year warned the UK government's smart meter scheme was too ambitious and risked becoming an "IT disaster". Fflur Lawton, Head of policy for Wales at Smart Energy GB, said: "There's certainly a challenge to get there but energy firms are working hard to do that and working with their customers to make sure they understand the benefits of the smart meter." "Each of the energy suppliers rolls out on a slightly different rate. Where you live and what sort of house you have will affect when you'll get your smart meter." A DECC spokesperson said: "Energy suppliers have made a good start during this stage of the rollout, with over two million meters already operating in homes and businesses across Britain."
In the phone of David Kennedy, rugby coach at Bangor College, Ireland's new inside centre is saved simply as 'Shoots McCloskey'. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Some of the big six energy firms have yet to install a single smart meter in Wales, BBC Wales has learnt.
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt.
The roof of a detached property at Barlows Reach, Chelmsford, was fully alight after being hit at 22:45 BST on Friday. The roof collapsed in the blaze, which spread to the first floor through cavity walls. Nobody was injured. Crews also attended a fire at two semi-detached bungalows in Holland-on-Sea at 04:25. One of the properties was set alight by lightning leaving "a family of four homeless", said Essex Fire and Rescue Service. The roof space of the second became heavily smoke logged. A neighbour who saw the Chelmsford fire told BBC Essex the sound of the lightning strike was "like a bomb going off". "We just heard the family screaming the house was on fire, but she [the mother] managed to get the children out. "They were in bed when she found a piece of fire on the landing, something had fallen and then the loft collapsed. She just got everybody out thank goodness and everybody is safe." Nobody from the family was available for comment. Forecaster and storm-chaser Chris Bell, from Norwich-based Weatherquest, warned more storms are on the way for East Anglia. "We're expecting from late Saturday into Sunday for there to be lots of potential for thunderstorms across the region," he said. "That could produce localised flooding on the roads, lots of lightning and you want to take that seriously. "Lightning safety is something that's probably underestimated in this country, but if you can hear thunder you're close enough to be struck by lightning."
Two families have lost their homes after properties in Essex were struck by lightning.
Please summarize the document below.
Media playback is not supported on this device Accies took the lead when Mikey Devlin stole in ahead of Ash Taylor to divert Danny Redmond's free-kick into the net from close range. Adam Rooney almost brought the Dons level, his glancing header from Niall McGinn's cross coming back off a post. Substitute Miles Storey had a goal ruled out for offside as Accies held on for the win despite a late red card for midfielder Darian MacKinnon. The defeat sees Aberdeen remain nine points clear of third-placed Rangers having played a game more. Hamilton move off the bottom of the table and above Inverness CT, Motherwell and Ross County. Hamilton stunned the Dons after just nine minutes with Devlin's first goal of the season, the defender getting a foot on the ball as the Aberdeen back-line hesitated and allowed him to prod the ball home. Aberdeen started without Johnny Hayes, a shock absentee whose hamstring problem could also keep him out of the weekend Scottish Cup tie against Partick Thistle. But they responded in positive fashion. Rooney rattled Gary Woods' left post with a header, McGinn flashed a shot across the goal and the same player landed a free-kick on top of the net. Despite being a goal down they dominated play throughout the half, but just couldn't get the ball in the net. The pressure on Hamilton was incessant but what you do have to say is that their defending was courageous. And their spirits were lifted by the appearance off the bench of their marquee player Ali Crawford after a five-game absence through injury. Devlin made an incredible goal-saving header over his own bar before Rooney failed to put away a Kenny McLean cross. Still the Alamo-like performance by the home team went on. Even when sub Storey had the ball in the net Accies were saved by the offside flag. And then Hamilton's luck seemed to change. Two yellow cards within a minute meant a red for MacKinnon - the second a particularly reckless challenge - and suddenly for the last six minutes the home team were down to ten men. But incredibly, despite conceding 20 corner kicks and winning not a single one themselves, they held out for a quite astonishing and vitally important win. Hamilton manager Martin Canning: "Obviously in the first half we get our opportunity and we take it. Probably in the game we had four or five breakaways when we could have done better with the final pass. "In the main it was backs to the wall, Aberdeen are a top team, so we knew they were going to be on the front foot. But with the situation we are in, everybody's got to fight, they've got to brave and throw their bodies on the line. Everything I'd want to see from the team, and I have seen it all season to be honest, was there tonight. "Yeah, we rode our luck, Aberdeen had a lot of opportunities to put the ball in the box but I don't remember too many clear cut chances. "A lot of it was balls into the box and Michael Devlin was outstanding. I've never mentioned it to the media before but it's something we've mentioned behind closed doors here. When you go back a couple of months ago when Scotland were playing, people were saying there are no young Scottish centre backs about and nobody even mentioned Michael, and he's captaining a Premier League team at 22. "That's in the future and I think he's got the capabilities to go there but he just has to keep his head down and keep working hard and keep on performing like that, because Aberdeen are a top team and you're competing against the best in the country. All round I thought he was fantastic." Media playback is not supported on this device Aberdeen manager Derek McInnes: "A lot of pride in the performance and pride in the response, dealing with the situation, players taking real responsibility. "I didn't think it was a difficult game for us, coming here we normally find it a bit more difficult than it was tonight. I thought we dominated the game and some of our play was excellent. We can be critical of the goal we lost and the amount of crosses in their box and how we've not converted chances. "Kenny McLean was a Rolls Royce tonight, he was absolutely everywhere. The high quality of his crossing, his possession and his work rate. He was in good company with a lot of good performances in the team, but sometimes you don't get what you deserve. "It was total dominance, the game was played in their final third. We tried to be as positive as we could and we didn't panic. We just never had that final pass or shot in us tonight. Everyone could see how eager and determined our team was tonight to make the game go our way. While we lost we can still have a lot of pride in our performance." Match ends, Hamilton Academical 1, Aberdeen 0. Second Half ends, Hamilton Academical 1, Aberdeen 0. Corner, Aberdeen. Conceded by Georgios Sarris. Corner, Aberdeen. Conceded by Grant Gillespie. Georgios Sarris (Hamilton Academical) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Peter Pawlett (Aberdeen). Corner, Aberdeen. Conceded by Michael Devlin. Attempt blocked. Kenny McLean (Aberdeen) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Substitution, Aberdeen. Anthony O'Connor replaces Ryan Jack because of an injury. Attempt missed. Dougie Imrie (Hamilton Academical) left footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high. Substitution, Hamilton Academical. Massimo Donati replaces Rakish Bingham. Second yellow card to Darian MacKinnon (Hamilton Academical) for a bad foul. Graeme Shinnie (Aberdeen) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Darian MacKinnon (Hamilton Academical). Darian MacKinnon (Hamilton Academical) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Graeme Shinnie (Aberdeen) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Darian MacKinnon (Hamilton Academical). Attempt missed. Ash Taylor (Aberdeen) header from the centre of the box is too high. Corner, Aberdeen. Conceded by Gary Woods. Hand ball by Greg Docherty (Hamilton Academical). Corner, Aberdeen. Conceded by Dougie Imrie. Graeme Shinnie (Aberdeen) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Foul by Graeme Shinnie (Aberdeen). Giannis Skondras (Hamilton Academical) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Substitution, Aberdeen. Miles Storey replaces Ryan Christie. Attempt missed. Shaleum Logan (Aberdeen) header from the left side of the six yard box is close, but misses to the left. Corner, Aberdeen. Conceded by Scott McMann. Attempt saved. Shaleum Logan (Aberdeen) header from the right side of the six yard box is saved in the centre of the goal. Attempt blocked. Niall McGinn (Aberdeen) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Corner, Aberdeen. Conceded by Georgios Sarris. Corner, Aberdeen. Conceded by Georgios Sarris. Substitution, Hamilton Academical. Greg Docherty replaces Daniel Redmond. Substitution, Hamilton Academical. Ali Crawford replaces Gramoz Kurtaj. Foul by Ash Taylor (Aberdeen). Michael Devlin (Hamilton Academical) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Attempt saved. Ash Taylor (Aberdeen) header from very close range is saved in the centre of the goal. Corner, Aberdeen. Conceded by Georgios Sarris. Corner, Aberdeen. Conceded by Daniel Redmond. Corner, Aberdeen. Conceded by Georgios Sarris. Corner, Aberdeen. Conceded by Daniel Redmond.
Hamilton moved up to ninth in the Premiership with victory over Aberdeen.
Can you summarize the following paragraph?
Ellinor Grimmark argued that her Christian beliefs made it impossible for her to carry out abortions and that it was unfair to be turned down for jobs in Joenkoeping because of that. But the labour court ruled that she had not suffered discrimination. It said the authorities had not violated her "freedom of opinion and expression". US Christians have backed Ms Grimmark. The US Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) is a partner of her legal team - Scandinavian Human Rights Lawyers. The labour court ruling on Wednesday defended Joenkoeping region's right to require midwives to carry out abortions. In 2015 a district court rejected Ms Grimmark's discrimination complaint. But she then decided to sue the regional health authority. In the long-running case Sweden's discrimination ombudsman also ruled against her. Ms Grimmark says she will take her case to the European Court of Human Rights. It cannot overrule Sweden's courts, but if it finds a violation it can order a compensation payment. The Svenska Dagbladet daily says she now has a legal bill of about 1.5m kronor (£136,000; $170,000). Sweden's Health Professionals - an association of midwives and other medics - welcomed the court decision. Its vice-president Ann Johansson said "people seeking care should not have to think about your own opinions". According to UN data, Sweden has one of the highest abortion rates in Europe - it was 20.8 per 1,000 women in 2011. The UK figure in 2012 was 16.6, and among the other figures for 2012 were: Norway (15.5), Russia (34.2), Estonia (23.7 - the highest rate in the EU) and Bulgaria (21.5). Among the lowest in Europe in 2012 were Italy (9.4) and Portugal (9).
A Swedish court has ruled against a midwife in a dispute over her refusal to carry out abortions.
Write a brief summary of the document.
We are heading into another long hot summer of soul searching for the Labour Party, but the circumstances this time round could not be more different. There was a sense last year that Labour members welcomed the opportunity to reflect on the future. Now we've had a year of blood-letting and the party's very future appears to be at stake and, as a result, there will be an intensity to the Corbyn versus Smith contest right from the beginning. This time last year, Jeremy Corbyn was the rank outsider. Now he goes into the latest challenge with the confidence that he had an overwhelming victory less than a year ago. The latest YouGov poll for the Times puts him well ahead, and some Welsh Labour insiders admit it's difficult to see past another Corbyn win. That said, strange things happen in leadership contests, and Owen Smith could build a head of steam this summer that will give him a chance for the top job. As I said earlier, Owen Smith never lacks confidence, he also never lacks energy, and he'll need all of that in August hustings around the country. Much depends on the registered supporters. Jeremy Corbyn won last year even among the full members, but the impact of the £3 supporters gave him a huge lead. It now costs £25 to become a registered supporter, and there's only a 48 hour window to sign up. We don't know the figures yet but it is fair to say they will have less of an impact. I presented a documentary last year about Jeremy Corbyn, largely based in the Rhondda valley, ironically a stone's throw from Owen Smith's Pontypridd constituency. It was clear then that Corbyn was tapping into the disillusionment with the political establishment in a way that no-one else on the left could match. To mount an effective challenge, Owen Smith will now have to get his central argument across that the current leader doesn't have what it takes to get into power. The follow-up claim is that unless Labour has a realistic chance of getting into Downing Street, it's not doing what is says on the tin which is to represent working people. Let battle commence. Her Majesty's Chief Inspectorate of Prisons in England and Wales, Nick Hardwick said: "This is the most dangerous prison I've been into throughout my time as Chief Inspector." The prison has faced criticism in a series of reports dating back to 2009: The author criticised the Loiseau des Ducs in July 2013, saying it was "very overrated, all for show and with very little on the plate. The most plentiful plate was the one carrying the bill". But the comment was published before the restaurant opened to the public. The court ruled that it could not have been based on a real experience. It said the review aimed to deter future customers, and ordered the author to pay €2,500 in damages and €5,000 towards the cost of the investigation. The reviewer, who was not named in French media reports, posted the comment on France's Pages Jaunes website under the pseudonym The Clarifier five days before the restaurant, run by the Bernard Loiseau group, opened. Group director Ahlame Buisard said the company was not against real customers expressing positive or negative opinions, but that the case against the fake review was a point of principle. Bernard Loiseau, one of France's most celebrated chefs, committed suicide in 2003 after his flagship restaurant was downgraded in a top restaurant guide. Loiseau des Ducs received its one Michelin star in February 2014.
Owen Smith has never been a politician who lacks confidence but even he must realise the scale of the task ahead of him. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Inspectors said on Thursday that Northern Ireland's high security Maghaberry Prison is "unsafe and unstable" for prisoners and staff. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A court in France has fined an internet user €2,500 (£1,800; $2,800) for posting a false and malicious review of a Michelin-starred restaurant in Dijon.
What is the summary of the document provided?
Finches in the Galapagos Islands are being threatened by a parasitic fly that attacks their young. A new mathematical model suggests that the birds may succumb to this pest in 50 years. But the authors say that human intervention could alleviate the risk of extinction. During his time on the Galapagos in the early 1830s, Charles Darwin noticed that finches on different islands in the chain were quite similar but had large variations in their beaks, depending on the local food source. Because the islands are so far from the mainland, Darwin concluded that the birds had begun as one species and then started to evolve into separate varieties of finch. There are between 14 and 18 species on the Galapagos - but this study looked at one of the most common, the medium ground finch. Around 270,000 of these birds are found on Santa Cruz island. The finches are threatened by a nest fly which lays parasitic larvae in their nests which attack the young, usually at night. "They are maggots basically, is what they are," said Prof Dale Clayton from the University of Utah, the senior author on the study. "Some of the eggs are laid in the nostrils of the nestlings so those eggs hatch and the larvae begin feeding immediately in the nostrils so you see perforations through the bill in especially bad cases. "They are pretty nasty customers." The flies are believed to have arrived in the Galapagos in the 1960s. Prof Clayton and his colleagues developed a mathematical model using five years of data to project the impact of fly damage on the reproduction rates. Finches breed more successfully in years when relatively high rainfall increases the food supply. They tend to do badly during extremely wet or dry years. In two of the three scenarios that they modelled, the finch populations were declining and at risk of extinction. In the worst scenario the birds would be gone in 50 years. The model showed that the critical elements in their survival were the probability that a given nest was infested by flies and to a lesser extent the proportion of adult finches that survive from one year to the next. But the model also contains some good news according to the paper's first author, Dr Jennifer Koop, who carried out the research as a doctoral student and now is an assistant professor of biology at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. "Even though these guys may be going locally extinct, the model also shows that if you can reduce the probability of infestation, then you significantly alleviate the risk of extinction," she said. The researchers argue that if the number of infected nests could be reduced by 40% then the risk of extinction would essentially be lifted. There are a number of human interventions that could achieve this, they say, including the introduction of wasps that would lay their eggs in the fly larvae which would destroy them. Another idea is to use pesticides. Cotton balls would be treated with the chemicals and left for the birds to incorporate into their nests. "The birds will travel up to 60 feet or so and pull the cotton out and line their nests," said Prof Clayton, "If they get at least a gram of that fumigated cotton in their nests, you kill 100% of the flies." The scientists say that the stress from the flies might also provoke an evolutionary response in the finches. They point to a related species where the nestlings learned to become more vocal when attacked by the pest, as a result the parents fed them more and their survival rates improved. Researchers are concerned that these threatened finches may simply not have enough time to adapt. Follow Matt on Twitter @mattmcgrathbbc.
The birds that helped Charles Darwin refine his theory of evolution are in danger of going extinct, according to a new study.
Please summarize the following text.
For Cubs fans, it's been 108 years of hurt - that's how long it's been since their team last won a World Series. Some might put that down to chronic bad luck, but others say there's a more supernatural - and animal-related - explanation. In 1945, the last time the Cubs contested a World Series, bar owner Billy Sianis and his pet goat Murphy were allegedly removed from Wrigley Field because of the animal's bad smell. "Them Cubs, they ain't gonna win no more," an outraged Sianis reportedly declared. And so the curse of the billy goat was born: The Cubs lost the '45 Series and went more than a century without glory before beating the Cleveland Indians in a dramatic series finale on Wednesday night. Sporting curses may seem far-fetched, but there are plenty of mythical tales of terrible juju striking teams across the world. Superstitious nonsense? Or a reason for sports fans to keep on wearing that lucky underwear? Have a read of some of the world's strangest sporting curses and decide for yourself. For fans of English football club Birmingham City, much of their historic bad luck was down to an ill-advised stadium move. In 1906, the club moved to St Andrew's, apparently evicting some Romani people in the process. Angered at being moved on, they placed a 100-year curse on the club. Cue decades in the doldrums and no major trophy wins for the club. The stadium even got bombed during World War Two in 1941. The curse took hold so strongly some managers tried desperate measures to have it lifted. In the 1980s, Ron Saunders reportedly had crucifixes installed on the floodlights and on the soles of the players' boots. Barry Fry said he was advised to urinate on all four corners of the pitch to lift the curse - so he did. He got sacked a few months later. In 2006, the year the curse officially ended, Birmingham got relegated and promoted straight back into the Premier League. They won their only major trophy, the League Cup, in 2011. Traditionally, Canadian teams have dominated the Stanley Cup, NHL's premier competition, winning 40 times between 1927 to 1993. But no Canadian team has won since Marty McSorley, a player with a suitably Back to the Future name, changed the destiny of teams north of the border forever. In the 1993 final, the Montreal Canadiens were taking on the Los Angeles Kings. The Kings were a goal up and set to go two games ahead in the series when the Montreal coach objected to the hockey stick used by Kings player McSorley It was too curved. McSorley was sent to the sin bin and Montreal ended up winning the game, the series and the Stanley Cup. Since then, the Stanley Cup has become a wasteland for Canada's finest. Some people have questioned why the curse would work against the team not cheating but, hey, it's a curse so absolutely doesn't have to make sense. Still unconvinced? In 1995, the Quebec Nordiques upped sticks across the border and became the Colorado Avalanche. They won the Stanley Cup a year later. In Ireland, the sporting curse to end all sporting curses exists against Mayo's long-suffering Gaelic footballers. The county last won an All-Ireland title in 1951. Since then, they've been in eight All-Ireland finals - and lost every single one. The run of defeats started in 1989 and culminated this year when Mayo lost by a single point in a replay against Dublin. So what happened? Legend has it, the triumphant '51 team were travelling home from Dublin when the celebratory squad passed a funeral without paying it sufficient respect. An angered priest subsequently cursed the team, saying Mayo wouldn't win again until every member of the 1951 team had died. Two of the team are still alive - Dr Padraig Carney and Paddy Prendergast, who has dismissed the curse as "nonsense". After eight heartbreaking final defeats, Mayo fans can be forgiven for thinking otherwise. Every golfer dreams of sliding on the green jacket after winning at The Masters at Augusta - but nobody wants to win the Par-3 contest. That's because nobody who has ever won the Par 3 tournament has ever gone on to win the Masters in the same year. Since 1960, the nine-hole contest has been held the day before the tournament proper and has jinxed anyone with the temerity to actually win. Ireland's Padraig Harrington has won the Par 3 tournament a record three times but the major winner has never claimed a green jacket. Last year, nine players recorded holes-in-one. Needless to say, none of those guys went on to win the 2016 Masters. Biggie vs Tupac. Jay Z vs Nas. Drake vs Meek Mill. If those names are unfamiliar, then prepare to get even more confused. Feuds are common in hip hop but it's much rarer for a rapper to start a beef with a sports star. But that's what happened in 2011 when West Coast's Lil B' (aka The BasedGod) "cursed" basketball star Kevin Durant on Twitter in what is probably the first - and only - well-documented case of someone getting hexed on social media. Durant's crime? Tweeting in 2011 that he didn't like Lil B's music. The rapper responded: "Kevin Durant will never win the title after he said 'Lil' B is a wack rapper'. The Basedgods curse on Durant." And it kind of worked. Durant's team, the highly touted Oklahoma City Thunder, did not win a championship in the last five seasons despite being in contention every year. The curse ended earlier in 2016 when Durant announced he was joining the Golden State Warriors. "Welcome home KD the curse is lifted," Lil B tweeted. Amen to that.
The Chicago Cubs have done it: They have finally won a World Series and, in doing so, have broken one of world's most infamous sporting curses.
What is the summary of the document provided?
Organisers of the event have billed it as the largest of its kind to be held in the UK. The conference has been jointly organised by the Finland-based Digital Games Research Association (DiGRA) and the Foundations of Digital Games (FDG) The five-day event is being held at Abertay University. The results of new research, including designing for virtual reality, will be unveiled at the conference. Jim Whitehead, president of the Society for the Advancement of Digital Games said: "Abertay University is among the oldest computer game programs in the world, and has been a long time leader in games education. "It was a natural match to host the first ever DiGRA/FDG conference in Dundee" The event will coincide with the Dare Protoplay gaming festival, which runs from 4 to 7 August in the Caird Hall and City Square. He said it would be a test of whether warring parties were committed to allowing in humanitarian supplies. Among the areas due to receive aid is the town of Madaya, where people have been dying of starvation. World powers last week agreed to seek a nationwide "cessation of hostilities" and to accelerate and expand aid deliveries. The seven areas named by the UN are: "It is the duty of the government of Syria to want to reach every Syrian person wherever they are and allow the UN to bring humanitarian aid," Mr de Mistura said after talks in Damascus on Tuesday. "Tomorrow we test this." The Syrian government of President Bashar al-Assad earlier approved humanitarian access to seven areas which are besieged, either by government troops or rebel groups. The areas are those deemed by the 17-member International Syria Support Group to be most in need of relief. Almost half a million people live in besieged areas, according to the UN. The cessation of hostilities - which does not apply to jihadist groups - is due to come into force later this week. But President Assad has cast doubts on the move, warning it would be "difficult" to implement and would not mean all parties would stop using weapons. Government forces, backed by Russian air power, have been advancing in the north towards Syria's biggest city and commercial centre, Aleppo. They are on the brink of encircling the rebel-held east of the city. Earlier this week, a series of rocket attacks on several hospitals and schools in areas close to Aleppo killed up to 50 people. Save the Children said seven healthcare facilities were hit - more than was previously reported. Turkey has blamed Russia for the strikes, which the UN has said could constitute war crimes. Russia said it "categorically rejects" accusations of war crimes. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told the BBC that the only proof Russia would accept from the ground "comes from the Syrian authorities". The 17-year-old is currently with Start in his homeland and had a trial with the reigning Scottish Premiership champions in January. He returned to Glasgow for signing talks on Tuesday. Ajer has made more than 40 senior appearances at club level, scoring 13 goals, and has played and scored for Norway Under-17s. Media playback is not supported on this device The teenager is the youngest player to captain a team in the Tippeligaen, which is presently in its close season. He flew to Scotland from Alicante, where he had been at a pre-season training camp in La Manga. And speaking after arriving at Glasgow Airport on Tuesday, Ajer said: "I'm really happy. I enjoyed it last time." Celtic bolstered their first-team squad during the winter transfer window by signing Denmark defender Erik Sviatchenko and Turkey forward Colin Kazim-Richards and also brought in Manchester City's English winger Patrick Roberts. Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page.
