instruction
stringclasses 60
values | input
stringlengths 15
174k
⌀ | output
stringlengths 1
994
|
---|---|---|
Write a concise summary for the following article. | Now, of course, no self-respecting gym is without one. They are comfortably the best-selling piece of gym equipment in the US.
They appeal to everyone from amateurs to Olympians, if nothing else, because it may seem a far more comfortable option than pounding the streets in the depth of winter.
But how safe are they?
The question has been raised by the sudden death of Silicon Valley entrepreneur, Dave Goldberg, who was found lying next to a machine at a Mexican resort.
The SurveyMonkey chief executive had slipped, banged his head and later died of his injuries.
About 24,000 people were admitted to US hospitals last year with treadmill-related injuries, the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) estimates, with slips and strains the most common causes.
But deaths are rare, with 30 reported deaths over a 12-year period to 2012, according to the CPSC, and not all of these are caused by hazards specific to treadmills. Some people suffer heart attacks from the exercise, for example.
Indeed, you are more likely to be killed by lightning than by exercising on a treadmill. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 261 people died in the US after being struck by lightning between 2006 and 2013.
Children, however, are at particular risk.
The daughter of US boxer Mike Tyson died after becoming entangled in the cable of a treadmill, and there are numerous cases of children suffering severe friction burns after trapping fingers and hands in the revolving belt.
Australia has even launched a public campaign on the dangers of treadmills to young children.
Few gym companies in the UK approached for information responded, but LA fitness said that the number of people injured on treadmills was "low - just 2% of all our accidents".
The company recommends being properly inducted on machines, knowing the safety features, having water at hand and not looking at your feet when you are running as among the best ways to stay safe.
And any inherent risks in with exercise need to be contrasted with the risks of inactivity.
Advice on exercising can appear confusing - one recent report suggested that intensive training may be as bad as not jogging at all.
But World Health Organization advice remains that adults should do at least 75 minutes of vigorous exercise a week. | It will surprise no-one familiar with the relentless whir of a treadmill to learn they were once used to a punish inmates in 19th century British workhouses. |
Please summarize the passage below. | According to the 46-year-old Swiss, 16 countries would be eliminated after a preliminary knockout round.
The rest of the tournament would then be the same as it is now, with 32 teams competing in the group stages, followed by further knockout rounds.
Infantino said a decision on possible expansion would be taken in January.
"These are ideas to find the best solution," he said. "We will debate them this month and we will decide everything by 2017."
Infantino took charge of world football's governing body in February.
One of his election promises was to expand the World Cup to 40 teams.
But his idea now is that 32 teams take part in a preliminary knockout round in the host country, with the winners joining 16 seeded teams in the group stages.
"It means we continue with a normal World Cup for 32 teams, but 48 teams go to the party," said Infantino, who replaced Sepp Blatter.
"Fifa's idea is to develop football in the whole world. The World Cup is the biggest event there is. It's more than a competition, it's a social event."
Media playback is not supported on this device
Richard Conway, BBC Radio 5 live sports news correspondent
This is all part of Gianni Infantino's plan to expand the tournament because there is a lot of discontent from some continents who feel World Cup places are not allocated in the right way.
It could be something like England against Iceland in the first round if England were not seeded.
It is very high risk - and it would be dramatic and exciting for TV, I am sure. That is what is on the table and a decision will be made in January next year.
Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox.
The animal artwork will appear at the junction of Pear Tree Road, Lower Dale Road and Normanton Road, in Normanton, Derby, in April.
Charity Sustrans said the design would help make the area more appealing for people and help slow down cars.
The charity has been working with different communities in England to help redesign busy streets.
Dan Robertson, from Sustrans, said: "Through simple changes like this we can really change the feel of a space into a place people want to be in.
"This is one of several such initiatives that are happening here in Normanton at the moment."
The initiative came from design workshops held over 18 months.
The tiger design was created as a way to increase awareness of pedestrian needs in the area by highlighting where people want to walk.
The tiger will be painted on to roads and pavements on 12 April. | Fifa president Gianni Infantino has proposed expanding the World Cup finals to 48 teams - after initially suggesting he wanted to boost it to 40.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A giant tiger is to be painted in a city suburb to highlight the safest places to cross the road. |
Can you summarize this passage? | The claim: The Conservatives' win in Copeland is the first time since 1878 that a governing party has made a comparable gain in a by-election
Reality Check verdict: A governing party gaining a seat at a by-election is an extremely unusual event. It has happened since 1878, but you could argue that those occasions had unusual circumstances that meant they were not comparable.
It is very rare for the governing party to pick up votes from the opposition. It is even rarer for them to gain a seat, as the Conservatives did when Trudy Harrison won Copeland in Cumbria.
The constituency and its predecessor, Whitehaven, had returned Labour MPs since 1935.
The Conservatives say this is "the first time since 1878 that a governing party has made a comparable gain in a by-election".
The party was referring to the Worcester by-election 139 years ago, when they won the seat from the Liberals.
Copeland is certainly not the first instance of a ruling party winning a seat at a by-election since that year, when Benjamin Disraeli was prime minister and women could not vote.
That has happened several times since, but in unusual circumstances which are perhaps not "comparable" to Copeland.
For example, in 1982 at the height of the Falklands War, a Labour MP defected to the Social Democratic Party in the south London seat of Mitcham and Morden.
This split the left-of-centre vote, meaning the Conservative candidate won despite getting a smaller share of the vote than at the previous general election.
A Conservative/National Liberal candidate won the Yorkshire seat of Brighouse and Spenborough from Labour in 1960, but that seat was very marginal. Labour won by just 47 votes at the 1959 general election, and lost by 666 a year later.
In 1953, the governing Conservatives took Sunderland South from Labour, but this was also very close and the Conservative vote share fell slightly because a Liberal picked up some votes.
Copeland was not nearly as tight as these examples, and the Conservatives increased their vote share substantially.
Labour's Jamie Reed won the seat by more than 2,000 votes in 2015, while the new Conservative MP took it by a similar margin.
The swing was 6.7%, a stunning result for a governing party.
There are various other examples of government by-election gains since 1878.
However, as Matt Singh of NumbrCrunchr Politics points out, these are "mostly the product of freakish circumstances… none of which apply to Copeland".
Read more from Reality Check | Governing parties rarely look forward to by-elections, which tend to have relatively low turnouts and are seen as having less at stake that general elections. |
Can you provide a brief summary for this document? | More than 300 motorcyclists turned out to say a final farewell to the Italian road racer who died following a crash at the Tandragee 100 at the weekend.
The convoy included fellow riders, fans and many more from the motorcycling community.
Members of Mr Cecconi's family were also present.
There was a blessing at the start line before the hearse made its way around the circuit.
Onlookers broke into spontaneous applause in tribute to the popular Italian rider who called the course "home".
The 37,500 tonne INS Vikrant is expected to go for extensive trials in 2016 before being inducted into the navy by 2018, reports say.
With this, India joins a select group of countries capable of building such a vessel.
Other countries capable of building a similar ship are the US, the UK, Russia and France.
Monday's launch of INS Vikrant marks the end of the first phase of its construction.
The ship will be then re-docked for outfitting and further construction.
The ship, which will have a length of 260m (850ft) and a breadth of 60m, has been built at the shipyard in Cochin.
It was designed and manufactured locally, using high grade steel made by a state-owned steel company.
Vice-Admiral RK Dhowan of India's navy has described the launch as the "crowning glory" of the navy's programme to produce vessels on home soil.
TV series Da Vinci's Demons received six nominations, with Doctor Who and Y Gwyll/Hinterland receiving five each.
Doctor Who's Peter Capaldi is up against Hinterland's Richard Harrington and Rhys Ifans (Dan y Wenallt) for best actor.
Nominations were announced on Wednesday with the presentations in September.
The awards ceremony takes place at the St David's Hall, Cardiff.
Swansea City football documentary Jack to a King has received five nominations.
It is the 24th annual British Academy Cymru Awards, that recognise excellence in broadcasting and production in film and television in Wales.
Set Fire to the Stars has been nominated in the feature/television film category, for original music by Gruff Rhys, make-up and hair, photography and lighting, writer, costume design and production design.
In the factual programming category, Michael Sheen's Valleys Rebellion will go up against Jamie Baulch: Looking for my Birth Mum and Malcolm Allen: Cyfle Arall, for the single documentary award.
The factual series category will be contested by RAF Fighter Pilot: Rhod Gilbert's Work Experience, Adam Price a Streic y Glowyr and Great Welsh Writers: Dannie Abse.
Michael Sheen and Rhod Gilbert are nominated for the best presenter award, along with poet Owen Sheers for Dylan Thomas, A Poet's Guide.
Bafta Cymru director Hannah Raybould said: "It's been an outstanding year for television and film talent working in Wales.
"Across all categories we've seen an excellent breadth of programmes and individuals represented - in both languages, and from those starting out in their careers to the very experienced."
A breakthrough award will also be given to an emerging professional who has made a significant impact in television or film in the past year.
Host Huw Stephens called the night "a celebration of all the hard work that goes into making some incredible programmes and films". | The body of 38-year-old Dario Cecconi was taken on a lap of honour of the Tandragee 100 road race circuit in County Armagh on Thursday evening.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
India has unveiled its first home-built aircraft carrier from a shipyard in southern Kerala state.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Dylan Thomas biopic Set Fire to the Stars has received seven nominations for this year's Bafta Cymru awards. |
Summarize this article briefly. | It means Liam Williams starts on the wing with Leigh Halfpenny at full-back.
And Rhys Webb has been selected at scrum-half ahead of Mike Phillips for the match at the Millennium Stadium.
"We have been impressed with the form of Rhys and Dan [Biggar] at half-back for the Ospreys," Wales coach Warren Gatland said.
"It will be good to see them together on this stage again."
Bath loose-head Paul James is preferred to Gethin Jenkins, with the Blues player dropping to the bench.
Sam Warburton will lead the team from open-side, with Dan Lydiate taking the blind-side spot.
Davies, who has played 41 times for Wales, was injured in Clermont's 35-3 European Champions Cup victory over Sale on 26 October.
He missed three of the 2013 autumn Tests and the opening three matches of the 2014 Six Nations with a chest injury.
North will line up alongside Jamie Roberts in the centre - the same pairing that played in the 27-6 victory over France in the 2014 Six Nations.
The Northampton wing also played at centre against the Wallabies in the corresponding match last season.
Gatland is forced to switch North to centre after Scarlets centre Scott Williams - the natural replacement for Davies - failed to recover from a hamstring strain.
Blues midfielder Cory Allen has also been hit by injury but is named on the bench.
Gatland added: "Injuries in the midfield mean we get to see Jamie and George line up together there again and we were pleased with how that went earlier in the year."
Wales have lost their past nine encounters with Australia - with the average points difference less than six - and the coach expects this match to be close.
"The last few outings against Australia have been extremely tight, we are expecting the same this weekend and it's going to be another huge battle but it's a challenge we are really looking forward to," he said.
Wales: Leigh Halfpenny (Toulon), Alex Cuthbert (Cardiff Blues), George North (Northampton Saints), Jamie Roberts (Racing Metro), Liam Williams (Scarlets), Dan Biggar (Ospreys), Rhys Webb (Ospreys), Paul James (Bath), Richard Hibbard (Gloucester), Samson Lee (Scarlets), Jake Ball (Scarlets), Alun Wyn Jones (Ospreys), Dan Lydiate (Unattached), Sam Warburton (Capt), Taulupe Faletau (Newport Gwent Dragons).
Replacements: Scott Baldwin (Ospreys), Gethin Jenkins (Cardiff Blues), Rhodri Jones (Scarlets), Bradley Davies (London Wasps), Justin Tipuric (Ospreys), Mike Phillips (Racing Metro), Rhys Priestland (Scarlets), Cory Allen (Cardiff Blues).
Emergency services were called to Kilburn High Road at the junction with Netherwood Street at about 17:20 GMT after reports of a shooting.
Paramedics treated the man, who was his early 20s, but he was pronounced dead at the scene.
Scotland Yard said no arrests have been made and enquiries continue.
The man's next of kin have been informed.
Roads have been cordoned off while police investigate, with witnesses describing the area as "mayhem". | Wales' Jonathan Davies has failed to recover from injury in time to face Australia and so Northampton wing George North will switch to midfield.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A man has died after a gunshots were fired on a busy north-west London street during rush hour. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | Responding to the publication of Sir John Chilcot's inquiry into the war, Mr Corbyn said MPs had been "misled" in the run-up to the invasion.
He also apologised on behalf of Labour and called for more powers for the International Criminal Court.
David Cameron said lessons must be learned from the Iraq War.
He announced a two-day Commons debate into Sir John's long-awaited report.
Sir John said his report does not make a judgement on the legality or otherwise of the war.
But Mr Corbyn, a long-term critic of the war who voted against the invasion, said it had "long been regarded as illegal by the overwhelming by the weight of international legal opinion".
It "devastated Iraq's infrastructure" he said, and "fostered a lethal sectarianism".
"By any measure, the invasion and occupation of Iraq... has been for many a catastrophe," he said.
Going to war without a UN mandate was "profoundly dangerous", Mr Corbyn said, adding: "All those who took the decisions laid bare in the Chilcot report must face up to the consequences of their actions, whatever they may be."
He paid tribute to the late Robin Cook, who resigned from the government over his opposition to the war.
Mr Corbyn said that in his resignation speech, Mr Cook had said "in a few hundred words in advance of the tragedy to come what has been confirmed by this report in more than two million words".
In a speech later on, Mr Corbyn apologised to Iraqis, soldiers' families and Britons who feel democracy was "undermined" by the invasion.
He said: "Politicians and political parties can only grow stronger by acknowledging when they get it wrong and by facing up to their mistakes.
"So I now apologise sincerely on behalf of my party for the disastrous decision to go to war in Iraq."
He added: "Finally, we need Britain to join the 30 countries including Germany and Spain that already support giving the International Criminal Court the power to prosecute those responsible for the crime of military aggression."
Earlier, as he fielded questions from MPs, Mr Cameron, who as a backbencher at the time voted in favour of intervention, said: "Members on all sides who voted for military action will have to take our fair share of the responsibility.
"We cannot turn the clock back but we can ensure that lessons are learned and acted on."
He said the experience of Iraq should not prevent Britain from collaborating with the United States in future military action.
Lib Dem leader Tim Farron said the late Charles Kennedy, who led his party at the time had been "right all along" in his opposition.
Labour MP Ann Clwyd said Saddam Hussein had been in breach of UN resolution and killed thousands of his citizens.
She said: "I wish people would ask Iraqis what they think of the invasion, because many are grateful that we took the action that we did at that time."
The weather warning is valid from 11:00 GMT to 19:00 GMT.
Rivers Agency chief executive David Porter has said it is continuing to monitor water levels closely following more rainfall, including Lough Erne.
A number of roads are closed across Northern Ireland.
Mr Porter said the agency brought in extra pumps and Derrychara Link in Enniskillen was cleared at 02:30 GMT, but he said "keeping it open depends on rain today".
He said Upper Lough Erne "was still about 150mm below 2009 levels".
A Met Office Yellow warning of ice was in place until 10:00 GMT on Sunday.
On Friday, the minister for agriculture, Michelle O'Neill, said there was no engineering solution to flooding in County Fermanagh.
Ms O'Neill said the problem is one that the local community "will have to deal with time and time again". | The 2003 Iraq invasion was "an act of military aggression" and a "catastrophe", Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A Met Office Yellow weather warning of rain for County Fermanagh is in force for Sunday. |
Summarize the provided information. | Road safety is a bigger concern for parents than "stranger danger", suggests the survey for the sustainable transport group, Sustrans.
Some 470 parents of five to 11-year-olds in England, Scotland and Wales were questioned.
Sustrans wants speed limits reduced to 20mph in all built-up areas.
It wants local authorities to ring-fence part of their budget to build dedicated cycling and walking routes to school. And it wants any new housing developments to take into account the needs of walkers and cyclists.
The charity is asking supporters to write to their MPs to urge changes to transport policy to make cycling and walking to school safer.
Sustrans says the most recent government figures on road deaths and injuries show that in 2012, across England, Wales and Scotland, 33 children under the age of 16 died in accidents while walking or cycling and more than 1,800 were seriously injured.
"If a whole classroom of children had been killed under other circumstances there would be public outcry," said Sustrans chief executive Malcolm Shepherd.
"With today's children the least physically active in history and set to have shorter life expectancies than their parents... shuttling kids to the school gate in the car is not the answer.
"Giving children the opportunity to walk, scoot or cycle the school run is vital to their health and well-being, so making our roads safe enough that they can do this must be a top priority," said Mr Shepherd.
Of the parents who took part in the survey, some 18% said their child had experienced a vehicle not stopping or stopping too late at a pedestrian crossing, 13% said their child had nearly been hit by a speeding vehicle while crossing the road and 5% said their child had actually been hit.
Some 44% said road safety was their biggest concern, compared with 28% whose main worry was strangers.
The survey suggested that in a typical week some 61% of children would walk or cycle to or from school at some point, most of them with their parents or another adult.
A spokesman for the Department for Transport said: "Most drivers know that keeping to the speed limit can mean the difference between life and death in a collision and that they should always remain mindful of pedestrians, especially around schools where children are crossing.
"We want people to drive in a safe manner at all times, which is why we recently increased the fixed penalty to £100 for several driving offences, including careless driving, and why we have given local councils more flexibility so that it is cheaper and easier for them to implement 20mph limits and zones.
"We are also encouraging councils to think about cyclists when designing new road schemes and they can also install safer Puffin crossings to detect when pedestrians have safely crossed."
The Local Government Association said keeping children safe on the school run was of "paramount importance" to councils.
Cllr Peter Box, chairman of the body's Economy and Transport Board said many councils had already introduced 20mph speed limits around schools and were investing in cycling and walking despite funding cuts.
He said many head teachers had asked their councils to introduce CCTV camera cars around their schools to tackle drivers parking on zig-zag lines or pavements, forcing children and parents with buggies to walk in the road.
"Plans by the government to ban the use of CCTV cars in this way will do nothing to solve the real problem of safety outside our schools that this alarming survey clearly highlights and will only leave school children further at risk." | Over two fifths (41%) of parents in a survey for a transport charity say their child has had a near-miss traffic accident going to or from school. |
What is the summary of the following document? | Angharad Bullock, 39, from Morriston, Swansea, was reported missing on 28 April, along with the toddler.
South Wales Police confirmed the pair had been found on Tuesday night.
Jim Stevenson opened the scoring for the visitors when he headed home Rhys Browne's cross just moments into the second half.
And Browne made certain of all three points late on with a powerful drive from outside the box.
Halifax came close to grabbing a consolation, but Shaquille McDonald's effort was saved by keeper Dan Thomas.
The Shaymen are only two points clear of the relegation zone, while Aldershot climbed one place to 14th.
Media playback is not supported on this device
Aldershot manager Barry Smith told BBC Surrey: "We knew Halifax were on a good run of form and we knew they would come out all guns blazing.
"I felt if we weathered the storm we would always get chances. We've played better but it's not a great pitch and we scored two good goals."
A BBC investigation found the report in August 2012 was misleading and unfair.
The programme has also been under fire for dropping a report into disgraced BBC DJ Jimmy Savile and wrongly linking Lord McAlpine to a sex abuse inquiry.
The apology was broadcast on radio and online, with Newsnight to follow.
The internal investigation into the report by former Bureau of Investigative Journalism chief reporter Angus Stickler found that there was no evidence to back Newsnight's claim about Help for Heroes.
In the apology, the BBC will say: "Following an investigation by its Editorial Complaints Unit, the BBC now accepts that its coverage was misleading and unfair to Help for Heroes.
"The BBC gave the impression that Help for Heroes was responsible for shortcomings in the provision of support to wounded veterans. The editorial complaints unit found no evidence to support this suggestion.
"Although it was legitimate to report the concerns of veterans, the BBC portrayed criticisms about overall support by a number of agencies as specific criticisms of Help for Heroes. This unfair impression was reinforced by our coverage of the story in other outlets.
"In addition, the Newsnight report contained interviews with two contributors which were edited in a way which misrepresented their views."
It continues: "Although a representative of Help for Heroes took part in a studio discussion which followed the Newsnight report, the response of Help for Heroes to the criticisms wasn't properly reflected.
"This contributed further to the unfair impression of Help for Heroes, for which the BBC wishes to apologise."
The BBC said it accepted the findings of the ruling, and acknowledged that it had "made some mistakes" in reporting concerns from some veterans: "That shouldn't have happened and we apologise."
"It is important to stress that the ruling has found that it is clear that at least some injured veterans and their families had been expressing criticisms of Help for Heroes and it was legitimate to report these," it added.
Help for Heroes welcomed the apology, but said the Bureau of Investigative Journalism should also apologise to all of the wounded service personnel, their families and others who support the charity through volunteering and fundraising.
It said that after allowing the journalists to visit a recovery centre and interview a family, the "broad and completely understandable concerns about the long-term care needs of the wounded were falsely and unfairly reported as criticisms of the charity".
"The Newsnight report was a complete shock to us, but an even bigger shock to the men and women we're helping to recover," co-founders Bryn and Emma Parry said in a joint statement.
"We are grateful the BBC has admitted it got the story completely wrong and has finally apologised.
Newsnight was criticised for dropping a report into Jimmy Savile's years of sex abuse. It led to an internal inquiry and the programme's editor, Peter Rippon, stepped down.
Then last November the programme linked Lord McAlpine to allegations of sex abuse. The BBC paid £185,000 in damages to him.
A new editor for the programme was announced on Thursday. Ian Katz, from the Guardian, will take up his role in September. | A mother who went missing with her three-year-old son has been found safe, police have said.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Aldershot bounced back from successive defeats to pile the pressure on struggling Halifax.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The BBC has apologised for a Newsnight report about military charity Help for Heroes that gave the false impression it was responsible for shortcomings in support offered to wounded veterans. |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | Defence Minister Antoni Macierewicz said previous inquiries that blamed human error and bad weather were riddled with "mistakes".
He said the crash near Smolensk might have been caused by an explosion.
Polish officials earlier accused Russia of withholding key evidence, something denied by Moscow.
Announcing the new investigation, Mr Macierewicz suggested that the presidential plane had "disintegrated" between 15 and 18 metres (49-59ft) before crashing in western Russia on 10 April 2010.
"There is no doubt that these circumstances are not only a sufficient reason, but one that makes it compulsory to re-examine this tragedy," the minister said.
He questioned the results of previous Polish and Russian investigations.
Among those who died were top state officials, many of whom belonged to the now governing Law and Justice party led by Jaroslaw Kaczynski - the late president's identical twin brother.