More than 350 computer gaming researchers from around the world are attending a conference in Dundee to discuss the future of the industry. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Aid convoys are due to be sent to Syria's besieged areas, UN envoy Staffan de Mistura has said. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Norwegian midfielder Kristoffer Ajer has agreed to join Celtic in June on a four-year contract.
Can you summarize this passage?
Noor Salman is suspected of aiding and abetting her husband Omar Mateen, who was killed in a shootout with police, as well as obstructing justice. It is expected she will be sent to Florida, where charges were filed. Fifty-three people were also wounded by Mateen, who vowed allegiance to so-called Islamic State (IS). Police interviewed Ms Salman last year, believing she may have been aware of her husband's plans. She told the FBI her husband had become radicalised in the year leading up to the attack. He made his pledge of allegiance during the actual assault, which lasted three hours. Ms Salman, who moved to the San Francisco area after the attack on 12 June, is expected to appear in a Californian court on Tuesday. Confirming the arrest, Attorney General Loretta Lynch told the MSNBC network: "This is a matter that we continue to take very seriously. "We said from the beginning we were going to look at every aspect of this case, every aspect of this shooter's life, to determine not just why did he take these actions, but who else knew about them, was anyone else involved, is there any other accountability that needs to be had here in this case." Mateen, 29, was from Fort Pierce, a town about two hours' drive south of Orlando. His father, Seddique Mateen, said his son had become "very angry" after seeing two men kissing in Miami. Mateen had been interviewed by FBI officers twice in 2013 following inflammatory comments to colleagues asserting ties to IS but no hard evidence was found. He appears to have been a regular at the club and contacted men on gay dating apps, raising the possibility that he was conflicted about being gay and had lashed out.
The wife of the gunman who killed 49 people at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, last year has been arrested in San Francisco, US officials say.
Please provide a summary for the content below.
The victim died at the scene after a collision between the van he was driving and a car on the A96 near Pitcaple, Inverurie. The incident took place at about 15:30. The other injured male driver involved in the crash was taken to Aberdeen Royal Infirmary. Police have appealed for witnesses and the road has been closed. The incident involving a white Honda Jazz and a red Renault Master van happened about half a mile from Pitcaple. Sgt Rob Warnock, of Police Scotland, said: "Our thoughts are with the families at this sad time. "The road is likely to remain closed for some time and we would urge people to seek alternative routes." Linfield said the individual was not a Club Member or season ticket holder. "We have begun an investigation to establish how they were able to obtain a match ticket," they added. Celtic, who won the game 4-0 to complete a 6-0 aggregate victory, have been charged by Uefa over an "illicit banner" displayed during the match. A Uefa spokesperson said that the charge related to the banner "portraying a person in a paramilitary uniform". That case will be dealt with by the Uefa control, ethics and disciplinary body on Friday. Trouble in the first leg in Belfast led to Linfield being handed a partial stadium closure for their next European tie and fined £8,850 following incidents at Windsor Park. Uefa imposed the penalties after objects were thrown at Celtic players in the second-round qualifier. Linfield's South Stand lower section 1 will be closed for one European game. "We continue to co-operate with the PSNI over the events of the first leg and are hopeful that individuals who have now been identified will shortly appear before the courts," Linfield said on Tuesday. "Linfield note that the local courts have the power to issue banning orders against individuals convicted of criminal offences in football stadia and would be fully supportive of such punishments being invoked in the event of convictions arising from this match." Celtic's Leigh Griffiths received a one-match ban for provoking spectators while his club were fined £4,000. Griffiths tied a Celtic scarf to a goalpost after the final whistle in Belfast. The picture, showing Ieshia Evans calmly standing in front of two heavily body-armoured police officers during a #Blacklivesmatter protest in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, went viral at the weekend. Black Lives Matter protest photo hailed as 'legendary' Among the most prominent people to share the image on Facebook was Shaun King, a senior justice reporter with the New York Daily News newspaper with more than 560,000 followers. Ms Evans has responded to the furore via Facebook, where she said: "I appreciate the well wishes and love, but this is the work of God. I am a vessel!" The photo garnered messages of respect and admiration from friends and supporters on her Facebook wall. And strangers on Twitter offered words of praise using the terms #BlackLivesMatter and #LeshiaEvans. Many on social media felt that this was a remarkable moment captured on film and compared it to another iconic image from almost 30 years ago. Others, however, were less convinced of the image's importance. Produced by the BBC's UGC and Social News team
A man has died and another was seriously injured after a two-vehicle crash on a rural road in Aberdeenshire. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Linfield have given a lifetime ban to an "individual" convicted of a criminal offence committed during the Champions League tie at Celtic on 19 July. [NEXT_CONCEPT] The woman at the centre of a frenzy over a recent photograph taken during protests in the US has taken to social media to thank people for support and attribute her actions to God.
Summarize the following content briefly.
8 August 2017 Last updated at 12:34 BST But she's unhappy with new changes to the way that England's women are funded. She's gone to meet players to find out what they think.
Fourteen-year-old Rebecca dreams of playing rugby union professionally.
Write a summary of this document.
The 30-year-old has been with the Dingwall club since leaving Partick Thistle in 2008. But he has not played at all this season and has only made three appearances since December. Boyd, who started his career with Livingston, becomes Killie boss Lee Clark's 16th signing this summer.
Kilmarnock have signed defender Scott Boyd on a season-long loan from Scottish Premiership rivals Ross County.
Write a concise summary for the following article.
Erhun Oztumer hit the bar for Walsall early on with a free-kick before Amadou Bakayoko poked them in front. Jack O'Connell had a header ruled out for the Blades for pushing. Etheridge palmed away Sharp's penalty after James O'Connor handled, before Sharp had a stoppage-time effort ruled out for handball as Walsall held on. The Blades, who had not lost in the league since August, would have gone second in the league with a win. Walsall, who also won at Bramall Lane in the EFL Trophy last month, climb a place to 16th after ending a run of five league games without a victory. Match ends, Sheffield United 0, Walsall 1. Second Half ends, Sheffield United 0, Walsall 1. Attempt missed. Billy Sharp (Sheffield United) right footed shot from very close range is high and wide to the right. Corner, Sheffield United. Conceded by Josh Ginnelly. Attempt blocked. John Fleck (Sheffield United) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Attempt saved. Kieron Freeman (Sheffield United) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Foul by Billy Sharp (Sheffield United). Matt Preston (Walsall) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Neil Etheridge (Walsall) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Leon Clarke (Sheffield United). Attempt missed. Jack O'Connell (Sheffield United) header from the left side of the box is too high. Scott Laird (Walsall) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Foul by Scott Laird (Walsall). Harry Chapman (Sheffield United) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Caolan Lavery (Sheffield United). Isaiah Osbourne (Walsall) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Penalty saved! Billy Sharp (Sheffield United) fails to capitalise on this great opportunity, right footed shot saved in the bottom right corner. Penalty conceded by Matt Preston (Walsall) with a hand ball in the penalty area. Attempt missed. Leon Clarke (Sheffield United) header from the centre of the box misses to the right. Substitution, Sheffield United. Caolan Lavery replaces Daniel Lafferty. Foul by Ethan Ebanks-Landell (Sheffield United). Simeon Jackson (Walsall) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Corner, Sheffield United. Conceded by Joe Edwards. Corner, Sheffield United. Conceded by Neil Etheridge. Attempt saved. Mark Duffy (Sheffield United) right footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Substitution, Walsall. Simeon Jackson replaces Amadou Bakayoko. Foul by Josh Ginnelly (Walsall). Ethan Ebanks-Landell (Sheffield United) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Corner, Sheffield United. Conceded by Joe Edwards. Attempt blocked. Harry Chapman (Sheffield United) right footed shot from the right side of the box is blocked. Substitution, Sheffield United. Harry Chapman replaces Chris Basham. Substitution, Walsall. Josh Ginnelly replaces Erhun Oztumer. Substitution, Walsall. Isaiah Osbourne replaces George Dobson. Attempt missed. Daniel Lafferty (Sheffield United) left footed shot from the centre of the box is too high. Corner, Sheffield United. Conceded by James O'Connor. Attempt blocked. Paul Coutts (Sheffield United) left footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Matt Preston (Walsall) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. John Fleck (Sheffield United) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Matt Preston (Walsall). Foul by Amadou Bakayoko (Walsall).
Neil Etheridge saved Billy Sharp's late penalty as Walsall held on to beat Sheffield United and end the Blades' 15-match unbeaten run in League One.
What is the summary of the document provided?
Authorities found a nitrogen tank containing the vials in the man's bag when he was crossing the border at the northern Thai town of Nong Khai. Police said the man confessed that the semen was bound for a fertility clinic in the capital of Laos - Vientiane. Laos has seen a boom in commercial surrogacy after neighbouring Thailand and Cambodia banned the practice. The semen was collected from Chinese and Vietnamese men, police said. The smuggler, a Thai national, told police he had done 12 similar trips in the past year where he would collect semen from Bangkok clinics and transport them to the clinic in Laos, reported The Bangkok Post newspaper. He said he had also done several deliveries to a hospital in Cambodia, the paper reported. In 2015, Thailand banned foreigners from paying Thai women to act as surrogates following a string of scandals in the once thriving industry. Cambodia followed with a total ban last year. This has coincided with a rise in the number of Laos-linked surrogacy agencies and fertility clinics, reported AFP news agency.
Thai police have arrested a man attempting to smuggle six vials of human semen into Laos.
Can you summarize the following paragraph?
The tail houses the "black boxes" - the voice and flight data recorders - which could give investigators clues as to the cause of the crash. It was found in a secondary search area, lending weight to theories that strong currents have moved the debris. The plane was lost en route from Surabaya, Indonesia, to Singapore on 28 December, with 162 people aboard. No survivors have been found. Part of the tail of the Airbus A320-200 was spotted by teams involving divers and unmanned underwater vehicles, search and rescue chief Bambang Soelistyo said in Jakarta. It is the first significant piece of wreckage from the crash to be identified and was found in an area some 30km (19 miles) from the initial search area. The part found has the AirAsia mark on it, Mr Soelistyo said. It is buried in mud, in water 30m (98ft)deep, and is believed to be upside down. Despite powerful sea currents and murky water, searchers managed to take photographs, he said. On one piece, the letter A appears to be painted. Only 40 bodies have been recovered so far but the authorities believe many of the passengers may still be strapped inside the main body of the plane. The BBC's Karishma Vaswani in Jakarta says the tail was not found in the area search teams previously focussed upon, but in the expanded search area. This could add weight to that theory, she adds. A huge international operation with aerial searches and more than 30 ships involved has been repeatedly hampered by poor weather. "The seas haven't been very friendly but the black boxes have a 30-day life and they will be able to find them," Peter Marosszeky, a senior aviation research fellow at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, told Reuters news agency. "It's the weather that is causing the delay." Some wreckage, including seats and a door, was found floating on the sea. At the weekend search officials said sonar had detected what they thought were five large parts of the plane. The cause of the crash is not known but the plane was flying through stormy weather at the time and had requested permission to change course. Indonesian aviation officials have said that AirAsia did not have permission to fly the Surabaya-Singapore route on the day of the crash. Investigators said they had found another body on Wednesday, bringing the total recovered to date to 40. Most of the people aboard the plane were Indonesian: 137 adult passengers, 17 children and one infant, along with two pilots and five crew. Anton Castilani, head of Indonesia's Disaster Victims Identification Unit, said identification would become more difficult because the bodies being found were increasingly decomposed. "That makes it harder to do quick identification of the bodies," he said, quoted by the Straits Times. "We can still do DNA testing but that takes one to two weeks." After two weeks, most corpses will sink, he was also quoted as saying by the Associated Press news agency. AirAsia previously had an excellent safety record, with no fatal accidents involving its aircraft. AirAsia chief executive Tony Fernandes said on Twitter: "We need to find all parts soon so we can find all our guests to ease the pain of our families. That still is our priority."
Part of the tail of crashed AirAsia flight QZ8501 has been found in the Java Sea, Indonesian searchers say.
Summarize the content of the document below.
Tries from Johnny Sexton and Richardt Strauss put Leinster in control and another score by the hooker helped extend the lead to 17-0 by the break. Jack McGrath, Isa Nacewa, Mick Kearney, Noel Reid and Garry Ringrose added second-half tries for Leinster. Marco Lazzaroni, Matteo Muccignat and Enrico Bacchin replied for Treviso. Despite Treviso's late rally, Zebre's 47-22 win over the Dragons means that they clinch the European Champions Cup spot available to the leading Italian club. Leinster, chasing a third Pro 12 title in four years and a fifth overall, will renew acquaintances with Ulster in the play-offs, having beaten the Belfast outfit in the semi-finals in 2011 and 2014, and the final in 2013. Nacewa's quick feet helped set up Sexton's opening ninth-minute try as the veteran's quick feet helped open up the Treviso midfield. Forward power yielded both of Strauss' first-half tries with Sexton finally landing a conversion at the third attempt to leave Leinster 17-0 ahead at the break. Nacewa was again the provider for McGrath's bonus-point clinching 45th-minute try and the wing added the first of his four second-half conversion with Sexton having departed the fray. The New Zealand-born Fiji international notched a try of his own in the 50th minute after starting the attack with a clever cross-kick before Mick Kearney quickly added Leinster's sixth touchdown. After Leinster coach Leo Cullen emptied his bench, the home side's performance became somewhat ragged as Lazzaroni, Muccignat and Bacchin notched Treviso tries. But Leinster continued to look dangerous in attack themselves as Reid and Ringrose were able to bring their try-count up to eight. Leinster: R Kearney; I Nacewa (capt), G Ringrose, B Te'o, D Kearney; J Sexton, E Reddan; J McGrath, R Strauss, M Ross; D Toner, M Kearney; R Ruddock, J Murphy, J Heaslip (capt). Replacements: S Cronin, P Dooley, T Furlong, R Molony, D Ryan, L McGrath, C Marsh, N Reid. Benetton Treviso: J Hayward; L Nitoglia, T Iannone, A Sgarbi, A Esposito; L McLean, E Gori; M Zanusso, O Gega, S Ferrari, M Fuser, F Paulo; F Minto, A Zanni (capt), A Steyn. Replacements: L Bigi, M Muccignat, 18 S Manu, M Lazzaroni, A De Marchi, A Lucchese, J Ambrosini, E Bacchin.
Leinster set up a home Pro12 semi-final against Ulster as they finished top and ended Treviso's hopes of playing in next season's European Champions Cup.
Please summarize the passage below.
The Condor Liberation is now the only ferry operating between Guernsey, Jersey and the UK. Captain Fran Collins, executive director of operations, said: "It's a milestone in Condor's history. "It's the first time a vessel of this type has been used in northern Europe so it's pretty exciting to see her going to sea with a full complement." The 102m (335ft) long vessel was built by Austal shipbuilders in Australia and can carry up to 880 passengers and 245 vehicles. Following its purchase the firm sold the smaller Vitesse and Express ferries to Greek company Seajets, with Vitesse already delivered and Express due to follow once Condor Ferries is happy with the new ferry in service. The Liberation is supposed to be able to operate in bigger waves than the smaller ferries, but is not yet licensed to do so. Captain Collins said: "At the moment she has a limit of three and a half metres [of wave height], which is the same as the previous vessels. "The Maritime and Coastguard Agency impose that limit on any high speed craft operating in these waters until she's been proven otherwise. "Through the summer we'll take a series of assessments in heavy weather... and we hope to get that increased come the autumn." The bigger ferry cannot operate to Weymouth so sailings to the UK port ended on Monday. Mobile food sellers on beaches and streets would also have to move on from spots every 20 minutes or risk losing their licence. Denbighshire council will consider the changes as it reviews its Street Trading Policy on Wednesday. The Ice Cream Alliance said the proposed rules were "a nonsense". A spokesman for the alliance, which represents more than 600 businesses in the UK, said: "Members of the public will get quite upset about it when it is a hot day and there is a big queue, they could be waiting and the time will run out and the van will have to move on. "At the end of the day ice cream sellers are providing a service to the public, it is a service they are paying to provide, and then they are being thwarted in trying to make a living." A document before the council says the policy - which applies to roads, footways and beaches - aims to prevent the obstruction of streets. Under the rules all ice cream, hot food and sandwich vans would have to move at least 50 metres every 20 minutes, and would not be able to return to the same spot for four hours. Food vans would also be barred from outside schools and colleges between 07:30 GMT and 18:00, but will be allowed with expressed permission from the school. People who break the rules may have their licence suspended or revoked, and may face prosecution. Denbighshire council has been asked to comment. The panto, at the Bristol Old Vic, has replaced the unconscious princess with a prince called Percy and swapped the traditional kiss for CPR. Despite being rewritten to appeal to a modern audience, the gender swap has caused controversy. But producer Chloe Elwood said: "There's always been a tradition of playing with gender at Christmas." The decision has caused some controversy in the national press, with Conservative MP Peter Bone telling The Sun newspaper it was "political correctness gone mad". Written by the Grimm Brothers in 1812, Sleeping Beauty has traditionally seen an inert helpless princess, patiently waiting to be awakened from her slumber by a kiss from Prince Charming. But the Bristol Old Vic production has put Prince Percy into a deep sleep while it falls on a young feisty heroine to rescue him with cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). "Sleeping Beauty is often very passive - she's seen as the passive heroine who gets rescued and that's not incredibly helpful in the 21st century ," said director Sally Cookson. "So that's why I wanted to spice things up a little bit and swap it - just for a bit of fun really." The show's producer, Ms Elwood, admits it is "quite a long way" from the traditional tale but said it is not "especially radical". "Panto has traditionally been full of men playing women, girls playing boys - it's all very much in the spirit of the fun we expect at Christmas," she said. "Sally's not doing anything that's especially radical, I think what people have got upset about is the notion of a high-fibre diet of feminism."
A £50m ferry serving the Channel Islands and UK has completed its maiden voyage from Poole to Guernsey. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Ice cream and burger vans could be banned from selling within 100m of a school under changes to rules in Denbighshire. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A decision to cast a man in the title role of Sleeping Beauty has been defended by a theatre.
Please provide a concise summary of the following section.
What is even more remarkable is that Gughan Ramakrishnan only started studying for his exam at the beginning of this year. Gughan was a pupil at St Joseph's Primary School in west Belfast's Slate Street when he sat the exam in June. His father said the family were delighted at his success. "Gughan was ready to go to cricket training at Stormont when the principal of St Joseph's Primary School called me about the GCSE result," Mr Ramakrishnan added. "We were delighted, I then called my wife and she was very happy. "We also shared our happiness with our parents in India and relatives in the US." Gughan, whose family is originally from Karur in southern India, joined St Joseph's Primary School in December 2010. The school's principal, Mairead Weir, explained the background to Gughan studying for the GCSE exam. "We have informal links with St Louise's Comprehensive in west Belfast to ensure a good transition for children moving from primary to post primary level," she added. "Some of their teachers thought he would be able to do a GCSE in maths when they saw his work." Ms Weir said GCSE foundation level had originally been considered, but this opinion was later revised following further consultation. "I approached St Louise's to see would they enter Gughan for the GCSE on my behalf, the principal was able to do that and accommodate him," she added. Ms Weir said the young maths student was "a little nervous" prior to sitting the exam, but had "a big smile on his face" on its completion. "Gughan is quiet, humble and unassuming and he said it was fine," she added. "I am delighted for him and the school and our staff that we were able to move him on to achieve his potential. "He is a brilliant all-rounder at maths and has a wonderful flair for it. "Our school is in an area of multiple deprivation, yet we have wonderful children who can achieve the best if given that chance. Gughan was given that chance and achieved, we wish him all the best." Gughan, who is aiming to become a scientist in the future, will now be bringing his numerical skills to Methodist College. He began his GCSE maths journey soon after securing success in his transfer test. But before he enjoys another test triumph at his new school, he will want to display his ability with fours and sixes on another stage. "Gughan is an all-rounder who likes to bat as well as bowl, I think the maths will be useful for his cricket," Mr Ramakrishnan added. "He plays for the under-11s at Civil Service and they are in the final of a cricket tournament in Dublin in September." The former England captain died in January aged 77 after a short illness. Heyhoe Flint played in 22 Tests and 23 one-day internationals, and became the first woman to be inducted into the ICC Hall of Fame in 2010. The announcement came at Lord's where the launch of this summer's Women's World Cup in England took place. The hosts will play India at Derby in the first match of the tournament on 24 June. Baroness Heyhoe Flint, as she became in 2011, was vice-president of her beloved Wolverhampton Wanderers FC, and captained England to victory at the inaugural World Cup in 1973 - an event only made possible after she persuaded her friend and fellow Wolves devotee Sir Jack Hayward to sponsor the tournament.
An 11-year-old cricket lover from Northern Ireland has shown he can score at the highest level by receiving a grade B in GCSE maths. [NEXT_CONCEPT] An annual award for the best female cricketer will be named after the late Rachael Heyhoe Flint, the International Cricket Council has announced.
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt.
TUV was found liable over a global scandal affecting thousands of women. In 2010 it emerged that French company Poly Implant Prothese (PIP) had made implants with substandard, industrial-grade silicone. TUV Rheinland was among the bodies that had certified them. PIP exported 80% of its implants before the firm was liquidated in the scandal. The commercial court in Toulon, southern France, said TUV Rheinland must pay 3,000 euros to each of the 20,000 plaintiffs. PIP's silicone gel can cause medical problems if the implants leak or erupt. A UK report in June 2012 found that PIP implants had double the rupture rate of other implants. The scandal affected about 300,000 women in as many as 65 countries, including France, the UK, Germany, Venezuela and Brazil. Public Health Wales is investigating the small outbreak among people with links to Lliswerry High School. Dr Tom Porter at Cardiff and Vale health board said uptake of the jab was "lower than we would like it to be". He said this meant further outbreaks were "likely". Vaccine sessions have already taken place at Lliswerry High School and the primary schools in Newport linked to it. Dr Porter, a consultant in public health medicine, said: "We know that around one in seven children and young people in Cardiff and the Vale of Glamorgan are currently not fully protected against measles. "We would urge parents to check that their children have had two doses of MMR and, if not, to contact your GP surgery to make an appointment for vaccination." According to latest Public Health Wales figures, the MMR uptake among 16-year-olds for Wales as a whole is 87.2%, meaning roughly one in seven are unvaccinated across the country. Dr Porter said: "There is no immediate cause for concern in the area at the moment, but because there are pockets of low uptake there's likely to be further outbreaks. "This campaign is aiming to try and prevent further outbreaks from happening." The first MMR dose is usually given at 12 months and the second at 40 months. Symptoms of measles include a fever, cough, runny nose, conjunctivitis and a distinctive red rash. Silver Hydro has submitted the proposals for the old Caddonfoot Primary at Clovenfords. Pupils moved out of the school nearly three years ago and into a brand new building. It is now hoped the old property could be turned into what developers describe as a "sustainable water-based energy research facility". The proposal would see water engines and their electronic components assembled and tested in what was the assembly/dining area. Developers said the site of the building - next to the Caddon Water which flows into the River Tweed - would be ideal for their project. Silver Hydro said it had made a successful bid to purchase the building, subject to planning approval. It added that externally-visible alterations would be minimal.
A French court has ordered a German safety body to pay 60m euros (£52m; $64m) in compensation to 20,000 women who received faulty breast implants. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Parents in Cardiff and Vale of Glamorgan are being urged to ensure their children have received two doses of the MMR vaccine, following a measles outbreak in nearby Newport. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Plans have been lodged to create a hydro energy research centre at a former school building in the Borders.
What is the summary of the following article?
Cardinal Pell, who is treasurer to the Vatican and is based in Vatican City, has repeatedly denied "all such accusations" against him. Prosecutors in Australia's Victoria state have given advice to police, who will decide whether to lay charges. The claims relate to alleged incidents in the 1970s, local media said. Victoria Police said detectives from Taskforce Sano, which investigates child sexual abuse, would "take time to consider [prosecutors'] advice". "As this remains an ongoing investigation, we will not be commenting further at this time," a police statement said, without naming Cardinal Pell. Sydney's Catholic Archbishop Anthony Fisher said it was not known "if or what" recommendations had been made by prosecutors. "What is clear, however, is that Cardinal Pell has co-operated in every way with multiple police, parliamentary and royal commission investigations," he said. "Even churchmen have a right to 'a fair go'." The Australian Broadcasting Corp (ABC) last year aired allegations by two men, now aged in their forties, who claimed Cardinal Pell had touched them inappropriately in the 1970s. Cardinal Pell strongly denied the allegations at the time, describing them as a "scandalous smear campaign". He was voluntarily interviewed by Australian detectives in Rome last year. No charges have ever been laid against him. Last year, the cardinal gave evidence to a royal commission - Australia's highest form of inquiry - about whether he knew paedophiles were active in churches under his watch. He told the hearing that he was deceived by a senior clergyman over one paedophile priest, but admitted he did not act on an abuse claim. Earlier this week, Cardinal Pell accused an Australian publisher and some media outlets of interfering with justice over the publication of a new book. The book by ABC reporter Louise Milligan details fresh abuse claims against Cardinal Pell, alleged to have taken place in the 1990s. A spokesman for the cardinal said on Monday: "He repeats his vehement and consistent denials of any and all such accusations, and stands by all the evidence he has given to the royal commission." In February, the royal commission heard 7% of Australia's Catholic priests allegedly abused children between 1950 and 2010. The miner said a number of parties are interested in the assets and it is "actively pursuing options to exit". Shareholder Elliott Management has campaigned for strategic changes at BHP including the sale of its shale operations. It comes as the company reported $5.89bn (£4.56bn) annual net profit. BHP said on Tuesday that it deemed the shale business "non-core" and was exploring options to offload the assets. Chief executive Andrew Mackenzie said a number of parties are interested in acquiring its onshore US oil and gas operations, but would not name the price the company is seeking for the assets. BHP's entry into US shale came at the peak of the fracking boom in 2011. A slump in oil prices slugged the business and forced a $7.2bn writedown last year. BHP chairman Jac Nasser, who retires this year, recently conceded a $20bn investment in shale six years ago was a mistake in hindsight. Analysts have suggested the business could sell for about half that in today's market. New-York based fund manager Elliott Management had been agitating for a sale or other form of divestment of the US shale business. The activist shareholder has publicly campaigned for a series of other changes at BHP, including the elimination of dual-structured Australia and London stock listings, and higher shareholder returns. Plans to sell its US shale operations came as the global miner posted an annual net profit of $5.89bn, following a record $6.39bn loss a year earlier. The result was slightly below analysts' expectations. The miner tripled its final dividend to $0.43 a share, which was also shy of expectations. The Anglo-Australian firm, like other miners, has benefited from a rebound in industrial metals prices after a slump caused by supply gluts and economic slowdown in China. China is the world's biggest buyer of commodities.
Police have received legal advice about sexual assault allegations involving Australia's most senior Catholic figure, Cardinal George Pell. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Mining giant BHP Billiton will sell its US shale assets after pressure from shareholders to offload the underperforming business.
Write a summary of this document.
Teeth and bone fragments from the kitten-sized predator, named Microleo attenboroughi, were found in limestone deposits at the Riversleigh World Heritage Fossil site in north-western Queensland. The researchers named the new species after the British broadcasting legend because of his work promoting the famous fossil site, which provides a record of nearly 25 million years of Australia's natural history. When Microleo was still prowling around, in the early Miocene era (roughly 19 million years ago), the arid, outback ecosystem was a lush rainforest. "It likely ran through the treetops, gobbling up birds, frogs, lizards and insects," says Dr Anna Gillespie, a palaeontologist at the University of New South Wales (UNSW). Dr Gillespie, who has been working at Riversleigh and preparing fossils for 20 years, helped recover fragments of the animal's skull and several teeth. It's far from a complete skeleton, but it's an important part of the puzzle."Crucially, we have got the third premolar, which is an elongated tooth that looks like a blade," she told the BBC. The razor-sharp tooth, used to tear up prey, is a common feature found in all known members of the family. "It immediately tells us it's a marsupial lion," she says. But the tooth is by far the smallest of its kind ever recovered. It's about one-tenth the size of the 3cm-long "bolt-crunching" teeth belonging to the largest and last surviving marsupial lion, Thylacoleo carnifex, which went extinct about 100,000 years ago. Thylacoleo weighed about 130kg (286lbs) and was Australia's largest carnivorous mammal. It was a fearsome predator about the size of an African lion, with the bite strength to match, and hunted megafauna such as giant kangaroo and diprotodon. In sharp contrast, Dr Gillespie and her team estimate that their "little guy" weighed only 600g, and was about the size of a kitten. "We weren't expecting to find a marsupial lion of this small size," she says. "It might have been a bit too big to fit in your pocket, but it would have fit quite comfortably in a handbag. It would have been very cute." The team has ruled out the possibility that the fossils belonged to a juvenile, or a malformed member of a related species. This is due to their distinctive shape, the fact that all the molars have erupted and the presence of "very clear wear patterns". "This animal has been running around hunting things for quite a while. So it's definitely an adult," says Dr Gillespie. The team from UNSW has described the new species in the journal Palaeontologia Electronica. With this find, the researchers have determined that at least three different marsupial lions were co-existing in the ancient Riversleigh rainforest. "This level of diversity is unmatched for the family at any other time in their evolutionary history," the researchers note. One marsupial lion (Priscileo) weighed about 1.8kg, and was about the size of a cat. Another yet-to-be described species (Wakaleo) weighed around 30kg, about the size of a small Labrador dog, says Dr Gillespie. She says it indicates that they may have been co-operating, dividing up the food resources to reduce competition between themselves. The fossil was found in a location at Riversleigh known as Neville's Garden, which has become renowned for its rich diversity of animals. It's yielded bandicoots, possums, kangaroos, toothed platypuses, small koalas, thousands of bats, fish, turtles, lizards, pythons and a range of rainforest birds. "My colleagues have been working at Riversleigh for 40 years," says Dr Gillespie. "In that time we have processed tonnes of limestone, and got thousands and thousands of fossils back, but this is the only specimen from this animal. "So it's rather enigmatic in this way," she says. "It might have been a rare species in that ecosystem, but we still have to hunt for more." Stephen Wroe, an associate professor of zoology and palaeontology at the University of New England in NSW, who was not involved in the study, says the discovery raises new questions about the origin of the marsupial lion family. "Until quite recently there were only a few marsupial lion species known. Over the last decade or two evidence from Riversleigh has seen this jump to 11 subspecies," he says. "This most recent find doesn't just increase the known diversity in terms of species numbers - it greatly expands the diversity of known morphologies." Mr Wroe says the team has done a good job estimating the body size: "No matter how you wash it, this little guy was tiny relative to other members of the family." He says its diminutive size may explain why only a single specimen has been found. "In general Australia's fossil record is very poor over this time period," he says. "Riversleigh is a freakishly productive area in this respect."
A miniature marsupial lion, extinct for at least 18 million years, has been named after Sir David Attenborough after its fossilised remains were found in a remote part of Australia.
Can you provide an overview of this section?
Mae papur briffio gafodd ei yrru gan Brifysgol Cymru Y Drindod Dewi Sant i'r llywodraeth ym mis Medi yn dweud: "Mae angen buddsoddiad cyhoeddus yng nghynllun Yr Egin y brifysgol er mwyn cael gwared â'r bwlch ariannol." Ym mis Hydref, dywedodd Ysgrifennydd yr Economi, Ken Skates wrth ACau ei fod yn "siomedig" bod bwlch ariannol wedi ymddangos. Mae'r brifysgol wedi gwadu na dyna oedd yr achos, gan ddweud nad oes bwlch ariannol wedi ymddangos yn y cynllun busnes. Fe wnaeth y brifysgol ofyn am arian cyhoeddus bythefnos ar ôl i S4C gael gwybod bod y cynllun yn datblygu yn ôl y disgwyl. Daeth ar ôl i'r brifysgol ddweud bod y cynllun yn cael ei "reoli'n effeithiol". Fe wnaeth prif weithredwr S4C, Ian Jones, ysgrifennu at Is-ganghellor y brifysgol yn croesawu "sicrwydd bod costau'r cynllun yn parhau i gael eu rheoli'n effeithiol". Roedd y brifysgol hefyd wedi dweud wrth Lywodraeth Cymru bod tua 65 o staff S4C a'r BBC yn symud i'r Egin. Dywedodd BBC Cymru nad oedd unrhyw gytundeb o'r fath wedi ei gadarnhau a bod trafodaethau yn parhau. Dywedodd llefarydd ar ran S4C mai'r brifysgol oedd yn gyfrifol am adeiladu ac ariannu Yr Egin. Dywedodd llefarydd ar ran Prifysgol Cymru Y Drindod Dewi Sant: "Nid oes bwlch ariannol wedi ymddangos yng nghynllun busnes Yr Egin ers i S4C ei dderbyn." Ychwanegodd bod yr Awdurdod yn "llwyr ymwybodol o'r ffaith y byddai'r brifysgol yn gwneud cais drwy sianelau allanol am arian tuag at ddatblygu clwstwr creadigol yng Nghaerfyrddin". Dywedodd y llefarydd hefyd y "byddai'n anodd iawn deall pam y byddai cynllun trawsnewidiol allweddol fel hwn yng Ngorllewin Cymru, a fyddai'n gwireddu amcanion strategol clir yn Symud Cymru Ymlaen, yn cael ei wrthod, yn enwedig o gofio bod yr argymhellion yn rhoi sylw teilwng i'r holl risgiau ariannol terfynol".
Fe wnaeth y brifysgol y tu ôl i bencadlys newydd S4C, Yr Egin, ddweud wrth Lywodraeth Cymru y byddai angen arian cyhoeddus, fis yn unig cyn gwadu bod bwlch ariannol.
Write a brief summary of the document.
It was a first half to forget, with neither side managing a shot on target. As the game opened up after the break Doolan nodded the home side ahead from close range, shortly after Danny Devine had been denied with a similar chance. Then Doolan made it two with another header, this time getting to Callum Booth's cross. With Ross County losing at home to St Johnstone, the result moved Thistle into sixth place, five points clear of Accies in the relegation play-off spot. With six of their seven previous meetings having ended all square, the opening exchanges indicated another tight affair in prospect. Neither side created a clear-cut chance during the first quarter of this fixture. Hamilton goalkeeper Gary Woods dealt with a cross from the right with a powerful punch clear, while Tomas Cerny at the other end only dirtied his gloves by fielding a headed pass-back from Devine. This was Cerny's 200th appearance in Scottish football and by coincidence it came in a fixture between the two teams with whom he acquired that total. Having never been on the losing side in fixtures between the two, he was keen to maintain that trend. However, his goal was threatened five minutes before the interval when Michael Devlin sent a glancing header wide of his right-hand post after connecting with a Danny Redmond corner kick from the right. They talk about "Firhill for thrills" but that phrase was furthest from the mind after the first half. While there was plenty of endeavour, there was no end product. Early in the second half Eamonn Brophy got his head to a Redmond cross but it flew wide of the target. Brophy got closer with his next effort. This time he got beyond Liam Lindsay before firing in a low shot, but Cerny was alert to the danger and stretched well to turn the effort round the post. Thistle should have opened the scoring through Lindsay when he blasted over from four yards when Woods parried a Devine header into his path. Midway through the second half the home side made the breakthrough. Substitutes Chris Erskine and Doolan combined as the latter rose at the back post to head home the former's cross from the left. And Thistle doubled their lead when Booth's cross was perfect for Doolan to dispatch another header beyond the reach of Woods. Thistle have now gone 11 games unbeaten against Accies, and while Alan Archibald's men rise up to the top half of the table, the visitors are left in the thick of a relegation battle. Partick Thistle manager Alan Archibald: "It was a massive game and a massive three points. There wasn't a lot of good football on show, I think because of the size of the game and what was at stake. "It is a boost (being in the top six). We don't harp on about it too much, I think the last time it lasted three days. I said to the lads we've nine huge games before the split, lets win the home ones and see where it takes us, we've done that today and hopefully we can build on it." Hamilton Academical manager Martin Canning: "We were probably the better team for parts of the first half. We forced Thistle into changing their shape. In the second half you can clear see we tired which was going to happen given how stretched the squad is. When you've got a squad our size and you've got seven or eight bodies out it's going to take its toll. "It's still all to play for, it's still a tight league, but it's going to be a grind." Match ends, Partick Thistle 2, Hamilton Academical 0. Second Half ends, Partick Thistle 2, Hamilton Academical 0. Corner, Hamilton Academical. Conceded by Danny Devine. Attempt missed. Blair Adams (Hamilton Academical) left footed shot from outside the box misses to the right. Attempt missed. Giannis Skondras (Hamilton Academical) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the right from a direct free kick. Rakish Bingham (Hamilton Academical) wins a free kick on the left wing. Foul by Danny Devine (Partick Thistle). Foul by Chris Erskine (Partick Thistle). Darian MacKinnon (Hamilton Academical) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Abdul Osman (Partick Thistle) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Darian MacKinnon (Hamilton Academical). Steven Lawless (Partick Thistle) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Grant Gillespie (Hamilton Academical) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Steven Lawless (Partick Thistle). Goal! Partick Thistle 2, Hamilton Academical 0. Kris Doolan (Partick Thistle) header from very close range to the top right corner. Assisted by Callum Booth. Ryan Edwards (Partick Thistle) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Darian MacKinnon (Hamilton Academical). Giannis Skondras (Hamilton Academical) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Ryan Edwards (Partick Thistle) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Giannis Skondras (Hamilton Academical). Substitution, Hamilton Academical. Blair Adams replaces Eamonn Brophy. Substitution, Hamilton Academical. Gramoz Kurtaj replaces Massimo Donati. Foul by Liam Lindsay (Partick Thistle). Eamonn Brophy (Hamilton Academical) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Steven Lawless (Partick Thistle). Grant Gillespie (Hamilton Academical) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Goal! Partick Thistle 1, Hamilton Academical 0. Kris Doolan (Partick Thistle) header from very close range to the top right corner. Assisted by Chris Erskine. Attempt missed. Liam Lindsay (Partick Thistle) right footed shot from very close range is too high. Attempt saved. Danny Devine (Partick Thistle) header from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Substitution, Hamilton Academical. Grant Gillespie replaces Daniel Redmond. Craig Watson (Hamilton Academical) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Kris Doolan (Partick Thistle) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Craig Watson (Hamilton Academical). Michael Devlin (Hamilton Academical) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Abdul Osman (Partick Thistle) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Michael Devlin (Hamilton Academical). Attempt saved. Chris Erskine (Partick Thistle) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Substitution, Partick Thistle. Chris Erskine replaces Adebayo Azeez. Foul by Ryan Edwards (Partick Thistle). Michael Devlin (Hamilton Academical) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Kris Doolan came off the bench to score twice as Partick Thistle beat struggling Hamilton Academical to move into the Premiership's top six.
Give a brief summary of the provided passage.
The PM said he was "delighted" by the result, which gave the UK a chance to change "for the better". He said there had to be a "fair and balanced" settlement with English MPs deciding on laws applying to England. But defeated SNP leader Alex Salmond warned against any delay in shifting powers to Scotland as he announced his decision to step down. "For me as leader, my time is nearly done," he said. "For Scotland, the campaign continues and the dream shall never die." Scotland's First Minister explained his decision to quit just hours after Scotland voted decisively to stay in the United Kingdom by 2,001,926 votes to 1,617,989 - about 55% to 45%. The vote is the culmination of a two-year campaign. Talks will now begin on devolving more powers to Scotland. BBC political editor Nick Robinson The people have spoken. Scotland has rejected independence. The result has been accepted by both sides. So that you might think is that. Not a bit of it. The fact that over 1.5m British citizens voted not to remain part of the UK, the fact that a majority in Scotland's biggest city - Glasgow - backed independence, the fact that the Westminster establishment briefly thought this vote was lost, is the reason for that. The leaders of the three UK parties are now promising significant constitutional change and not just for Scotland but for England, Wales and Northern Ireland as well. They have agreed on a timetable for giving more powers to the Scottish Parliament but are a long, long way from agreeing proposals. Read more from Nick Robinson. Mr Salmond said he was "immensely proud" of his Yes campaign and serving as Scotland's First Minister had been "the privilege of my life", but he conceded that the SNP would benefit from new leadership to take the process on. The party had "the opportunity to hold Westminster's feet to the fire on the 'vow' that they have made to devolve further meaningful power to Scotland," he said. "This places Scotland in a very strong position." But while he would continue to serve as MSP for Aberdeenshire East, he had decided to stand down after the party's annual conference in November. "We lost the referendum vote but can still carry the political initiative," he said. "More importantly Scotland can still emerge as the real winner." In a statement outside Downing Street Mr Cameron defended the decision to hold the referendum, saying it was right that the SNP's majority in Holyrood was respected. He said Lord Smith of Kelvin had agreed to oversee the process of devolving more powers over tax, spending and welfare to Scotland, with draft legislation by the end of January. Mr Cameron added that the rights of other people in the UK needed to be "respected and enhanced". He said he had long believed that a crucial missing part was England. He said "the millions of voices of England must be heard". The Leader of the Commons William Hague has been asked to draw up plans for what would be a fundamental change at Westminster - that only English MPs could vote on English matters. BBC deputy political editor James Landale The Downing Street constitutional declaration - as it will become known - marks the start of what potentially could be massive constitutional change. In particular, the prime minister has promised to give English MPs a greater say over legislation that affects England. He made clear this would cover the same issues over which Scotland will have greater control - tax, spending and welfare. And the changes will be agreed at the same pace with draft legislation by January. But David Cameron did not spell out the detail, leaving a policy vacuum that will now be filled by Conservative MPs and an army of constitutional experts and think tanks. Everything from a full English parliament to complicated plans for English grand committees will be discussed. The risk for the PM is that he loses control of this debate. Read more from James Landale Mr Hague insisted there was a "very clear commitment" to the Scottish reforms pledged by the three main UK parties, but he argued that the English question had to be resolved at the same pace. "I think it would be inconceivable to go ahead with a further important stage and measure of devolution to parts of the United Kingdom, without addressing this issue," he told the BBC. "Of course it's been an anomaly for quite a long time now that Scottish MPs can vote on everything happening in England, but we the English MPs can no longer do so in Scotland, and indeed nor can the Scottish. "But it will become absolutely acute - it will become absolutely indefensible with further devolution - and I think people need to know at the time of the general election next May where we all stand on that, whether we've tried to reach an agreement, and if not, it's something they can decide on in the general election." 'History made' BBC political correspondent Iain Watson said the proposal to restrict voting rights for Scottish MPs could undermine a future Labour government - theoretically there could be a Labour PM who lacks a majority of English MPs so is unable to get health or education issues through parliament. But Labour leader Ed Miliband, arriving at his party's conference in Manchester, said he would not allow the moment "to be used for narrow party political advantage". Instead he announced plans for a full constitutional convention "rooted in our nations and regions... to ensure decisions are taken closer to the families and businesses". "These issues can no longer be fixed solely by politicians or prime ministers trying to shore up their position in their own party," he said. "The people need to be given a voice too." He did not comment on proposals for English-only votes in Parliament, instead calling for more powers to be devolved to regions within England. 'Rash promises' Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said it was time for the "clammy grip" of Westminster and Whitehall to be released "so that communities, families, cities, towns and villages across the UK feel that they have more say over their destiny than is currently the case". Mayor of London Boris Johnson said the result was "a great day for Britain" and pressed the case for English devolution. "What is sauce for the goose has got to be sauce for the gander," he added. Meanwhile, Conservative MP Owen Paterson, who was sacked by Mr Cameron as environment secretary in July, demanded an immediate recall of Parliament to debate a new constitutional settlement. He said it had been "completely unacceptable that right at the end of the campaign we have an ex-Labour leader (Gordon Brown) galloping off up to Scotland making some very rash promises of extensive new powers to the Scottish people - apparently with the endorsement of all three UK party leaders." England's voice Conservative Bernard Jenkin said he supported English votes for English laws, but claimed Mr Cameron's "No" campaign had been "patronising, over bearing," and had given very little clarity about the implications of independence - "just rather a lot of scare stories". Ex-Labour minister Frank Field urged the Labour leadership to come up with its own answer to the "English question" as soon as possible, warning that the party could not afford to drag its heels or be seen as "anti-English". UKIP leader Nigel Farage said it was now time for a "constitutional convention to find out how a fair UK would work". "I think England needs a voice," he said. "We've heard a lot from Scotland. The tail can't continue wagging the dog any longer. We must have English MPs voting on English only matters." Graham Brady, chairman of the Conservative MPs' 1922 Committee, said he could envisage parliament having English-only days - when English MPs vote on English matters. Speaking to the BBC's Newsnight programme, he said a separate English parliament could be costly and bureaucratic, but one parliament could sit on different days of the week for different matters.
David Cameron has said it is time for the UK "to move forward" after Scotland voted against independence.