The party has never accepted the previous inquiries that concluded the Smolensk crash was an accident.
Commenting on Poland's move, Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said she hoped "this is not linked to politics".
"This hope is a faint one, but it still exists," she added.
Relations between Poland and Russia have been strained over the continuing conflict in Ukraine's south-east and the annexation of the country's southern Crimea peninsula by Moscow in 2014.
Correction 25 February 2016: This report has been amended to clarify the findings of the different investigations into the crash.
The 29-year-old left-hander, who has previously played for Surrey, has hit six centuries in 32 Test matches and a total of 28 in first-class cricket.
His arrival is set to fill the gap in Somerset's batting line-up vacated by the retirement of former captain Chris Rogers at the end of the 2016 season.
He will be available for all formats, around his international commitments.
Elgar joins a Somerset top order that includes new club captain Tom Abell and former England opener Marcus Trescothick, who signed a new deal for 2017 in August.
The Taunton-based side finished second in the County Championship in 2016, narrowly missing out on a maiden title as Middlesex triumphed on the final day of the season.
As a slow left-arm bowler, Elgar has also taken 13 Test wickets.
He first played for Somerset in 2013 on a short-term contract, when he provided cover for Alviro Petersen. | Poland has launched a new investigation into the 2010 plane crash in Russia, in which President Lech Kaczynski and 95 other people were killed.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Somerset have signed South Africa opener Dean Elgar as their overseas player for 2017. |
Summarize the information given below. | Alistair, 28, pulled away from 26-year-old Jonny about halfway through the 10k run in sweltering conditions.
The Yorkshiremen were close throughout the swim, cycle and road race stages, with Alistair walking over the line six seconds ahead.
Henri Schoeman was third, claiming South Africa's first triathlon medal.
Analysis: Inside story of the Brownlees' triumph
Alistair Brownlee is the first athlete to win successive Olympic triathlon titles, while Jonny improved on the bronze medal he won at London 2012.
The brothers were part of a 10-strong group that pulled away during the 40km bike stage, having comfortably negotiated the 1,500m open-water swim from Copacabana Beach.
Mario Mola of Spain, ranked number one in the world after winning four ITU World Series events this year, finished more than a minute behind the Brownlees in eighth.
Britain's other entrant, Gordon Benson, did not complete the race after crashing on the seventh lap of the eight-lap cycle leg.
Alistair Brownlee: "I was pretty confident we would get first and second but I didn't know which way round it would be.
"I just had the edge on Jonny but he has killed me in training and I have been going through hell. It has been so hard. I have woken up in pain every day.
"The swim wasn't that quick but we knew the first two laps on the bike would be crucial. The last few weeks we have been training to commit and, boy, we did.
"As soon as we got to halfway I knew we were going to get two medals and it was just a run for it."
Jonny Brownlee: "I'm used to getting beaten by him, but at the start of the day the dream was to get gold and silver and that is what we have done.
"We had a plan and really committed, and when Alistair pushed on I thought it I would be risking a medal to go with him.
"Maybe in four years if he is older and greyer he will be that bit slower... but maybe he won't be."
BBC Sport's chief sports writer Tom Fordyce
"That might seem like the result all expected, but these have been he most testing of four years for Alistair Brownlee - every season an injury, every season a doubt that he could ever stay fit for long enough to hit his peak once again.
"But no-one can suffer in a race like the double Olympic champion, no-one push themselves as hard.
"The greatest one-day racer in history has once again proved himself unbeatable when it matters most."
Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox.
Find out how to get into triathlon in our special guide. | Alistair Brownlee retained his Olympic men's triathlon title to win Britain's 20th gold medal of the Rio Games, with brother Jonny claiming the silver. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | The first refugees arrived in the town on 9 December last year, and since then 11 refugees have settled in Ceredigion.
The mural, which was unveiled at Ysgol Gymraeg Aberystwyth, includes messages from pupils and members of the public.
It was a special collaboration between Oxfam Cymru, the artist Valériane Leblond and the school.
Pupils Cari and Steffan said they hoped everyone liked their mural of welcome.
Kirsty Davies-Warner, head of Oxfam Cymru, said: "It's been one year since the first refugees arrived to Wales, and this wonderful mural symbolises the extent of support and welcome that the people of Aberystwyth have shown the newly-arrived families."
Earlier this year, Syrian refugees gave out flowers and thanked passers-by for welcoming them to the town.
Pamela Geller is a harsh critic of political Islam who has often faced threats from jihadist groups.
She sponsored a competition to draw the prophet Muhammad which was attacked last month by two Islamic State-inspired gunmen in Texas.
On Tuesday Boston police in shot dead a suspect who had been under watch.
Boston Police Commissioner William B Evans described the plan to target Mrs Geller as "more along the lines of wishful thinking."
"There was some mention of that name", Mr Evans told a television program on Thursday morning.
Early on Tuesday morning Usaama Rahim, 26, called his nephew, David Wright, 24, to inform him that the plan had changed and he now intended to "go after" the "boys in blue" according to a conversations recorded by the FBI.
Investigators believe "boys in blue" was code for Boston police officers.
Two hours later Rahim was shot and killed while under surveillance by counter-terrorism officers.
Police say Rahim attacked officers with a large combat knife after being approached by five officers in the residential Roslindale neighbourhood.
He was shot three times and later died in hospital.
Michael McCaul, the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said Rahim had been "communicating with and spreading ISIS [Islamic State] propaganda online".
"These cases are a reminder of the dangers posed by individuals radicalised through social media," said Mr McCaul.
Facebook posts published by the Boston Globe newspaper show that Rahim had been contacted by the FBI in the past.
"Damn FBI calling my phone!" Rahim wrote in 2012. "They just want any opportunity to drag a Muslim into some DRAMA . . . He wanted to meet up with me and 'Talk.' HA! I said about WHAT?"
"Try again, monkey-boys . . ." he followed up in a later post.
Rahim had worked for CVS since March but previously was a security guard, for a time employed at the Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center.
An investigation will be conducted by Boston Police and the FBI to determine if the shooting was justified.
David Wright was arrested later on Tuesday after a raid at his home in Everett, Massachusetts and now faces charges of conspiracy to obstruct an investigation.
Authorities also searched a home in Warwick, Rhode Island, but officials refused to say confirm it was linked to the Boston investigation. | A mural including messages welcoming refugees from Syria who arrived in Aberystwyth one year ago has been unveiled for the first time.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Two men who plotted to "randomly" behead Boston police officers had initially planned to target a conservative blogger. |
Please summarize the passage below. | The Haxey Hood is contested by patrons of pubs in the neighbouring villages of Haxey and Westwoodside in North Lincolnshire, and can run for hours.
The Hood, a leather tube about one metre in length, is pushed in a scrum until it reaches one of four pubs.
The contest is held annually on the Twelfth Day of Christmas.
There is also a procession around participating public houses, The Carpenters Arms in Westwoodside, and the Kings Arms, The Loco and the Duke William, all in Haxey.
The King's Arms were crowned this year's winners.
The tradition is said to have started when Lady de Mowbray was out riding between Westwoodside and Haxey - between Gainsborough, Scunthorpe and Doncaster - when her silk riding hood was blown away by the wind.
She is said to have been so amused to see local farm workers chasing it she rewarded them land - on condition the chase be re-enacted every year.
The story says the worker who caught the hood was too shy to approach her and handed it to a fellow worker to return.
It is said Lady de Mowbray thanked the man who returned the hood and said he had acted like a lord. The worker who caught it was labelled a fool.
The main event starts when the hood is thrown into the middle of the scrum, or sway, as it is known locally.
The sway pushes through the villages, with each team trying to direct it towards their pub.
The contest ends when the Hood is touched by the landlord of the winning team's pub. | A traditional mass rugby-style event dating back to the 14th Century has been held. |
Write a brief summary of the provided content. | 18 November 2015 Last updated at 16:21 GMT
It's something students at Bedford High in Greater Manchester have been exploring, as part of Anti-Bullying Week.
They've made a special film, which tells the story of Holly, a girl struggling to cope with being bullied at school and online.
Kara, who plays Holly in the film, said: "I wanted to be involved because this is really what some people have to go through."
"They shouldn't have to. They are not alone at Bedford. We will stand together against bullying," Kara added.
Click play to watch 'I am Holly'.
A few days shy of his 93rd birthday, Harry Nunn is still hard at work with horses.
A volunteer at the Brae Riding for the Disabled Centre in Dundee, Harry has been around the animals his entire life.
And 50 years ago, he played an important role in one of the biggest events of the 20th century - the funeral of Sir Winston Churchill, Britain's wartime leader and one of history's great statesmen.
Churchill of course has his own Dundee links - before his two stints as Prime Minister, he was the MP for the city for 14 years.
His state funeral was a grand occasion, attended by world leaders and broadcast on television, and massive crowds packed the streets of London to see the procession pass by.
Yards behind the gun-carriage which bore Churchill's lead-lined and flag-draped coffin, his widow and family rode in a horse-drawn carriage - driven by Harry Nunn.
"At the time it didn't even seem like you were doing it, but you could see the cortege in front of you the whole time," he said.
"What amazed me was, I'd never seen so many people. Right from when we came out of the House of Lords, right along Whitehall and all the way up, it was chock-a-block.
"And when you left St Paul's to go down to the boat, there were just as many people - you wondered where they'd all come from."
Mr Nunn was a groom at the Royal Mews, a member of the Royal household who looked after the Queen's horses and carriages.
Having served in the Army during World War Two, he briefly came face-to-face with Churchill a few weeks before the D-Day landings.
But he was chosen for one of the most important jobs at the funeral simply because of his familiarity with the horse chosen to draw the Churchills' carriage.
"I'd had the horse when he was young, so they thought I should go with him as it was his first trip out in public," he said.
"If anything went wrong he might understand things better if I was with him. That's how it all started."
And things did nearly go wrong, with the horse uneasy with the funereal pace of the solemn procession.
"The young horse did well - he got a bit frustrated with going so slow, as they were hardly walking, it was at crawling pace. A young horse, he wanted to go," said Mr Nunn.
"When you get a big horse, they stride out well, so I got down and walked beside him for a little while, and gave him a tap to say 'behave'.
"It must have been hard for him, it was his first time out and there were all these crowds standing there."
After the funeral, Mr Nunn and the other grooms received a letter of thanks from Lady Churchill, which was pinned up on a notice board at the Royal Mews.
And although the letter eventually disappeared - Mr Nunn suspects it was binned by a fellow groom keen on keeping the place tidy - he still looks back with pride at the part he played that day in 1965.
"I was honoured and pleased that I'd done it, as it's something you don't get to do twice in a lifetime," he said.
"It was great to be asked to do it." | How does it feel to be a victim of bullying?
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Fifty years on from Sir Winston Churchill's state funeral, one Dundee man looks back on the important role he played in the proceedings as Britain laid its wartime leader to rest. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | American, Delta and United airlines say the ban will apply to checked and carry-on luggage on all flights.
A US government agency is investigating the two-wheeled scooters after receiving at least 10 reports of fires.
Other airlines have already banned the skateboard-like device, which is a popular gift item this holiday season.
JetBlue, Alaska, Virgin American, Hawaiian, Spirit and Allegiant have all previously banned hoverboards, and Southwest is having internal discussions on how best to handle the devices.
Delta has said that the self-balancing scooters often use batteries that exceed the wattage allowed on planes and are often poorly labelled.
The lithium ion batteries used in the devices are common in devices like phones, laptops and toys.
The US Consumer Product Safety Commission is conducting a high-priority investigation of hoverboards, because of their surge in popularity in recent months and reports of fires in at least nine states.
"We know consumers are giving it as a gift during the holidays," the watchdog agency's spokeswoman Patty Davis said. "We are working all across the country to move our investigation into the fires forward as quickly as possible."
Given the concerns about fires, the International Air Transport Association (IATA) has recommended that the scooters be transported only as carry-on luggage. Each airline is responsible for making its own decision about banning the devices.
Sales of the devices in the UK have taken off, despite the fact that it is illegal to ride them on public roads and sidewalks.
On Thursday, a 15-year-old riding a hoverboard died in a crash with a bus in London. And in September, a man used one of the devices during the robbery of a crate of energy drinks from a convenience store in south London.
British authorities have become alarmed by the devices, and have seized more than 15,000 of the them at ports and airports in the UK in recent weeks.
Cardigan Bay has one of Europe's largest semi-resident populations of bottlenose dolphins.
But the Sea Watch Foundation says a short-beaked common dolphin has now been seen from New Quay, in Ceredigion.
It says the smaller breed, with its yellow and white markings, usually gathers in groups in waters deeper than 164ft (50m).
Sea Watch Foundation - a UK-wide charity which monitors dolphins, whales and porpoises - said there had also been several sightings of the more commonly spotted bottlenose dolphins in the bay in March.
These were "likely to increase" into the summer as dolphins return to the sheltered bay with their young, the foundation said.
The charity's sightings officer, Kathy James, said: "Now is a great time to come to New Quay to observe its wildlife.
"You might get to witness some really interesting interactions between the two species." | The three leading US airline groups have announced a ban on so-called hoverboards, saying their batteries present an unacceptable fire hazard.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A breed of dolphin usually found in deeper waters has been seen off the Mid Wales coast, a sea life charity says. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | La La Land
Arrival
I, Daniel Blake
Manchester by the Sea
Moonlight
I, Daniel Blake
American Honey
Denial
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
Notes on Blindness
Under the Shadow
Damien Chazelle - La La Land
Tom Ford - Nocturnal Animals
Ken Loach - I, Daniel Blake
Kenneth Lonergan - Manchester by the Sea
Denis Villeneuve - Arrival
Emma Stone - La La Land
Amy Adams - Arrival
Emily Blunt - The Girl on the Train
Natalie Portman - Jackie
Meryl Streep - Florence Foster Jenkins
Casey Affleck - Manchester by the Sea
Andrew Garfield - Hacksaw Ridge
Ryan Gosling - La La Land
Jake Gyllenhaal - Nocturnal Animals
Viggo Mortensen - Captain Fantastic
Viola Davis - Fences
Naomie Harris - Moonlight
Nicole Kidman - Lion
Hayley Squires - I, Daniel Blake
Michelle Williams - Manchester by the Sea
Dev Patel - Lion
Mahershala Ali - Moonlight
Jeff Bridges - Hell or High Water
Hugh Grant - Florence Foster Jenkins
Aaron Taylor-Johnson - Nocturnal Animals
Manchester by the Sea - Kenneth Lonergan
Hell or High Water - Taylor Sheridan
I, Daniel Blake - Paul Laverty
La La Land - Damien Chazelle
Moonlight - Barry Jenkins
Lion - Luke Davies
Arrival - Eric Heisserer
Hacksaw Ridge - Robert Schenkkan, Andrew Knight
Hidden Figures - Theodore Melfi, Allison Schroeder
Nocturnal Animals - Tom Ford
Under the Shadow - Babak Anvari (writer/director), Emily Leo, Oliver Roskill, Lucan Toh (producers)
The Girl with All the Gifts - Mike Carey (writer), Camille Gatin (producer)
The Hard Stop - George Amponsah (writer/director/producer), Dionne Walker (writer/producer)
Notes on Blindness - Peter Middleton (writer/director/producer), James Spinney (writer/director), Jo-Jo Ellison (producer)
The Pass - John Donnelly (writer), Ben A William (director)
Son of Saul - Laszlo Nemes, Gabor Sipos
Dheepan - Jacques Audiard, Pascal Caucheteux
Julieta - Pedro Almodovar
Mustang - Deniz Gamze Erguven, Charles Gillibert
Toni Erdmann - Maren Ade, Janine Jackowski
13th
The Beatles: Eight Days a Week - The Touring Years
The Eagle Huntress
Notes on Blindness
Weiner
Kubo and the Two Strings
Finding Dory
Moana
Zootropolis
La La Land - Justin Hurwitz
Arrival - Johann Johannsson
Jackie - Mica Levi
Lion - Dustin O'Halloran, Hauschka
Nocturnal Animals - Abel Korzeniowski
La La Land - Linus Sandgren
Arrival - Bradford Young
Hell or High Water - Giles Nuttgens
Lion - Greig Fraser
Nocturnal Animals - Seamus McGarvey
Hacksaw Ridge - John Gilbert
Arrival - Joe Walker
La La Land - Tom Cross
Manchester by the Sea - Jennifer Lame
Nocturnal Animals - Joan Sobel
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them - Stuart Craig, Anna Pinnock
Doctor Strange - John Bush, Charles Wood
Hail, Caesar! - Jess Gonchor, Nancy Haigh
La La Land - Sandy Reynolds-Wasco, David Wasco
Nocturnal Animals - Shane Valentino, Meg Everist
Jackie - Madeline Fontaine
Allied - Joanna Johnston
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them - Colleen Atwood
Florence Foster Jenkins - Consolata Boyle
La La Land - Mary Zophres
Florence Foster Jenkins - J Roy Helland, Daniel Phillips
Doctor Strange - Jeremy Woodhead
Hacksaw Ridge - Shane Thomas
Nocturnal Animals - Donald Mowat, Yolanda Toussieng
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story - Nominees to be confirmed
Arrival - Claude La Haye, Bernard Gariepy Strobl, Sylvain Bellemare
Deepwater Horizon - Mike Prestwood Smith, Dror Mohar, Wylie Stateman, David Wyman
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them - Niv Adiri, Glenn Freemantle, Simon Hayes, Andy Nelson, Ian Tapp
Hacksaw Ridge - Peter Grace, Robert Mackenzie, Kevin O'Connell, Andy Wright
La La Land - Mildred Iatrou Morgan, Ai-Ling Lee, Steve A Morrow, Andy Nelson
The Jungle Book - Robert Legato, Dan Lemmon, Andrew R. Jones, Adam Valdez
Arrival - Louis Morin
Doctor Strange - Richard Bluff, Stephane Ceretti, Paul Corbould, Jonathan Fawkner
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them - Tim Burke, Pablo Grillo, Christian Manz, David Watkins
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story - Neil Corbould, Hal Hickel, Mohen Leo, John Knoll, Nigel Sumner
A Love Story - Khaled Gad, Anushka Kishani Naanayakkara, Elena Ruscombe-King
The Alan Dimension - Jac Clinch, Jonathan Harbottle, Millie Marsh
Tough - Jennifer Zheng
Home - Shpat Deda, Afolabi Kuti, Daniel Mulloy, Scott O'Donnell
Consumed - Richard John Seymour
Mouth of Hell - Bart Gavigan, Samir Mehanovic, Ailie Smith, Michael Wilson
The Party - Farah Abushwesha, Emmet Fleming, Andrea Harkin, Conor MacNeill
Standby - Charlotte Regan, Jack Hannon
Tom Holland
Laia Costa
Lucas Hedges
Ruth Negga
Anya Taylor-Joy
Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email [email protected]. | Here is the full list of winners at this year's Baftas, which have taken place at London's Royal Albert Hall. |
Provide a summary of the section below. | Media playback is not supported on this device
Ashley McKenzie claimed the first gold in the men's -60kg class before Colin Oates matched him in the men's -66kg.
In the last contest of the night, Nekoda Davis beat Scotland's Stephanie Inglis in the women's -57kg class.
Scotland's John Buchanan (men's -60kg), James Millar (men's -66kg) and Connie Ramsay (women's -57kg) won bronzes.
Media playback is not supported on this device
Buchanan, 38, who had come out of a 10-year-long retirement for the Games, sealed his win over South Africa's Daniel Le Grange with an ippon score, before celebrating his win by somersaulting off the mat.
Millar - a late call-up as replacement for the injured -100kg judoka James Austin - defeated Mathews Bpunza of Zambia with a late ippon throw.
And Ramsay ensured Scotland added further to their medal haul when she pinned down Cameroon fighter Paule Sitcheping.
The Renicks sisters, Kimberley and Louise, won the host nation's first gold medals with victory in the -48kg and -52kg category respectively.
Northern Ireland's Lisa Kearney continued the home nations dominance in the SECC by beating Canada's Audree Francis-Methot to claim bronze in the women's -52kg class.
Media playback is not supported on this device
England were the big winners, though, with their three golds at the SECC.
London-born McKenzie, 25, who beat Buchanan on his way to the final, claimed a shido penalty victory over India's Navjot Chana after an edgy contest to take the top prize.
Norfolk's Oates, 31, who is ranked seventh in the world and was firm favourite going into these Games, defeated Andreas Krassas of Cyprus with a quick throw and armlock combination.
And Davis, who is based at British Judo's centre of excellence in Walsall, capped a superb night for England by scoring a Waza-ari throw, which she followed up with a 25-second hold-down to clinch the title.
Stephen Goodwin, 51, of St Saviours Road, St Helier, Jersey, illicitly transferred the money between 2006 and 2011 through several jurisdictions, including the UK and Jersey.
He had pleaded guilty to several counts relating to money trafficking and tax evasion at Jersey's Royal Court.
He was also fined £2,000 and had assets of £214,237 confiscated on Thursday.
Goodwin was sentenced for two counts of income tax fraud, one count of attempting to pervert the course of justice and a fourth count of converting, transferring or removing proceeds of drug trafficking from the jurisdiction.
A spokeswoman for States of Jersey Police said: "He deliberately sought to remain under the radar, in terms of declared earnings to government departments, and evade any suspicious activity that is reported through the banking mechanisms."
Police said "cash packages" were intercepted in 2011 by Jersey Customs and Immigration Services which led to an investigation being launched through the Joint Financial Crimes Unit.
German architects GMP's design won the international tender and work will begin at the end of the season.
A new exterior will be built that includes a retractable roof and is due to be completed by 2017.
"We want to make the Santiago Bernabeu the best stadium in the world," said Real Madrid President Florentino Perez.
"Our commitment is to continue increasing the heritage of our club, thus gain in economic strength, so we can continue to lead in an environment of increasing competition.
"We believe in a project that will enhance our image, brand and city that we also feel proud of."
Reports in the Spanish media suggest half the financing for the project would come from selling naming rights and half from a bond issue among Real members.
The Bernabeu currently has a capacity of 85,454 but Real are yet to confirm whether this will change after the refurbishments. | England won three Commonwealth Games gold medals on a rewarding night of judo for the home nations at the Scottish Exhibition Conference Centre.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
An IT expert who laundered almost £600,000 has been jailed for six years.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Real Madrid have unveiled a £330m redesign plan they hope will turn their Santiago Bernabeu ground into the best stadium in the world. |
Can you provide a brief summary of the following information? | Morrisons says it will train 9,000 apprentices over the next five years; and Premier Inn and Costa Coffee owner Whitbread plan 6,000 by 2020.