Summarize the information in the following document.
Nineteen people complained that four of the pictures in it were unsuitable for a catalogue targeted at teenagers. The Devon-based company responded that the brand was aimed at university students over the age of 18. But the ASA concluded that the catalogue was sufficiently provocative to present a risk to younger teenagers. The company said that people wishing to receive their catalogue would have had to sign up online or in stores and in either case would have had to confirm that they were over 18. It said that its logo described it as the "University Outfitters" and added that the pictures were supposed to project "a positive, fun and sometimes flirtatious" reflection of student life. Two years ago, the ASA cleared a semi-naked image in the Jack Wills catalogue, saying that it was not provocative enough to present a risk to teenagers or be unsuitable for the target audience. This time though, the ASA adjudication ruled that some of the images went beyond what could be considered to be fun or flirtatious. It was particularly concerned about an image of a topless couple kissing while being sprayed with water.
Clothing retailer Jack Wills has been told by the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) not to reprint its spring catalogue in its current form.
Write a brief summary of the provided content.
Local Orange Order lodges marched past the Ardoyne shops in north Belfast early on Saturday morning. Loyalists are now due to dismantle their protest camp at Twaddell Avenue. It was set up in July 2013 after the Parades Commission ruled Orangemen could not walk along the route . 600 police officers were involved in the security operation. The Orange Order were allowed to march along the route after an agreement between Orangemen and the nationalist residents' association the Crumlin Ardoyne Residents Association (Cara). Several dozen protesters from the Greater Ardoyne Residents Collective (Garc), who reject that deal, gathered at the Ardoyne shops as the parade got underway. They chanted "walk of shame" but dispersed peacefully after the march passed. A protest against the parade passed off peacefully on Friday evening. Over 200 people took part.
One of the most bitter parading disputes in Northern Ireland in recent years has ended.
Provide a summary of the section below.
Sir Peter, 66, who has been an MP for 35 years and was a junior minister in Margaret Thatcher's government, was honoured for public service. He is the first MP to receive a knighthood since fellow-Tory Sir Peter Viggers in 2008. Since the expenses scandal the next year, MPs have been conspicuously absent from the honours list. Sir Peter is joined on the honours list by Labour's Anne Begg, 55, who is made a dame for services to disabled people and equal opportunities. The Aberdeen South MP, who was born with Gaucher's disease, a rare genetic condition which causes regular bone breakages, has chaired the All Party Group on Equalities and the All Party Group on Chronic Pain. Sir Peter, MP for Worthing West since 1997, previously represented Woolwich West - later renamed Eltham - since a by-election in 1975. He was a parliamentary under-secretary of state at the Department for Employment, the Department of Transport and the Northern Ireland Office between 1984 and 1990 - but has spent most of his Parliamentary career as a backbencher. His wife, former health secretary Virginia Bottomley, was made a life peer in 2005. Sir Peter said he was surprised and "delighted" to be knighted at a time when political honours were out of fashion. He told BBC News it was probably, in part, in recognition of his campaigns on human rights - in the late 1970s he attempted to prevent the assassination of Archbishop Oscar Romero in El Salvador - and his achievements in helping to cut road deaths as a transport minister in the 1980s. But he also spoke up for the role of backbench MPs and the importance of public service. "My idea of what public and political service is, is to try to make possible the things which are right, and you normally do that in association with other people, some in Parliament, some outside of Parliament," he told the BBC News Channel. Various civil servants also received honours, including the retiring permanent secretary at the Home Office, David Normington. Sir David, who has been in the civil service for 37 years, was also permanent secretary at the Department for Education and Skills. He was appointed a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath. Tom Fletcher, Gordon Brown's former foreign policy adviser, was also appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George.
Veteran Conservative MP Peter Bottomley has been awarded a knighthood in the New Years Honours list.
Please summarize the given passage.
Data from JustGiving shows that 2,348 appeals were set up by cancer patients or their loved ones in 2016, a seven-fold rise on the number for 2015. Over £4.5m was raised by these appeals in 2016 compared with £530,000 in 2015. Doctors say the number of patients bypassing the NHS is "very worrying". Liz Sheppard, a mother-of-three from Mansfield, was diagnosed with small cell stomach cancer - a rare form of the disease - in November 2015. She has now raised over £135,000 online to help pay for immunotherapy, which she is receiving at a private centre in London. She has already spent around £60,000 of the money on immunotherapy, and says she is responding well to the treatment. She told the BBC: "I'm able to get out and lead as normal a life as possible. Certainly I'm not bedridden. "If it wasn't for people's generosity and kindness, I wouldn't be where I am now. It's not something I could have self-funded. Without that money I wouldn't be here. It means everything. "I'm a mother. I look at my children every day and they keep me going. "And the messages people leave when they make a donation can be motivating in themselves. You can draw a lot of strength from them." A spokesman for NHS England said: "More people than ever before are surviving cancer thanks to improved NHS care… and together with NICE (the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence) we have also launched a new-look cancer drugs fund, meaning patients will be able to access promising, new and innovative treatments much quicker." According to the detailed figures released by the platform JustGiving, USA, Germany and Mexico topped the most popular destinations for patients travelling abroad for treatments last year. More than a fifth of those looking for treatment (404 people) raised £1,393,490 in donations to travel to the United States for care. Germany followed in second place with 142 people crowdfunding £368,530 (a 461% increase from 2015), whilst 23 people raised £69,660 to travel to Mexico for treatment (a 224% increase from 2015). Immunotherapy was the most popular treatment crowdfunded on the JustGiving platform in 2016. The therapy uses the body's own immune system to fight off cancer. It has been shown to work in certain cases, but not all. And some are still in the very early stages of research. The treatments people have funded are not always considered to have the backing of sufficient scientific evidence by NHS experts. Charles Wells, chief operations officer for JustGiving, said: "Over the last 12 months, we've seen more and more people crowdfunding on JustGiving to raise money for cancer treatments that aren't available on the NHS. "It can be a practical way for friends, family and the community to come together and help, as well as providing a lifeline for people by giving them access to pioneering treatments when they've been given a cancer diagnosis." Consultant oncologist Dr Clive Peedell expressed concern about the rise in the number of patients bypassing the NHS to fund their own treatment. He told BBC Radio 5 live: "The NHS is clearly financially under pressure at present, but cancer therapy has received preferential funding compared with other diseases and conditions. "The system for approving effective new cancer drugs is not perfect, but is much improved. "The vast majority of proven effective treatments for cancer are funded by the NHS. "This includes immunotherapy for a number of indications including lung cancer, which is my own field. "However, funding pressures are likely to pressurise the current system even further and we could see it break down in future. "It is therefore very worrying to see this trend of crowdfunding for cancer drugs. "It would be interesting to review all the cases to find out how many are genuinely appropriate. "I worry that some patients may be trying to access treatment that may not be beneficial. "Worse still, there may be significant extra costs involved, especially if patients pay privately or travel abroad." The NHS England spokesman said it was investing £130m in state-of-the-art radiotherapy equipment, alongside £200m of funding over two years to improve local cancer services.
There has been a big leap in the number of cancer patients turning to crowdfunding to pay for treatments not available on the NHS, figures seen by BBC Radio 5 live suggest.
Summarize the information in the following document.
Peterhead power station and the White Rose scheme in North Yorkshire were the bidders in the competition. Shell and SSE are behind the Aberdeenshire plans. The energy company Drax had announced in September it was abandoning plans to introduce CCS technology in North Yorkshire. In a stock exchange announcement, the government said: "Today, following the Chancellor's Autumn Statement, HM Government confirms that the £1bn ring-fenced capital budget for the Carbon Capture and Storage Competition is no longer available. "This decision means that the CCS Competition cannot proceed on its current basis. "We will engage closely with the bidders on the implications of this decision for them." A Shell spokesman said: "Shell is disappointed at the withdrawal of funding for the CCS Commercialisation Competition, in which our Peterhead CCS project was one of the final contenders. "We have worked tirelessly over the last two years to progress our plans for this project. "It has the potential to bring huge value to the UK, both in terms of immediate emissions reductions and developing knowledge for the benefit of a wider industry. "Government funding to support this world-first demonstration project, through the competition, was important to achieving the aim of making the technology commercially viable in the shortest possible time. "While we acknowledge that this decision has been made in the context of a difficult spending review, without that funding, we no longer see a future for the Peterhead project in the near term. "Shell remains committed to CCS - as our involvement in demonstration projects in other parts of the world shows - and view it as an important part of a low-carbon energy future." A spokesperson for SSE said: "Whilst SSE appreciates that being in government involves taking difficult decisions, it is extremely disappointed by today's announcement that the government is removing all committed public support for the demonstration of Carbon Capture and Storage in the UK. "SSE believes this decision represents a significant missed opportunity for the UK." Scottish energy minister Fergus Ewing said it was a "disgrace". He said: "It shows complete disregard for tackling climate change, utter indifference to developing the crucial new technologies that will cut emissions and is another UK government hammer blow to energy generation in Scotland." Jonathan Church, climate and energy lawyer at ClientEarth, said: "This an extremely damaging move by the UK government. "Development of CCS has been delayed for years and by successive governments, and by axing the £1bn grant to fund these projects, the UK government is essentially closing off one of the key avenues in the UK's transition to a low-carbon economy." Banff and Buchan SNP MP Eilidh Whiteford told BBC Scotland: "I think the whole point of the Peterhead project was it was a great chance to develop that technology. "I will be seeking clarification from the government." Drax was part of a scheme to store carbon dioxide next to its plant, which is the biggest coal-fired power station in the UK.
The UK government has announced it is axing a £1bn grant for developing new carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology.
Write a summary for this information.
Emyvale prospect McAllister, a former Minor star, netted past keeper Chris Snow in the first minute of the opening Section B fixture at Clones. Tomás Corrigan landed nine frees for Fermanagh who led in the second half but Monaghan shaded it by 1-13 to 0-15. St Mary's edged Antrim 2-16 to 3-12 in the other Section B fixture. Monaghan: R Beggan, O Coyle (0-1), F Kelly (0-1), R Wylie, K Duffy, C Walshe, B Greenan, D Hughes (0-2), K Hughes (0-2, 1f), K O'Connell, J Mealiff, G Doogan, D McAllister (1-0), T Kerr (0-4), M Bannigan (0-3, 1f). Subs: N McAdam for C Walshe (52), S Carey for D McAllister (55), S Finnegan for J Mealiff (63), D Malone for G Doogan (69). Fermanagh: C Snow, M Jones, L Cullen, T Daly, D McCusker (0-1), R McCluskey, A Breen, R Hyde, K Connor, C McManus, T Clarke, P McCusker (0-1), E Courtney (0-1), E Donnelly (0-1), T Corrigan 0-9 (0-9f). Subs: T McCaffrey for T Daly (13), C Corrigan 0-1 for R McCluskey (HT), B Mulrone for T Clarke (HT), D Teague 0-1 (0-1 45) for E Courtney (55), J Duffy for A Breen (71).
David McAllister scored a vital goal in the first minute of his senior inter-county debut as Monaghan beat Fermanagh by a point in the Dr McKenna Cup.
What is a brief summary of the information below?
In his review of the 569bhp Aston Vanquish for the Sunday Times driving magazine he said he took sections of the Isle of Man's TT course "flat out". Manx police said they were "making some inquiries". Martin, 33, said he completed his lap of the 37.7 mile (60 km) TT course in the £203,000 supercar in 22 minutes. The television presenter, from Grimsby in North East Lincolnshire, had his review published on 7 April. Aston Martin Vanquish Carbon Edition In it Martin, a favourite to take over from Jeremy Clarkson as a host on Top Gear, said he saw speeds of 180mph down Sulby straight, which has a 40mph speed limit. He also wrote that when he passed Union Mills, on to a section with no speed limit, he thought "right, let's have it" and that he later took a corner called Ballacrye, near the village of Ballaugh, with the "accelerator flat to the floor". He completed his lap of the course at about 06:00 BST. The mechanic, who has never won a TT but finished on the podium more than 20 times, can complete a lap of the TT course in about 17-and-a-half minutes during a Superbike race. The TT sees competitors reach speeds in excess of 200mph around closed roads each June.
Claims by TT star Guy Martin that he reached speeds of 180mph on open roads whilst reviewing an Aston Martin supercar are being probed by police.
Summarize the content provided below.
But when pressed for an answer on Donald Trump's controversial refugee ban she first of all, uncomfortably, avoided the question. Then on the third time of asking she would only say that on the United States policy on refugees it was for the US. Her refusal to comment was immediately condemned by the former Labour leader, Ed Miliband, who said it was shocking and wrong. The UN has expressed dismay and France and Germany have reported concerns. Downing Street had been delighted with its visit to Washington. But the PM returns to a row over her refusal to give her view. Having boasted that the virtue of the special relationship is that friends can be candid with each other, Theresa May's silence on President Trump's executive order will raise suspicion that in fact, as the junior partner, she is unwilling to speak her mind.
Before this trip Theresa May promised to be frank with the American president when she disagreed.
Summarize the information given below.
First-half goals by Jesus Corona and Raul Jimenez and Carlos Vela's tap-in after the break secured the 3-1 win. Substitute Stephen Gleeson's strike 13 minutes from time was some consolation for Martin O'Neill's men. The Irish host Uruguay in a friendly on Sunday before a World Cup qualifier at home to Austria on 11 June. Brighton defender Shane Duffy got a first taste of action since he suffered a fractured metatarsal on 4 March, with O'Neill desperate for him to get minutes under his belt ahead of Austria's visit to the Aviva Stadium Strikers Daryl Murphy and David McGoldrick were also handed chances to stake a claim. But it was goalkeeper Darren Randolph, who lost his place at West Ham towards the end of the Premier League season, who was given ample opportunity to regain match sharpness as Mexico started strongly. Corona curled a third-minute shot wide of the far post and then steered another off target from Vela's pull-back eight minutes later. The opener came from a Mexico break after a Republic corner, Jorge Hernandez feeding the ball to Corona, who slipped past Daryl Horgan and Richard Keogh before firing home. O'Neill's men were being overrun in midfield and were undone again with 25 minutes gone when Hernandez floated the ball over the top to former Arsenal striker Vela, who was barged to the ground by James McClean, the Republic skipper on his 50th appearance. Jimenez converted the resulting penalty with a casual efficiency to put Mexico 2-0 ahead. Duffy had a 44th-minute strike ruled out for offside after Conor Hourihane's earlier effort had been deflected out for a corner. O'Neill resisted the temptation to change either personnel or system at the break but his hopes of a fightback were dashed within nine minutes of the restart after Callum O'Dowda could only deflect Jimenez's pass into the path of substitute Oribe Peralta. His shot was well saved by Randolph but the rebound fell to Peralta who squared unselfishly for Vela to tap home. Defender Kevin Long was handed a senior debut when O'Neill made a 64th-minute triple substitution but it was Gleeson who made the telling impact from the bench when he steered home from close range after Oswaldo Alanis stabbed McClean's cross straight to him. Republic of Ireland manager Martin O'Neill: "First of all, I was delighted with the game. Secondly, quite a number of players have not played football for quite a considerable amount of time. "In terms of our preparation for the main game against Austria, I thought it was excellent. Mexico were very good, they were good on the ball as befits a side like that. "I thought it was a great work-out, a great exercise for us. "It really is a fantastic stadium and the noise in terms of atmosphere and occasion was very good. But I would have liked us to have played better." Match ends, Mexico 3, Republic of Ireland 1. Second Half ends, Mexico 3, Republic of Ireland 1. Attempt missed. David McGoldrick (Republic of Ireland) right footed shot from the centre of the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by James McClean with a cross. Attempt missed. Oribe Peralta (Mexico) right footed shot from the right side of the box is just a bit too high. Assisted by Javier Aquino. Oribe Peralta (Mexico) wins a free kick on the right wing. Foul by Kevin Long (Republic of Ireland). Attempt saved. Oribe Peralta (Mexico) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Rafael Márquez. Attempt saved. James McClean (Republic of Ireland) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Eunan O'Kane. Foul by Oribe Peralta (Mexico). James McClean (Republic of Ireland) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Attempt blocked. Orbelín Pineda (Mexico) right footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Jorge Hernández. Foul by Oribe Peralta (Mexico). Kevin Long (Republic of Ireland) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Attempt saved. Callum O'Dowda (Republic of Ireland) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Stephen Gleeson. Raúl Jiménez (Mexico) wins a free kick on the right wing. Foul by James McClean (Republic of Ireland). Jesús Gallardo (Mexico) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Stephen Gleeson (Republic of Ireland). Goal! Mexico 3, Republic of Ireland 1. Stephen Gleeson (Republic of Ireland) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom left corner. Substitution, Republic of Ireland. Stephen Gleeson replaces Daryl Horgan. Substitution, Republic of Ireland. Alan Browne replaces Cyrus Christie. Attempt missed. Orbelín Pineda (Mexico) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Assisted by Javier Aquino. Attempt blocked. Miguel Layún (Mexico) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Substitution, Mexico. Rafael Márquez replaces Carlos Vela. Corner, Mexico. Conceded by Shane Duffy. Substitution, Republic of Ireland. Wes Hoolahan replaces Daryl Murphy. Substitution, Republic of Ireland. Eunan O'Kane replaces Conor Hourihane. Substitution, Republic of Ireland. Kevin Long replaces John Egan. Attempt saved. Javier Aquino (Mexico) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Oribe Peralta. Attempt saved. Daryl Murphy (Republic of Ireland) header from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Daryl Horgan with a cross. Corner, Republic of Ireland. Conceded by Jorge Hernández. Attempt blocked. Daryl Murphy (Republic of Ireland) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Attempt blocked. Daryl Horgan (Republic of Ireland) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Substitution, Mexico. Orbelín Pineda replaces Jonathan dos Santos. Substitution, Mexico. Javier Aquino replaces Jesús Manuel Corona. Corner, Mexico. Conceded by Richard Keogh. Attempt saved. Jonathan dos Santos (Mexico) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Oribe Peralta. Attempt missed. James McClean (Republic of Ireland) left footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the right. Goal! Mexico 3, Republic of Ireland 0. Carlos Vela (Mexico) left footed shot from very close range to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Oribe Peralta. Attempt saved. Oribe Peralta (Mexico) right footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the bottom left corner.
An under-strength Republic of Ireland were outclassed by rampant Mexico in a friendly match at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.
Please provide a short summary of this passage.
Writing under the headline "Visa cloud over trade ties as British PM Theresa May arrives in India", Jayanth Jacob of leading daily Hindustan Times said "the stringent visa regulations by the British cast a shadow over the prospect of the two countries hammering out an ambitious trade and investment partnership post-Brexit". Jacob quoted S Irudayarajan, migration expert and consultant for government on mobility issues, as saying that "India is an important country for the UK. And curbing the flow of good minds whether they are students or skilled workers is not good for the UK". Reflecting similar sentiments, The Times of India published an editorial titled "Muddled May". "As the second largest global job creator in Britain and its third largest source of foreign direct investment, India finds these British policies both objectionable and puzzling. How does the UK hope to forge closer trade ties with India while growing increasingly disagreeable to Indian trade professionals?" A UK-India free trade agreement would be a "non-starter as long as the visa issue isn't sorted", added the Times of India. In an opinion piece on news portal DailyO headlined: "Post-Brexit, Britain is no lure for Indian students, and Theresa May's no help", columnist K Srinivasan notes that "Britain used to be the preferred destination for higher education, coupled with lucrative employment in related fields of study, for people from many countries, including India. But not any more, as the country's immigration laws get tighter and the impact of Brexit surfaces slowly". Business daily The Economic Times in a piece headlined "Where great minds meet" concurs, saying: "With the contentious issue of immigration in the background, PM May has her hands full on this visit to India, seeking a quick and favourable trade deal, while looking to project the UK as a truly global and forward looking nation." Television channel NDTV also notes that: "IT professionals have asked how there can be better trade, with Mrs May's government making it tougher for Indian professionals to travel to that country with tougher new rules for visa and immigration." BBC Monitoring reports and analyses news from TV, radio, web and print media around the world. You can follow BBC Monitoring on Twitter and Facebook.
Theresa May's first trip outside Europe since becoming prime minister has made the front pages of most Indian newspapers, with one suggesting that "stringent" British visa regulations for Indian nationals may hamper the prospects of a post-Brexit partnership deal.
Summarize the information given below.
The chairman and chief executive of the Shrewsbury and Telford NHS Hospital Trust both told the meeting they could not comment in detail about the review. Following shouts of "shame", "sham" and "resign", a 40-minute break was called. The chairman later said the decision to suspend was difficult but correct. The monthly board meeting was the first opportunity for members of the public to question the trust since the BBC revealed earlier this month that the health secretary has ordered an investigation into a number of deaths and other maternity errors. There have been at least seven avoidable deaths of babies due to mistakes in labour over a 20-month period. Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt has ordered NHS Improvement to investigate the way the trust has investigated the deaths and learned lessons. The meeting was scheduled to take questions at the end from the public, and chairman Peter Latchford refused several requests to bring forward questions about maternity services. After chief executive Simon Wright, read out a prepared statement saying the trust could not comment on the review, in case it prejudiced the investigation, there was an outcry. Other members of the public urged the non-executive directors to "raise your voices up and provide accountability". Mr Latchford then said that in his opinion the meeting could not proceed and adjourned the proceedings. After the board walked out, a group of about 15 people held an impromptu meeting, where they called for resignation of the chief executive and the medical director, Dr Edwin Borman. They repeatedly referred to comments Mr Borman made to the BBC - that the trust's perinatal mortality rate was in line with the national average - as "disgraceful". After the 40-minute suspension, the board members returned and the meeting continued. In a statement in the evening, Mr Latchford said: "The decision to briefly adjourn the meeting following a period of disruption was a difficult one to make but one I believe to be the correct decision, allowing us time to gather our thoughts before reconvening to discuss, and make very important decisions, about the safety of our hospital services. "We are aware that people have lots of questions about the independent review that NHS Improvement is leading, but if we comment now, we risk prejudicing the review and we are committed to using it as a chance to make further improvements." The chief executive had told the meeting the trust has written to around 3,000 women who are due to give birth at the trust to reassure them about the safety of their maternity services. Lynsey Haycock, 41, was putting up a display in her classroom when she fell at Forge Valley School in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, on Thursday. Mrs Haycock was taken to hospital but died the next day as a result of medical complications. Head teacher Dale Barrowclough said she was a "much-loved and respected teacher" at the school, an academy for 11 to 18-year-olds. "Her dedication and hard work helped improve the life chances of all the pupils who were fortunate to have her as a teacher," he continued. "We all came to know Mrs Haycock as a very warm-hearted person with a great sense of humour. Not only was she treasured by staff, she was much-loved by the pupils at Forge Valley. "As a community we are devastated by this tragic death and our thoughts are with Mrs Haycock's family and friends during this very difficult time." It is believed Mrs Haycock was injured as she prepared for the new school term, which began on Monday. A book of condolence has been opened at the school for people to leave their tributes to the science and health teacher. The Health and Safety Executive said it was aware of the incident and making preliminary inquiries.