There were also commitments from National Grid and Dairy Crest.
The PM promised three million new apprentices under a Tory government.
Mr Cameron, who launched the Costa Coffee apprenticeship scheme, said: "We want apprenticeships to be level-pegging with a university degree giving millions more people the dignity of work and a regular pay packet.
"We've already created 2.2 million apprenticeships since 2010 but a future Conservative government is committed to opening up three million more high quality apprenticeships - to help strengthen our economy and communities and give millions more people financial security."
This election issue includes funding for schools, university tuition fees and early years education.
Policy guide: Where the parties stand
Labour says it would guarantee apprenticeships for every school leaver in England who "gets the grades" by 2020, while the Lib Dems have been keen to claim a share of the credit for those created in the last Parliament.
Nick Clegg's party says it would offer an extra £1 an hour for the lowest paid apprentices.
Andy Harrison, chief executive of Whitbread, said: "I firmly believe that investing in apprenticeships is essential to Whitbread's future success and to the health of the UK economy, as well as helping the next generation to achieve their full potential."
National Grid is taking on 500 new apprentices and Dairy Crest will take 200, as well as opening a new training academy.
Also on Thursday, Labour said it would guarantee teenagers face-to-face individual careers advice if it forms the next government.
The party's education manifesto also includes a pledge "to protect the entire education budget in real terms".
Subscribe to the BBC Election 2015 newsletter to get a round-up of the day's campaign news sent to your inbox every weekday afternoon. | Prime Minister David Cameron has welcomed announcements of 16,000 new apprenticeships, saying he wants the qualifications to be "level pegging" with university degrees. |
Please provide a concise summary of the following section. | Auction house Tajan said the drawing, one of eight the Renaissance artist made of the martyred Saint Sebastian, was an "extraordinary discovery".
The drawing has been authenticated by an expert from New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
Tajan claims it is the first "new" da Vinci to be discovered in 15 years.
Yet a "lost" painting of Christ as Salvator Mundi (Saviour of the World) was more recently attributed to him in 2011.
According to the New York Times, the sketch came to light when 14 unframed drawings were brought in to Tajan to be valued by Thaddee Prate, its director of old master pictures.
Mr Prate spotted "an interesting 16th Century drawing" within the bundle and sought a second opinion from an art expert in Paris.
The expert recognised the work was by a left-handed artist and also found two smaller scientific drawings on the back of the sheet.
The Metropolitan Museum's expert, Carmen C Bambach, confirmed the work was by da Vinci, who was famously left-handed.
The drawing shows Saint Sebastian tied to a tree, with notes and diagrams about light and shadow on the other side.
According to Dr Bambach, the drawing was made between 1482 and 1485 when da Vinci was working in Milan.
Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email [email protected]. | A previously unknown Leonardo da Vinci sketch has been valued at $15.8m (£12.4m) after being taken to a French auction house by a retired doctor. |
Summarize this article briefly. | The plaque in Dudley will mark where Edwards grew up before signing for Manchester United as a teenager.
Sir Bobby told the crowds Edwards had been "like a brother" to him ahead of the unveiling.
The plaque was unveiled on what would have been Edwards's 80th birthday. He died from injuries sustained in the 1958 Munich Air Crash.
The tribute at Priory Park will mark where the player "honed his skills" near his childhood home on the Priory Estate, said Dudley North MP Ian Austin.
Mr Austin, who helped organise the event, said Edwards was "the greatest footballer that ever played".
Sir Bobby has described Edwards as his "hero".
He previously told BBC Sport: "I feel terrible trying to explain to people just how good he was, his death was the biggest single tragedy ever to happen to Manchester United and English football.
"I always felt I could compare well with any player - except Duncan. He didn't have a fault with his game."
Sir Bobby replaced ex-England manager Sam Allardyce to unveil the tribute. Allardyce left his role as England manager after The Daily Telegraph claimed he offered advice on how to "get around" transfer rules.
Mr Austin said Sir Bobby, who survived the Munich plane crash, had been Edward's best friend and he was "delighted" he was to unveil the tribute.
Edwards was one of the eight Busby Babes who died in the air crash in which 23 of the 43 passengers on board died. | A blue plaque honouring Manchester United star Duncan Edwards has been unveiled by Sir Bobby Charlton. |
Write a brief summary of the provided content. | 24 August 2014 Last updated at 11:14 BST
There's a new Doctor, a revamped Tardis and we hear tell of new villains and monsters on the way.
As the excitement builds, we took ten young Doctor Who fans to get a tour behind the scenes where the magic happens, on the set of the Tardis itself.
But what they didn't know, was they were about to get caught in the act.
Watch the full interview with the Doctor, Peter Capaldi. | The wait is nearly over: the new series of Dr Who is nearly upon us. |
Give a concise summary of the following information. | Father-of-two Sean Kelly, 37, from Cardiff, died in hospital on Sunday following a serious assault in Theodora Street, Adamsdown on Thursday.
An 18-year-old and 45-year-old have been charged with murder.
Both men, from the Cardiff area, are due to appear at the city's magistrates' court on Wednesday, South Wales Police said.
Following his death at the University Hospital of Wales, Mr Kelly's family paid tribute to "a fun loving guy".
In a statement, they added: "He was a great son, father, brother and uncle. He was a doting dad to his two children and he's going to be extremely missed by all."
On Tuesday, The Mirror newspaper reported that the Doctor's next companion will be played by Bradley Walsh.
According to the Mirror, a source said: "Bradley is super excited to be joining the cast of Doctor Who in such a key role."
"It means that his schedule over the coming months will be jam-packed... But, crucially, it won't affect his role as presenter of The Chase. He loves that show with a passion and so does the audience, so he's delighted to have found a way to make it all work."
Newsround contacted the BBC but it refused to comment on the rumours, so nothing has been confirmed.
It has already been announced that Jodie Whittaker will be playing the role of the Time Lord - the first time that a woman has taken on the part.
Recent companions have been played by female actors, such as Jenna Coleman, Pearl Mackie and Billie Piper.
We will have to wait to see if the Doctor will have a male sidekick this time.
Now chair of the Edge Foundation, Mr Baker says young people must be taught the skills for jobs of the future.
He warned that many white collar and professional jobs will be under threat from artificial intelligence.
"Jobs are being lost in professions we used to regard as careers for life."
Lord Baker has produced a report, the Digital Revolution, calling for the education system to respond to the way in which technological change will affect the future jobs market.
"The economy is changing at an unprecedented pace," he said.
"Artificial intelligence, robots, 3D printing and driverless vehicles will impact on sectors as varied as the legal profession, transport and construction."
Lord Baker, who heads the Edge charity, which promotes vocational education, says figures from the Bank of England show that automation could put 15 million jobs at risk.
But he warns that the provision of the necessary digital skills is "almost entirely absent from the core curriculum in mainstream schools".
The report calls for a stronger emphasis on work-related technical skills, linked to the impact of digital technology.
Try our calculator to see if your job is at risk of automation
Lord Baker says that schools should be able to teach computer science to GCSE, rather than modern languages, and wants at least half of all 16-year-olds to take the exam at that level.
He says that apprenticeships should be available from the age of 14, combining a "core academic curriculum with hands-on learning".
All primary schools should have 3D printers and design software, he says, and they should bring in outside experts to teach coding.
"We should not go back to a 19th Century diet of academic subjects for all. We need 21st Century education for a 21st Century economy," said Lord Baker. | Two men have been charged with murdering a 37-year-old man in Cardiff.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A Doctor Who rumour is flying around that has got everybody talking.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Schools should put a greater emphasis on teaching digital technology - as millions of jobs could be swept away by automation, says former education secretary Lord Kenneth Baker. |
Give a concise summary of the following information. | Curtis Lee Morrow, from Maymount Street in the city, was charged with six offences that were all alleged to have taken place on Friday, 20 March.
They include causing grievous bodily harm, possessing a weapon - namely a metal vacuum pipe - with intent to commit GBH and resisting police.
He was remanded into custody.
The 23-year-old is also accused of causing criminal damage and breaching a non-molestation order by being in the vicinity of Cloverfield Street.
No further details of the alleged offences were outlined during the hearing at Belfast Magistrates' Court on Saturday.
However, a police constable said he believed he could connect the accused to each of the charges.
Mr Morrow was granted legal aid and although he did not apply for bail, his solicitor indicated he would do at the next appearance.
The accused was remanded into custody to appear in court again on Monday by video link. | A man has appeared in court in Belfast accused of seriously injuring a woman by attacking her with a metal pipe from a vacuum cleaner. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | Bill Kintner retweeted a post implying that three female protesters were too unattractive to be sexually assaulted.
The tweet drew criticism from other lawmakers, who threatened to submit legislation to boot him out of office.
Hundreds of thousands of protesters around the world took to the street on Saturday, supporting a range of causes.
Mayor resigns over Michelle Obama post
Mr Kintner retweeted a comment Sunday by conservative radio personality Larry Elder that mocked female protesters.
Mr Elder had posted a photo of three women holding signs apparently referring to Mr Trump's taped boast about grabbing women by the genitalia.
The radio host had commented: "Ladies, I think you're safe."
On Wednesday morning Mr Kintner posted his resignation on Facebook saying: "I look forward to not having to spend 75 more days with politicians."
"To paraphrase Richard Nixon, You won't have Bill Kintner to kick around anymore," he added.
Mr Kintner had already been under fire for the past five months after a sex scandal provoked calls for him to resign.
The Republican lawmaker was fined $1,000 (£795) last year after admitting to using his work laptop computer to have cyber-sex with a stranger online.
Other politicians around the country have faced criticism over social media postings about Saturday's women's rights protests.
Indiana Republican state Senator Jack Sandlin shared a meme on Sunday showing women marching through Washington.
It included the caption: "In one day, Trump got more fat women out walking than Michelle Obama did in 8 years" - referencing the former first lady's fitness campaigns.
In a follow-up post, he denied having posted the image, implying that he had been the victim of hacking.
President Trump was criticised during his election campaign for implying that the women who had accused him of sexual assault were too unattractive for him.
A senior F1 source said Honda was "annoyed" by the development.
It follows the discovery of a loophole and subsequent clarification of the rules by the FIA, the governing body.
McLaren-Honda have been in contact with the FIA about the issue but said it would not comment further for now.
The situation has arisen because of a lack of clarity in the rules concerning permitted engine developments.
The intention was to freeze in-season development, to keep costs down.
Renault and Ferrari had wanted to end the ban in an attempt to close the gap on Mercedes, which had the dominant power-unit in 2014.
Honda has been told by the FIA it must submit its definitive 2015 engine designs by 28 February, whereas Renault, Ferrari and Mercedes can stagger improvements over the season if required.
Because Honda's new engine is racing for the first time 2015, the FIA believes it is "fair and equitable" that Honda complies with the same restrictions as its rivals last year.
Honda feels the ruling puts them at a disadvantage, and will meet the FIA next week to discuss the situation.
A senior figure from one of Honda's rivals said the changes "won't make that much difference".
Honda, which has returned to F1 this season following an absence of six years, has the option of lodging a protest against Ferrari, who discovered the loophole that has led to the change in interpretation of the rules by the FIA.
Renault, Ferrari and Mercedes have so far not responded to requests to comment from BBC Sport.
The season starts with the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne on 15 March. | A Nebraska state senator has resigned amid a political row sparked by a photo he posted on Twitter mocking women protesting against Donald Trump.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
McLaren and new engine partner Honda have queried a ruling that prevents them from improving their engine during the 2015 season but allows their rivals to do so. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | Resuming on 33-1, Machan (81) and Wells put on 134 for the second-wicket before Machan was bowled by Ravi Patel (4-42).
Wells fell to Patel shortly after for 61, but Yardy's innings of 70 at Lord's helped the visitors up to 300 all out - a first innings lead of 66.
At stumps, Middlesex were 47-0, with Sam Robson racing to 41 not out, trailing by 19 runs.
A worn-looking pitch made Machan's fine knock all the more impressive, with Yardy and Wells taking a more workmanlike approach to their innings.
Patel was not introduced to the Middlesex bowling attacking until 150 runs were on the board but in just his second over he removed Machan, going on to add Wells, Chris Nash and Ben Brown.
Just as the home side were threatening to take control at 216-6, a Sussex fight back began, with Ashar Zaidi putting on 38 with Yardy, followed by a useful 40 from Yardy and Ollie Robinson.
James Harris finished off the Sussex tail with the wickets of Yardy and Chris Liddle in three balls, leaving the match finely balanced, and allowing Middlesex's batsmen to make vital ground before stumps. | Half-centuries from Luke Wells, Matt Machan and Michael Yardy gave Sussex a first innings lead against Middlesex. |
Please summarize the given passage. | Dywedodd arweinydd y Ceidwadwyr ei bod eisiau'r "cytundeb gorau posib" i Gymru a gweddill y Deyrnas Unedig.
Yn y cyfamser, mynnodd Mrs May mai mater i'r grŵp Ceidwadol yn y Cynulliad oedd sefyllfa cyn-aelod UKIP, Mark Reckless, a'r drafodaeth ynglŷn â'i ganiatáu i gael eistedd â'r Ceidwadwyr yn y Senedd.
Daw ei sylwadau wedi ei hymweliad â Chymru ddydd Mawrth - ymweliad gafodd ei ddisgrifio gan Lafur fel "stynt".
Mewn cyfweliad ar raglen Good Morning Wales ar BBC Radio Wales ddydd Mercher, dywedodd Mrs May: "Nid yn unig ydw i eisiau'r cytundeb masnach gorau gyda'r Farchnad Sengl Ewropeaidd ar gyfer busnesau a ffermwyr Cymru a'r Deyrnas Unedig, 'dwi hefyd eisiau i ni agor marchnadoedd newydd ar draws y byd i bobl yma yng Nghymru gael masnachu gyda nhw.
"Bydd pob pleidlais i mi a'r Ceidwadwyr yma yng Nghymru ac ar draws y DU yn bleidlais fydd yn cryfhau fy sefyllfa yn y trafodaethau pwysig hynny."
Cyn i Mrs May gyhoeddi'r etholiad cyffredinol, fe ddatblygodd ffrae ym Mae Caerdydd wedi i'r Aelod Cynulliad, Mark Reckless, adael UKIP ac ymuno â grŵp y Ceidwadwyr yn y Cynulliad fel aelod annibynnol.
Pan ofynnwyd iddi a oedd ganddi hyder yn arweinyddiaeth Andrew RT Davies, dywedodd Mrs May: "Andrew Davies yw arweinydd y Ceidwadwyr Cymreig yn y Cynulliad."
Ychwanegodd: "Mae wedi bod yn gwneud gwaith da yn y Cynulliad Cenedlaethol. Nhw sydd i ddewis pwy sy'n eistedd gyda nhw.
"Mae Mark Reckless yn aelod annibynnol o'r Cynulliad."
Ddydd Mawrth, disgrifiodd y Prif Weinidog Carwyn Jones benderfyniad Mrs May i ymweld â chadarnle'r Blaid Lafur fel "stynt".
Dywedodd ei fod yn bwysig i bobl "weld y Torïaid am yr hyn ydyn nhw, eu syniad nhw o arwain yw dweud dim a gwneud dim".
"Rydyn ni eisiau cynnig gobaith," meddai, "a dweud wrth bobl nad oes rhaid i bethau fod fel hyn."
Dywedodd arweinydd Plaid Cymru yn San Steffan, Hywel Williams na fyddai ei blaid yn caniatáu "dinistriad bwriadol o ddiwydiant Cymru a chreu llwydni i genedlaethau o bobl ifanc".
"Bydd y Torïaid yn ennill yr etholiad yma," meddai. "Dyw'r blaid Lafur gwan a rhanedig ddim yn barod i ffurfio llywodraeth felly mae'r etholiad yma am yrru'r bobl gryfaf i San Steffan i sefyll i fyny yn erbyn y Torïaid i amddiffyn Cymru.
"Plaid Cymru yw'r unig blaid fydd yn sefyll i fyny yn San Steffan a sicrhau bod gwaith y llywodraeth yn gweithio dros Gymru, nid de-ddwyrain Lloegr yn unig."
Dywedodd llefarydd ar ran y Democratiaid Rhyddfrydol bod Brexit eisoes yn cael effaith yng Nghymru.
"Mae'r etholiad yma yn gyfle i newid cyfeiriad y wlad ac atal Brexit caled," meddai. | Mae'r Prif Weinidog Theresa May wedi dweud ei bod eisiau dod o hyd i farchnadoedd newydd i fusnesau o Gymru yn dilyn Brexit. |
Summarize this article briefly. | The club, whose Carrow Road ground is usually sold out, commissioned a study from the University of East Anglia.
Academics concluded that expanding the ground by 7,000 would be viable.
But chief executive David McNally said increasing the capacity would cost £20m and that continuing to strengthen the first-team squad would take priority.
In a webchat with fans on the club's website, Mr McNally said the UEA experts' findings supported the club's plans to increase the number of seats.
"This independent research project is really important as it deals with facts, such as population growth, and real numbers, such as socio-economic data, and not instinct or intuition," he wrote.
"And so we are convinced that an expansion of Carrow Road is something that the club should contemplate.
"However, circa 7,000 additional seats could cost approximately £20m. Currently, every spare penny is reinvested in the first team squad and this is something that board wishes to continue in the short term.
"Once we have become an established Premier League side then we may consider it viable to invest in the development of Carrow Road.
"In the meantime, we will look at a number of alternative schemes in order to ensure that we are properly prepared for expansion as and when it happens."
Norwich City returned to the Premier League last season after an absence of six years.
Carrow Road currently has a capacity of 27,200 and last season the average attendance for Premier League matches was 26,606.
Both the club and the UEA said the research study had been privately commissioned and would not be released. | Norwich City FC say they will consider expanding their stadium, but only after they have become an established Premier League side. |
Write a summary of this document. | The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) has completed an investigation into claims against Katy Bourne during last year's PCC election.
Its report has now been passed to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS).
In a statement, Ms Bourne's office said it would be "inappropriate to comment" until the matter was concluded.
"The office is aware the IPCC has passed its report into this complaint to the CPS," it said.
It is alleged Ms Bourne made a false statement during the 2016 election regarding her expenses while serving as the PCC.
An IPCC spokesman said: "A referral to the CPS is made when the IPCC investigation indicates that a criminal offence may have been committed.
"It does not mean that criminal charges will necessarily follow."
Manager Brendan Rodgers has two trophies in his debut season, following League Cup success in November, and has a Scottish Cup final with Aberdeen to look forward to next Saturday.
The Celtic class of 2016-17 have set a number of new SPL/Premiership-era records on their way to a sixth consecutive title.
Here are the key figures behind Scotland's 'invincibles'.
No Scottish champions have gone unbeaten since the late 19th century. Celtic managed it in 1897-98, with Rangers going one better the next season, winning every game. However, those league campaigns were over 18 matches, not even half the duration of the current one.
In the SPL/Premiership era, Celtic lost one game in their 2001-02 and 2013-14 successes.
In 1967-68, both winners Celtic and runners-up Rangers were beaten just once.
Only Juventus in Italy's Serie A (2011-12), Arsenal in England's Premier League (2003-04) and Barry Town in the League of Wales (1997-98) have been unbeaten champions over a 38-game campaign in recent history.
The previous Scottish record was 103 points, set by Celtic in 2001-02 - Martin O'Neill's second season in charge.
It is also a new European record, surpassing Welsh side Barry Town AFC, who reached 105 in 1996-97.
Juventus, Real Madrid and Barcelona are the other European sides to have hit 100 or more points in a season.
Again, Celtic surpassed a record of their own, having won 33 league games in the 2001-02 season.
The champions scored four goals or more on 14 occasions.
The biggest home win was 6-1 against Kilmarnock in September, while there were 5-0 away victories at Hearts and Partick Thistle.
Celtic needed a final-day victory to edge past the 29-point margin of victory they managed in 2013-14.
No mean feat considering runners-up Aberdeen set their best Premiership points tally with 76.
Paris St-Germain set a new European mark last season when they finished 31 points clear in Ligue 1.
Stuart Armstrong's second-half strike against Hearts on Sunday meant Celtic bettered the 105 league goals they scored in 2003-04.
The champions scored in every league outing, averaging just over 2.7 goals a game.
In 1966-67, under the legendary Jock Stein, Celtic netted 111 goals in 34 Division One games, returning an eye-watering 196 in all competitions on their way to a domestic treble and European Cup glory.
The title was wrapped up in early April with a thumping 5-0 win at Tynecastle.
The previous record was seven games to spare, set by Rangers in 1928-29 and equalled by Celtic in 2013-14, both over 38-game campaigns like this one. | Prosecutors are to decide whether the Sussex Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) should face charges over allegations she made a false statement.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Champions Celtic completed an unbeaten Scottish Premiership campaign with a 2-0 win over Hearts at Celtic Park on Sunday. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | The Labour leader said he was not "one of the doom-mongers" who thought new technology would "inevitably herald an era of mass unemployment".
But he argued that adapting the UK for the jobs of the future "can't simply be left to the market".
A recent report suggested robots could affect 30% of British jobs by 2030.
The PwC study estimated that nearly a third of existing jobs in the UK were potentially under threat from automation, compared with 38% in the US and 21% in Japan, with manufacturing and retail at the greatest risk.
"Technological change, from automation to decarbonisation, means many jobs and industries will disappear or shrink in the coming years and decades," Mr Corbyn told business leaders in London.
"At every stage of economic and industrial history, jobs, industries and skills have been lost, replaced and transformed.
"But when that happens at huge social cost, as it did for example in the very early days of the industrial revolution... people in desperation opposed mechanisation and opposed the bringing in of machines because they got no benefit from it."
He added: "We can't simply leave it to the market."
Instead, the public sector should "work with business to manage the social and economic effects of rapid technological change".
Rejecting a pessimistic view of increasing automation, Mr Corbyn told the British Chambers of Commerce annual conference: "As with every other technological revolution, disappearing jobs will be replaced with new, as yet unforeseen forms of work."
In its election manifesto, Labour promised that if it won power all further education courses would be free as part of a new national education service, with fees for adult education courses scrapped.
Mr Corbyn called for a "step-change in skills and training", with anyone able to retrain at any point in their life.
He also said there had been a "deep-rooted historical snobbishness" towards technical subjects.
Mr Corbyn said there had been a "lost decade" in terms of wages and output and argued that businesses would prosper if education was "given laser-like attention by a committed government".
The Conservatives have set a goal of creating three million new apprenticeships by 2020 as part of efforts to address skills gaps which British business has warned is holding the country back.
To help pay for this, firms with a pay bill of £3m have had to pay an apprenticeship levy since April.
Among the other speakers was Education Secretary Justine Greening, who told the conference that technical and further education needed more support and investment.
"A skills revolution needs a technical education revolution," she said, calling on businesses to support so-called "T-level" technical qualifications in England and work placements.
A songwriter called Katie Farrah Sopher claims Disclosure's White Noise, Latch and You and Me feature song words taken from her personal songbook, according to the Mail on Sunday.
Sopher is claiming a reported £200,000 in damages for the tracks.
She accuses ex-boyfriend Sean Sawyers of stealing the songbook and selling lyrics to music industry contacts.
The songwriter claims the book features lyrical content inspired by a "toxic" relationship with Sawyers.
In addition to the accusations towards her ex-boyfriend, Sopher is personally suing Disclosure and their collaborators on the three tracks; Sam Smith, AlunaGeorge and Eliza Doolittle.
White Noise, which features AlunaGeorge peaked at number two in the UK, while You & Me featuring Eliza Doolittle reached number 10.
Latch, got to number 11 in the UK and features Sam Smith.
All three of the tracks appear on Disclosure's number one debut album Settle.
Sopher, from East London, is also seeking damages from dance duo AlunaGeorge, both for their contribution to White Noise and because she claims she wrote lyrics which appear in their top 20 single Attracting Flies.
According to the Mail On Sunday, Sawyer denies all allegations and says he's never seen the book in question.
Newsbeat has contacted all of the artists accused of using Sopher's lyrics but there has been no comment.
Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter, BBCNewsbeat on Instagram and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube | The state should work with business to help the UK maximise the benefits of automation and other technological changes, Jeremy Corbyn has said.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Disclosure and Sam Smith are among four artists being sued over the use of lyrics which it's claimed were stolen. |
Summarize the content provided below. | Edinburgh routes to and from Milngavie and Helensburgh were disrupted due to fire damage on the line on Wednesday 18 January.
Some trains were cancelled the following day and others were started or terminated in Airdrie or Bathgate.
The 14-year-old will be reported to the children's reporter.
A ScotRail Alliance spokesman said: "This incident needlessly disrupted the travel plans of thousands of customers during one of our busiest periods.
"We always support the British Transport Police in its inquiries and efforts to bring those responsible for crime on the railway to justice."
It reported pre-tax profit up 15.8% to £690m in the first half of the year.
The world's largest advertising group said worldwide GDP growth "seems to have slowed in the second half of last year and into the new year".
The firm said trading in the UK was stronger in July, "perhaps reflecting a post-Brexit vote recovery, driven by a weaker pound sterling".
WPP chief executive Sir Martin Sorrell had previously warned about the impact of leaving the EU on the UK economy.
Speaking to the BBC, Sir Martin said that he was pleased with the company's performance post-Brexit, acknowledging that the UK had "perked up" in July after the vote.
But he suggested that it might have been even stronger without the referendum. Overall, he said it was too early to tell how the vote to leave the EU would affect the economy.
Asked if he wanted Brexit negotiations to start as soon as possible, in other words triggering the "article 50" clause which would prompt the exit talks, Sir Martin said: "Basically, yes."
"What business wants is things resolved as quickly as possible, but practically, that's pretty impossible," he said, adding that the government needed time to negotiate.
"We've outsourced trade negotiations for the last 10 years or so, so building an organisation that can negotiate all these trade agreements... is a very big task and will take a long time."
In its release, WPP said there was "limited likelihood of a worldwide recession" but named Russia, Brazil and the UK as possible countries that could see two quarters of negative growth.
WPP's like-for-like net sales grew 3.8% for the six months to 30 June.
Shares in the company were the biggest risers on the FTSE 100, up more than 6% in afternoon trade, as analysts hailed the results as "robust".
"Quite apart from the immediate boost to the quality of its overseas earnings given the weakness of sterling in the wake of Brexit, "maxi-quadrennial" events such as the Olympics and the impending US elections also provide an environment in which the company will typically prosper," said Richard Hunter from Wilson King Investment Management. | A West Lothian schoolboy has been charged with wilful fire-raising following damage on a railway line near Blackridge station.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Advertising giant WPP says it is "grinding out" growth as clients remain cautious amid slower global growth. |
Summarize the content provided below. | Kevin McGirr, 40, had been charged with the theft of the rare copy of Harry Potter and The Philosopher's Stone.
The book, worth about £6,000, went missing from the Creative Art Gallery in Woodstock, Oxfordshire, in October.
McGirr, of Oxford Road, Kidlington, was jailed for six weeks after changing his plea to guilty at Banbury Magistrates' Court earlier.
He was also ordered to pay compensation of £250, and £400 in legal costs.
The JK Rowling book was found wrapped in a plastic bag outside a Boots store in Abingdon on 15 November.
Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, the first novel in the series, was first published in 1997.
It was later made into a feature film starring Daniel Radcliffe as the young wizard. | A man has been jailed after he admitted stealing a limited first edition Harry Potter book from an art gallery. |
Write a summary for the following excerpt. | The results, written up by MIT Review, revealed that its IQ was equivalent to that of a four-year-old.
Increasingly machines are getting better at specific tasks such as playing chess, recognising pictures and making complex commutations.
But general intelligence is still proving elusive for most of them.
The MIT machine - dubbed ConceptNet4 - was put through its paces by researchers from the University of Illinois, led by Stellan Ohlsson.
The IQ test they chose, known as the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence, is commonly used in US schools.
It is designed for young children and measures intelligence in five categories:
The questions had to be modified for the computer and some programming was necessary to allow the machine to understand what it was being asked.
It did well on vocabulary and similarities, had an average score on information and scored poorly in the word reasoning and comprehension categories.
"The ConceptNet scored a [mark] that is average for a four-year-old child, but below average for five to seven-year-olds," the researchers concluded.
A lot depended on how the machine interpreted the questions. For instance, in answer to the question 'Why do we shake hands?", the machine produced the result "epileptic fit".
But when the team reduced the question to just "shake hand", the computer came back with more relevant answers such as "flirt", "thanks" and "meet friend".
Sometimes its answers appeared completely illogical - in response to the question "Where can you find a teacher?", it came back with "piano" and "band".
The researchers could not explain such anomalies but did suggest ways that the test could be improved - for instance, inputting questions using natural language via a virtual assistant such as Siri or Cortana.
The history of AI research stretches back to the 1950s. In the early days, computers were given knowledge bases and worked things out using logic and reasoning. That method of teaching computers has been surpassed in recent decades by a new era of machine learning, where AIs are given large quantities of data from which they can learn.
The researchers concluded that both approaches might be useful in future.
"In general, recent successes in AI have been mostly learning-driven and the era of knowledge-driven AI appears to have passed. Perhaps knowledge bases that are a hybrid of the two paradigms will play a role in the next round of AI progress."
The BBC recently ran a season of AI coverage - you can catch up on the series in the Intelligent Machines index.
Here are a few of the highlights:
Last season's 24-goal man, Andy Cook, put the hosts ahead with his second of this campaign after battling past two defenders on the left and slamming home.
Though the score was close, Tranmere in truth should have won by more. James Norwood headed Steven Jennings' corner against the post and Cook was denied by a clearance off the line.
Alex Flisher levelled midway through the second half, squeezing the ball under Scott Davies.
However Steve McNulty bundled home a deserved winner 10 minutes from time, as another Jennings corner caused trouble in the Maidstone box.
Report supplied by the Press Association
Match ends, Tranmere Rovers 2, Maidstone United 1.
Second Half ends, Tranmere Rovers 2, Maidstone United 1.
Substitution, Tranmere Rovers. Adam Mekki replaces James Norwood.
Substitution, Maidstone United. Dan Sweeney replaces James Rogers.
Goal! Tranmere Rovers 2, Maidstone United 1. Steve McNulty (Tranmere Rovers).
Substitution, Tranmere Rovers. Jake Kirby replaces Connor Jennings.
Goal! Tranmere Rovers 1, Maidstone United 1. Alex Flisher (Maidstone United).
Substitution, Maidstone United. Dumebi Dumaka replaces Tom Murphy.
Second Half begins Tranmere Rovers 1, Maidstone United 0.
First Half ends, Tranmere Rovers 1, Maidstone United 0.
Goal! Tranmere Rovers 1, Maidstone United 0. Andy Cook (Tranmere Rovers).
First Half begins.
Lineups are announced and players are warming up. | An artificial intelligence system (AI) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has taken an IQ test designed for a young child.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Tranmere won their fifth National League fixture to start the season, this time 2-1 at home to Maidstone. |
Please provide a summary for the content below. | Dressed in a dark navy suit, the 79-year-old was supported by the use of a cane and Keisha Knight Pulliam, the woman who played his precocious daughter, Rudy Huxtable, on the landmark television series The Cosby Show.
But his reputation as a fatherly figure has been overshadowed in recent years by the more than 50 women who have come forward to accuse him of sexual assault.
The actor and comedian is facing three counts of felony aggravated indecent assault stemming from a 2004 incident in which former Temple University employee Andrea Constand claims he drugged and molested her.
He maintains his innocence, though some among the chorus of women who have offered up similar accounts appeared in court in Norristown, Pennsylvania, wearing pins with the words emblazoned: "We stand in truth."
Though the allegations have tarnished Mr Cosby's reputation, the actor has long been considered a Hollywood trailblazer for African Americans.
He rose to fame as the first black actor to star in a major drama series, I Spy, in 1965. The role earned him three of his four Emmy awards before he created several shows including the influential The Cosby Show in 1984.
Darnell Hunt, the director of the Ralph J Bunche Center for African American Studies at UCLA, says his depiction of an upwardly mobile African-American family transcended race and broke new ground in an era otherwise criticised for portraying the "ghetto-centric" black stereotypes.
"It showed that black people were American, too, which was sort of Cosby's political philosophy," he said.
"It was and is still one of the most talked about TV shows ever and it certainly had a huge impact on this sort of whole discussion of images of black people and media."
In fact, Mr Cosby enlisted Harvard psychiatrist Dr Alvin Poussaint as a consultant to ensure the scripts underscored a genuine family dynamic.
Which is why it may be difficult for some Americans to separate the career he has made on promoting family values and education from the man Assistant District Attorney Kristin Feden accused of being a sexual predator in court on Monday.
Mr Cosby and one of his daughters have recently suggested race played a role in the allegations against him.
The suggestion sparked outrage among some critics who point to previous comments he made in which he criticised single African-American mothers and young black men.
"Many blacks felt it was him talking down to them and blaming them as opposed to the systemic forces that keep black people subordinated," says Mr Hunt.
"But the sad reality is race is always a factor in America and that lens will be significant regardless of whether or not the allegations are racially motivated," says Mr Hunt, who wrote OJ Simpson Facts and Fictions, a book on the racial divide and perception of the American footballer's famous trial.
"There is probably a lot of ambivalence in the black community with respect to the meaning of all of this," he added. "People are probably waiting to see how all of this works out with the trial."
Some Philadelphia residents like Rickey A Rivera, who lives in Mr Cosby's childhood neighbourhood, remain convinced the case has racial undertones.
"He can never be who he was and that's what's sad to me," Mr Rivera says.
Other Philadelphia residents have struggled to reconcile how to talk about the local hero and the allegations against him.
A mural that once stood on Broad Street depicting Mr Cosby and other famed fathers has disappeared, but another still stands amid the housing projects where he grew up in North Philadelphia's Poplar neighbourhood.
William "Buddy" Savin, who owns a funeral home in the area, points out his own partially eroded image on a similar pillar beneath an overpass less than 100ft (30 metres) away from the portrait of Mr Cosby.
Mr Cosby is seen flashing his signature grin, holding his fist in what appears to be a nod to black power as children play in the foreground.
Mr Savin grew up with Mr Cosby in the Richard Allen housing project and spoke to him as recently as last week about the death of a mutual friend and Philadelphia jazz legend, Mickey Roker.
The projects have mostly been torn down and replaced with new rows of town homes, but remnants of a past life - and Mr Cosby's legacy - still exist.
"He was a black person who made it but he never forgot his roots," Mr Savin says. "He always came back to the projects."
Though some residents are cagey when asked about Mr Cosby, everyone seems to have an anecdote about the comedian.
A women standing in her front yard not far from where his house stood explains how she once saw Mr Cosby perform at her high school, but demurs when asked about her feelings on him now.
"I have his autograph," she tells the BBC. "That's all I can say about him."
But Mr Savin is happy to recount Mr Cosby's community work despite the scandal that has engulfed him over the last few years.
A bespectacled man dressed in a pinstriped suit, he recalls how Mr Cosby returned to the neighbourhood when the new Richard Allen townhomes opened in 2003.
He speaks about Mr Cosby's generous funding for dozens of children's education and his contributions to the nearby Temple University.
The Temple "T" logo stands tall atop a building visible from the Richard Allen homes.
Mr Cosby, one of the Temple's most famous alumni, is often credited with helping to transform Temple from a local school to a nationally recognised university.
The school, just blocks away, is where he met Ms Constand while serving on the school's board of trustees.
In the wake of the allegations, Temple eventually joined a growing number of colleges and universities that revoked the dozens of honorary degrees he received over the years. He was also removed from the board of trustees.
Mr Cosby's presence on campus has mostly been erased, but university students like Olivia Jefferson, 25, remain conflicted.
"He was the ideal black father. He showed this image personally we didn't see in the black community often growing up," she says. "And all these allegations coming out, it's a betrayal." | Less than two weeks before Father's Day, the man once affectionately known as America's Dad stepped back into the public spotlight to defend his legacy as he faced one of dozens of sexual assault allegations against him. |
Provide a concise overview of the following information. | Former Bristol Rovers man Brunt, 23, has been out since March 2016 with a cruciate ligament injury.
He has scored 13 goals in 57 appearances for the Pilgrims, but is out of contract this summer.
Ijaha, 27, has had an operation on a pelvic problem and has made just three appearances in League Two this term.
"Neither of those two will play again this season," Adams told BBC Sport.
"With six games to go, if they get themselves back into full-time training there are a good number of players that are well ahead of them so it's not going to be possible for them.
"We'll get them back to full-time training as quickly as possible and give them the best opportunity."
Plymouth are currently second in the League Two table, with a 10-point cushion in the automatic promotion places.
She led a ceremony to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the coup that brought the general to power.
She demanded an end to impunity and said Chileans had the right to find out what happened to the victims.
The opposition has boycotted an official ceremony to mark the coup.
At the ceremony, centre-right President Sebastian Pinera criticised the "violent coup that started a 17-year period of military rule".
But he said it was "the predictable outcome" after "repeated violations of the rule of law" under the government of socialist President Salvador Allende.
He denounced the violations committed during the period and said: "Many of us could have done a great deal more to safeguard the respect of human rights."
The event, at the presidential palace in Santiago, was attended by Ms Bachelet's rival in November's presidential election, Evelyn Matthei.
During the opposition ceremony held earlier at the capital's Museum of Memory and Human Rights, Ms Bachelet dismissed the view that Chile was on the verge of a civil war in 1973.
"It is fair to say there was a lack of dialogue and a polarisation of the politics then. But it is unfair to say that the the military coup was inevitable," she said.
She said "painful wounds" were reopened every time Chile looked into its past, but said the aim was not to victimise anyone, but "to get to know the truth."
More than 3,000 people are estimated to have been killed during Gen Augusto Pinochet's government, which came into power on 11 September 1973.
Mr Allende committed suicide inside the presidential palace - Palacio de la Moneda - after it was encircled by troops and bombed by Chilean air force planes.
According to official figures, some 40,000 people were victims of human rights abuses, including Ms Bachelet and her mother, who were tortured before going into exile.
She returned to Chile after the end of Gen Pinochet's rule and was elected the country's first woman president.
The BBC's Gideon Long in Santiago says 40 years on, Chile is still split over the events that preceded the coup and General Pinochet's legacy.
These divisions are evident in the campaign to succeed Mr Pinera.
Chileans go to the polls on 17 November to choose between Ms Bachelet and Ms Matthei, the daughters of two generals who were good friends and neighbours until the 1973 coup.
Gen Alberto Bachelet, who remained loyal to Mr Allende, was arrested, tortured and died in detention. Gen Fernando Matthei became a senior member of Gen Pinochet's regime. | Manager Derek Adams has confirmed Plymouth Argyle striker Ryan Brunt and midfielder David Ijaha will not play again this season.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Chilean opposition leader Michelle Bachelet has called for a full investigation on the human rights abuses committed during Gen Pinochet's rule. |
Summarize the passage below. | Almost 400 staff at the local authority took voluntary redundancy packages last year.
Information on a "early release scheme" is to be made available to workers online in the effort to achieve a further reduction in posts.
The GMB union, which represents many said it was disappointed at the level of cuts proposed.
It warns that a further reduction in the council's workforce will increase work loads on remaining employees and affect the running of services.
Bill Fernie, Highland Council's budget leader, told BBC Alba that the early release scheme should mean compulsory redundancies could be avoided. | Highland Council is to seek a cut of "at least" 200 jobs to help it make budget savings. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | The Proteas face England in three one-day internationals, the first of which is at Headingley on Wednesday.
Hosts England are one of the favourites to win the 2017 Champions Trophy, starting on 1 June, having exited at the group stages of the 2015 World Cup.
"They did really well to come back from that," said De Villiers.
Eoin Morgan's side have lost just one one-day series at home, against world champions Australia, since defeat by Bangladesh knocked them out of the World Cup.
"They are a really talented group of players - the way they came back from that earned a lot of respect around the world," added De Villiers.
"They must be one of the favourites, in their home country and playing some really good cricket of late."
South Africa are top of the ODI rankings but De Villiers, 33, said his side will be wary of facing England's "stand-out player" Ben Stokes.
All-rounder Stokes, 25, scored his maiden Twenty20 century for Rising Pune Supergiant in the Indian Premier League, also taking 12 wickets, but will not play in the final after being recalled by England.
"He's definitely got something special about him," said De Villiers.
"A lot of guys lose their way in the IPL, and others find the next level in their game - Ben Stokes definitely lifted his game and I think it would have done him the world of good."
South Africa also take on England in three Twenty20 internationals and four Tests this summer, but De Villiers has ruled himself out of the Test series in order to rest.
"I haven't retired - but I'm not going to change my decision," he said.
"I'll look indecisive, but it's important that I'm feeling physically and mentally healthy, and that's what I decided on."
Marvin Rees said there was little point in having a "black-and-white argument over cuts or no cuts".
He was speaking after hundreds of people gathered to call for justice for the victims of the Grenfell Tower fire.
A rival for his job said protest was "often the only way people feel they can make their voices heard".
Mr Rees, who took over as the Labour mayor of Bristol last year, said in October that budget cuts of £92m had to be made to Bristol City Council's budget by 2022.
Earlier this month, proposals including the end of funding for some libraries, the closure of public toilets and reducing funding for lollipop ladies were put forward to help balance the books.
Following the protest, Mr Rees said the city needed "a constructive but challenging relationship with government, not just a combative one".
"We welcome constructive debate, but Bristol would be better served by a positive focus on what we can achieve together, rather than a black-and-white argument over 'cuts or no cuts'," he said.
"If someone has better ideas that could really work, I'd urge them to come to the table rather than shouting from the sidelines."
The protest was the latest in a series of marches in Bristol in recent weeks, and organisers insisted that continued protest was vital.
Jane McDowell, from Bristol housing campaign group Acorn, said the Grenfell Tower fire "typifies austerity and why we need to put our foot down against it".
Green Party former mayoral candidate Tony Dyer said: "We need to recognise that public protest is often effective.
"This is why politicians are keen to be at the forefront of marches when they or their party are not the target."
The two blocks of six and seven storeys will be built between Belfast Metropolitan College and the Public Records Office for Northern Ireland.
The proposal also includes over 14,000 sq m of space for research and development.
The minister, Mark H Durkan, said the development would provide "much needed" high specification office space.
He added: "It is anticipated that once completed this building will accommodate 2,000 workers at this highly desirable waterfront location.
"Having this in place should help attract investment and encourage further job creation."
The US bank Citigroup occupies a substantial amount of office space in Titanic Quarter but it is not clear if a tenant has been identified for the new development.
High-end office space in Belfast has been dwindling as little development has taken place in the aftermath of the property crash.
However some new development is now beginning to take place.
Belfast Harbour Commission is currently developing office space in a project known as City Quays 1. | England's one-day team have "earned a lot of respect" after recovering from hitting "rock bottom" in 2015, says South Africa captain AB de Villiers.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The mayor of Bristol has told anti-austerity campaigners to come up with better ideas, rather than shouting from the sidelines.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A £20m office development in Belfast's Titanic Quarter has been given the go-ahead by the environment minister. |
Summarize the content given in the passage. | A renowned investigative reporter, she had focused on businesses and offshore bank accounts allegedly linked to the family of President Ilham Aliyev.
Human rights organisations have complained that the trial was politically motivated.
Two prominent activists were jailed last month on similar charges.
Leyla Yunus and her husband Arif were given jail terms of eight and a half years and seven years, respectively.
Ismayilova: Giving Azerbaijan's government a headache
The Azerbaijan government said at the time the couple's court process had been open and free and that judicial independence and the rule of law were "fully guaranteed".
Responding to the latest verdict, Council of Europe Secretary General Thorbjorn Jagland linked the cases and spoke of a worrying trend against human rights activists and journalists.
He said the developments had a "chilling effect on freedom of expression in the country".
Human Rights Watch condemned the sentence as "outrageous".
Amnesty International accused the government of stepping up "its brutal crackdown" on journalists, political and human rights activists - "indeed anyone who dares to publicly raise a critical voice".
Although President Aliyev is accused of jailing opponents and clamping down on dissent, Azerbaijan has been openly courted by the West thanks to substantial gas reserves seen as a possible alternative to Russian supplies.
Addressing the court on Monday, Ismayilova, 39, said it was not a coincidence that she had been charged with embezzlement and tax evasion as these were the crimes she had written and spoken about as a journalist.
She was cleared of a separate charge of inciting a former colleague to suicide because, she said, she had refused to bow to government blackmail and had come out stronger.
Arrested in December last year, Ismayilova had become a recognised daily talk show presenter at Radio Azadliq, RFE/RL's Azeri service.
In 2011, intimate pictures and a video emerged of her with her boyfriend which had been captured by a hidden camera. A letter with the pictures warned her to stop investigating alleged government corruption.