An NHS trust being investigated over maternity errors, including baby deaths, has been forced to adjourn its board meeting amid calls to answer questions about alleged failings. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A teacher has died after breaking her leg in a fall in her classroom.
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt.
The "crude improvised explosive device" was found in Nadeem Muhammad's carry-on luggage as he went through security at Manchester Airport on 30 January. Made from batteries, wire, masking tape and a marker pen tube it was "potentially viable", the court heard. Mr Muhammad, 43, denies possessing explosives with intent. Security terminal boss Deborah Jeffrey told Manchester Crown Court the item had been swabbed and the device showed no trace of explosives so she "put the item into my pocket so it wouldn't go missing". She later put it through an X-ray machine and believed it was not viable because she could not see a detonator. Counter terrorism police subsequently examined it and found it contained nitroglycerin and nitrocellulose and was "potentially viable." Mr Muhammad, who lives on Tinline Street, Bury was born in Pakistan and holds an Italian passport. He was attempting to board a Ryanair flight to Bergamo in the Lombardy region of northern Italy when the item was discovered. Ms Jeffrey said: "There are strange things people carry in their bags but I'd not seen anything like that before." She said she had asked Mr Muhammad how the object came to be in his case and he claimed someone else might have put it there. She said he was "very calm and quiet". Police questioned Mr Muhammad but did not arrest him. He returned to the airport on 5 February and flew to Italy. Three days later a forensics officer examined the device and called the bomb squad. Forensics expert Lorna Philp said the bomb had the potential to cause injury to people and damage to property if detonated. The person setting it off would have had to be very close to the bomb to connect the wires protruding from it though, her report found. Mr Muhammad was arrested when he returned to the UK on 12 February. He denies possession of explosives with intent to endanger life or property and an alternative charge of possession of explosives under suspicious circumstances. The trial continues. The 36-year-old, who played nine Tests and 43 one-day internationals, made his views in a Facebook post in July. Vermeulen was responding to a complaint by Prosper Utseya, which alleged that there was racism in Zimbabwe cricket. "Racism is abominable and there can be no defence for it," Cricket Zimbabwe said in a statement. On Friday, a Zimbabwean newspaper published an apology from Vermeulen. In it, the former international said that he had made a personal apology to Utseya, and that it had been accepted. "I know my comments were over the top and I apologise to all that I have offended. But as a cricketer, it's how our minds work," he said. Zimbabwe Cricket said: "Mark Vermeulen has been banned from participating in all cricket activities, after he owned up to repulsive remarks that reflect racism, prejudice and plain ignorance. "We find Vermeulen's Facebook comment distasteful and unacceptable, particularly for a senior sportsman who should have learned from playing in Zimbabwe and abroad that there is no place for racism in sport."
An airport security manager "popped a pipe bomb in her pocket" for safekeeping when security staff found it in a passenger's hand luggage. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Former Zimbabwe Test batsman Mark Vermeulen has been banned from all cricket activities for referring to black people as "apes".
Summarize the passage below.
Boeing's commercial aircraft boss Ray Conner said Sutter was "an inspiration" not just to Boeing but "to the entire aerospace industry". The 747, which ushered in the long-haul travel era, first flew in 1969 before making its commercial debut in 1970. It only lost its status as the biggest passenger aircraft in 2007 with the launch of the Airbus A380. Sutter was in charge of the engineering team that developed the 747 in the mid-1960s. He and his team became known as "the Incredibles" for producing the world's largest aeroplane in just 29 months. Ironically, Boeing did not initially expect to produce many passenger-carrying 747s. In the 1960s, the future of commercial aviation was widely expected to be with supersonic airliners. The subsonic 747 was expected to become obsolete after a production run of about 400 craft. Boeing thought it would largely be used as a freighter - which was why the pilots' cabin was placed on an upper deck - giving the aircraft its distinctive humped silhouette. However, with the oil price rises of the 1970s, noisy and expensive supersonic flight was limited to just one commercial aircraft - Concorde. The 747, on the other hand, has been continuously updated and improved throughout its life. Production is likely to last until at least 2019, and so far the company has delivered more than 1,500 of the planes. Joe Sutter was born in Seattle in March 1921, and took a summer job at Boeing in 1940 while studying for an aeronautical engineering degree.
Joe Sutter, the man who led development of Boeing's 747 jumbo jet, has died aged 95.
Please provide a short summary of this passage.
Many over-55s will be able to dip into their pensions pots when they wish to. But the party says a charges cap may be required to prevent investors in certain schemes losing more than a quarter of their money in fees. The Treasury says savers will be given impartial guidance and new rules for financial firms are being introduced. Up until now most people in defined contribution schemes - where the final pension depends on the amount of investment returns - bought an annuity, a pre-set income for life, from a provider when they retired. From next April, savers will be able to use their pension money as they see fit, from the age of 55. More than 300,000 people will be able to access their pensions. A quarter of the money withdrawn will be tax-free, with income tax payable on additional withdrawals. Labours says it is concerned that insurers, investment managers and advisers will see the change as an opportunity to cash in. In particular, it is highlighting the potential high fees for pensioners who use so-called income drawdown schemes to access their cash, a practice up until till now used mostly by wealthier retirees. The schemes allow savers to take part of their pension while keeping the rest invested in the stock market. Labour says the fees for such schemes could reach 27% of the value of a £30,000 pension pot, if existing charging structures on drawdown products were applied. Pensions minister Steve Webb said the Financial Conduct Authority would soon be publishing new guidelines for companies selling pension-related financial products. But Labour says the government has not included income drawdown investments in its plans to combat high fees. Shadow pensions minister Gregg McClymont said: "Labour welcomed the new pension flexibilities announced in the Budget, but we are concerned that the government has not thought through the risks of rip-off charges."
Labour is urging the government to ensure people taking advantage of new pension freedoms next April are not ripped off by financial firms.
What is the summary of the document provided?
The 200 books, mainly published in the 19th and early 20th Century, include one work that was issued by order of Emperor Nicholas I in 1849. Auctioneers said the collection, which will be sold on 14 June, is "remarkable and seemingly unique". Birmingham City University, which owns the books, said it was sad to see them leave but it would reinvest the funds. The collection was built up from the mid-19th Century to support art and design education in the university's previous life as the Birmingham College of Art. Chris Albury, auctioneer and senior valuer for Dominic Winter, which is handling the sale, said: "It's a very interesting and varied collection which includes a number of rarities, the undoubted highlight being the sumptuously illustrated Antiquities of the Russian Empire. "This monumental, rare and influential work contains over 500 plates of Russian artefacts including icons, crowns, costume, weapons and jewellery." The Antiquities of the Russian Empire books were one of only 600 sets issued on the order of Emperor Nicholas I. Mr Albury said the Birmingham copy was "remarkable and seemingly unique" because it contained English descriptions of the artefacts. "We expect huge transatlantic international interest for this English language set," he said, estimating it could fetch more than £30,000 at the sale in South Cerney, Gloucestershire. The university said the books are now being sold because they no longer have relevance to current teaching or research. Steve Rose, deputy director of library and learning resources, said it was a "stunning collection". "I will be sad to see the books leave, but it means we can place a greater emphasis on our [books] that have direct relevance to the university's research," he said.
A collection of rare Russian books owned by a university could fetch £50,000 when they are sold at auction.
Summarize the content given in the passage.
It happened at the doorway of a fast food restaurant in Donegall Place around 00:30 BST on Sunday. The injured man suffered serious head injuries during the incident. A man in his 20s was arrested but later released on police bail pending further inquiries. Police have appealed for witnesses to contact them. 2 June 2016 Last updated at 14:55 BST Mohammed Nowrouz Noori, an Afghan in his 30s, lost his wife Nilufar, his son Mohammad and baby daughter Nastaran in January on a failed crossing from Turkey to Greece. Repatriating the bodies of his wife and son to Kabul for burial took him 12 days and left him bankrupt - he never found his daughter. The grime star and the late rock icon are up for best British male. Other nominees at "music's biggest night" include Beyonce, The 1975 and Bastille. Performances will come from Ed Sheeran and Little Mix, as well as US stars Katy Perry and Bruno Mars. The show kicks off at 19:30 on ITV and you can follow the red carpet action on BBC Music News Live from 15:00 GMT. Dermot O'Leary and Emma Willis have been drafted in to present the ceremony at London's O2 Arena, after original host Michael Buble pulled out to care for his young son, who is receiving treatment for cancer. Willis, a mum-of-three who presents The Voice UK and Big Brother, said she hoped she could "do him proud". "Every part of me sends so much love and all the best wishes in the world to Michael and his family at such a difficult time," she said. The star will introduce performances from the following acts: This year's ceremony is notable for its recognition of grime, which re-emerged from the underground last year, asserting its position as the UK's biggest musical movement since Britpop. Skepta, who won the 2016 Mercury Prize for his self-released album Konnichiwa, is favourite to win best breakthrough artist; while fellow grime MCs Stormzy and Kano are also up for awards. Bowie - who died in January last year - is likely to prevail in the best British male category, as the music industry takes itschance to honour one of rock's most recognisable and influential figures. His haunting swansong, Blackstar, is also up for best British album. Pop group Little Mix tie with Skepta for the most-nominated act of the night - each has three - but the girl band look like they will be locked out of their categories, best group (likely to go to The 1975), best video (One Direction) and best single (Clean Bandit, for Rockabye). Meanwhile, Beyonce and her younger sister Solange Knowles are both up for best international female, after releasing albums about race and politics last year. Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email [email protected].
A man in his 50s is in a critical condition in hospital following a fight with another man in Belfast city centre. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Hundreds of migrants face huge debts and a logistical nightmare to repatriate the bodies of loved ones who have died during perilous sea crossings to Europe. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Skepta and David Bowie are among the stars expected to win at the Brit Awards on Wednesday night.
What is the summary of the provided article?
Designed by Brighton's Yelo Architects, the building would sit on the corner of Sackville Gardens and Kingsway. It would provide 107 homes ranging from penthouse apartments to "affordable" flats, some with rooftop gardens or balconies. Developers say it should be embraced but some campaigners think it is the wrong building in the wrong place. The developer claims the derelict site has been an "eyesore" since a former hotel partially collapsed and had to be demolished in 2006. Tom Shaw of The Hyde Group said: "This is a prominent site on Hove seafront which deserves a high quality building with real architectural and design merit." But Valerie Paynter, of Save Hove, said: "This is an interesting piece of architectural design - but not for this site. "It would serve better as offices in a large public square setting. It is depressing to have to oppose it." Ms Paynter said light loss and its "overbearing appearance" would create a "bullying" presence for the housing that surrounded it. Councillor Robert Nemeth of Wish Ward said: "With housing targets imposed upon us, we have little choice but to get building. "This means either tall developments in key areas in the city or sprawling over the South Downs. As long as neighbours' concerns are genuinely taken into account, I'd much rather go up than out."
Plans for a 17 storey high-rise building on Hove seafront have divided local residents.
Write a summary for the following excerpt.
He told supporters that it was shameful that some top officials were earning $18,000 (£13,000) a month, while others were paid as little as $140. Officials not ready to accept the new $7,000 monthly wage limit should "start looking for alternative jobs", he said. Mr Magufuli has promised to cut wasteful public expenditure in office. The changes would come into effect in time for the start of the next financial year, which starts on 1 July, the president said. He likened the gulf in wages to a few "angels residing in heaven", while the majority "languished as if they were in hell", Tanzania's The Citizen newspaper quotes him as saying. Junior civil servants would see their salaries increase as part of the new policy, Mr Magufuli added. The president was speaking from his home town of Chato in north-western Tanzania in his first visit since taking office last October. He also used his speech to announce a drop in the current income tax rate from 11% to 9%. "It's true we want to collect tax, but we must also understand what the working class takes home," he said. On Tuesday, a US government aid agency withdrew $472m (£331m) of funding for a Tanzanian electricity project after criticising the government's handling of elections in Zanzibar. The president appeared to react to the move in his speech by criticising over-reliance on foreign aid: "We need to stand on our own. Work hard so that Tanzanians can get rid of donor dependence." Nicknamed the bulldozer, Mr Magufulil has announced a range of cost-cutting measures since coming to power including cancelling official celebrations for independence day.
Tanzanian President John Magufuli has promised to slash the salaries of senior civil servants, cutting the top wage threshold by almost two-thirds.
Please summarize the following text.
Crolla, 29, will make the third defence of his WBA lightweight title against Linares at the Manchester Arena. In his only fight on British soil last May, Japan-based Venezuelan Linares stopped Kevin Mitchell in 10 rounds. "I rate Linares very highly but I genuinely believe I'll have an answer for whatever he shows me," said Crolla. On Friday, Crolla weighed in 3lb heavier than Linares at 9st 8lb 5oz. "He's technically brilliant and I've got to be switched on from the opening bell. He's a very good counter-puncher, so I know I can't be lazy at any stage," said Crolla. "He likes to fight at his pace and I can't allow that. I've got to take advantage of some weaknesses that I think I've seen there. I'm confident I can do that. "Kevin Mitchell was seconds away from winning but Jorge dragged himself off the floor and came from behind to get the stoppage. That's what true champions do." Crolla is the favourite with the bookmakers but his 31-year-old challenger has plenty of championship pedigree. Linares is a former world champion at featherweight and super-featherweight and his stoppage of Mitchell was the penultimate defence of the WBC lightweight title. On that occasion, Linares climbed off the canvas in the fifth round before clubbing the game Londoner into submission. Linares has not fought since a fourth-round knockout of Mexico's Ivan Cano last October. He vacated the WBC title in February and was subsequently declared the governing body's 'champion in recess'. "I love fighting in my opponent's back yard, with all the noise that comes with it from their fans," said Linares, who has 40 wins from 43 professional fights, with 27 knockouts. "The supporters cannot get in the ring with their fighter, it's just me and him." As well as Crolla's WBA belt, the coveted Ring magazine lightweight belt will also be up for grabs on Saturday. Crolla won the WBA title with a fifth-round knockout of Colombian Darleys Perez last November before stopping Linares' compatriot Ismael Barroso in May. Crolla has 31 wins (13 KOs), four defeats and three draws from 38 pro fights. Victory over Linares could pave the way for a unification bout against WBO champion and fellow Mancunian Terry Flanagan. On the undercard, London's John Ryder defends his lightly-regarded WBA International middleweight title against Jack Arnfield of Blackpool. Boston's Callum Johnson fights Namibia's Willbeforce Shihepo for the vacant Commonwealth light-heavyweight title, while Conor Benn has his fifth fight in the paid ranks.
Britain's Anthony Crolla admits Jorge Linares is the best opponent he has faced but believes he will expose his weaknesses when they meet on Saturday.
Write a summary of this document.
Mr Chanos, who is betting against the shares of both firms, described the bid as a "shameful example of corporate governance at its worst". Tesla made a $2.8bn (1.9bn) offer for SolarCity on Tuesday. Tesla's chief executive Elon Musk said the deal, which will be paid for in Telsa shares, was a "no brainer". The two firms have close ties. Mr Musk owns 22% of SolarCity and sits on the company's board. SolarCity's chief executive Lyndon Rive and Mr Musk are cousins. "As a combined automotive and power storage and power generation company, the potential is there for Tesla to be a trillion-dollar market cap company," Mr Musk said. Mr Chanos has taken short positions in both Tesla and SolarCity. When investors take short positions they borrow shares of a company, sell those shares and try to buy them back at a lower price. Mr Chanos said SolarCity was "headed toward financial distress," and neither company could handle the burden of a tie-up. "[SolarCity] is burning hundreds of millions in cash every quarter, a burden that now Tesla shareholders will have to bear, at a total cost of over $8bn," he said. Mr Musk said SolarCity would not impact Telsa's cash flow and would have its own positive cash flow in the next three to six months. SolarCity reported a loss of $25m in the first quarter and has liabilities of $6bn, which includes debt and unpaid tax. On Wednesday, Tesla's share price put the company's value at $29.8bn while SolarCity's was $2.2bn. SolarCity's shares have fallen over 50% during the last year, but rose more than 3% on Wednesday. Tesla shares closed more than 10% lower.
Tesla's bid to buy struggling solar energy firm SolarCity has been called "shameful" by financier Jim Chanos.
Please provide a short summary of this passage.
Pennsylvania doctors found patients' asthma was harder to control if they lived near a fracking site, compared with other asthma patients. The findings, in more than 25,000 patients, are not proof of a causal effect. The authors say in the journal JAMA that more safety studies are needed. Fracking, or hydraulic fracturing, involves drilling down miles underground and blasting the shale rock with a high-pressure water mixture to release the natural gas trapped inside. Proponents say it has the potential to be greener, in terms of carbon footprint, than some other energy sources. Critics are worried about the impact on humans and the planet - namely, air and water pollution, earth tremors and potential health risks. Public Health England has looked at the issue in the UK and believes "the risks to public health from exposure to emissions from shale gas extraction are low if operations are properly run and regulated". The US has already pushed ahead with fracking, which is now a big industry. The UK, however, has remained cautious and paused its pursuit following a couple of small earthquakes near a test drilling site in the Blackpool area. US researchers, funded by the National Institutes of Health, set out to study the impact of fracking on the population of Pennsylvania - a region which has seen more than 6,000 shale gas wells drilled in the last decade or more. Using local electronic health records, they identified asthma patients and checked if fracking activity might be linked to disease flare-ups over a six-year period. A flare-up was defined as mild if the patient needed to be prescribed a steroid inhaler, moderate if they needed to go to the emergency department and severe if they had to be hospitalised for their asthma. The Johns Hopkins researchers looked at the distance the patient lived from an active fracking site, as well as other risk factors, such as whether they lived by a busy road. Patients with asthma in areas with the highest fracking activity - judged on distance, size and activity of the shale gas sites in the locality - had higher risk of asthma flare-ups compared with asthma patients living in places with low fracking activity. The odds of a flare-up was about 1.5 to 4 times higher, but the researchers still do not know why. They believe air pollution from the shale site itself as well as the heavy vehicles needed to build and service these facilities might be to blame, although they don't have any proof. Researcher Sara Rasmussen said: "We need more studies now to explore this theory. Another possible pathway is stress." Asthma can be exacerbated by stress and she says people living in the communities they studied would have had to deal with disruption as the shale gas sites were built. But, again, it's not clear if this would have an impact. Dan Murphy of Asthma UK said: "Asthma is a complex condition affecting one in 11 people in the UK, yet years of research underfunding means it still remains a relative mystery. "While this study suggests that living near fracking industry wells may increase risk of an asthma attack, more research is needed to get a clearer picture of the connection between the two and the impact on people with asthma." Energy In Depth, a campaign body set up by the Independent Petroleum Association of America, said: "The researchers claim this study 'adds to a growing body of evidence tying the fracking industry to health concerns.' "The study - and many others like it - actually doesn't have any evidence to prove causation, while numerous studies that actually provide real evidence that fracking is reducing asthma throughout the US continue to be overlooked." Update 20 July 2016: This story has been updated to include a response from the fracking industry.
The controversial method for mining natural gas known as fracking might trigger asthma flare-ups, according to a US study.
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt.
The impromptu surgery was done in the open air by a family member with razorblades outside the maternity ward of Douala's Laquintini Hospital, because medical staff refused to help. One of the babies was dead, but witnesses said the second baby was still alive when it was removed, though it died shortly afterwards. As the hospital staff refused to help, this has not been corroborated by medical officials. Marie Sen, Ms Koumateke's mother: "The mortuary attendant even came and said the babies were still kicking inside the stomach" About an hour earlier, Monique Koumateke, 31, was nearly full term when her family rushed her to hospital in a taxi after she had become ill. The midwife on duty told her relatives she was already dead and should be taken to the mortuary. Then an attendant, Monga Luc, noticed the twins might still be alive. "The mortuary attendant even came and said the babies were still kicking inside the stomach," her mother Marie Sen told the BBC. "We went to the maternity ward [again] but they chased us away." However, when they went back to the main hospital, they were told no-one would help. This is when a relative of Ms Koumateke's partner, Takeh Rose, rushed to find some razorblades to see if she could rescue the twins. Onlookers at the hospital two weeks ago filmed the scene and the footage was shared on social media. In the subsequent uproar, police arrested the midwife and nurse on duty that day, as well as Ms Rose and the mortuary attendant. All four have been released on bail as investigations continue. Hospital officials have not commented, but Health Minister Andre Mama Fouda, speaking after the arrests, said the staff at the state-run institution had done nothing wrong. A Supreme Court judge has also become involved in the heated debate about the issue online. Justice Ayah Paul Abine posted on Facebook that the minister's exoneration of the hospital staff needed to be investigated. Protesters in Douala have been calling for Mr Fouda to resign. "Hospitals now are just money-making businesses," one resident told me. Cameroonians do not receive free health care and have to pay for consultations as well as medicine, which can be costly. It is not uncommon for people to be detained at hospitals until their bills are paid. According to the UN, 28% of Cameroon's population live below the income poverty line. The recent death of a pregnant medical doctor in Douala caused similar outrage. Dr Helene Ngo Kana had an ectopic pregnancy and was unable to pay for medical assistance - and so died in Douala's General Hospital without getting any help. "This is a regime of shame. You have to pay before they deliver you; pay before you are treated," said opposition leader John Fru Ndi, condemning the poor treatment of patients at state-run hospitals. He made the comments after visiting the Koumateke family at their run-down house in Douala's Mboppi slum. Ms Koumateke leaves behind her partner and two children aged three and five. More than a dozen lawyers have now clubbed together to fight for justice for those who came to Ms Koumateke's aid. They are offering their services free of charge to help win compensation for Ms Koumateke's children and her partner, as well as defending Ms Rose and the mortuary attendant. "We are first of all humans, then lawyers. This sad incident could not leave anyone indifferent," said attorney Guy Olivier Moutin. "It's a fight for the widower and the two children left behind. And we will defend two of the four arrested… we will fight for their total freedom." And civil society leaders in Doula, like Ferdinand Ndifor, are calling for a full investigation into Cameroon's health system. "Are the hospitals equipped? Are there enough doctors on duty?" he asked. "We want to know - will this happen again tomorrow?"
Mobile phone footage of a woman without medical training cutting open the belly of a dead woman in a desperate attempt to save her unborn twins has provoked an outcry in Cameroon.
Please give a summary of the document below.