Government officials and pro-government media outlets have accused her of being "pro-Armenian" or an "international agent". | Leading Azerbaijan journalist Khadija Ismayilova has been sentenced to seven and a half years in jail for embezzlement and tax evasion. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | The tournament's recent history has offered little other than unrelenting misery for Robben and Bayern - but the agony is over after a colourful, enthralling final that confirmed Germany as the new power base of European domestic football.
Bayern had lost two finals in three years, including defeat on penalties to Chelsea in their own Allianz Arena 12 months ago, but on this occasion they cast off the tag of losers to claim the crown for the fifth time.
Only Real Madrid (nine) and AC Milan (seven) have won this tournament more times and the taste of victory was even sweeter for 29-year-old Robben and veteran Bayern coach Jupp Heynckes, who steps aside to hand over to Pep Guardiola at the end of this season.
"Bayern Munich were magnificent but the man who should take all the plaudits is manager Jupp Heynckes. He has changed this team completely, he has got them fitter than Dortmund. He has got wingers Franck Ribery and Arjen Robben so fit. He has changed their mentality and he deserves this win."
Read Steve's final analysis
Heynckes will have the chance to bow out with a Treble; Bayern have already won their league and face VfB Stuttgart in the German Cup final next Saturday.
Robben was reduced to tears at the final whistle after playing in Bayern's losing finals against Inter Milan and Chelsea, when he missed an extra-time penalty, and also losing semi-finals to Liverpool in 2005 and 2007 during his Stamford Bridge career.
And for 68-year-old elder statesman Heynckes, this was the perfect parting gift and proof of his enduring powers. He has provided a hard act for Guardiola to follow, even with his outstanding track record of success at Barcelona, which included two Champions League triumphs.
Robben, however, was the central figure as he set up Mario Mandzukic's first for Bayern on the hour but Dortmund, under the guidance of charismatic coach Jurgen Klopp, quickly equalised through Ilkay Gundogan's penalty after Dante fouled Marco Reus.
And Robben finally had his revenge on a competition that has been so cruel to him in the past, showing great composure to taken Frank Ribery's flick in his stride in the 89th minute and beat Dortmund's outstanding keeper Roman Weidenfeller.
Robben's goal was the decisive moment of a Champions League final that saw the Bundesliga come to London and deliver a powerful statement of intent about its current status.
As well as the quality of the football, which was truly exceptional, the supporters of Dortmund and Bayern splashed their yellow and red colours spectacularly across Wembley's canvas and the dignity and grace in defeat and victory of Klopp and Heynckes only confirmed this was an occasion that did great credit to these two German heavyweights.
Heynckes cut a mellow figure beside the animated Klopp in Wembley's technical area but Dortmund's coach, with his flamboyant gestures and trademark grin, has established a reputation as one of football's most significant figures.
And he will know, just as much as his players, that this was an opportunity missed by Dortmund. They paid a heavy price for failing to capitalise on a first half hour in which they dominated Bayern and were only kept at bay by the brilliance of Germany keeper Manuel Neuer.
The intense pressing style that is the trademark of Klopp's team pushed Bayern on to the back foot in the opening phases and left Dortmund regretting they did not take at least one of a succession of opportunities.
Neuer made five important saves in the first 35 minutes as Dortmund tested Bayern in a manner that proved way beyond Barcelona when they were humiliated 7-0 over two legs in the semi-final.
He thwarted Robert Lewandowski twice and saved superbly at his near post from Reus, who saw another shot blocked. Neuer was also tested by Sven Bender.
Reus then tested Neuer once more as Dortmund poured forward, urged on from the technical area by the animated Klopp as he delivered a constant stream of encouragement and applause in the direction of his players.
Bayern - finally emerging as an attacking force - may have had the feeling it was going to be another night of Champions League final misery when Weidenfeller touched Mandzukic's header on to the bar and denied Robben one-on-one before unwittingly blocking another effort from the eventual match-winner with his face.
The Bundesliga champions had been a growing threat after a poor start and the breakthrough finally came on the hour when Ribery played in Robben and his cross gave Mandzukic the simplest of tasks to finish from six yards.
Dortmund required a swift response and it came inside seven minutes - thanks to a piece of recklessness from Dante.
The Bayern defender, who had already been booked, needlessly raised his foot and caught Reus in the stomach. Gundogan stepped forward to score coolly from the penalty spot.
It took a magnificent piece of last-ditch defending from Neven Subotic to keep Dortmund on terms. Thomas Mueller rounded Weidenfeller and his shot looked destined for the net until the lunging Subotic somehow recovered to clear, prompting a fierce fist-pumping response from Klopp.
Both goalkeepers had been outstanding throughout and it was Weidenfeller's turn to demonstrate his ability once more with fine stops from David Alaba and Bastian Schweinsteiger as this enthralling final drew towards a climax.
It was Robben who made the decisive contribution and when Italian referee Nicola Rizzoli sounded the final whistle to start wild Bayern celebrations, he was reduced to tears as he finally realised his dream. | Arjen Robben's late winner exorcised the demons that have haunted him and Bayern Munich in the Champions League as they won a pulsating all-Bundesliga encounter against Borussia Dortmund. |
Write a summary of this document. | The Stornoway-based crew was training in the area where the whale was spotted west of Lewis earlier this week.
It was thought the whale was entangled in rope, or another object.
Members of British Divers Marine Life Rescue were later able to reach the whale by boat and found it to be swimming strongly and healthy. | A coastguard helicopter crew took film footage of a humpback whale off the Isle of Lewis following concerns that the animal was in distress. |
Summarize the provided section. | Stephen Jones heard the crash from his parents' home near Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, on Sunday night.
He jumped into the 12ft (3.6m) deep North Level Drain as her car sank and pulled the driver free in pitch black darkness.
The 34-year-old said his heroics were "what anyone would do".
The woman was unhurt but later charged with drink-driving.
More news from Cambridgeshire
Mr Jones, from Woking, Surrey, was visiting his parents in Parson Drove when they heard "an almighty sound" at about 21:15 BST.
The car had careered through metal railings and plunged into the middle of the water where it started sinking, he said.
"I think the the scary bit was the fact you could hear the person inside the car screaming for help, which was terrifying.
"I went straight into the water and tried to open the doors first of all, but couldn't.
"Luckily the windows were already smashed, so I went underwater and unlocked the doors and just had a feel around.
"I managed to feel someone in there and pulled them out."
Mr Jones said he was in the "freezing, pitch black water" for about four minutes trying to free the woman.
Police, the fire service, an ambulance and air ambulance were all called to the scene and were "amazing", he added.
Mr Jones was later praised by police on Twitter, who wrote: "Steve, thank you for your life-saving actions."
"It could have been an awful lot worse than it was. I just did what any human would have done if you heard screams," Mr Jones said.
"The fire chief told me [the woman] would certainly have drowned if I hadn't gone in to help."
The woman, 58, from Spalding in Lincolnshire, will appear before Peterborough magistrates on 17 May. | A woman whose car plunged into a river was saved from "certain drowning" by a man who dived into the water after hearing her screams. |
Can you write a brief summary of this passage? | The Glasgow-based company said it had acquired Colton Packaging Teesside in a deal worth up to £1.25m.
Colton was part of Colton Packaging, an established regional distributor of protective packaging materials based in Leicester.
Last year the Teesside operation generated sales of about £3m.
Macfarlane is paying an initial sum of just over £1m for Colton, which is based in Thornaby near Middlesbrough. It will pay a further £200,000 if Colton achieves "key financial objectives" in the 12 months following the acquisition.
Macfarlane has made several acquisitions in recent years in an effort to expand its packaging distribution offering.
In 2014, it bought Network Packaging and Lane Packaging, and last August it acquired Nottingham-based One Packaging Ltd.
Macfarlane chief executive Peter Atkinson said: "Colton Packaging Teesside is a high quality business with a good team of people who will complement the Macfarlane Packaging Distribution business based in Newcastle and strengthen Macfarlane's presence in the north east of England."
Macfarlane Group currently employs more than 750 people at 28 sites, mainly in the UK and Ireland.
Fiji international prop Saulo, 28, who will tour with his country this summer, has joined from Toulon.
Samoa international lock Paulo, 29, has signed following the end of his contract at Bennetton Treviso.
Flanker Schatz, 26, who has made two appearances for Australia, arrives from the Melbourne Rebels.
The Premiership club have now signed 10 players since gaining promotion from the Championship.
John Welch, 74, from Corsham and his partner Eileen Swannack, 73, from Biddestone, have been formally identified as victims of the attack.
The couple had been together for nearly a decade and had travelled to Tunisia twice a year for the past eight years.
They had been officially listed as missing since the attack in Sousse on 26 June.
Relatives of Ms Swannack and Mr Welch are getting family liaison officer support.
On Wednesday a book of condolence opened at St Nicholas' Church in Biddestone to remember the couple.
The first bodies of those killed have arrived back in the UK but the process of identifying victims continues in Sousse.
Thirty of the 38 victims are thought to have been British. | Macfarlane Group has continued to expand its packaging distribution business by buying a north of England firm.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Newly-promoted London Irish have added Manasa Saulo, Teofilo Paulo and Jake Schatz to their ranks for the new Premiership season.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A Wiltshire couple were among Britons killed by a gunman in Tunisia, police have confirmed. |
Summarize the information given below. | Jessamy O'Neill, of Swanscombe near Dartford, said she was sickened when she discovered the page, which has been "liked" by more than 21,000 people.
The introduction states: "There are no boundaries on offensiveness; post anything you like."
She asked Facebook to remove the group but it said it did not break any rules.
Ms O'Neill, who lost her unborn baby to a rare chromosome disorder a year and a half ago, discovered the page when she went on Facebook to seek support.
She said: "It's not even a joke, it's sickening and it's wrong and it causes hurt.
"If it was racist, sexist or pornographic it would be pulled down straight away but why, when it's an innocent child, is it not?"
She has now set up a page called Get Dead Baby Jokes Page Banned which is currently supported by about 580 people.
In a statement, Facebook said: "We take our Statement of Rights and Responsibilities very seriously and react quickly to remove reported content that violates our policies.
"In general, groups devoted to jokes, even disgusting and distasteful ones, do not violate our policies. Where these groups make real threats or statements of hate, however, we will remove them."
Simon Dean took charge after ministers put Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board in special measures amid concerns about management failings.
A report also condemned poor treatment of mental health patients at Glan Clwyd Hospital as "institutional abuse".
Mr Dean said his priority was to "get out and about and listen to people".
Meeting families of patients on the Tawel Fan mental health ward had been a "powerful and humbling experience", he said.
The deputy chief executive of the Wales NHS was asked by Health Minister Mark Drakeford to run Wales' largest health board following the suspension of its chief executive Trevor Purt earlier in June.
Mr Dean said he did not know how long he would be in charge as he sought to provide "stability and leadership".
"I don't see myself as the saviour of Betsi. This is a team effort. I see my role as being a catalyst," he said.
The 100-day plans will set out objectives and milestones, but that does not mean everything will be resolved in that time, he added.
Mr Dean said people would be held to account where it was required.
"We have to see special measures as an opportunity rather than a challenge. I am very heartened by the way staff have responded," he said. | A Kent woman who lost her baby 24 weeks into her pregnancy has started a campaign against a Facebook group which shares jokes about dead babies.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The man given the job of running the NHS in north Wales has asked staff for 100-day plans to turn the region's troubled health service around. |
Write a short summary of the following excerpt. | Spokesman Peter Cook said it was one of several incidents of Iranian vessels harassing US ships in the past week.
Mr Cook said the intention of the Iranian ships was unclear but their behaviour was unacceptable, as the boats were in international waters.
But Iran's Defence Minister, General Hosein Dehghan, said the US ships were in Iranian waters.
He said his forces would warn or confront any foreign ship that entered his country's waters.
American patrol ship the USS Squall fired three warning shots after an Iranian craft approached it head on, coming within 200 yards (180m) before turning away, the Pentagon says.
The shots, fired from a 50-calibre gun, caused the Iranian vessel to turn away, the spokesman added.
In a separate incident, video footage from on board the USS Nitze warship shows several small boats approaching the destroyer at high speed. Flares were fired after two of the boats ignored warnings to change course.
Some 40% of the world's seaborne oil exports pass through the Strait of Hormuz, at the entrance to the Gulf.
In January, Iran detained 10 US sailors at gunpoint after they ended up in Iranian waters. A naval inquiry later found that they had navigated incorrectly.
In the same month, Western powers lifted sanctions on Iran as it restricted its nuclear activities. The move heralded a change in relations between the US and Iran.
The painting had been in the hands of a private collector and has not been seen in public for 15 years.
The amount was one of the highest fetched by a work of post-war contemporary art at Christie's.
The current record for a Bacon was set at Sotheby's in New York in May 2008, when one of the Irish-born artist's Triptychs sold for $86.3m (£55m).
Bacon painted more than a dozen portraits of Moraes, a familar Soho denizen who also posed for Lucien Freud.
Francis Outred, of Christie's, said the painting sold this week was "one of the most seductive and sexually-charged" he had ever encountered.
The £21.3m price - paid by an anonymous bidder - was more than £1m above the auction house's top estimate.
The same event also saw a Lucien Freud etching sold for £145,250 - the highest amount that one of the late artist's prints has ever fetched at auction. | The Pentagon has said a US Navy vessel fired three shots to warn an Iranian military boat off in the Gulf.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A nude portrait by Francis Bacon, of the Soho model Henrietta Moraes, has sold for £21m at Christie's in London. |
What is the brief summary of the provided content? | The 24-year-old back-rower, who signed from London Broncos in 2014 and went on to be an ever present last season, also has an option for a third year.
"George has been the model of consistency during his time at the club," said head coach Ian Watson.
"He was a key part of our squad last season and held the pack together alongside Craig Kopczak."
The 23-year-old will ride alongside fellow Welshmen Geraint Thomas and Luke Rowe in Australia's Tour Down Under from 14-22 January.
Doull left Team Wiggins to join Team Sky for the 2017 season.
"My big aim for the year is that big week in April in the Tour of Flanders," Doull told BBC Radio Wales.
The Olympic gold medallist says the race, which starts and finishes in Adelaide, will be "a big step up" for him.
He continued: "I've raced on the road to a decent level before, but never anything world tour.
"I'm looking forward to getting my first proper race with Sky under my belt and doing my job and trying to put a good performance in for the team."
Team Sky's leading riders for the southern hemisphere race, including Colombian Sergio Henao and Dutchman Danny van Poppel, will look to thrive in the race as well as Thomas and Doull.
"We'll be going into the race with multiple options with Sergio and G [Thomas] potentially for the overall title and Danny for the flat days, so there won't be any days off," Doull said.
"We're working hard for the whole period, but I think that's one of the aims of doing the race anyway is to get a good workload in before the bigger races later in the year."
Doull is aware of the impact the Tour Down Under can have on his career, much like how Thomas and Rowe have benefitted from their own experiences in the competition.
"Speaking to people like Luke and Geraint, they say it's a really good way to start your year," he said.
"You have to come out to Australia quite early, do a couple of weeks of training then obviously straight into the first world tour race of the year.
"It's going to be good to get a good one under my belt quite early. It's a nice way of doing it as well, getting away from the cold and the winter of Cardiff and escaping to the sun and getting a consistent block of work done.
"There's no distractions and no problems like ice on the road."
Find out how to get into cycling with our special guide.
Detroit Pistons owner Tom Gores and Cleveland Cavaliers' Dan Gilbert are hoping to build a new stadium for the team in the downtown of the city.
In a statement, the pair said their proposal had won support from the MLS.
The league is aiming to increase its size from 20 to 24 teams by 2020 and then ultimately to 28.
"Detroit is rising and we know firsthand the power of sports to lift a community and drive a civic renaissance," read the Gores and Gilbert statement.
"We are very excited about the prospect of bringing Major League Soccer to Detroit and building an ownership group that represents a cross-section of investors."
Gilbert added: "Bringing a team downtown will also further energise Detroit's urban core, which is critical to the entire city's overall health and vibrancy."
David Beckham's Miami franchise is aiming to be one of the first quartet to join the league.
Miami Beckham United (MBU), the ownership vehicle behind the proposed MLS team, announced last week that the group had purchased the land needed to build a stadium. | George Griffin has agreed a new two-year contract with Super League side Salford Red Devils.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Welsh cyclist Owain Doull hopes his first major race for Team Sky can help him win selection for the Tour of Flanders in April.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Detroit may soon have a Major League Soccer team after two owners from basketball's NBA announced a joint bid to launch a franchise in the city. |
Write a summary for the following excerpt. | New research suggests that most of it was put in place just five to six million years ago.
Earlier studies had claimed the canyon was perhaps 70 million years old.
The latest investigation, published in the journal Nature Geoscience, agrees that some segments are very ancient, but says the full system is young.
"The 'old canyon model' has argued that the Grand Canyon was carved 70 million years ago in the same place and to nearly the same depth as the modern canyon. We are refuting that," said Prof Karl Karlstrom from the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.
"We are also refuting the 'young canyon model', which claims the canyon was cut entirely in the last six million years. Instead, we show that the Colorado River used some old segments as it found its path from the Rockies to the Gulf of California in the past six million years.
"What's different here I think is that we finally have a description of the Grand Canyon that honours all the hard-won data," he told BBC News.
Whether Karlstrom's and colleagues' paper will actually end the debate that has raged for 140 years remains to be seen. What is in little doubt is the great splendour of the canyon.
Running for almost 450km and to a depth of 1,800m, it is simply too vast for the five million tourists who visit the National Park each year to take it in. Many try their best by taking a plane or helicopter ride through the deep incision, which records nearly two billion years of Earth history.
That huge scale has also been problematic for scientists who have had to gather data from many different locations through the canyon in an attempt to gauge its true age.
The latest study used a couple of techniques that go under the term thermochronology.
This measures changes in the structure of rocks' mineral crystals as they get cooler through time. This transition occurs as deeply buried rocks come closer to the surface as erosion removes overlying layers of material.
Karlstrom's team used thermochronology to constrain the timing of the formation of four of the Grand Canyon's five segments.
They found that two of the three central segments - known as the "Hurricane" segment and the "Eastern Grand Canyon" - were indeed ancient palaeocanyons. The former was cut between 50 and 70 million years ago; the latter was incised some 15 to 25 million years ago.
But they determined that the two end segments of the canyon - known as the "Marble Canyon" and the "Westernmost Grand Canyon" - had to have been carved in the last five to six million years, when the Colorado River managed to link up the full system that everyone recognises today.
"If you were to add up the 280-mile length and ask, 'how much is young? More than half of it is young; a quarter of it is middle-aged - 15-25 million years old; and the rest of it is 70 million years old," said Prof Karlstrom.
"It continues to deepen today, of course. Right now, over the course of the last half-a-million-years or so, it's been deepening by about the thickness of a piece of paper every year.
"It's a beautiful place to work and a wonderful laboratory where the geology is laid bare. It's great for research, and for the many students we take there to teach."
[email protected] and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos
Southend Airshow, scrapped in 2013 by the council, was set to return in September after volunteers raised £220,000.
An alternative location was being sought after the organisers said holding it in Southend was too costly.
However, Tom Curtis from the Southend Airshow Community Interest Company (SACIC) said those efforts had failed.
The event - that ran for 28 years until 2012 - once attracted up to 400,000 people.
Mr Curtis said: "We now have to face the reality that although there may be other air shows in Essex in the coming years, we will not have an air show in Southend."
All the money raised is going to be donated to the group's nominated charities instead, Mr Curtis added. | The world famous Grand Canyon, which snakes through the American state of Arizona, only took its present form relatively recently.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Organisers hoping to revive one of the country's major air shows have said their efforts have failed. |
Summarize the provided section. | Exeter made an excellent start by taking the lead inside four minutes as recalled striker Reuben Reid provided the assist for David Wheeler to score his fourth goal in five matches with a deft close-range finish.
Ollie Watkins, fresh from a hat-trick the day after his 21st birthday at Newport last time out, missed several chances to increase Exeter's lead, with one of those a fierce shot that smashed against the post.
Any fears Exeter may have had of paying the price for those missed chances were dispelled five minutes after the break when Wheeler turned provider for Harley, making his first start since September, to finish at the back-post.
Harley then made it 3-0 on 65 minutes when he converted from the penalty spot after the dangerous Watkins had been fouled by Tom Parkes.
Liam McAlinden finished the scoring on 82 minutes when he was played-in by fellow substitute Robbie Simpson and coolly slipped the ball past Alex Cisak to complete the rout.
Match ends, Exeter City 4, Leyton Orient 0.
Second Half ends, Exeter City 4, Leyton Orient 0.
Jack Stacey (Exeter City) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Foul by Josh Koroma (Leyton Orient).
Corner, Leyton Orient. Conceded by Jordan Moore-Taylor.
Ollie Watkins (Exeter City) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Foul by Paul McCallum (Leyton Orient).
Delay over. They are ready to continue.
Substitution, Leyton Orient. Victor Adeboyejo replaces Robbie Weir because of an injury.
Delay in match (Exeter City).
Substitution, Exeter City. Troy Archibald-Henville replaces Craig Woodman.
Goal! Exeter City 4, Leyton Orient 0. Liam McAlinden (Exeter City) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the top right corner.
Attempt missed. Josh Koroma (Leyton Orient) right footed shot from the right side of the box is close, but misses to the right.
Ollie Watkins (Exeter City) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Myles Judd (Leyton Orient).
Substitution, Exeter City. Robbie Simpson replaces Ryan Harley.
Substitution, Leyton Orient. Robbie Weir replaces Ollie Palmer.
Attempt saved. Paul McCallum (Leyton Orient) header from the left side of the six yard box is saved in the top centre of the goal.
Foul by Lloyd James (Exeter City).
Paul McCallum (Leyton Orient) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Attempt missed. Gavin Massey (Leyton Orient) right footed shot from outside the box is too high.
Corner, Leyton Orient. Conceded by Troy Brown.
Goal! Exeter City 3, Leyton Orient 0. Ryan Harley (Exeter City) converts the penalty with a right footed shot to the bottom left corner.
Penalty Exeter City. Ollie Watkins draws a foul in the penalty area.
Penalty conceded by Tom Parkes (Leyton Orient) after a foul in the penalty area.
Substitution, Exeter City. Liam McAlinden replaces Reuben Reid.
Attempt missed. Yvan Erichot (Leyton Orient) right footed shot from outside the box is too high.
Substitution, Leyton Orient. Josh Koroma replaces Callum Kennedy.
Lloyd James (Exeter City) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Foul by Paul McCallum (Leyton Orient).
Goal! Exeter City 2, Leyton Orient 0. Ryan Harley (Exeter City) right footed shot from the left side of the six yard box to the bottom left corner. Assisted by David Wheeler with a cross.
Second Half begins Exeter City 1, Leyton Orient 0.
First Half ends, Exeter City 1, Leyton Orient 0.
Corner, Exeter City. Conceded by Yvan Erichot.
Attempt blocked. David Wheeler (Exeter City) right footed shot from the left side of the box is blocked.
Corner, Exeter City. Conceded by Tom Parkes.
Attempt blocked. Ryan Harley (Exeter City) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.
David Wheeler (Exeter City) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Foul by Yvan Erichot (Leyton Orient).
Attempt missed. Gavin Massey (Leyton Orient) right footed shot from the left side of the box is close, but misses to the right. | Ryan Harley scored twice to help Exeter thrash Leyton Orient 4-0 at St James Park. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | The blaze in Wadsworth Road, Perivale, began just before 19:00 BST on Saturday.
As flames tore through the two-storey building, a 50m by 20m structure of mixed industrial units, plumes of thick black smoke were visible across London.
About 30 people were evacuated from the warehouse but there are no reports of any injuries.
People living nearby were advised to close windows and doors due to large amounts of smoke produced.
The fire was brought under control shortly before midnight, the London Fire Brigade said.
The cause of the blaze is not yet known.
Vinesh Pomal, 28, who lives nearby, said the fire looked to have "spread to the entire building".
"I can see flames, debris and thick black smoke is just billowing out now as the whole building is on fire. It's just getting worse. I can see the heat from my bedroom window which is quite scary," he said.
"I have never seen so much drama in Perivale before. I have friends from east London messaging me saying they can see it. It's put Perivale on the map for all the wrong reasons."
Station manager Jeff Lisle who was at the scene said: "Crews worked very hard in extremely difficult conditions to bring this fire under control.
"Firefighters used aerial ladder platforms to tackle it from numerous vantage points and to prevent the blaze from spreading to neighbouring warehouses.
"Although not in a residential area the smoke from the fire was travelling quite a distance so we advised locals to keep windows and doors shut as a precaution."
Some 45 firefighters remained at the scene on Sunday damping down the fire. | A serious fire at a warehouse in west London required about 120 firefighters to bring it under control. |
Summarize this article briefly. | The report by the Environmental Audit Committee also called for lower VAT on recycled products and longer warranty periods on consumer goods.
It concluded that a "circular economy" approach is needed to save resources as the world's population rises.
In England, 8.5 million tonnes of local authority-collected waste goes to landfill, according to government figures.
If Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales are included, the amount of waste in the UK being buried is in the region of 11 million tonnes.
The report called for a move away from "the throwaway society", said the chair of the Environmental Audit Committee, Joan Walley.
"It's really looking at a whole new way that we do business and how we live our lives, and really accepting that it makes sense from everyone's perspective to have a circular economy where we reuse and recycle and have virtually zero waste."
Local councils should be banned from sending leftover food to landfill sites, said the MPs.
Of the 7.2m tonnes of food thrown out every year, only 400,000 tonnes are collected separately for recycling in the UK, around 6% of the total.
The MPs also want separate food collections for composting or making biogas, renewable energy and fertiliser through the "anaerobic digestion" process.
Businesses told the inquiry that the recycling regime in England is confusing and makes it harder for companies to get hold of raw materials that could be reused.
Mike Barry of Marks and Spencer told the Committee, "The number one thing that [the Government] can do to help us is to simplify the collection of waste in the consumer's home."
Wales and Scotland have made improvements in standardising recycling collections.
In Wales, more than 90% of homes now have access to organic recycling facilities.
However, in England, only around a quarter of local councils provide a separate food waste collection.
Resource Management Minister Dan Rogerson said the Government was fully committed to building a circular economy and wanted to see the UK leading the way in new waste and recycling markets.
"That is why we have invested £17m to encourage businesses to become more resource efficient," he said.
"We will continue to work closely with local authorities, industry and the voluntary sector to consider how best to take these recommendations forward and will respond to the Committee in due course."
According to a recent report by the think tank the Green Alliance, electronic goods worth around a billion pounds are put in landfill each year, but only around 2% are recycled.
"If we got that product back to someone who could repair it, about a quarter of products are readily repairable or reusable and that's a lot of value: we reckon at least £250 million per year," said Dustin Benton of the Green Alliance.
One company that would stand to benefit from the proposals is London-based company Envirowaste, which prepares thrown-away goods for reuse.
"People just ring us up and tell us to get rid of everything," said James Rubin, who welcomed the report.
"We all get rid of waste, and it's a matter of putting it into a bin and forget about it. People should be taking more responsibility."
But Aleyn Smith-Gillespie of the Carbon Trust said, "Stronger signals are needed to encourage businesses to take action on ending the throwaway society.
"Many companies do recognise the potential in a shift towards a more sustainable circular economy, but currently only a handful of pioneers are taking the important first steps." | MPs have called for a ban on food waste going in to landfill. |
Summarize the content provided below. | The findings by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics) are in contrast to other parts of the UK, especially London, where both sales and new buyer demand fell sharply.
Rics said demand for new homes in Scotland grew in July.
It noted that more surveyors reported a growth in new buyer inquiries.
The number of homes coming onto the market also increased in July, with 8% of respondents reporting an increase in new instructions,
Rics said the continuing supply and demand imbalance was creating more optimism in the Scottish market, compared with the rest of the UK.
In July, more surveyors reported prices rise over the month, while 32% of respondents expected house prices to increase over the next three months.
However some surveyors said the Commonwealth Games, the school holidays and the approaching independence referendum led to a slowdown in house sales in their areas last month.
Rics director Sarah Speirs said: "The housing market in Scotland continues to show an imbalance between supply and demand in Scotland and this impacts on prices.
"With demand from new buyers at the highest rate since December 2013 and fewer properties coming onto the market, there is certainly the need for investment in regeneration and creation of new stock in order to keep prices at a sustainable level."
Last month, Registers of Scotland reported that the average price of a house in Scotland had risen by 5.9% in the past year.
It said the average cost of a home in the three months to June was just over £162,000.
The total value of sales across Scotland in the quarter increased by 29.7%, compared with a year ago, to stand at almost £3.95bn.
The number of sales also increased by more than 22%, indicating sustained growth over the past year.
A teenage sea cadet has told the Ballymena Guardian his training helped him to rescue his family after a two-car crash on a dual carriageway.
Lewis Allison, 16, helped his father, Thomas and partner Hazel Edgar, as well as her eight-year-old son, Stuart, who has cerebral palsy. Ms Edgar was later cut free from a vehicle by the emergency services.
The pelting of cars with stones and free fruit is causing consternation in Dungannon and makes the front page of the Tyrone Times.
Police have warned those involved in the Ballygawley Road incidents that if they continue they will be "arrested and end up with a criminal record".
The Fermanagh Herald believes voter apathy could be one of the biggest obstacles facing politicians in the county if an election is called as a result of the Stormont crisis.
It also reports over 100 successful applicants from Fermanagh have received more than £2.6m under the Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) scheme. It stresses there is nothing to suggest that any of the applicants have been abusing RHI.
A public meeting on the future of Daisy Hill hospital is the lead story in the Newry Democrat.
Daisy Hill Action Group wants people to attend Monday's event which is due to discuss the Bengoa report and the potential implications for the hospital.
Meanwhile, a mother's disgust at finding used syringes on separate occasions at an Armagh toilet block is the hot topic in the Ulster Gazette.
Police Inspector Kieran Quinn is aware of the problem at the building in McCrum's Court and will be "flagging this up" again with patrols.
Separately, the newspaper says the West Armagh Consortium is calling for a combined approach to tackle the destruction caused by weekend parties at Sherrys Field.
The Londonderry Sentinel's front page splash is about Derry City and Strabane District Council agreeing to take on board concerns about swimming timetable changes at the Foyle Arena.
One mother says others shared her anger that public access to the pool was closed at designated times during swimming lessons.
Elsewhere, it reports a remedy for an illegal waste site at Mobuoy Road could cost a minimum of £20m and a maximum of more than £100m. | House prices in Scotland are holding up as a result of growing demand and a lack of supply of homes, according to Scottish surveyors.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A car crash rescue bid, a mum's disgust at used syringes in a toilet block and a free fruit frenzy are among the stories making the headlines in Northern Ireland's weekly newspapers. |
Summarize the passage below. | A survey by Deloitte found that 27% of 119 finance directors whom the accountancy firm questioned in the fourth quarter were more optimistic, helped by better GDP growth.
That compares to 16% in the third quarter.
However, two-thirds of them are still worried about the impact of Brexit.
"Ahead of the referendum Brexit was seen by chief financial officers [CFOs] as the most significant risk facing their business," said the report by Deloitte.
"In the wake of the vote, in late June, optimism dropped to the lowest level since the global financial crisis. CFOs battened down the hatches, pulling back on investment and spending. Since then the UK has proved more resilient than expected and talk of the UK falling into recession has abated".
Despite the rebound in business confidence, most finance bosses expect more economic and financial uncertainty following Brexit.
Nearly half of those surveyed plan to cut spending and take defensive measures to protect their balance sheets and build up cash over the next year.
About 48% also expect hiring and mergers and acquisition activity to slow down. | UK finance chiefs have become more optimistic about the future, even though uncertainty is now the "new normal" for businesses. |
Summarize this article briefly. | Attawapiskat chief Teresa Spence says she will join the 11 January meeting, but continue her fast until then.
She began her protest against a budget bill critics say weakens native land rights and environmental safeguards.
Three other chiefs have joined Ms Spence in her hunger strike.
"To all the supporters and the helpers, I'm really grateful today," she said on Friday. "But I'll still be here on my hunger strike until that meeting takes place."
She did not rule out continuing the fast beyond the meeting: "We'll see what the results are, if there's really a positive result, because there are a lot of issues that we need to discuss."
The Canadian government previously offered the Attawapiskat leader a meeting with Aboriginal Affairs Minister John Duncan.
On Friday, Mr Harper released a statement which cited his January 2012 meeting with First Nations leaders and said he would meet with chiefs "in this spirit of ongoing dialogue".
Mr Harper said the "working meeting" would focus on "the treaty relationship and aboriginal rights and economic development".
While the Attawapiskat leader has continued her fast, First Nations protesters and others have rallied around her, as well as Canadian indigenous rights movement Idle No More, in protest on a range of issues.
Ms Spence has staged her protest in a traditional teepee within sight of the parliament buildings in Ottawa, Canada's capital city.
"This is a crisis, and we cannot continue on this path of social indifference," Ms Spence said in a statement issued earlier on Friday, before Mr Harper's announcement.
Ms Spence has urged Mr Harper to "open his heart" and meet native leaders.
During her hunger strike, Ms Spence is consuming only water, fish broth and a medicinal tea, Reuters news agency reports.
"I know it's hard for people to understand what I'm doing," she told reporters on 28 December. "But it's for this pain that's been going on too long with our people."
Ms Spence has invited MPs and senators to visit her teepee. High-profile visitors have included former Canadian Prime Minister Joe Clark.
Budget legislation passed last month by Canadian lawmakers will reduce environmental safeguards for rivers and lakes and make it easier to sell reserve lands, critics say.
Aboriginal groups have also criticised what they say are unfulfilled promises by the federal and provincial governments - dating back to the early 1900s - to give them a stake in the development of natural resources, and other benefits.
Supporters of the Idle No More movement held marches, rallies and highway blockades across Canada in 2012, as well as "flash mob" protests with traditional drumming and dancing.
On Wednesday, protesters blocked cargo transport at Quebec's Pointe-a-la-Croix, but allowed passenger trains through.
"We are aware our fight is not with the citizens of this country, but rather the Harper government," Alexander Morrison, a spokesman for the group, told CBC News.
Many of the group were from the nearby Listuguj Mi'gmaq First Nation.
And on Friday, the Sikniktuk Mi'kmaq Rights Coalition in New Brunswick said they were planning a cargo train blockade in the eastern part of the province until Monday. Another protest was planned along a highway in Fredericton, New Brunswick by the Kingsclear First Nation.
In Mr Harper's year-end remarks on Monday, he said the government "continued to strengthen our relationship with First Nations", but did not mention Ms Spence.
A spokesman for Mr Duncan, the aboriginal affairs minister, said the federal government had built schools and homes, enacted measures to protect women's rights, and invested in safe drinking water in native areas. | Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has agreed to meet a delegation of First Nation leaders, following a 25-day hunger strike by one chief. |
Write a summary for the following excerpt. | Police had attended the alert after a suspicious object was discovered at Butcher Gate shortly after 23:30 BST on Friday.
It was later declared a hoax.
During the clearance operation, fireworks and petrol bombs were thrown at police in the Fahan Street area. There were no injuries reported.
Police said it was also reported that the windscreen of a van was smashed in Fahan Street shortly after midnight.
Daniel Shepherd, 23, from Skewen, Neath Port Talbot, said he acted in self-defence when he hit Jonathon Thomas, 34, outside the Cross Keys pub in Swansea city centre last November.
Mr Thomas died in hospital about an hour after the attack on 1 November.
The defendant has denied manslaughter at his trial at Swansea Crown Court.
Mr Shepherd's barrister Nicola Powell read a dozen character references, including ones from a former teacher and a retired police officer, who described him as popular, polite and respectful.
Earlier, the jury was shown CCTV footage of an incident on Oxford Street in Swansea city centre, involving Mr Thomas.
In the footage, he is seen staggering towards a group of people, before punching a man once in the face, knocking him off his feet to the ground.
Witness Rhys Thomas told the jury that Jonathon Thomas bumped into his friends and wanted to fight him before throwing a punch at him.
"He was fairly intimidating and aggressive towards us," he said.
"He kept on asking me to go round the corner for a fight with him."
During the trial, the prosecution has claimed Mr Shepherd had reacted aggressively when Mr Thomas bumped into him outside the pub in the early hours of the morning.
Michael Jones, prosecuting, had told the jury that the defendant had struck Mr Thomas from behind.
"This was a punch delivered in anger and without any justification," he said.
Mr Shepherd was arrested at his home in Neath later that morning. The court heard he appeared to be in shock when he was informed Mr Thomas was dead.
The judge is expected to begin summing up the case on Tuesday.
The plant had already obtained approval from the country's nuclear watchdog.
But locals had petitioned the court in Fukui prefecture, where Takahama is located, to intervene, saying it would not withstand a strong earthquake.
All 48 commercial reactors in Japan remain offline following 2011's Fukushima disaster.
The BBC's Rupert Wingfield-Hayes in Tokyo says the ruling is a serious blow for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's push to have the reactors restarted.
Mr Abe has said the shutdown is damaging the struggling economy, forcing Japan to import expensive fossil fuels to make up the power shortfall.
The operators of Takahama plant, Kansai Electric, said the plant met heightened safety standards brought in by the Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) after Fukushima.
But the court agreed with nine local residents who filed an injunction, and ruled that the company had been overly optimistic in assuming that no major quake would hit the region, national broadcast NHK reports.
It also criticised the NRA safety standards as "lacking rationality".
Kansai Electric said it was considering appealing against the ruling.
Before the accident, caused by a massive quake and tsunami, about 30% of Japan's power was nuclear generated.
So far only two reactors - in Kagoshima prefecture in the far south - have been approved for restart. They are expected to become operational later this year, but this move is also being challenged in court.
The gold was concealed in mobile phones packed in boxes in the cargo of the plane at Chennai airport.
India is one of the world's main gold consumers and imports are seen as a major contributor to the country's account deficit.
It raised duty on imports of gold jewellery to 10% from 8% last year .
The government is trying to curb demand for the precious metal, which many Indians traditionally hoard in the belief it will bring financial security.
The central bank says gold imports amounted to $3.9bn during the quarter ending last December, down from $16.4bn in the previous three months.
It is not clear who the sender and the recipient of gold discovered at Chennai airport were, but officials said the plane arrived from Hong Kong.
Last November cleaners found a stash of 24 gold bars worth more than $1.1m in the toilet compartment on board a Jet Airways flight at Kolkata airport. The plane had arrived from Bangkok. | Twenty-five petrol bombs and a number of fireworks have been thrown at police by youths following a security alert in Londonderry.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A man accused of killing a former rugby player with a punch to the back of the head has been described as a "perfect gentleman" and "exemplary individual".
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A Japanese court has blocked the restarting of two nuclear reactors in the western city of Takahama, after local people raised safety concerns.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A stash of 27kg of gold worth more than $1.5m (£956,023) has been discovered hidden on a commercial plane in southern India, reports say. |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | Media playback is not supported on this device
A Gareth Bale free-kick and a late winner from substitute Hal Robson-Kanu saw Chris Coleman's side earn a 2-1 victory over Slovakia in Group B.
But who were the stand-out performers in Bordeaux? BBC Wales Sport's Dafydd Pritchard gives his ratings.
Called in to replace the injured Wayne Hennessey, who was forced out with a back problem, the 22-year-old Liverpool keeper was solid in his first international start, punching well from crosses and making a handful of decent saves.
Coped well with the threat of Slovakia winger Vladimir Weiss and gave Wales some useful width on the right.
Comfortable on the ball and focused in defence, the West Brom defender played his part in a determined team display.
The Swansea man led his defence with authority, making timely blocks and interceptions without ever seeming flustered.
As well as making a crucial block to deny Marek Hamsik a certain goal in the third minute, the Tottenham defender was excellent as he carried the ball out of defence.
A typically combative display from the Swansea full-back, who stood up to the robust physicality of Slovakia.
Playing in place of Joe Ledley, who is still regaining match fitness after recovering from a broken leg, the Wolves midfielder grafted and kept the ball well.
Typically industrious at the base of midfield and wise in his use of the ball. A pivotal player for Wales.
Guilty of over-complicating things in the first half, the Arsenal midfielder's ambitious passes and flicks did not come off - but he had a hand in the winning goal.
Repaid Chris Coleman's faith with an energetic and brave performance, always looking to run at opposition defenders despite being the target of heavy challenges.
His goal was not one of his best free-kicks, but the Real Madrid forward was his usual menacing self on the break despite being marked heavily by his opponents.
Media playback is not supported on this device
Bursting with energy when he came on after 71 minutes, Wales' cult hero ran tirelessly and, albeit with some fortune, struck a famous winning goal.
Media playback is not supported on this device
Given the committed nature of his 20-minute performance, it is difficult to believe the Crystal Palace midfielder broke his leg as recently as 7 May.
Create leagues and play against your friends in BBC Sport's new Euro 2016 Predictor game
The 22-year-old left-armer has been out of action since fracturing his hand in April, and has since suffered from a reoccurring back injury.
Topley, who has played 10 ODIs and six T20 internationals, was due to join an England training camp in South Africa later this month.
He joined Hampshire from Essex last season but has played just once since. | After ending their 58-year wait to reach a major tournament, Wales started their Euro 2016 campaign in the best possible way.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Hampshire bowler Reece Topley is to have surgery on his left shoulder after suffering an injury setback. |
Can you write a brief summary of this passage? | Their investigation of a seamount more than 500km (300 miles) from the Canary Islands has revealed a crust of "astonishingly rich" rock.
Samples brought back to the surface contain the scarce substance tellurium in concentrations 50,000 times higher than in deposits on land.
Tellurium is used in a type of advanced solar panel, so the discovery raises a difficult question about whether the push for renewable energy may encourage mining of the seabed.
The rocks also contain what are called rare earth elements that are used in wind turbines and electronics.
Known as Tropic Seamount, the mountain stands about 3,000m tall – about the size of one of the middle-ranging Alpine summits – with a large plateau at its top, lying about 1,000m below the ocean surface.
Using robotic submarines, researchers from the UK's National Oceanography Centre found that the crust is dark and fine-grained and stretches in a layer roughly 4cm thick over the entire surface of the mountain.
Dr Bram Murton, the leader of the expedition, told the BBC that he had been expecting to find abundant minerals on the seamount but not in such concentrations.
"These crusts are astonishingly rich and that's what makes these rocks so incredibly special and valuable from a resource perspective."
He has calculated that the 2,670 tonnes of tellurium on this single seamount represents one-twelfth of the world's total supply.
And Dr Murton has come up with a hypothetical estimate that if the entire deposit could be extracted and used to make solar panels, it could meet 65% of the UK's electricity demand.
He says he is not advocating deep-sea mining, which has yet to start anywhere in the world and is likely to be highly controversial because of the damage it could cause to the marine environment.
But Dr Murton does want his team's discovery, part of a major research project called MarineE-Tech, to trigger a debate about where vital resources should come from.
"If we need green energy supplies, then we need the raw materials to make the devices that produce the energy so, yes, the raw materials have to come from somewhere.
"We either dig them up from the ground and make a very large hole or dig them from the seabed and make a comparatively smaller hole.
"It's a dilemma for society - nothing we do comes without a cost."
Scientists are now weighing up the relative risks and merits of mining on land as opposed to on the seabed.
Mines on land often require forests and villages to be cleared, overlying rocks to be removed and roads or railways to be built in order to extract ores with relatively weak concentrations of minerals.
By contrast, mines on the seabed would extract far richer ores, covering a smaller area and with no immediate impact on people - but instead killing marine life wherever digging machines are deployed and potentially devastating a far wider area.
One major concern is the effect of plumes of dust, stirred up by excavation of the ocean floor, spreading for long distances and smothering all life wherever it settles.
To understand the implications, the expedition to Tropic Seamount conducted an experiment, the first of its kind, to mimic the effects of mining and to measure the resulting plume.
Deploying from the UK research ship James Cook, a remotely operated vehicle deliberately pumped out hundreds of litres of sediment-filled water every minute while other robotic sensors were positioned downstream in the ocean current.
According to Dr Murton, early results indicate that dust was hard to detect 1km away from the source of the plume, suggesting that the impact of mining could be more localised than many fear.
But this comes as different disciplines within marine science are coming up with a range of perspectives on this emerging development.
A study led by Dr Daniel Jones, also at the NOC, reviewed evidence of seabed exploration and found that in the wake of mining many marine creatures would be likely to recover within a year but that few would return to their previous levels even after two decades.
Another study focused on tiny organisms on the floor of the Pacific Ocean in a region known as the Clarion-Clipperton Zone, which stretches in a belt south of Hawaii.
Much of this zone has been licensed by the UN's International Seabed Authority to companies from more than a dozen countries to search for minerals in the potato-sized rocks or "nodules" lying on the seabed.
Prof Andy Gooday, also of the NOC, and colleagues found that among the metals-rich nodules, there is a far greater diversity of single-celled organisms called xenophyophores than previously thought.
Their research identified as many as 34 species of these lifeforms that are new to science.
These organisms occupy one of the lower rungs in the food chain and also play an important role by forming hard shell-like structures, like miniature coral reefs, that provide habitats for other creatures.