Tahir Nazir, 40, of Glasgow, also targeted students in Manchester where he tried to rape a sleeping woman. Manchester Crown Court heard he had a sexual obsession with students and repeatedly tried to enter their rooms during a tour of university locations. He was found guilty of sexual assault, attempted rape and trespass offences. The court heard Nazir was caught "on top" of a very drunk student after he broke into a house in Cathays, Cardiff, on 22 September, through a bathroom window. On 1 November, a woman in Hulme, Manchester, said she woke to find him "licking her neck". He was arrested on 6 November after women in a shared house in Fallowfield, Manchester, became concerned someone was trying to open the doors of their rooms in the early hours of the morning. Nazir had denied claims his trips to Inverness, Aberdeen, Dundee, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Manchester, Oxford, Bristol and Cardiff had a sexual purpose. Instead, he told the court he loved driving and was "inspired by Gothic architecture". He admitted having a fake university ID, which he said he used for discounts, and Viagra in his car, which he said gave him energy for clubbing. The case was adjourned for sentencing in May. The women, aged 66 and 33, were pronounced dead at a property in Golders Green, north London, on Friday night. The victims' next-of-kin have been informed. The Met said it had arrested a 27-year-old man shortly before 14:00 BST after he was spotted in Golders Hill Park. Det Insp Ian Lott said: "This was a devastating attack on two women in their home." Emergency services were called to the house in Golders Green Crescent at 20:50 BST on Friday.
A prowler who broke into a house in Cardiff looking for students to sexually assault has been found guilty of a string of sexual offences. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man has been arrested on suspicion of murder after a mother and daughter were found stabbed to death in their home.
Write a brief summary of the provided content.
Ed Miliband might just have acquired a catchphrase. The Labour leader who Jeremy Paxman dubbed a "north London geek" borrowed the argot of a Wild West gunslinger when he came out to confront questions about his character during the first of the leaders' TV specials. When Paxman - the grand alpha-male of political interviewing - leaned in, so too did Miliband. "That's why Cameron didn't want to debate him," one Labour aide declared, at volume, as he entered the post-show spin room. Labour think Miliband has been caricatured and if the public sees more of the real man they will be impressed. The question is: will the tough guy image convince the public? Miliband faced hostile questions from the voters in the studio audience, some of whom looked pretty unconvinced by the answers. They picked, once again, over his relationship with the brother he beat to the leadership. It's healing, apparently. But then despite this not being a head-to-head debate, and certainly not the event the broadcasters originally wanted, it wasn't an easy night for either leader. David Cameron came under sustained fire from Paxman, accepting that he had failed to meet his commitment on net migration. Could you live on a zero-hours contract he was asked, time and time again. Cameron mentioned a government ban on exclusivity in those contracts, but he squirmed a little all the same. There was an on the record commitment from him to serve every day of a second term, while committing not to serve a third. Just how would that work? A question the PM's aides say is for another day. There were interesting hints from the other side about their future plans - Ed Miliband said overall spending would probably fall under Labour. But really - this was all about the theatre. It was pretty good telly, but then this is written in the spin room half an hour after the show's end credits. Everyone here, now, seems excited - spinners, journalists and politicians. The Westminster village has come to west London to play its favourite games. Just how it will actually go down in the country at large, and just how much attention voters will give to 90 minutes of politics on a Thursday night several weeks before the election, won't be revealed amid the dirty coffee cups of a post-programme spin room.
Hell yes, I'm tough enough.
Can you summarize the following content in brief?
The fire service was alerted to the incident at Cropton, near Pickering, at 1500 BST. About 150 acres (0.6km-sq) of moorland have been destroyed with eight fire crews needed to tackle the fire when it was at its strongest. North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service said there had been a spate of similar fires in the area recently. No one was hurt in the incident.
More than 50 firefighters have tackled a moor fire in North Yorkshire.
Write a summary of this document.
Professor Christopher Kopper of Bielefeld University will research claims VW collaborated with the military government from 1964 to 1985. A group of former employees filed a law suit against the company last year. Some claim they were arrested and tortured at a VW plant in Brazil. VW has previously investigated its own role in the use of slave labour in Nazi Germany during the Second World War. The company was set up in 1937 by the Deutsche Arbeitsfront, the Nazi trade union organisation. During the war, VW made vehicles for the German army using more than 15,000 slave labourers from nearby concentration camps. In 1998, survivors file a lawsuit against VW, which set up a restitution fund. VW said that Professor Kopper would start work as soon as possible and would travel to Brazil. Christine Hohmann-Dennhardt, a member of the board at VW who is responsible for integrity and legal Affairs, said: "We will clarify the company's role during the military dictatorship in Brazil with the requisite consistency and perseverance in the same manner as we engaged in the early and comprehensive clarification of issues relating to the National Socialist past and the employment of forced labour." She added: "We want to shed light on the dark years of the military dictatorship and explain the behaviour of those responsible at that time in Brazil and, if applicable, Germany." A report by Brazil's national truth commission in 2014 highlighted the case of Lucio Bellentani, a former VW employee. He said: "I was at work when two people with machine guns came up to me. "They held my arms behind my back and immediately put me in handcuffs. As soon as we arrived in Volkswagen's security centre, the torture began. I was beaten, punched and slapped." According to lawyer Rosa Cardoso, 12 employees at the Sao Bernardo do Campo site near Sao Paulo were tortured, while others were laid off and placed on blacklists.
Volkswagen (VW) has commissioned an expert to examine if the German carmaker allowed the arrest and torture of employees in Brazil under the country's former military regime.
Write a summary for the following excerpt.
Raziq Hussain's Hackney cab was stopped after driving on the wrong side of Oldham Road in Manchester in December. The 32-year-old, of Eastbourne Street, Oldham, registered double the legal limit when he was breathalysed. Manchester magistrates heard he had been taking fares. He was fined £110 and banned from driving for 16 months. Greater Manchester Police said Hussain was first seen cutting a corner on Whitley Road in Collyhurst in the early hours of 19 December. After being stopped, he registered 71mg of alcohol per 100ml of breath when breathalysed at the roadside, double the legal limit of 35mg. He told officers he had not drunk alcohol since he started work at 18:00 GMT and had taken several fares that night. Speaking after sentencing, Sgt Matt Bailey-Smith said Hussain's profession was the "significant aggravating factor" in his case. "His actions were reckless and risked the safety and welfare of every fare he took that evening as well as innocent motorists and pedestrians," he said. Along with his ban and fine for driving with excess alcohol, Hussain was also ordered to pay costs of £85 and a victim surcharge of £20.
A taxi driver who was found to be twice the drink-drive limit after being seen weaving down a road has been banned from driving.
Provide a brief summary for the information below.
The latest figures, released by the UN's refugee agency, include 100 deaths reported on Thursday after two rubber dinghies sank off Italy. The increase was down to bad weather, ever riskier boats and tactics to avoid detection, a spokesman said. The UN said Europe should organise legal ways for refugees to find safety. Spokesman William Spindler said the increase in deaths was "alarming" and the smugglers' practice of sending thousands of migrants off at the same time made it difficult for rescuers of save them all. Almost 360,000 migrants entered Europe by sea this year, mostly arriving in Italy and Greece, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said. The record number of deaths means an average of 14 people are drowning in the Mediterranean every day despite the overall number of people making the crossing declining. Most have perished on the dangerous crossing from North Africa to Italy after the shorter crossing from Turkey to Greece was closed off earlier this year. The UN said legal routes for refugees to reach Europe should include resettlement and family reunification programmes as well as private sponsorship and student scholarships to prevent refugees from resorting to the use of people smugglers. Just under 3,800 migrants died in the Mediterranean in 2015, according to IOM figures. A note on terminology: The BBC uses the term migrant to refer to all people on the move who have yet to complete the legal process of claiming asylum. This group includes people fleeing war-torn countries such as Syria, who are likely to be granted refugee status, as well as people who are seeking jobs and better lives, who governments are likely to rule are economic migrants. Joseph Brown-Lartey was driving an Audi A5 which collided with an Audi A6 in Sandy Lane, Bamford, Rochdale, at about 04:40 GMT on Sunday. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Four men in the other car, aged 18 to 21, were taken to hospital. Mr Brown-Lartey's parents said their "lives will never be the same again". Mr and Mrs Brown-Lartey said: "Joseph was a great son, brother and friend to many people with his whole future ahead of him. [He was] tragically and suddenly taken away from us‎ far too soon." UK Financial Investments, the body that holds the government's RBS stake, said it would offer about 600 million shares, representing 5.2% of the bank, to institutional investors. It is expected that the government will make a loss of about £1bn on the sale. Chancellor George Osborne signalled the move in his annual Mansion House speech in June. The UK owns 78.3% of RBS after bailing it out with about £45.8bn of taxpayer cash in 2008. Its stake will fall to 73.2%. The government paid about 500p per share for its RBS stake. Shares in the bank closed on Monday at 337.6p, down 4.6p, valuing RBS at £39bn. However, institutional investors may be able to buy the shares at a discount to Monday's closing price. One of the bookrunners said that shares would be priced at 330p. Mr Osborne said in June he was keen to start disposing of shares as soon as possible, and that he aimed to sell at least three-quarters of the stake over the next five years. The sale is being handled by Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and UBS. UKFI and the Treasury said they would not sell any more RBS shares for 90 days after the sale without the consent of the bookrunners. RBS was briefly one of the world's biggest banks by assets after expanding with takeovers and aggressive lending prior to the financial crisis. The bank has more than halved its assets to £945bn from £2.2 trillion over the past seven years while also cutting its staff globally from almost 200,000 to just under 110,000.
The number of undocumented migrants who drown in the Mediterranean trying to reach Europe has reached 5,000, the highest annual total yet, the UN says. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A 25-year-old man who was killed in a car crash in Greater Manchester has been described as a "great son, brother and friend". [NEXT_CONCEPT] The government has started to sell off its 78% stake in the Royal Bank of Scotland.
Give a brief summary of the provided passage.
The 27-year-old German joined the Terriers from 1860 Munich in June 2016 for a then club record fee of £1.8m. He made 48 appearances last season and scored the winning spot-kick as the Terriers beat Reading on penalties in the Championship play-off final. "Christopher was one of our standout players last year," said the Premier League club's head coach David Wagner.
Huddersfield Town defender Christopher Schindler has signed a new three-year deal, with the option of an extra year.
Write a summary for this information.
Residents of the New Lodge and local politicians came out to support contractors who are building new homes in the area. Kate Clarke of the group New Lodge Safer Streets said people in the area were "sick and tired of this happening". "It just seems like they're opportunists," she said. "Once they see a brick or something coming into the area, they're there looking protection money - it's absolutely disgraceful and we can't condemn it enough." SDLP North Belfast assembly member Alban Maginness said community representatives were "united in solidarity" against threats and intimidation. "We are not going to allow these criminals to interfere with the development," he said. Sinn Féin councillor JJ Magee said the community had been "campaigning since the 1990s for the redevelopment of the New Lodge Long Streets, which were some of the worst Victorian housing conditions in Belfast". "The message from the people of the New Lodge is loud and clear to the criminal gangs and it's a message of defiance in the face of threats, and solidarity with the workers building much-needed homes," he said.
Hundreds of people have protested against alleged extortion attempts on builders in north Belfast.
Can you summarize this passage?
Peter Ball, who is now 85, was jailed for 32 months in October 2015 after admitting sex offences against 18 teenagers and young men. The former bishop of Lewes and bishop of Gloucester carried out the abuse between the 1970s and 1990s Dame Moira Gibb's review criticises ex-Archbishop of Canterbury, Lord Carey. He has been asked to step down from his position as an honorary assistant bishop by the current archbishop, Justin Welby. Dame Moira, a former senior social worker, said there was a failure of the Church to respond appropriately to misconduct over a period of many years. Ball was released from jail in February after serving 16 months. In her report, "An Abuse of Faith", Dame Moira said: "Ball's priority was to protect and promote himself and he maligned the abused. "The church colluded with that rather than seeking to help those he had harmed, or assuring itself of the safety of others." Her review found that Lord Carey received seven letters following the arrest and cautioning of Ball in 1992, and failed to pass them to the police. Ball was not listed on the Church of England's "Lambeth List", which names clergymen about whom questions of suitability for ministry have been raised. Ball was given funds authorised by Lord Carey to support him. Lord Carey also wrote to Ball's brother, Michael Ball - another bishop - in 1993 saying: "I believed him to be basically innocent".
Senior figures in the Church of England "colluded" with a former bishop who abused young men, an independent review has found.
Summarize the information in the following document.
The 27-year-old has been released from the Wales squad to Ospreys. He was taken off after turning his right ankle during the 32-8 defeat by Australia. The Ospreys player missed much of the 2015-16 season after damaging ankle and knee ligaments playing for Wales against Italy in a pre-World Cup match. A Welsh Rugby Union statement read: "It is expected that Webb will undertake a period of rehabilitation of at least 12 weeks." In Webb's absence, Scarlets' Gareth Davies starts against Argentina on Saturday. Scarlets scrum-half Davies is one of six Wales changes for the match at Principality Stadium. In addition to Argentina, Wales face Japan and South Africa in Cardiff before the end of November. Full-back Tomkins, 27, has a foot injury that requires surgery to see the extent of the damage, while captain O'Loughlin, 33, has a calf problem. Both players will miss Friday's play-off semi-final with Hull FC and then a potential Grand Final on 8 October. England host the Four Nations tournament starting in late October. Forward O'Loughlin suffered his latest injury setback on Friday, hurting his calf in the warm-up before the win against Catalans Dragons that secured a home semi-final against Hull FC. "Wigan have only 20 players available from a squad of 35 but there is a tremendous spirit and confidence amongst this group that thrives in adversity," said chairman Ian Lenagan. "Despite all of the challenges that the club have faced this year I, head coach Shaun Wane and the squad believe that we can defy the odds to make this an excellent season end." The Four Nations, in which England face Scotland, New Zealand and Australia over a three-week period, starts on 28 October. The preliminary agreement will see Iran curb nuclear activities in return for relief from sanctions. US Republicans in particular have threatened to derail the agreement or impose new sanctions. The White House has said it is confident it can reach a final deal with Iran by an end of June deadline. President Obama aimed to speak to all four congressional leaders on Friday, White House spokesman Eric Schultz said. Republicans control both US Houses of Congress, and there is bipartisan support for a bill which would give Congress the right to review any deal before sanctions are lifted. Mr Obama has threatened to veto it. In his speech on Thursday hailing the deal, the president anticipated his critics. "If Congress kills this deal not based on expert analysis, and without offering any reasonable alternative, then it's the United States that will be blamed for the failure of diplomacy." Despite the domestic pressure, the White House gave another upbeat assessment of the deal. "We defied the odds," Mr Schultz said. "I do think there's a lot of work to be done, but we are confident that we can get those details in place." Iran's President, Hassan Rouhani, has vowed it will abide by the terms of the preliminary nuclear agreement it signed with six world powers, so long as they do too. He said the deal marked a step towards changing Iran's relationship with the world: "Today is a day that will remain in the historic memory of the Iranian nation. "Some think that we must either fight the world or surrender to world powers. We say it is neither of those, there is a third way. We can have co-operation with the world." Mr Rouhani is also expected to face opposition from conservative critics at home, although clerics praised the agreement at Friday prayers. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned that it posed a grave danger to the region, in particular his own country. He said any compressive accord, due before 30 June, had to include a "clear and unambiguous Iranian recognition of Israel's right to exist". The White House said the US would not sign an agreement over Iran's nuclear programme that would threaten Israel. Under Thursday's terms, Iran must slash its stockpile of enriched uranium that could be used in a nuclear weapon and cut by more than two-thirds the number of centrifuges that could be used to make more. In return, UN sanctions and separate measures imposed unilaterally by the US and EU will be gradually suspended as the global nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), confirms Iranian compliance. Iran's key nuclear sites
Injured scrum-half Rhys Webb is to have ankle surgery and will be out of action until the New Year. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Wigan Warriors pair Sam Tomkins and Sean O'Loughlin will miss the rest of the Super League season and are doubts for England ahead of the Four Nations. [NEXT_CONCEPT] President Obama has begun efforts to win over sceptical members of Congress about the framework deal on Iran's nuclear programme.
Write a concise summary for the following article.
Lines of Thought is a free exhibition of 70 line drawings spanning more than 500 years from the British Museum's prestigious collection. Leonardo da Vinci, Dürer, Degas, Rubens, Monet, Cézanne and Bridget Riley are also featured. It runs until 28 February. Prof Glenn Burgess, acting vice-chancellor of the University of Hull where the exhibition is held, said it could be "the single greatest gathering of artistic talent ever seen in Hull". Lines of Thought is a partnership between Hull 2017, the British Museum, the University of Hull and the Bridget Riley Art Foundation. Curators said the works had been arranged by "types of thinking rather than period or style" in order to explore the "creative impulses" behind the pieces. Georgia Mallin of the British Museum said the London attraction offers 10 national exhibitions a year, but the show in Hull is "arguably the best selection of masterpieces from [the British Museum's] Prints and Drawings collection that we've ever been able to offer". Martin Green, Hull 2017's CEO and director, said the show had kicked off an "outstanding" year for visual arts as part of the City of Culture programme. "The investment by the University of Hull to strengthen its already significant cultural activity is going to help ensure Hull's reputation as a destination for art lovers and culture vultures," he said. Lines of Thought will visit Poole and Belfast before travelling to the US. The city's year of culture was launched on 1 January with a giant fireworks display, watched by about 60,000 people. The fireworks display was billed as bigger than London's New Year's Eve event and included 15,000 fireworks to music by some of Hull's most famous artists. How Hull is aiming to win over the sceptics Why City of Culture will change Hull Is Hull a city on the rise?
Art by some of the most prominent great masters, including Michelangelo, Matisse and Rembrandt, are on show in Hull as it embarks on its year as the latest UK City of Culture.
Can you summarize the following content in brief?
Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, 37, was jailed for five years last month on secret charges. The United Nations has said she should be freed immediately, calling it a "mockery of justice". Richard Ratcliffe said his wife was being used as a "bargaining chip" and the UK should be more critical of Iran. He said the UK government "regularly expressed concern but they've never ever criticised and called a spade a spade". He said his wife was angry that more was not being done to secure her release and family members who have seen her for the first time since her arrest were shocked at how much weight and hair she had lost. Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who works for the Thomson Reuters Foundation, was arrested at Tehran airport after visiting her family on holiday seven months ago. The exact charges against her have not been published. The couple's two-year-old daughter Gabriella had her passport taken after her mother's arrest and has been staying with her grandparents in Iran ever since. Mr Ratcliffe said: "She still wakes up in the middle of the night asking for her mum." He said she can no longer speak English and when he calls her it has to be translated into Farsi. A UN working group has said that Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe's detention contravened international law. "Taking into account all the circumstances of the case, especially the risk of harm to Ms Ratcliffe's health and physical integrity and the well-being of her child, the working group considers the adequate remedy would be to release her immediately." It also found she had been discriminated against, and detained because she was a dual national. Iran does not recognise dual nationality. Ahmed Shaheed, the UN Special Rapporteur for Iran, said the case was "a mockery of justice" and was "evidence of the Iranian judiciary's complete disregard for the most basic fair trial and due process guarantees" both in Iranian and international law. The Ratcliffes' local MP, Labour's Tulip Siddiq, agreed more needed to be done to secure her release. She said she thought the British government was wary of jeopardising diplomatic relations, which have improved steadily since the deal on Iran's nuclear programme was struck. "The government has consistently made excuses to avoid laying judgement at the door of the Iranian authorities," she said. "We are now calling on Theresa May and Boris Johnson to put the entire machinery of government behind bringing Nazanin home to her family as soon as possible." The Foreign Office said both the prime minister and foreign secretary had raised her case with their counterparts in Iran and would continue to do so.
The husband of a British-Iranian charity worker imprisoned in Iran has called on the UK government to do more to help with her release.
Can you summarize the following paragraph?
The 31-year-old converted two penalties in a 3-1 victory over Vipers of Uganda that overturned a 1-0 away defeat in the last-32 tie. Mzimela, who also scored from a spot kick in a midweek South African FA Cup victory, put Stars in front after only two minutes. Ndumiso Mabena doubled the lead from a free-kick before half-time in Rustenburg. Milton Karisa scored for Confederation Cup debutants Vipers on 55 minutes to nudge his club in front on the away goal rule. Mzimela had the final say, however, converting another penalty a minute into stoppage time to rescue the South African club. Ulinzi Stars of Kenya overcame having a player sent off to whip Smouha of Egypt 3-0 in Machakos, but still exited the African equivalent of the Europa League. Smouha advanced 4-3 on aggregate having built a commanding first leg lead in Alexandria last weekend. Samuel Onyango scored twice in the opening half for the Kenyan armed forces side, who were reduced to 10 men on 55 minutes when John Kago was red-carded. Undaunted, Ulinzi grabbed a third goal 13 minutes from time through Omar Mbongi and rattled Smouha survived several late scares. Kenyans Jesse Were and David Owino scored for Zesco United of Zambia, who booked a play-offs place by drawing 2-2 with Le Messager Ngozi of Burundi in Bujumbura. Leading 2-0 from the first leg, Zesco equalised twice in the return match with Owino scoring in the final minute. JS Kabylie of Algeria, the most decorated club in the last-32 field with six African titles, left it late to eliminate Etoile of Congo Brazzaville. The only goal of the tie came a minute from time with Mohamed Boulaouidet rifling a free-kick into the net. Moroccan sides MAS Fes, the 2011 Confederation Cup winners, and Ittihad Tanger progressed in contrasting ways. Fes took a 3-1 lead over SC Gagnoa to the Ivory Coast, where they lost 1-0 to a Martin Kossivi goal midway through the second half. Ahmed Hamoudan scored a hat-trick as Tanger triumphed 3-0 in Morocco against Kaloum of Guinea, who won 1-0 at home. Recreativo Libolo of Angola held Ngezi Platinum of Zimbabwe 0-0 in Harare to advance having built a 2-1 first leg advantage. The overall winners now play the losers from the African Champions League to determine who plays in the expanded group phase of the tournament. Confederation Cup results:
Goalkeeper Mbongeni Mzimela was the unexpected two-goal hero as Platinum Stars of South Africa booked an African Confederation Cup play-off place.
What is a brief summary of the information below?
A suicide bomber detonated a vehicle in Sadr City, targeting a busy street full of garages and used-car dealers. At least 42 people were also wounded in the attack, which was claimed by the Islamic State group. Baghdad saw a wave of deadly suicide attacks in the first few days of 2017, but the number has dropped recently. The IS group has stepped up its attacks since the Iraqi army, aided by US-led coalition strikes, launched its campaign to dislodge the group from its stronghold of Mosul in the north four months ago. Wednesday's attack targeted the Habibya area of Sadr City, north of the centre of the Iraqi capital, an interior ministry official told AFP. The blast follows a car bomb attack in southern Baghdad on Tuesday that killed four people. On 2 January, 35 people were killed in a bomb blast in Sadr City, in an attack claimed by IS. Iraq's capital has also been hit by violent protests in recent days by supporters of Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, who are demanding changes to the electoral commission that oversees elections. At least six people were killed in clashes with police on Sunday.