Prof Gooday says that the range of life in the sediments of the deep ocean can be compared with that of a tropical rainforest and that "life on the ocean floor is more dynamic" than anyone expected.
He believes it is unlikely that seabed mining would cause species to go extinct but that the impact locally would be severe.
"If you eliminate these xenophyphores, which are very fragile and would certainly be destroyed by mining, it would destroy habitat structure for other organisms.
"It's difficult to predict and, like everything in the deep sea connected with the effects of mining, we need to learn more – we still know so little about what's going on down there." | British scientists exploring an underwater mountain in the Atlantic Ocean have discovered a treasure trove of rare minerals. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | Isabel Gayther, 21, was last seen at about 11:30 GMT on Christmas Eve.
Posts on her Facebook account in response to media coverage state she is "not missing" and has not come to harm.
The Met, which earlier said it was "concerned" for Miss Gayther, said it was aware of the messages but had not been able to speak to her.
A spokesman said an investigation continued, "with the aim of establishing that she is safe and well".
Miss Gayther lives in halls of residence in New Cross, south-east London.
She also has family in Oxford. | A university student who was reported missing after failing to turn up at home for Christmas has posted on Facebook, police have said. |
Give a brief summary of the following article. | However, the chief inspector of prisons also praised it as "well led", with competent and caring staff.
He said that the jail - which was built for 317 inmates, but houses more than 500 - was making progress.
Last year, the Prison Reform Trust said Exeter was the fifth most overcrowded jail in the UK, with 530 inmates.
The report, by Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Prisons, also highlighted that while prisoners at risk of self-harm were well cared for, improvement was needed, "particularly as there had been three self-inflicted deaths at the prison since its last inspection in 2009".
It said the typical Victorian prison was "old and difficult to maintain", adding there was "limited space and significant overcrowding", both in terms of the availability of accommodation and access to amenities and services.
But Nick Hardwick, chief inspector of prisons, said that, despite these challenges, it was a "broadly good report".
He added: "Overall, and despite some weaknesses and gaps, Exeter is one of the better older local prisons we have seen recently.
"There are clear structural challenges for the prison, not least the poor environment and the lack of space, but the prison is well led, and is not overwhelmed by these challenges. There is meaningful work to tackle risks and a sense that progress is being made."
Michael Spurr, chief executive officer of the National Offender Management Service, said: "Exeter is a safe local prison where staff are working well with offenders.
"There are challenges in running the Victorian prison, but I am pleased that the chief inspector has acknowledged the good work that is being done there, especially in resettlement, respect and safety." | Exeter Prison is "significantly overcrowded" with the use of illicit drugs "higher than expected", an unannounced inspection has found. |
What is the summary of the following article? | A week after winning the French International in Orleans, the 26-year-old top seed beat Dmytro Zavadsky of the Ukraine 21-16 21-12 in 30 minutes.
Zavadsky, the second seed, led 8-4 and 13-11 before Ouseph won seven points in a row and swiftly wrapped up the match.
Scotland's Imogen Bankier also took a second title in a week after partnering Petya Nedelcheva to the doubles crown.
Last week in Orleans, Bankier teamed up with Robert Blair to win the mixed doubles title at the French International.
On Sunday, she and Bulgarian Nedelcheva were in front throughout in defeating Denmark's Lena Grebak and Maria Helsbol 21-10 21-14 in 30 minutes.
It is believed the 25-year-old will leave Boro to sign for Birmingham on a more permanent basis.
Since arriving at the Riverside at the beginning of the season, the Italian has scored six goals in 24 appearances.
Fabbrini spent two months on loan with Blues last season, making five league appearances.
Boro are currently second in the Championship, while Birmingham are just outside the play-off places on goal difference.
Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page.
The alleged offences took place in Leigh Park in Havant between Monday and the early hours of Tuesday.
Hampshire Constabulary is carrying out searches at a property on the housing estate in Park Parade.
The men, aged 20, 36, and 43, from Havant, who are suspected of several sexual offences, were later released from custody pending further inquiries.
More on this and other stories from across the South of England
The three girls aged 15 and 16 are being supported by specially-trained officers.
The 20-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of three counts of causing or inciting a girl aged 13-17 to engage in a sexual act.
The 36-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of three counts of causing or inciting the sexual exploitation of a child aged 13-17.
The 43-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of three counts of causing a female aged 13 or over to engage in sexual activity.
The force has appealed for anyone who may have been in the Park Parade area on Monday evening to come forward.
Four homeless people took legal action against Birmingham City Council, claiming individuals were being denied statutory rights.
But at the High Court, Mr Justice Hickinbottom ruled against all four.
Figures did not support a proposition that as a policy or in practice homeless applicants were being systemically rejected, he said.
The judge said in each of the four cases he had concluded there had been no breach of duty or no substantial breach of duty.
He said the council was the largest housing authority in the country and owned 63,000 "housing units".
In a written ruling, the judge said Birmingham had "substantial areas of significant social deprivation" and the homeless population might be expected to be higher than in other areas.
But he added: "The statistical figures do not give any support to the proposition that, as a policy or approach in practice, the council is systemically turning away homeless applicants."
The judge said claimants who made an application for housing as a homeless person claimed the manner in which the council dealt "with his or her application was unlawful; and, further, that that manner reflected systemic failings".
He stated: "They say that the council, advertently or inadvertently, both in their own specific cases and generally, discourage and divert applications so that individuals are denied their statutory rights to have their situation properly inquired into and be given interim accommodation whilst those inquiries are being made."
But the judge said claimants had failed to prove any breach of statutory duty. | English number one Rajiv Ouseph captured his second successive title with victory in the Finnish Open.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Watford forward Diego Fabbrini is to be released from his season-long loan deal with Middlesbrough in order to join Birmingham, reports BBC Tees Sport.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Three men have been arrested on suspicion of sex offences against three teenage girls in Hampshire.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
England's largest housing authority does not "systemically" turn away homeless applicants, a judge has ruled. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | Hall, 24, finished in 59 minutes 34 seconds, pipping Learmonth by a second.
"I turn 25 next week and I always said that if I can get a World Cup podium before that I'd be happy," said Hall.
Richard Murray won the men's race at the second-tier event, heading a South African top three in Cape Town.
The World Triathlon Series - the sport's premier event - begins on March 3, with live coverage and highlights across the BBC Sport website and the Red Button.
The report was prepared for Saudi Arabia's legislative assembly, the Shura Council, by a well-known conservative academic.
Though there is no formal ban on women driving in Saudi Arabia, if they get behind the wheel, they can be arrested.
Saudi women have mounted several campaigns to try to overturn the ban.
Aside from the practical difficulties it creates, they say it is also illogical as in trying to keep them under family control and away from men, it actually puts them in daily contact with a male driver.
The issue has received huge international attention.
Some Saudi women feel it has attracted too much interest, obscuring other equally important issues.
As part of his careful reform process, King Abdullah has allowed suggestions to surface that the ban might be reviewed.
This has angered the conservative religious elite - a key power base for any Saudi ruler.
Now, one of their number - well-known academic Kamal Subhi - has presented a new report to the country's legislative assembly, the Shura.
The aim was to get it to drop plans to reconsider the ban.
The report contains graphic warnings that letting women drive would increase prostitution, pornography, homosexuality and divorce.
A Saudi woman who has campaigned for women drivers told the BBC that the report was completely mad.
She said the head of the Shura had assured women campaigners that he was still open to hearing the case for lifting the ban. | Great Britain's Lucy Hall won her first triathlon World Cup race in South Africa, beating compatriot and training partner Jessica Learmonth in a sprint finish.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A report in Saudi Arabia has warned that if Saudi women were given the right to drive, it would spell the end of virginity in the country. |
Can you write a brief summary of this passage? | Intelling Limited provides customer services support for companies, such as TalkTalk and O2.
The posts will be created over the next three years and pay salaries of £16,000 a year, on average. The company said 45 of the posts had already been filled.
Invest NI is contributing £1m towards the project.
Enterprise Minister Jonathan Bell said the investment was "positive news" for the Northern Ireland economy.
"Intelling is an ambitious, young company and I welcome its decision to choose Northern Ireland as the location for its expansion," he said.
"It creates much-needed jobs that offer flexible employment and the opportunity to develop transferable skills."
Phil Morgan, chief executive of Intelling Ltd, said: "The availability of talent here and cost competitive environment, along with Invest NI support, made Northern Ireland the best choice for Intelling over alternative locations."
The Ethiopian Football Federation president Juneydi Basha told BBC Sport that "the main reason for the decision was poor results at CHAN as well as in World Cup and African Cup of nations qualifying."
Gebremedhin Haile has been appointed on an interim basis for Ethiopia's remaining 2017 African Cup of Nations qualifiers against Lesotho and Seychelles.
He is a former international and has been coaching premier league side Mekelakeya since 2011 season and has won the Ethiopian Cup twice.
Ethiopia failed to get past the group stage of the Africa Nations Championship (CHAN) in Rwanda earlier this year picking up just one point from three games.
Last year they were knocked out of 2018 World Cup qualifying by Congo losing 6-4 on aggregate.
More recently results against Algeria have left them with little chance of qualifying for the 2017 Nations Cup in Gabon.
Firstly they lost 7-1 away in Algeria in March and then drew 3-3 at home with the same opponents in two consecutive qualifiers.
Ethiopia had led on three occasions in the second match but were unable to secure victory.
The poor performance of the Walyas has left them trailing by five points behind Algeria's Desert Foxes in Group J with two matches to play.
In a statement, the Ethiopian Football Federation cited "unmet targets" for Sahile's dismissal along with members of the federation's technical committee.
The body said it has picked Sahile's successor but would disclose his identity only in the "next few days" once terms had been agreed.
Sahile, an American of Ethiopian descent, is the third manager to be given his marching orders since Ethiopia came within two matches of a first-ever World Cup appearance in Brazil two years ago.
But Ethiopia's fortunes have since waned and the Walyas failed to qualify for last year's Nations Cup after finishing bottom of the group with just one win.
They next face Lesotho and Seychelles in June and September, with table toppers Algeria needing a solitary point to ensure their progress to next year's finals in Gabon.
A "noxious substance" was thrown at the trio in Islington, north London, at 13:05 BST, Scotland Yard said.
The man suffered "potentially life-changing injuries", although his condition is not thought to be life-threatening. The woman and boy suffered minor injuries.
Officers have yet to identify the substance used.
No arrests have been made.
A Met spokesperson added that police were still working to "establish the full circumstances" of the attack, which happened at the junction of Copenhagen Street and Caledonian Road. | A UK businesses services company is to open offices in Belfast, creating 250 jobs.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Ethiopia coach Yohannes Sahile has had his contract terminated after the team's poor run of form.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A man, a woman and a two-year-old boy have been hurt in a suspected acid attack. |
Summarize the provided information. | Read the reports from all of Tuesday's Championship matches:
Birmingham City 2-2 Preston North End
Bolton Wanderers 0-0 Charlton Athletic
Brentford 2-1 Cardiff City
Brighton & Hove Albion 4-0 QPR
Bristol City 2-3 Derby County
Burnley 1-1 Middlesbrough
Ipswich Town 1-1 Fulham
Leeds United 2-1 Wolverhampton Wanderers
Nottingham Forest 1-1 Blackburn Rovers
Reading 1-2 Hull City
Rotherham United 1-1 Huddersfield Town
Sheffield Wednesday 0-0 MK Dons | The top two drew, Brighton thrashed QPR to move closer to the automatic promotion places and Charlton were relegated. |
Summarize the information in the following document. | Create Fertility medical director Prof Geeta Nargund said some NHS clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) paid more than twice what others paid per cycle.
A national tariff would allow some regions to offer more women and couples treatment, she added.
CCGs pay clinics to provide fertility treatment for patients on the NHS.
The amount paid by CCGs per cycle can range from less than £3,000 to more than £6,000, according to data collated by campaign group Fertility Fairness in 2014-15 through the Freedom of Information Act.
Prof Nargund told the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme it would be for economists and CCGs to decide a fair and realistic cap, suggesting this could fall between £3,000 and £3,500 per cycle. It would be the Department of Health's responsibility to implement it, she added.
She said this would "level the playing field for women and couples all across the UK".
"It would allow us to double the number of IVF treatments that can be offered within the existing budget in many regions," she added.
Prof Nargund said there were a number of ways the more expensive providers could cut the cost of cycles - including reducing the number of drugs used.
She pointed to existing tariffs used for the provision of hip replacements and heart operations as an example of how the system could work.
Prof Nargund said the variation in fees was causing some CCGs to fail to meet guidelines set by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE).
NICE recommends that women under 40 should have access to three cycles of treatment, but only 38 of the 209 CCGs in England currently offer this, research from Fertility Fairness suggests.
Susan Seenan, chief executive of Infertility Network UK, said that patients "remain at the mercy of their postcode" as a result of the current system.
She added: "A basic IVF procedure is the same no matter which clinic is used. There is a limited amount of drugs they can use, so there shouldn't be a massive difference in price - not to the levels we're seeing in our data."
Ms Seenan said CCGs often did not know how much they should be paying for treatment. "Some appear to take the price they're given or don't question what is included in the cycle," she said.
Prof Nargund and Ms Seenan suggested CCGs should work together to improve their commissioning process and create economies of scale.
The Department of Health has not yet responded to our request for comment.
The Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:15-11:00 BST on BBC Two and the BBC News channel. | The amount IVF providers can charge the NHS in England for treatment should be capped by the government, a leading fertility expert has said. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | Dutchman Poels, 28, prevailed in a sprint at the end of a gruelling 154-mile race held in wintry conditions.
Poels had to fend off a late challenge from Switzerland's Michael Albasini, with Portugal's Rui Costa in third.
"To be able to win the first 'Monument' for the team is really special," said Poels. "It's a huge win for the team."
The Liege-Bastogne-Liege is the oldest of cycling's 'Monument' one-day races, a group that includes the Milan-San Remo, Tour of Flanders, Paris-Roubaix and Giro di Lombardia.
Sunday's race marked its 102nd edition and provided Poels with the biggest win of his career
"It's unbelievable," he added on Team Sky's website. "I'm really happy and I still can't believe I won Liege-Bastogne-Liege. It's a really nice victory that's for sure.
"I think everyone was really tired from the cold, rain, snow and everything else the weather threw at us today. I did a good sprint and luckily it was enough."
Final result: Liege-Bastogne-Liege:
1. Wout Poels (Ned/Team Sky) 6:24:29"
2. Michael Albasini (Swi/Orica) Same time
3. Rui Costa (Por/Lampre)
4. Samuel Sanchez (Spa/BMC Racing) +4"
5. Ilnur Zakarin (Rus/Katusha) +9"
6. Romain Bardet (Fra/AG2R) +11"
7. Roman Kreuziger (Cze/Tinkoff) +12"
8. Joaquim Rodriguez (Spa/ Katusha)
9. Bauke Mollema (Ned/Trek)
10. Diego Rosa (Ita/Astana)
Selected others:
16. Alejandro Valverde (Spa/Movistar)
44. Ben Swift (GB/Team Sky) +1:56"
112. Chris Froome (GB/Team Sky) +10:31" | Wout Poels triumphed in Sunday's Liege-Bastogne-Liege to secure a first victory for Team Sky in one of cycling's one-day Classics. |
Can you summarize the following content in brief? | Currently club's in England's top flight can spend £1.85m on their squad, with another £175,000 allowed for a marquee player outside of that.
Koukash called from an increase in the cap in 2013 when he bought Salford and hopes to discuss the matter at a Super League meeting this week.
"The cap is very, very restrictive," he told Rugby League Extra.
"The fact that it is the same as it was five years ago tells you something and it is restricting you - you can't even keep it with the rate of inflation.
"I'm not saying every owner or club is going to be able to do it but the fact that you're telling everybody to keep it below that level and the likes of [Leigh owner] Derek Beaumont, myself and [Warrington owner] Simon Moran - we've got the funds, we could go out and invest in trying to build stronger teams."
After only securing their Super League status with an golden-point drop-goal in the Million Pound Game against Hull KR last season, Salford are fourth after winning five of their first eight games in 2017.
It is the second full season for head coach Ian Watson after he replaced Iestyn Harris in 2015 and Koukash believes the 40-year-old former Red Devils scrum-half has made a difference.
"Ian is a fantastic coach and what makes him one is the fact he is a very, very nice person," he told BBC Radio Manchester.
"A coach is a leader more than anything else and his players are his soldiers - if the soldiers trust in the leader they'll do their best, and that is what I think has made an awful lot of difference this year.
"We've got a very young side. This side will improve this year from last year and I believe they will improve further next year as well."
Meanwhile, Salford have announced assistant coaches Martin Gleeson and Willie Poching have signed new contracts.
Media playback is not supported on this device
The Barcelona forward curled home a free-kick after only 12 minutes, and Luan added a second after the break.
Brazil will now play Honduras in Wednesday's semi-finals after they won 1-0 against South Korea, thanks to Alberth Elis's winner.
Germany play Nigeria in the other last-four match.
The Africans beat Denmark 2-0 in their quarter-final, while Germany won 4-0 against Portugal.
Brazil's second pool win came after 0-0 draws with Iraq and South Africa, and a 4-0 victory over Denmark.
Neymar, the poster boy for the Games, finally got off the mark at the fourth attempt when he curled home from 25 yards out.
He then provoked a mass brawl between the two teams after a heavy challenge on Andres Roa, and five yellow cards were handed out.
Brazil made sure of a place in their third consecutive Olympic semi-final when Luan's effort from outside the area beat goalkeeper Cristian Bonilla. | Salford Red Devils owner Marwan Koukash has reiterated his desire for Super League to increase the salary cap.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Neymar scored his first goal of the Olympics as hosts Brazil beat Colombia 2-0 to reach the semi-finals of the men's football. |
Summarize the provided information. | Michael Davies, 71, from Blaina, Blaenau Gwent, was staying at Hotel Maria in Sandown with his wife Pat when he disappeared.
Hampshire Constabulary said Mr Davies wandered off from the hotel at 21:30 BST on Tuesday 26 May and was later seen less than half a mile inland.
Two of Mr Davies' granddaughters have urged him to return.
Ellinor Trigg, 24, and Kelly Davies, 31, said in a statement: "We'd like to say to Granch that everyone is thinking about you, we all miss you and want you to come home.
"We feel like we're in limbo right now, we can't do anything until we know where you've gone.
"Please get in contact to let us know you're alright."
"Our appeal to anyone who sees him is to introduce yourself gently to him.
"Talk to Mike about his many interests and hobbies. He has a passion for old British motorbikes, pocket watches, cycling in Wales, old coin collections, and making ginger beer.
"He likes to watch the TV comedy programmes Only Fools and Horses and Rab C Nesbitt."
Mr Davies is described as white with cropped white hair and was wearing a blue T-shirt, a blue Reebok jumper, jeans and a baseball cap when he went missing. | The family of a south Wales pensioner who went missing on the Isle of Wight have appealed for him to make contact. |
Give a brief overview of this passage. | A woman, 33, from Milton Keynes, and a man, 26, from London, were arrested at Heathrow Airport on suspicion of conspiracy to commit child cruelty.
The Met Police said the girl had been travelling with them at the time.
The arrests were made by officers raising awareness of FGM, forced marriage and honour based abuse.
Officers said, as part of the operation, they had spoken to passengers who had travelled to the UK on various flights including from Abuja, Sierra Leone and Lagos.
It is illegal to participate in arranging FGM in or outside the UK and those involved can face a prison term of 14 years.
There has only ever been one, unsuccessful, prosecution in the UK, with three more cases set to be reviewed by lawyers.
The Met said it had dealt with an increasing number of cases, rising from 29 reports in 2012 to 196 in the year to March 2016.
His exit seems increasingly inevitable after a poor finish to the season.
The Toffees are currently 12th in the Premier League table but have won just one of their last 10 league games.
Supporters' groups are planning a protest at St George's Hall in Liverpool, where players and officials will gather on Thursday evening.
The only potential sticking point is that Martinez still has three years left on a lucrative contract, worth a reported £4m a year, that he signed in the summer of 2014.
Everton finish their season at home to relegated Norwich City on Sunday.
The agent of Dutch coach Frank de Boer, who has just stepped down at Ajax, has stated he would be interested in the Everton job if it became available.
Southampton's Ronald Koeman and Manchester City's Manuel Pellegrini have also been linked with the club.
Everton's board, led by new major shareholder Farhad Moshiri and chairman Bill Kenwright, have remained silent on Martinez's future.
It had been expected they would wait until the end of the season before conducting a review but anger among Everton fans means a decision on Martinez's future could now be made earlier.
Everton have produced three dismal away performances in succession in the Premier League, losing 4-0 at Liverpool, 3-1 at newly-crowned champions Leicester City and 3-0 at Sunderland on Wednesday.
They also lost the FA Cup semi-final to Manchester United.
In addition, Martinez has presided over the worst home record in Everton's history this season, losing eight of their 18 games so far.
They have won only five league matches at Goodison Park, with two of those coming against relegated Aston Villa and Newcastle United..
Martinez was appointed Everton manager in summer 2013, succeeding David Moyes after he left for Manchester United.
The 42-year-old Spaniard guided Everton to fifth place with 72 points in his first campaign - a club record in the Premier League era - but the Toffees managed just 47 the following season, finishing 11th. | An 11-year-old girl has been taken into care and two adults have been arrested in a crackdown on female genital mutilation (FGM).
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Everton boss Roberto Martinez will face fans' protests at the club's end-of-season awards dinner - unless he is sacked before Thursday's event. |
Give a concise summary of the passage below. | The holders, who also won the trophy in 2013, bowed out in the group stage despite six wins in 14 games.
Promotion in the County Championship, though, is still a possibility.
"We wanted to be in a position going into the last five games where we had something to play for, and we have," Ripley told BBC Radio Northampton.
"We'll be pushing hard to get ourselves in there with maybe two games to go, one game to go.
"I'm just looking forward to seeing us get stuck in and who knows, it could still be a pretty special season."
With two promotion places available again this summer, Northants are currently third, 15 points behind second-placed Worcestershire, but with a game in hand.
However, two of their remaining five matches are against leaders Nottinghamshire, the first starting at Trent Bridge on 28 August.
"I'm looking forward to the first game because that will be like a Test match kind of atmosphere and a good challenge, but I'd probably take one of the other teams (rather than playing Notts twice)," said Ripley.
"We've just got to play our best cricket for four days and if we get into a position where we get on top, we've got to really hammer it home.
"They've got such a healthy lead, I don't know if they'll just go for the jugular and try to win every game or whether they'll think that when they're playing someone else around them (in the table), have a featherbed (pitch), take some batting points and just ease themselves to promotion."