At least 18 people have been killed in a bomb attack on a predominantly Shia suburb of the Iraqi capital Baghdad, security sources say.
Please summarize the following text.
The figures, which precede the Brexit vote, show the deficit in goods and services widened to £2.26bn, up from a downwardly-revised deficit of £1.95bn in April. The deficit on trade in goods alone was £9.9bn in May, up from £9.4bn in April. The Office for National Statistics said goods exports fell £2.1bn to £23.7bn, while imports fell £1.6bn to £33.5bn. The sharp fall in the value of the pound since the EU referendum vote - it is currently at its lowest level for 31 years against the US dollar - has prompted hopes that it will boost demand for UK goods. But Howard Archer, chief economist at IHS Global Insight, said there was "no guarantee that the markedly weakened pound will provide a major boost to UK exports". He said the very fact of the UK leaving the EU could hold back economic growth in both the EU and globally, which would hit demand for UK exports. Mr Archer added that "imports are likely to rise markedly in value terms in the near term due to the sharp drop in sterling". However, he said that the volume of imports could be affected by weakening domestic demand. The British Chambers of Commerce said the figures painted a "rather bleak picture" of the UK's external position. Suren Thiru, the lobby group's head of economics, said not all exporters would necessarily benefit from the lower pound. "A weak pound is something of a double-edged sword, as many UK exporters are also importers as a result of global supply chains and so will be facing higher input costs due to the weakening currency." Michael Cockerell told reporters about the plan at a press screening of his new series Inside the Commons. "I'm not fingering anyone by name," Mr Cockerell said, when asked who was involved in the plot. But he did say they were "right wing Tories... what Downing Street know as the berserkers, the naughty bench". He declined to name the cameraman who was the subject of the apparent skulduggery. In the first episode of the four-part series, to be shown on Tuesday, the Conservative MP Bill Wiggin is seen complaining to the Speaker during a session in the Commons about the presence of camera crews in the chamber itself. Michael Cockerell said Mr Wiggin was not involved in the plot. "We heard of a plan to knock over the cameraman and cause the House to be suspended, and then they would blame it on us and suggest we shouldn't be there," he said, adding that Parliamentary staff had let them know about the plot and had managed to prevent it from happening. He said there were "very few" opponents to the documentary, but "in Parliament every day there are cunning plans, it is a place made for plotting and conspiracy". The documentary was filmed over the course of a year - after six years of attempting to persuade the parliamentary authorities to allow them the access they required. Atlantic Productions, the producers of the series for the BBC, gathered 600 hours of raw material for the four hours that will be broadcast throughout February. The first episode is broadcast on Tuesday on BBC Two at 21:00 GMT. Sources close to the family said Michael Sandford, 21, of Surrey, landed at Heathrow Airport earlier, nearly five months into a year-long sentence. He was arrested at an event in Las Vegas in the run-up to the US election. Sandford, from Dorking, who has autism, admitted last year to being an illegal alien in possession of a firearm. He also admitted disrupting an official function. He suffers from a number of mental health problems and was diagnosed as having had a psychotic episode at the time of the incident, in June. Sandford was released less than half-way through the sentence, despite fears Mr Trump might seek to intervene and keep him in jail for longer, or block his return to the UK. His mother said he had been frequently put on suicide watch in prison and claimed Trump-supporting guards and inmates had been making his life a misery.
The UK's trade deficit widened in May after the value of exports fell faster than imports. [NEXT_CONCEPT] MPs plotted to knock over a BBC cameraman in the House of Commons - in the hope of stopping a new documentary on Westminster life, a film-maker says. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A man jailed for trying to grab a policeman's gun at a Donald Trump rally in an apparent assassination bid has returned to the UK.
Summarize the content of the document below.
It is, for obvious reasons, the most unsettling and worrying time of the year for professional footballers. It can't be an easy day for managers either. Everyone is human and most managers will have sat in the other seat at some point during their playing career, so they will know exactly what it means to the players. Some have families to support, while others have had their dreams of a career in the game crushed. Most clubs these days will have a day set aside after the season has finished to have meetings with all of their players. These will mainly be debriefs about how the season has gone, reviewing your performances and assessing what is expected of you in the coming season. For the out-of-contract players it will be either a meeting about the offer of a new contract or to be told that you are being released. Most players will enter these meetings with no idea what their future may hold. Some will have an idea about which way the meeting will go - but nothing can be certain in this game. A young player may be kept on because of the potential they have shown, even if they haven't played every game, while a player who has been picked nearly all season may be moved on due to the budget they use up. The manager might also want to bring in one of his own signings. If a player is released then they invariably have two more pay days until they are out of contract and need to have found new employment. Nearly all professional footballers love playing the game, but as soon as it becomes a job you have to look at things slightly differently. Even if it is a positive meeting and a contract is offered there is still the concern surrounding what the contract offer might be. 'How long is it? Am I happy with it? Can I get a longer or more lucrative contract elsewhere?' Something that could be very simple can often take a lot longer to sort out than both parties would like. There's one season that stands out for me. We played an end-of-season friendly against a Premier League club's under-21 side, at their training ground, and all the meetings for the out-of-contract players were held at the same time. It felt very strange saying goodbye to some team-mates in the changing room and then getting changed and going to play a game. It's always an unsettling time and while the players under contract are feeling content knowing they have another year on their contract, strong bonds are made in the changing room so all of the squad are sympathetic to any team-mates who are in that situation. They know that a year down the line, it could be them. I have entered these meetings several times during my career. I have spent 12 and a half years at Wycombe Wanderers but my contract has run out a few times during that period and, although I have always been confident about how the meeting would turn out, I never knew exactly how it might go. The most nervous I have ever been going into one of these meetings is when I was 16, and I had a meeting at Ipswich Town about whether I was going to be taken on as an academy scholar or whether I would be released. My whole future and the opportunity to live out my dream as a professional footballer was to be decided in that meeting and I felt physically sick as I walked into the meeting room. Luckily the meeting was positive and it was the start of a career that I am still loving as much as I did that day.
Every time I seem to look on the BBC Sport website or catch up on social media at this time of year, I am met with the details of the number of players that are being released by clubs up and down the country.
Give a short summary of the provided document.
Crazy Night refers to a student named Anna Jean - a reference to Anna Jean O'Donnell, whom Williams briefly dated while at the University of Missouri. Williams wrote poetry about O'Donnell but only made passing mention to her in his notebooks and memoirs. The short story features in the spring edition of literary journal The Strand. According to its managing editor Andrew Gulli, the story, believed to have been written in the 1930s, could be "the missing piece of the puzzle" surrounding Williams' formative romantic liaison. The writer would go on to use his mother Edwina as the model for Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire and based the character of Laura Wingfield in The Glass Menagerie on his sister Rose. In Crazy Night, the narrator, a college freshman on an unnamed campus, has an intimate encounter with Anna Jean only to lose her to another student. The title of the story refers to a college ritual during which students are expected to binge on alcohol and sex. The ex-Team Sky rider, who was second in the past two years, finished behind compatriot Caleb Ewan in a bunch sprint on the 90km final stage in Adelaide. Porte, who now rides for BMC Racing, had won Saturday's fifth stage to lead by 48 seconds. "It's just incredible to come back here and win after being so close the past two years," he said. "I had a good break at the end of last season and I've come back refreshed - physically and mentally - and to win this race, it means a hell of a lot." Porte maintained his 48-second overall advantage over Colombia's Esteban Chaves with Australia's Jay McCarthy a further three seconds back in third overall. Ewan's sprint victory, where he edged out world champion Peter Sagan, gave him his fourth stage win as he joined Germany's Andre Greipel (2008) and Australia's Robbie McEwen (2002) as the only riders to have won four stages in the same edition of the race. OVERALL RESULTS 1. Richie Porte (Aus/BMC Racing) 19 hours 55 minutes 49 seconds 2. Esteban Chaves (Col/Orica) +48secs 3. Jay McCarthy (Aus/BORA) +51secs 4. Nathan Haas (Aus/Dimension Data) +51secs 5. Diego Ulissi (Ita/UAE Abu Dhabi) +59secs Selected others 38. Ben Swift (GB/UAE Abu Dhabi) +4mins 16secs 49. Geraint Thomas (GB/Team Sky) +6mins 27secs 97. Luke Rowe (GB/Team Sky) +21mins 03secs 107. Ian Stannard (GB/Team Sky) +24mins 56secs Find out how to get into cycling with our special guide.
A previously unseen short story by US writer Tennessee Williams, inspired in part by an old college girlfriend, has been published for the first time. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Australia's Richie Porte won the first event on the 2017 UCI WorldTour when he claimed victory in the Tour Down Under.
Give a brief summary of the content.
Patriarch Kirill's four-day visit is seen as a breakthrough in efforts to reconcile the two countries, divided by politics and religion for centuries. Poland has a small Orthodox community but is overwhelmingly Roman Catholic. Kirill's stance on the punk group being tried over an obscene protest song in a Moscow cathedral is under scrutiny. Verdicts in the trial are due on Friday. Three of the musicians face imprisonment on charges of violating public order and inciting religious hatred, in a case which has sparked protests worldwide by musicians and human rights activists, who see their prosecution as being wildly disproportionate. Sir Paul McCartney has written a letter of support to them. "I would like you to know that I very much hope the Russian authorities would support the principle of free speech for all their citizens and not feel that they have to punish you for your protest," the former Beatle wrote. Speaking after arriving by plane in Warsaw, Patriarch Kirill said: "It's a wonderful thing that the Christian faith dominates in both Russia and Poland and this provides us with common ground". Roman Catholic bishops and members of Warsaw's Orthodox Christian congregation crowded into the city's Orthodox Mary Magdalene Cathedral to welcome the patriarch. The four-day visit is the culmination of three years of talks between the two churches, the BBC's Adam Easton reports from Warsaw. Relations have been difficult, our correspondent adds. The Russian Orthodox Church has accused Roman Catholic priests of trying to poach believers in Russia and Ukraine. Patriarch Kirill is closely identified with the Kremlin, having backed Vladimir Putin's re-election as president this year. However, both churches are united in what they see as the need to defend Christian values in an increasingly secular Europe, our correspondent says. On Friday Patriarch Kirill and the head of the Roman Catholic Church in Poland, Archbishop Jozef Michalik, will sign an unprecedented document urging mutual forgiveness for past errors. "Our message is a call to the faithful and all who support soul-searching followed by a mutual asking for forgiveness," Archbishop Michalik was quoted as saying by AFP news agency. Alexander Volkov, spokesman for the Russian Orthodox Church, said the "brotherly and friendly visit" would have no political overtones. Relations between the two countries have been soured by centuries of mistrust. On the one hand, Poland was dominated by the USSR during the last century, and by the Russian Empire before World War I. On the other, Russians remember Poland's invasion in the early 17th Century and view with suspicion Warsaw's attempts to influence EU policy on Russia. Patriarch Kirill will visit the north-eastern city of Bialystok, capital of the Podlasie region which is home to some 70% of Poland's 600,000 Orthodox Christians. He will see the Suprasl Monastery, which houses an important museum of icons. While the Polish Orthodox Church is an independent institution, links to its Russian counterpart are still strong and it is regarded with suspicion by many Polish Catholics, according to a report in France's Le Figaro. Eugeniusz Czykwin, Poland's only Orthodox Christian MP, told the newspaper: "Stereotypes die hard. "For most people, to be Polish is to be Catholic. Inversely, the Orthodox religion is automatically associated with Russia. As a result, Orthodox Poles have long been regarded as a Fifth Column." Two women at Thursday's service in Warsaw, one Russian and the other Polish, told BBC News they were hopeful the visit would bring the nations closer. "I hope it helps but of course our history is not so easy for many years and many different difficult situations but I think step by step we can make it better," said Olga, who is Russian. Katarzyna, who is Polish, said: "I hope this visit makes relations better because Poland and Russia are neighbours. We should be friends, not fight each other."
The head of Russia's Orthodox Church has been given a state welcome to Poland on a historic visit that may be overshadowed by the Pussy Riot trial.
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt.
Bupa sponsored it for 22 years before pulling out in 2014. Supermarket Morrisons stepped in last year. Chief Executive at The Great Run Company, Mark Hollinshead, said he was confident of finding a sponsor and was in talks with some "ambitious" brands. The annual half marathon will take place on 11 September. The 13.1-mile (21km) race, which is thought to be the second largest for participation in the world, takes place between Newcastle and South Shields. Mr Hollinshead said: "We have several interesting conversations underway with some very ambitious brands but we are not in a position to announce anything." Leah Gillooly, a lecturer in marketing at Manchester University, said there were a lot of events competing for sponsors and event organisers had to choose carefully to avoid being associated with "undesirable" brands. In 2013, Newcastle United caused controversy when it named pay-day loans company Wonga as its sponsor. Ms Gillooly said: "The run is a fantastic event, but the sponsorship landscape is tricky with a lot of events competing for brands. "Organisers are commercial so they do have an eye on profit, but it's important when selecting a sponsor that they don't just choose the one offering the most cash." She also said events can go ahead without sponsors, but they would not make as much money to put towards future events. Morrisons said the company had been glad to back the run, but it was "focusing on other ways to reach customers".
The Great North Run, which attracts more than 50,000 runners, is without a sponsor less than three months before the 2016 event takes place.
What is a brief summary of the information below?
The kidnapping was reported by Syrian state media and confirmed by a member of the official opposition leadership. Yohanna Ibrahim is head of the Syriac Orthodox Church in Aleppo and Boulos Yaziji leads the Greek Orthodox Church in the city. They are the most senior Christian clerics caught up directly in the war. It was not immediately clear who had kidnapped them. Christians made up about 10% of the mainly Sunni Muslim country's population before the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad began just over two years ago. According to the UN, at least 70,000 people have been killed overall in the civil war and more than one million are now living as refugees in neighbouring countries. State TV announced that an "armed terrorist group" had kidnapped the two bishops as they carried out "humanitarian work in Aleppo countryside". Abdulahad Steifo, a Syriac member of the opposition Syrian National Coalition, said the men had been kidnapped on the road to Aleppo from the rebel-held Bab al-Hawa crossing, which is close to the Turkish town of Reyhanli. Asked who was behind their abduction, he said: "All probabilities are open." Christian residents of Aleppo, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP news agency that gunmen had killed the bishops' driver. In an interview with BBC Arabic's Saeed Shehada a week ago, Bishop Ibrahim said he was optimistic about the future of Christians in Syria: "There is no persecution of Christians and there is no single plan to kill Christians. Everyone respects Christians. Bullets are random and not targeting the Christians because they are Christians," he said. Jason Waterman "arrived without warning, dripping salt water and carrying a bag of wet clothing". The 32-year-old, originally from Watford, handed himself in late on Monday. The National Crime Agency (NCA) is now attempting to extradite him under a European arrest warrant. The NCA said: "He refused to say how he reached Gibraltar, only that it wasn't through the frontier." Mr Waterman, whose nicknames include Jugs and Jumbo, was wanted in connection with a drug trafficking investigation. Border police found 7kg (15lb) of cocaine, with a potential street value of £1.2m, at Bagby Airfield in October 2015. The discovery was made shortly after a light aircraft arrived from the Netherlands. The plane's pilot was arrested but later found not guilty of importation offences. Brian Shaw, NCA North East operations manager, said: "It might sound like a cushy number, sitting around watching Crimewatch Roadshow on a Monday morning, but life as a fugitive is hard and stressful. "The NCA first issued an appeal for Waterman in London nearly a year ago. Clearly something about the new appeal made him crack. "To everyone else feeling the stress of being on the run, I would say we are patient people, we keep the pressure on, and we never stop looking for you."
Militants in a rebel-held area of northern Syria have abducted two bishops travelling from the Turkish border back to the city of Aleppo. [NEXT_CONCEPT] A suspected drug smuggler has handed himself in to police in Gibraltar "dripping wet" after seeing himself on Crimewatch.
Summarize the content given in the passage.
Suriname beat Guernsey by six wickets to take the title, although Guernsey have gained promotion to Division Five with their appearance in the final. "There were contributions made across the board from everyone in the whole squad," Pothas told BBC Radio Guernsey. "The thing that stands out most is the maturity of a very young squad." Pothas continued: "It was nice as historically we're always hanging our hats on one or two players." Guernsey were bowled out for 237 with a ball to spare by Suriname, who the islanders had beaten in the group stages in Essex. Tom Nightingale, 17, top-scored for Guernsey with 65, while his older brother Ollie scored 59 as Gavin Singh took five wickets for Suriname. In reply, Singh hit 61 not out to win man of the match, while skipper Mohindra Boodram got 65 as Suriname reached their target with just under five overs to spare. "We're back to the path that we've set ourselves, which is to become a solid World Cricket League Division Four team," Pothas added. "You always want to win the trophy, you never play to come second, but it's a one-off. "If it was a a round-robin there'd have been no question we'd have come first." The company, which makes armoured vehicles at a site near Dumfries, made the move last week. Mr Arkless said the debtor - who he was not allowed to name - had received "huge public sector contracts". He asked for export support for Penman but also how other businesses could be made to pay their bills on time. The Dumfries and Galloway MP raised the issue during Prime Minister's Questions. He said the firm had been put in an "impossible position". "Penman has to continue to trade with this debtor as well as pursuing the debt," he said. Prime Minister Theresa May said her thoughts were with the families affected by the administration. "The administrator does have a role in ensuring that any sale of the business protects the maximum number of jobs," she said. She said Scottish Secretary David Mundell had made clear preserving posts was his priority. "Obviously the administrator will be looking to ensure the best possible options are found for the company," she added. 23 November 2016 Last updated at 19:55 GMT Dynamo, Gary and Frosty, the South American animals, attend Millgate School. Student Keenan said: "When you're angry, you can just come and calm down and feed them, get your emotions out." Staff said the alpacas have "definitely" had a "noticeable affect" on the pupils. The residential school, which is home to 72 boys, said it was the children's idea and there are plans to get donkeys in the future.
Guernsey boss Nic Pothas says he is pleased with the maturity of his side in World Cricket League Division Six, despite losing the event's final. [NEXT_CONCEPT] MP Richard Arkless has voiced frustration in the House of Commons over one debtor he said had forced Penman Engineering into administration. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Alpacas are being used to help calm children with behavioural and social difficulties at a Leicester school.
Summarize the following excerpt.
He said he had no doubt the Syrian PYD and its military wing were behind the rush-hour blast which killed 28 people. The bombing came as Syrian Kurds threatened to extend their control of territory along Turkey's border. The US backs the PYD in the fight against so-called Islamic State (IS). And yet it sees the Kurdish militant PKK inside Turkey as a terrorist organisation, even though it is affiliated to the PYD and its military arm, the People's Protection Units (YPG). Continued American support for Syrian Kurds, reiterated by a state department spokesman this week, is threatening to cause a rift between the two Nato allies. Mr Erdogan told reporters there was "no doubt about the fact that those who carried out this attack are the YPG and the PYD". He planned to tell Mr Obama later on Friday over the phone to consider "how and where those weapons you provided were fired"., How dangerous is Turkey's instability? World powers to hold talks on Syria Turkey v Kurds v Islamic State Turkey has already named the man who detonated the Ankara bomb as Salih Necar, a Syrian national and member of the YPG. A convoy of five military vehicles were targeted as they passed close to government offices while workers were going home. The PYD has denied involvement in the attack and the US has said it is unable to confirm or deny the Turkish allegation. Mr Erdogan said he was saddened by the West's reluctance not to link the YPG to the Turkish-based Kurdistan Workers' Party, viewed as a terror group by both the EU and the United States. He pointed out that he had told President Obama months before that after three plane-loads of US weapons arrived, half ended up in the hands of fighters of so-called Islamic State and the rest with the PYD. "They were used against civilians there and caused their deaths," he complained. The Turkish leader appeared to refer to a US air drop of military supplies in late 2014 meant for Iraqi Kurdish forces during the battle for the town of Kobane, Reuters reported. As the Syrian army, backed by Russian air power, has targeted Syrian opposition forces and pushed further north in Aleppo province, the Syrian Kurdish militia has made gains from the rebels close to the Turkish border. Turkey fears they could seize a 100km-stretch (62 miles) as far as Jarablus to create a large zone along the border. The army has continued to shell YPG targets across the border near the rebel-held town of Azaz. Turkey also has concerns that the PKK is being given support by the Syrian Kurdish militia in its battle with security forces in south-east Turkey. "There's close integration and there's talk of tunnels for the flow of weapons," Burhanettin Duran of the pro-government Seta research institute told the BBC.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said he will tell President Barack Obama that US weapons have helped Syrian Kurds, blamed by Turkey for Wednesday's Ankara bombing.
Can you summarize the following content in brief?
The Deeside factory is now making engines for vehicles made in Brazil and it is about to start supplying them for a new car being made in the UK. The Welsh plant employs more than 500 people and became the first factory outside Japan to build Toyota's hybrid engine. Welsh Secretary David Jones will visit the factory later on Friday. Toyota said it had already started recruiting new staff to help with its increased workload. Welsh Secretary Mr Jones, who is MP for Clwyd West, said: "Toyota has made a vital contribution to the growing success of the UK car manufacturing sector and to the creation of sustainable jobs in north Wales. "It is a glowing example of collaboration between a global company and the UK, and a demonstration of why Wales continues to be a prime location to invest and do business." Richard Kenworthy, director of the Deeside engine manufacturing factory, said the new jobs were great news for the plant and for Wales. The Deeside plant marked its 20th anniversary last year, with First Minister Carwyn Jones describing it as "a Welsh success story".
Car giant Toyota says it is creating 70 jobs at its engine plant in Flintshire to meet an increase in demand.
Summarize the content provided below.
7 April 2016 Last updated at 09:08 BST Sinn Féin's Martin McGuinness previously represented Mid Ulster, but had decided to run in Londonderry against the SDLP's new leader Colum Eastwood. Chris Page reports.
This year the poll in Foyle will be all the more symbolic and significant because of a showdown between the nationalist parties and their Stormont leaders.
Please summarize the document below.
The pair were picked up by military intelligence after entering Lebanon with forged papers 10 days ago. Baghdadi's wife - identified as an Iraqi national - is being questioned at the defence ministry. In June, Baghdadi was named the leader of the "caliphate" created by IS in the parts of Syria and Iraq it controls. Last month the group denied reports that he had been killed or injured in an air strike by US-led forces near the northern Iraqi city of Mosul. Describing them as "a valuable catch", the Lebanese newspaper al-Safir said that the IS leader's wife and child had been detained in co-ordination with "foreign intelligence services". They were held at a border crossing near the north-eastern town of Arsal while trying to enter Lebanon. They were currently being held for interrogation at the defence ministry's headquarters in al-Yarza, in the hills overlooking Beirut, it added. There were conflicting reports about the child, with a senior Lebanese security official telling Reuters news agency it was a girl - a direct contradiction of most news reports. A DNA test is being carried out to confirm the child is Baghdadi's. Lebanese officials initially said the woman was Syrian, but later identified her as an Iraqi called Saja al-Dulaimi, who had been living in Syria. A woman with that name was detained by the Syrian authorities before being freed in March as part of a prisoner exchange with al-Qaeda's local affiliate, al-Nusra Front. The exchange saw Islamic State's rival hand over a group of abducted Greek Orthodox nuns in return for the release of 150 of the Syrian government's female prisoners. Assuming the reports are true - and there is little reason to doubt them - the Lebanese authorities now face the delicate question of what to do with Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi's wife and offspring. In theory, they could prove a useful bargaining chip in the highly-charged imbroglio surrounding the fate of more than 20 Lebanese Army soldiers held hostage since August by IS and the rival al-Qaeda-linked militant group, al-Nusra Front. The militants are demanding the release of Islamist prisoners in Lebanese jails to spare the soldiers' lives - three have already been murdered. But al-Nusra has been much more involved than IS in back-channel negotiations for a possible exchange, so there is no guarantee it would pay off. And there is always the possibility that the continued detention of the pair could provoke IS to seek revenge in one way or another, perhaps by seizing more hostages. A US government source told Reuters that it was not sure how recently the woman had been with Baghdadi, and how much information, if any, she might have. However, a Lebanese official said the arrest was a "powerful card to apply pressure" in the hostage negotiations with IS and al-Nusra. Very little is known about Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who has not been seen in public since being filmed delivering a sermon at a mosque in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul in July. A profile published by IS supporters that month said the Iraqi was married, but it is unclear how many wives he has. Tribal sources in Iraq told Reuters he had three wives - two Iraqis and one Syrian. Under Islamic law he is allowed up to four. The US has offered a $10m (£6.4m) reward for information leading to the capture or killing of Baghdadi, whose real name is Ibrahim Awwad Ibrahim Ali al-Badri al-Samarrai. After rumours of his death emerged last month, IS released an audio recording purportedly of Baghdadi in which he claimed that the caliphate was expanding and called for "volcanoes of jihad" to erupt the world over.
Lebanese security forces have detained a wife and young child of Islamic State (IS) leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi near the border with Syria, the army says.
What is the summary of the provided article?
The 18-year-old from Denbighshire died in November 1995. The High Court ordered a fresh inquest in July after a challenge by her family. Pte James was among four soldiers who died at Deepcut between 1995 and 2002, sparking bullying allegations. Judge Barker is to hold a pre-inquest review hearing in the near future. Surrey County Council (SCC) said the date had yet to be fixed and the venue would also be announced at a later date. The High Court ordered that the inquest held on 21 December 1995 into the death of Pte James from a gunshot wound at the Princess Royal Barracks should be quashed and a fresh inquest ordered. The original inquest recorded an open verdict. Profiles of the Deepcut four Pte James, who grew up in Llangollen, died from a single bullet wound. Her parents believe she had suffered sexual harassment and bullying. Pte Sean Benton, 20, from Hastings, East Sussex, was found dead with bullet wounds at the barracks in June 1995, months before Pte James's death. In September 2001, 17-year-old Pte Geoff Gray, from Seaham, Co Durham, was found with two bullet wounds to his head, and six months later, Pte James Collinson, from Perth, also 17, was found with a single bullet wound upwards through his chin. Mr Justice Mitting and Judge Peter Thornton QC agreed that there was "an insufficiency of inquiry" at the 1995 inquest into Pte James's death. Judge Thornton said "the discovery of new facts or evidence" made "a fresh investigation including a fresh inquest necessary or desirable in the interests of justice". Pte James was undergoing initial training at Deepcut when she was found dead. Her parents Des and Doreen James, who live in Llanymynech, Powys, applied through human rights campaign group Liberty for a new inquest after the Human Rights Act was used to secure access to documents held by the authorities about the teenager's death. Liberty said the appointment of such an "experienced, reputable criminal judge" to head the new inquest recognised how important it was to get it right. "Under his oversight, Cheryl's loved ones really do hope they will get the rigorous, fearless investigation they've been waiting for all these years," it said. "However, a decision has also been taken which suggests the inquest will remain in Surrey. "This indicates the Coroner will receive police support from the local force, Surrey Police. "Serious criticisms have been levelled at the force in relation to the Deepcut cases. "We're working hard to ensure there can be no suggestion of a conflict of interest, or perception of a conflict." The Portsmouth South MP apologised in June last year for conducting an "inappropriate friendship" with a vulnerable female constituent. He resigned from the Liberal Democrats in September after he had the whip removed but remained an MP. The 68-year-old, who has battled health issues, said he hoped voters would accept he had paid for his "mistake". Mr Hancock said he was still fit to do the job despite undergoing major heart operations and recently spending time at a mental health unit. A civil action against him was dropped last year when the complainant agreed to a confidential settlement and the MP issued an apology. He told BBC News: "I'm going to stand for sure, I've made this decision because my health is so much better and I think I owe it to a lot of people who have supported me. "Once you've been an MP for as long as I have it's hard to just walk away. "I think if enough people realise that I'm like everyone, I'm a fallible human being who made a mistake but paid a very high price for it... I think I could [win]." He will go head-to-head with his former party colleague Gerald Vernon-Jackson who will be standing for the Liberal Democrats. But Mr Hancock said he felt he "did not owe anything" to his old party and was not concerned about taking their votes. He has been an MP in Portsmouth since 1984 and won with a majority of more than 5,000 votes in 2010. He has also served as a Portsmouth councillor, which he carried out alongside his MP duties, until he lost his Fratton seat in the local elections last year.
A new inquest into the death of soldier Pte Cheryl James at Deepcut barracks in Surrey is to be conducted by the Recorder of London Brian Barker QC. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Disgraced MP Mike Hancock has told BBC News he will stand in the general election as an independent candidate.
Can you summarize this passage?
Now schoolchildren in Northern Ireland will be playing Minecraft in their classrooms as part of a project devised by Londonderry-based innovation festival CultureTECH. Minecraft allows players to create their own world which they are then free to explore. Secondary-schools will use MinecraftEdu, a special version appropriate for the classroom, in lessons to help teach traditional subjects such as history and art. CultureTECH chief executive Mark Nagurski said the overwhelming response to Minecraft events at last year's festival sparked the idea. "We spent a couple of months talking with the MinecraftEdu guys who showed us the content that could be produced, so we decided to take a punt," he says. "We need more kids getting into STEM subjects (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) and coding if we are to build a pipeline to meet the increasing demand for jobs in the technology sector, and this is a great way for children to get into that." So, how can playing a video game during class-time benefit children? St Joseph's Boys' School in Derry has been running a pilot of the scheme as part of a collaboration between its history and IT departments. The game was offered to the school for free and history teacher Darren Currie says that made it "an opportunity we couldn't resist, especially when school budgets are so tight". His pupils are using the game to construct virtual replicas of Plantation period sites such as Brackfield bawn outside Derry and Monea Castle in County Fermanagh. "The Plantation period is a part of history that can be quite dry, so anything that helps pupils take it in better has to be a good thing," he explains. "The boys create these structures, label them and then work out and explain why, for example, this house was fortified, why these gun turrets are positioned where they are, and gain an understanding of the period as a result." An assessment is the summer will determine whether the scheme has been a success, but Mr Currie says the benefits are already beginning to show. "I work with a mixed ability group and this has helped with their motivation. Pupil engagement has increased and there is a collaborative and competitive element to it, too. "The pupils work in groups to build the best bawn, and that will over time help with their employability skills - not only are they gaining computing and programming skills, but this is also team-building." Mr Currie is encouraging other schools to follow St Joseph's lead. "What we are doing is just the tip of the iceberg - there are so many different applications for different subject areas. "There does have to be a structure and outcomes must be clear, and that way pupils will take over the learning themselves." A spokeswoman for the Paris prosecutor said they were in custody for questioning over "illicit activity". Uber, which puts vetted drivers in touch with passengers, is unpopular with registered drivers in many cities because they tend to undercut prices. A recent French taxi-drivers' strike turned violent. The US company is banned in some places, but it says it will keep operating in France. Last week, France's interior minister ordered a ban on the low-cost car-sharing service UberPOP after a day of nationwide protests by taxi drivers. Bernard Cazeneuve said the service was "illegal" and ordered police and prosecutors to enforce its closure. Uber says it will stop operating if ordered to do so by a court. Last week's protests saw US singer Courtney Love Cobain caught up in the unrest, which she compared with a war zone. Taxi drivers complain Uber is stealing their livelihoods as its drivers do not have to pass the same tests, nor pay the same taxes, as more established taxi services.
It is one of the most addictive video games in the world, with millions of users playing it for hours on end. [NEXT_CONCEPT] Two managers of the taxi-ordering app Uber have been arrested in France.
Write a summary of this document.
The Australian newspaper reported fresh rumours that US private equity giant KKR had a bid that could be "almost ready" for consideration. It would be one of the biggest deal in Australia's corporate history, the newspaper said. The news comes amid turbulent times for the supermarket chain. Woolworths' media team made no comment in relation to the takeover rumours, while KKR's media team in Australia was unavailable for comment. Earlier this month, Woolworths announced that its chief executive, Grant O'Brien, was stepping down after nearly four years. The firm also said it had plans to cut about 1,200 jobs. The changes are aimed at cutting millions of dollars in costs and improving sales after Woolworths' first-half profits fell. The retail giant has been up against rivals such as Coles and Aldi and it has been trying to win more customers with improved stores and competitive pricing. Woolworths recently cut its profit guidance for the year to June 2015.
Shares in Australia's biggest supermarket chain Woolworths have risen as much as 5% in Sydney on media reports of a possible takeover.
Please give a summary of the document below.
The German embassy in Beijing posted a statement accusing China of recording the visit against its wishes. One of the doctors was German. The statement adds that Chinese security services, rather than doctors, are steering the dissident's treatment. The Chinese authorities are yet to respond to the German statement. Nobel peace laureate Liu Xiaobo was serving a sentence of 11 years for subversion, but was moved from prison to a hospital last month with terminal liver cancer. Following international pressure, Beijing allowed two doctors - Markus Büchler from Germany and Joseph M Herman from the US - to examine the dissident in the north-eastern Chinese city of Shenyang. Over the weekend the doctors said he could go abroad for palliative care, directly contradicting Chinese medical experts who said previously that Mr Liu is too ill to travel. There are at least two known video clips which were first posted online on Sunday by Chinese government-backed groups. One video appears to shows the two Western doctors at Mr Liu's bedside, along with his wife Liu Xia as well as several Chinese doctors and nurses. A second video, which Chinese state news outlet Global Times later republished on its website, appears to show the Western and Chinese doctors in a conference room. In the first clip, a man thought to be Dr Büchler says the Chinese doctors are "very committed" to treating Mr Liu, while in the second he is heard saying: "I don't think we can do better medically than you do". The videos have been met with some scepticism from Chinese-language news outlets and blogs outside of mainland China. Some claim the recordings were edited to cast the Chinese doctors in a positive light and lend credence to Beijing's argument that Mr Liu is too ill to be medically evacuated. The fact that the videos were first posted on YouTube - which is blocked in China - has also prompted speculation that they were intended for a foreign audience. Late on Monday, the German embassy in Beijing released a statement accusing "certain authorities" of making audio and video surveillance recordings of the visit, and then leaking them "selectively to certain Chinese state media outlets". This, they said, constituted a breach of doctor-patient confidentiality. The recordings were also "made against the expressed wishes of the German side, which were communicated in writing" before the visit. "It seems that security organs are steering the process, not medical experts. This behaviour undermines trust in the authorities dealing with Mr Liu's case, which is vital to ensure maximum success of his medical treatment." Separately, Mr Liu's lawyer Jared Genser told the BBC that it was "unfortunate and unsurprising that the Chinese government would be engaged in surveilling anybody who is having contact with Liu Xiaobo and Liu Xia". There has been no official response to the statement but on Monday China's foreign ministry said it "hopes relevant countries will respect China's sovereignty and will not use individual cases to interfere with China's internal affairs", when asked if Liu Xiaobo would be allowed to leave. A Global Times editorial on Monday said Chinese authorities were "trying their best to treat Liu and have fulfilled their humanitarian obligations". It accused foreign forces of "still squeezing Liu for their political goals in disregard of his critical condition". Liu Xiaobo, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010 for his pro-democracy and human rights activism, is said to be in critical condition. Last week the hospital said his liver functions were worsening. Mr Genser has called for his immediate medical evacuation. He told the BBC: "My view is that China could demonstrate itself to be a strong power, and one that is secure by allowing him to travel abroad for medical treatment." "Instead, they seem to be afraid of this one man and his views on how China could evolve from being a single party system to being a multi-party democracy," he said.
Germany has issued a sharp rebuke to China after videos of Western doctors visiting ailing Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo in hospital were posted online.
Give a brief summary of the content.
The UN had previously asked for $2.1bn this year, as aid groups warn the country is on the brink of famine. Two years of war between a Saudi-led coalition supporting Yemen's government and Houthi rebels have devastated the country. Even before the conflict, Yemen was the poorest country in the Middle East. Speaking in Geneva on Tuesday, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said the conference had been a remarkable success. But he warned that the money had to translate into effective support for Yemenis. "That is why we basically need to make sure that there is unhindered access for all humanitarian actors to reach all the people in need, everybody in need, and everywhere inside Yemen," he said. The UN hopes to get the remaining $1bn it asked for soon, the BBC's Imogen Foulkes in Geneva reports. The sheer scale of the deprivation is staggering: of Yemen's 25.6m people, almost 19m are in urgent need of assistance, the UN says. Almost 7m are "severely food insecure", meaning they need food aid immediately. Two million children are acutely malnourished. "The situation is nothing short of catastrophic," says Robert Mardini from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), who recently returned from Yemen. "What everyone tells you is that life has become unbearable." Despite the aid pledges, the challenges for aid agencies will remain immense, our correspondent says. Save the Children would like funding specifically for education, pointing out that more than 2m children are unable to go to school because of the conflict. The ICRC, which has been trying to support hospitals in Yemen, would like more attention to health care, which is said to be on the verge of total collapse. Fewer than half Yemen's hospitals are functioning at all, and those that are face daily shortages of staff, medicines, and electricity. But even with the extra funding in place, there the delivery of aid poses huge challenges. The key port of Hudaydah, which aid agencies describe as the country's "lifeline", is now virtually closed due to a partial blockade by Saudi-led coalition forces and the destruction of cranes in air strikes. This means that about only 30% of the supplies Yemen needs are getting into the country at all. The ICRC has given up trying to get anything through Hudaydah and is sending supplies through the smaller southern port of Aden. This means more restrictions and delays as there are "100 checkpoints" between Aden and Sanaa, Mr Mardini says. The UN has repeatedly called on Yemen's warring parties to keep Hudaydah open, amid fears the Saudi-led coalition may be preparing an all-out assault on the port to try to deal the rebels a major blow. "People in Hudaydah are already on the edge of famine," says Caroline Anning of Save the Children. "An attack would tip them over."
Donors at a conference in Geneva have pledged nearly $1.1bn (£857m) to Yemen to help relieve the "world's largest humanitarian crisis", the UN says.
Summarize the following piece.
Mandy Dickson said she placed her 20-month-old son Devon on a slide at Green Grosvenor Park in Salford so she could discreetly photograph the men. She said the play area was littered with cannabis joints and a drug pipe. Salford Council said it had begun an investigation and was working with Greater Manchester Police (GMP). The incident in Lower Broughton on Thursday at about 11:00 BST was first reported by the Manchester Evening News. Ms Dickson told the BBC: "My son wanted to use the slide and I noticed the people on the ground, who I thought were homeless." She said Devon then kicked over what she thought was a water bottle belonging to one of the men. The 35-year-old said she then realised the bottle had been "turned into a drug pipe". Ms Dickson said she had received criticism on social media for "letting my son play near drug addicts" but explained she had placed her son on the slide only "for a few seconds" in order to get some photographic evidence to warn other parents living nearby. "I would absolutely not be able to live with myself if I'd done nothing and another kid had been harmed or died because of what they left behind," she said. Insp Darren Whitehead of GMP said: "The Broughton Neighbourhood policing team regularly patrol this area and we have not had any previous reports of this nature. "We will continue to conduct high visibility patrols and identify any individuals causing anti-social behaviour." Salford City Councillor David Lancaster said the images were "very concerning". "It would appear from the pictures I have seen that drugs are involved," he said. "For these young men to be seemingly unconscious in the middle of a family park - in the middle of the day - completely undermines the safe environment we need in which to let our children play."
A mother who took her toddler to their local playground was horrified to discover four men in a stupor surrounded by drug paraphernalia.
Summarize the content provided below.
At least six students were seriously injured by gunfire, but dozens more were hurt as they tried to escape. The gunman was accompanied by a suicide bomber, who blew himself up in the car park. No-one so far has said they were behind the attack but the Islamist militant group Boko Haram has carried out similar raids in the town . The name Boko Haram, loosely translated from the region's Hausa language, means "Western education is forbidden". The gunfire at the College of Administrative and Business Studies sparked panic, with students jumping from windows to escape the militants. Latest African news updates They were injured after jumping out of windows and over walls, the Associated Press news agency quotes a hospital worker as saying. The police have said that the surviving gunman is in their custody. The attack in Potiskum comes as Boko Haram is facing renewed pressure, reports the BBC's Abdullahi Kaura Abubakar from the capital, Abuja. A military operation is continuing in its Sambisa forest stronghold, with senior Nigerian officers say many of the insurgents have been killed and those still alive are on the run. Despite this, Boko Haram is still able to carry out isolated attacks. Observers say unless senior members of the group are captured, Boko Haram may be able to regroup and rearm, both within and outside Nigeria's borders. Why Boko Haram remains a threat What next for rescued Boko Haram captives The group has become known for its targeting of schools and colleges with its most notorious attack on a school in Chibok in north-eastern Nigeria. More than 200 girls were kidnapped in the attack in April 2014. In the past few weeks the Nigerian army has freed hundreds of women and girls who had been held by Boko Haram, but the Chibok hostages have not been among them. The group has also killed thousands of people, many of them are school and college students.
Two militants have attacked a business college in Potiskum in the north-eastern Nigerian state of Yobe.
Please summarize the following text.
The 25-year-old, signed from Crystal Palace for a reported £10m in the summer, clinically fired home after Mohamed Diame's ball over the top. Newcastle edged the opening period, with Isaac Hayden twice heading wide when well placed. Gayle struck the post after half-time, as City failed to seriously trouble Magpies goalkeeper Matz Sels. The Robins, playing in front of the biggest crowd at Ashton Gate for 26 years, saw plenty of the ball but struggled to convert their attacking play into genuine goalscoring opportunities. Hordur Magnusson came closest to an equaliser, heading Luke Freeman's near-post corner just wide in the final 10 minutes. Striker Jonathan Kodjia, still without a goal this season, had the home side's clearest sight of goal in injury time but could only volley over from close range. Newcastle, who have now recorded back-to-back victories after losing their first two matches of the season, held on for their first away win since December 2015. Bristol City head coach Lee Johnson: "There were loads of positives for us. We lost to one quality finish after being caught out by a great ball. "We have a bit of work to do with our forward play. The strikers need to know when the ball is going into the box so they can time their movement and we took too many touches at times. "But I can't be too critical because the players gave everything. The way we penned Newcastle in and the energy we showed were really pleasing." Newcastle manager Rafael Benitez: "It's great to have a team who can go forward and score goals but you also need organisation and team spirit to get results. "For me, it was a step forward in the confidence of the players because we now know we can win games with our forward play or by defending strongly. "I expected a difficult game because what I knew of Bristol City and their manager is they know what they are doing and can change systems during a match. I expect them to do well this season." Match ends, Bristol City 0, Newcastle United 1. Second Half ends, Bristol City 0, Newcastle United 1. Gary O'Neil (Bristol City) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Matt Ritchie (Newcastle United). Corner, Newcastle United. Conceded by Aden Flint. Attempt blocked. Rolando Aarons (Newcastle United) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Yoan Gouffran. Foul by Bobby Reid (Bristol City). Ciaran Clark (Newcastle United) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Callum O'Dowda (Bristol City). Chancel Mbemba (Newcastle United) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Attempt missed. Jonathan Kodjia (Bristol City) right footed shot from the right side of the box is high and wide to the left. Attempt blocked. Luke Freeman (Bristol City) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Gary O'Neil with a headed pass. Substitution, Newcastle United. Rolando Aarons replaces Dwight Gayle. Attempt missed. Lee Tomlin (Bristol City) right footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high from a direct free kick. Substitution, Newcastle United. Jonjo Shelvey replaces Isaac Hayden. Hördur Bjorgvin Magnusson (Bristol City) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Ayoze Pérez (Newcastle United). Attempt missed. Hördur Bjorgvin Magnusson (Bristol City) header from very close range is close, but misses to the right. Assisted by Luke Freeman with a cross following a corner. Corner, Bristol City. Conceded by Yoan Gouffran. Luke Freeman (Bristol City) wins a free kick on the right wing. Foul by Jack Colback (Newcastle United). Foul by Callum O'Dowda (Bristol City). Vurnon Anita (Newcastle United) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Lee Tomlin (Bristol City) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Yoan Gouffran (Newcastle United). Attempt saved. Lee Tomlin (Bristol City) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Gary O'Neil. Attempt missed. Aden Flint (Bristol City) header from the centre of the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Gary O'Neil with a cross following a corner. Corner, Bristol City. Conceded by Vurnon Anita. Attempt missed. Bobby Reid (Bristol City) right footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the left. Assisted by Lee Tomlin. Bobby Reid (Bristol City) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Jack Colback (Newcastle United). Substitution, Bristol City. Aaron Wilbraham replaces Tammy Abraham. Dwight Gayle (Newcastle United) hits the right post with a right footed shot from outside the box. Assisted by Jack Colback. Attempt missed. Ayoze Pérez (Newcastle United) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Assisted by Yoan Gouffran. Hand ball by Matt Ritchie (Newcastle United). Substitution, Bristol City. Callum O'Dowda replaces Scott Golbourne. Substitution, Newcastle United. Ayoze Pérez replaces Mohamed Diamé. Mark Little (Bristol City) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Yoan Gouffran (Newcastle United). Delay over. They are ready to continue.
Dwight Gayle scored his fourth goal in three Championship games as Newcastle United won at Bristol City.