Ripley is confident Northants have the seam-bowling quality to add to their five Championship wins this season, but wants more consistency from his batsmen.
"We really need to fire with the bat to give ourselves a chance. We've had some decent individual performances, but as a collective, our batting points (total) doesn't lie, we haven't set the world alight," he added. | Northamptonshire head coach David Ripley believes it could still be a "pretty special season" despite failing to reach the T20 Blast quarter-finals. |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | An entire generation of Syrians has had its education truncated, and the country's once flourishing academic community has been scattered or driven underground.
The scale of the problem, according to the president of the Institute of International Education (IIE), Allan Goodman, is "unprecedented" in the near 100-year history of his New-York based organisation.
Higher education in Syria was expanding on the eve of the conflict in 2011, with some 350,000 full-time undergraduates and more than 8,000 lecturers and professors.
More than a quarter of young people were going into higher education.
Five years later, around 2,000 academics and hundreds of thousands of students are living in the refugee camps of Turkey and Jordan.
Many more are lost among the millions of internally displaced Syrians.
"Even in Iraq, when professors were being assassinated and there was terrible violence, many universities managed to stay open, and many students continued to study," says Mr Goodman.
But in Syria, universities were often deliberately targeted and destroyed.
Mr Goodman says the international community has only recently started to appreciate the gravity of the problem - and the need for higher education to be part of any rebuilding and post-war reconstruction.
The IIE has been working to rescue scholars from Syria and to help refugees.
Sana Mustafa is now a final year undergraduate at Bard College in New York.
She had been a business student in Damascus and had been detained by the Syrian secret police after taking part in an anti-government demonstration in 2011.
She was released and in 2013 went to Lebanon to take part in conflict resolution and peace-building workshops.
While there she won a place on a US-Middle East programme at the Roger Williams University in Washington DC and arrived in the US in the summer of 2013.
"I was supposed to stay two months, but while here my dad got detained in Syria."
"I couldn't go back. My mum and two sisters fled to Turkey. I had been in my fourth year, I had nearly finished, just one a semester left, but I couldn't continue with it, because first I had to survive."
"I was trying to find shelter, a ceiling to sleep under, and to get political asylum.
"I started moving from place to place. I stayed in nine places in one year, always couches, I never had my own bed. I was staying with random people, I knew no one, I had no money, I mean it, nothing."
The IIE were able to help her to apply for scholarships - and her current college offered her full funding.
Dr Talal al Mayhni, a neuroscientist at Cambridge University's Department of Clinical Neurosciences, left Syria in 2011.
"As a Syrian, all I can say is we lost control of what is going on in our country... I am not wanting to blame anyone.
"I think there are a reasonable number of scholarships available to support Syrians. But there are lots of obstacles, and it's not just the academics. You have the postgraduates and undergraduates who have lost years of their lives."
"It has affected a whole generation."
As for his former university, Dr al Mayhni hears: "There are informers everywhere. It's not a place for academic excellence any more, sadly."
Another Syrian academic at a UK university, who wished to remain anonymous, said that at Aleppo University, things got to the point where "there was no electricity, and it was often difficult to find water. But we did our best".
Staffing of his faculty reduced from nearly 60 to 10 and most of his male students had been forced to join the army.
More stories from the BBC's Global education series looking at education from an international perspective and how to get in touch
But there are some glimmerings of light and initiatives to pluck a few more Syrian scholars from the furnace.
The IIE's Scholar Rescue Fund and the Finnish government's Centre for International Mobility (CIMO) has launched a scheme to allow Syrian scholars to continue their work in Finnish universities.
Selecting the students can be difficult.
"It's a very challenging and sensitive process," said James King, assistant director of the IIE's Scholar Rescue Fund.
As with any scholarship application, they're asked to supply CVs, references, samples of publications - but for many, meeting these requirements is impossible. Documents are lost or withheld, referees can be gagged by hostile institutions.
The joint project with Finland will add a few more rescued academics to the 83 from Syria and 304 from Iraq awarded fellowships by the Scholar Rescue Fund.
The Council for At Risk Academics (CARA) is the direct descendant of the Academic Assistance Council founded by William Beveridge, director of the London School of Economics, in 1933 to help academics suffering under Nazi persecution.
It has since had many changes of name - but its job is essentially the same, and it has never been short of work.
"Our founders were very clear, their mission was in two parts: the relief of suffering, and the advancement of learning and science, " said Stephen Wordsworth, executive director of CARA.
"Certainly the Syrians we're helping are quite clear they want to go back to help build a better society when that's possible", he added.
"It's very much the way they think. A couple of years ago we were having the same experience with Iraq, and 90% of them did go back".
There were cases of academics who returned to Mosul, in northern Iraq, and then had to leave a second time after its occupation by the so-called Islamic State group.
Assassinations of professors in Iraqi cities, alongside the murder of the Palmyra archaeologist Khaled al-Asaad in 2015, raised awareness of the desperate situation of scholars.
"Higher education is a very international business, and there's an awareness of our responsibilities to our peers," Mr Wordsworth added.
CARA works with a network of 113 universities in the UK. Their support to help Syrian scholars, in terms of fee waiver and living costs, increased to over £2m in 2015.
"They are all trying to help," said Mr Wordsworth.
The academics who have found sanctuary abroad have cast light on conditions for those still trying to work in Syria.
"Some universities are still operating, some have shut down altogether," Mr Wordsworth said.
Simply getting to work could be perilous: "They find themselves going through multiple checkpoints run by assorted militias... they get robbed, they get dragged away to join the army… or they just get beaten up."
The biggest efforts to help displaced Syrian scholars have come from Germany.
In 2014 the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) won government funding of 7.8m euro (£6m) to offer 200 scholarships. It received over 5,000 applications, half from academics still in Syria.
"We put together a travelling selection committee of 25 German professors", said DAAD's Middle East region head Dr Christian Hulshorster. "We travelled for three weeks, interviewing in Istanbul Beirut, Cairo and Erbil."
These students, mostly postgraduates, are now studying in German universities.
There are also science research fellowships named after Jewish pathologist Philipp Schwartz, who fled Nazi Germany in 1933 and founded the Emergency Society of German Scholars Abroad.
Another German 100m euro (£80m) initiative has been launched this year, to help refugees who were already in, or about to start higher education back home.
DAAD's secretary general, Dorothea Ruland, said these students were important as they would eventually return to Syria and inspire future generations.
Mr Goodman says if he had a "magic wand" he would create an entire university in exile.
There have been two examples of this - the New York School for Social Research, funded by the Rockefellers in 1933, and the European Humanities University, opened in Vilnius, Lithuania in 2005, in exile from Minsk in Belarus.
But with the political debate on refugees becoming heated, the idea of rescuing scholars is getting tougher.
There have been questions about the morality of offering sanctuary to professors while others are left to the mercy of traffickers.
It's not an argument Mr Goodman accepts: "We need a change of mindset... We know that refugees spend many years in camps, and to have a whole generation growing up in a camp with no education is a very dangerous thing." | While the Syrian refugee crisis grabs the headlines, a less visible story with equally calamitous implications is unfolding in its shadow. |
Can you provide a brief summary of the following information? | Defendant Stephen Anthony Hough, 58, of Maes y Dre, Flint, is charged with the murder and rape of Janet Commins between 5 January and 12 January 1976.
He appeared at Mold Crown Court on Monday and formally pleaded not guilty to her murder.
Mr Justice Lewis agreed to an application for the start of the trial to be put off until Tuesday afternoon.
The body of Janet Commins was found under a hedge in a school playing field in Flint on 11 January, 1976.
Ministers are expected to announce that the UK will cut carbon emissions by 57% by 2032, from 1990 levels.
The announcement will help reassure the investors needed to overhaul the UK's ageing energy system.
The energy industry will be relieved after cuts in renewables subsidies and the vote to leave the EU, which influences so much of the UK's energy.
Energy Secretary Amber Rudd said climate change remained one of the most serious long-term risks to the economy.
Speaking at a business and climate summit in London, Ms Rudd said: "Climate change has not been downgraded as a threat.
"We must not turn our back on Europe or the world. So while I think the UK's role in dealing with a warming planet may have been made harder by the decision last Thursday, our commitment to dealing with it has not gone away."
Business spokesmen at the conference echoed a call by the former Labour Climate Secretary Ed Miliband for the prime minister immediately to ratify the Paris climate accord in which nearly 180 countries agreed to cut carbon emissions.
I understand, though, that there will be a warning note from the government's advisers - the Committee on Climate Change. They are expected to press ministers to urgently produce new policies to back up its ambitions.
The committee has previously calculated that the government's targets for low-carbon energy are on track, but said that a new approach is needed on CO2 emissions from housing as well as agriculture and transport - two sectors where emissions are growing.
Committee members have expressed their concern at the government's failure to support carbon capture and storage technology, which will allow fossil fuels to continue to be burned.
The prime minister said it was essential for the UK - before he withdrew the funds supporting the technology.
Follow Roger on Twitter @rharrabin | A Flintshire man has pleaded not guilty to the murder and rape of a 15-year-old schoolgirl more than 40 years ago.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A world-leading climate change target up to the early 2030s is set to be confirmed by the British government. |
Please summarize the given passage. | The 34-year-old, who was detained on Wednesday in Birmingham, can be kept in police custody until the evening of 23 November.
He was arrested on suspicion of "the commission, preparation and instigation" of acts of terrorism under Section 41 of the Terrorism Act 2000.
A search of a property in the city has been completed.
West Midlands Police said the arrest was planned and intelligence-led and there was no threat to the public's safety.
Aberdeen claimed their first win at Ibrox since 1991, Graeme Shinnie and Ryan Christie scoring before Martyn Waghorn's reply for the hosts.
Caixinha said he was left waiting over 15 minutes for McInnes in his office at Pittodrie in April before leaving.
But McInnes insists his opposite number was "mistaken".
Caixinha said following his side's 2-1 defeat in Glasgow: "I was just saluting him and saying I didn't understand the reason why he invited me to be received in his office and didn't show up at the previous match.
"So I said that if you didn't show up in the previous match, you are definitely not welcome to come to my office. It is a question of respect. If I am not being respected then, please, don't show up.
"If he didn't show up and I waited more than 15 minutes, what do you call that?"
Media playback is not supported on this device
But McInnes said of events at Pittodrie after Rangers' 3-0 win on 9 April: "I was doing my media duties as I normally do and there is absolutely no way I would be like that with any manager and I never will.
"Every manager is welcome in my office and I always make the point.
"It's not something you can aim at me. He's wrong, he's mistaken. If he thinks that then maybe he should have said to me before - I don't know.
"[Assistant] Tony Docherty and my staff were there at the time and told me they came in, had a quick glass of red wine and shot away. They made their apologies for having to leave so soon.
"I was still doing my media work and it was no longer than any other time. I would never disrespect any manager in terms of after the game."
The Dons boss had said this week that Rangers "should probably be embarrassed that they've not finished second" owing to the Glasgow side's greater financial clout.
Aberdeen will finish as Premiership runners-up for the third season running with Rangers consigned to third place.
"Managers and benches can get passionate on the touchline," said McInnes. "There was a couple of calls, one or two things, and I argued with him as he did with me."
And Caixinha added: "I'm not focused on Aberdeen next season. The focus at this club is always to be number one.
"We don't misunderstand things here. I know what it represents to be in this chair, despite many others who should like to be here but they aren't.
"I know what the job represents and I am here to defend the club and work for the club." | More time has been granted to question a man held on suspicion of terrorism offences.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Rangers manager Pedro Caixinha says he told Aberdeen counterpart Derek McInnes not to come into his office following Wednesday's meeting in Glasgow. |
Can you summarize this passage? | Abdulkadir Masharipov is believed to have mounted the assault on the Reina club which left 39 people dead.
The Uzbek national is said to have been caught in Istanbul's Esenyurt district.
Citizens of Israel, France, Tunisia, Lebanon, India, Belgium, Jordan and Saudi Arabia were among the victims, and dozens of people were injured.
So-called Islamic State (IS) said it was behind the attack, saying it was revenge for Turkish military involvement in Syria.
The gunman arrived at the club by taxi early that Sunday, before rushing through the entrance with a long-barrelled gun he had taken from the boot of the car.
He fired randomly at people celebrating the new year.
It was the culmination of a huge police manhunt: a raid on the Istanbul suburb of Esenyurt that finally caught the alleged Reina attacker, named as Uzbek national Abdulkadir Masharipov.
Photographs show him with a heavily bruised face, wearing a grey T-shirt and being held by his throat.
There had been fears that the gunman had managed to escape Turkey, perhaps to territory held by so-called Islamic State, which said it was behind the attack.
The Turkish authorities will be hugely relieved at his capture. But the far greater challenge for them is to secure this country and step up intelligence to halt the wave of terror attacks that has engulfed Turkey.
Police reportedly found the suspect along with his four year-old son at the home of a Kyrgyz friend in the city. Turkish media say that his friend was also detained, along with three women.
According to the Hurriyet newspaper, he was due to undergo medical checks before being taken in for interrogation at a police headquarters.
Sources: Turkish media
Turkish media report that the suspect rented a flat in the central Turkish city of Konya with a woman believed to be his wife and two children. He arrived in Istanbul on 15 December, according to Hurriyet's sources.
The reports add that police also carried out raids on other suspected IS militants.
Turkey has been battling IS inside northern Syria while seeking to push back ethnic Kurds in the region too.
Reina was one of Istanbul's best-known clubs, with a view across the Bosphorus towards Asia.
It attracted singers, actors and sports stars as well as foreign tourists.
20 August 2016: Bomb attack on wedding party in Gaziantep kills at least 30 people, in an attack claimed by IS
28 June 2016: A gun and bomb attack on Ataturk airport in Istanbul kills 41 people, blamed on IS militants
19 March 2016: Suicide bomb kills four people in shopping street in Istanbul. IS blamed
12 January 2016: 12 Germans killed by IS bomber in tourist area of Istanbul
10 October 2015: More than 100 killed at peace rally outside railway station in Ankara; blamed on IS
20 July 2015: 34 people killed in bombing in Suruc, near Syrian border; IS blamed | Turkish police have arrested the main suspect in the New Year's Eve attack on an exclusive nightclub in Istanbul after a huge manhunt. |
What is the summary of the given information? | McGuire is world individual champion in the BC4 classification, while Smith won team gold alongside double Paralympic gold medallist Murray at Beijing 2008.
Games debutants Josh Rowe and Claire Taggart, Patrick Wilson, and brothers Jamie and Scott McCowan are also named.
Kieran Steer and Evie Edwards complete the line-up.
Matt Hammond, team leader for GB Boccia, said: "Today's announcement is a proud moment.
"The team is as strong as it's ever been and these athletes have been pushed to deliver the performances needed to secure their place on the team.
"I'd like to congratulate the athletes and their competition partners for all of their hard work up to this point and I believe we can pose a real threat to our rivals on the court in Rio."
The Paralympic Games get under way in Brazil on 7 September.
Media playback is not supported on this device | David Smith, Stephen McGuire and Nigel Murray have all been named in Great Britain's 10-strong boccia squad for the Rio Paralympic Games in September. |
What is the summary of the document provided? | The dove, named Nancy, was found by Imdad Sardharwalla and taken to a local vet after being abandoned at birth.
Once strong enough, she was set free but only made it as far as a house two doors away from the surgery.
After making herself at home on the cooker, homeowner Rachel Lucken and others took to Facebook to find a permanent safe aviary for the bird.
Mrs Lucken had spotted the dove being closely watched by cats in her garden after it was released from its aviary at the vet's on Sunday.
More news from Hertfordshire
After putting the photo on Facebook another neighbour, Charlotte Page offered to look after the bird, also posting images.
"I think as it was hand-reared it basically doesn't want to be free and is craving human company," Mrs Page said.
Mr Sardharwalla recognised Nancy's pictures and is leading the hunt for a more suitable permanent home.
Nancy meanwhile is being cared for at the vet's once more.
Dr Viola Ross-Smith, from the British Trust for Ornithology, said: "Some species of birds can imprint on the first thing they see, in this case maybe it was a human."
"The dove may well think it actually is a human," she added.
The 24-year-old maintained the sparkling form which has seen him set new Scottish records at 5,000m and 3,000m in the past five weeks.
He broke away with four laps to go and enjoyed a celebratory final lap as he finished in 13 minutes, 44.00 seconds.
Tom Farrell pipped fellow Englishman Andy Vernon for second place.
"I am absolutely buzzing," said Butchart, a member of the Central Athletics Club based in Stirling.
"I was really nervous for today, it was my first chance of winning a British title and I am really happy to be going to Rio, I'm over the moon.
"This is the best thing that has ever happened to me. I am so excited to represent my country and so looking forward to the Games.
"I have been working so hard to get it done."
Fellow Scot Eilidh Doyle comfortably won her 400m hurdles heat in 56.30 seconds - nearly two seconds quicker than anyone else in the three heats - to qualify for Sunday's final at 13:46 BST.
Laura Muir was the fastest qualifier for Sunday's 1500m final (15:27) in four minutes, 15.07 seconds, winning the second heat ahead of Charlene Thomas (4:15.46) and Jessica Judd (4:16.18). Sarah McDonald, Laura Weightman and Hannah England were the leading trio in the opening heat.
Lynsey Sharp won her 800m heat in 2:01.86, with only Jenny Meadows (2:01.33) qualifying faster for Sunday's final at 16:33.
Chris O'Hare won his 1500m heat and Jake Wightman finished second in his to both reach the final, at 15:05 on Sunday. Englishman Tom Lancashire, who won the final heat, was the fastest qualifier. | A home is being sought for a hand-reared dove that "may well think it actually is a human".
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Andrew Butchart surged clear of the field to win the British Championships 5,000m and seal his place in Great Britain's Olympics team for Rio. |
Can you summarize the following information? | Media playback is not supported on this device
The Reds now face a trip to Devon for the third-round replay and have six remaining games in January.
Klopp's side also play Southampton in a two-legged EFL Cup semi-final and Premier League games against Manchester United, Swansea and Chelsea.
However, the German boss said: "I don't think the line-up was a mistake."
Asked about the long, midweek trip for the FA Cup replay, which is set to be played on 17 January, Klopp added: "Yippee. I don't know if at home they can play the same defensive style. We are looking forward to it."
Liverpool's starting line-up on Sunday had an average age of of 21 years and 296 days.
Forward Ben Woodburn, 17, is the club's youngest goalscorer after his strike against Leeds in the EFL Cup earlier this season and he was given his first start.
Trent Alexander-Arnold, 18, and 19-year-olds Joe Gomez - making his first appearance since suffering a knee ligament injury in October 2015 - Ovie Ejaria and Sheyi Ojo were also in the side.
At 29, Lucas was the oldest Liverpool player.
"I am responsible if you want to see it in a bad way," added Klopp.
"I always choose line-ups to win the game. We didn't think about the age. They are important players in our squad."
First-team regulars Daniel Sturridge, Adam Lallana and Roberto Firmino were brought on during the second half, but the hosts - who had enjoyed 80.3% possession in the first period - continued to be frustrated.
"We could have done better, 100%," said the Reds boss. "In the first half we lost patience too early - crossing at the wrong moment, making the wrong pass.
"We had the ball all the time. It was boring, not the most exciting game."
Media playback is not supported on this device
Plymouth, who are second and challenging for promotion from League Two, limited Liverpool to four shots on target.
"It is probably one of the best defensive performances Anfield has seen," said Plymouth boss Derek Adams. "We allowed them time but didn't allow them space.
"This was about a team performance. We had 13 players and they all deserve a huge amount of credit."
Asked what Liverpool could expect in the replay at Home Park, he added: "Welcome to the real world." | Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp defended selecting the youngest starting XI in the club's history for the 0-0 FA Cup draw against League Two side Plymouth. |
Summarize the content provided below. | More than 50 posts, including specialist teachers, are earmarked to go as part of a strategy to streamline the service and cut costs.
The plans have been opposed by some parents and the EIS teaching union.
Education committee chairman Jeff Leaver said he understood the unease but safeguards would be built in.
The learning support strategy is to be the focus of a series of family engagement forums.
The first is between 18:00 and 19:30 at Moffat Academy.
Media playback is not supported on this device
The star of BBC Three sitcoms Crims and Josh kicks off his Elis in Euroland campaign with an ode to Darren Barnard and Bobby Gould's sartorial expertise.
Elis In Euroland will be a series of comedy video shorts on the BBC Wales Sport Facebook page during Euro 2016.
Follow Elis in Euroland throughout Euro 2016 on BBC Wales Sport's Facebook page or check out his weekly radio show on BBC Radio Wales
Who do you think should start at Euro 2016? Step into Chris Coleman’s shoes and pick your XI - and then share it with your friends using our brand new team selector.
Thomasina Bennett was temporarily staying at Milford House in Derbyshire while her daughters went on holiday.
The wardrobe had not been fastened to the wall, but the home was cleared of a safety charge relating to this.
Gerald Hudson, trading as Milford House, was instead convicted of a charge relating to monitor alarms.
The personal activity monitor alarms (PAMs) were supposed to alert staff if residents got up in the night - but Mrs Bennett's alarm did not go off.
Margaret Calladine, Mrs Bennett's elder daughter, said they chose the home because it used these monitors.
"When we were talking to the manageress of the home we told her about my mum's problems and she assured us that my mum would be monitored at night if she got out of bed," Mrs Calladine said.
"That was the main reason that we chose that home to put her in because to us that was vital, because we knew that she would get out of bed because she did at home, and she would fall and she can't get herself back up."
Hudson, 72, from Ambergate, was fined £60,000 and ordered to pay £90,000 costs at Derby Crown Court.
He was cleared of failing to make a sufficient assessment of the risks of using free-standing furniture, which would have been a breach of the Health and Safety at Work Act.
However, he was found guilty of a breaching the act by failing to suitably assess the risks of using the PAMs, failing to ensure they were suitable for use, and failing to ensure employees were adequately trained to use them.
In a statement, Milford House Partnership said the PAMs were "bought in good faith from a specialist company who had provided them to other healthcare organisations including the NHS".
"Our staff were left absolutely devastated by the death of Thomasina Bennett," it said.
"We truly believed that by adding in extra safety measures that went above and beyond the industry standards, that we were extending our duty of care to our residents." | Plans to overhaul learning support in Dumfries and Galloway schools are being put under the spotlight in the first of a series of consultation events.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Comedian and actor Elis James is so excited that Wales are finally in a major tournament after 58 years of heartache that the devoted supporter will give us a daily fans' eye-view as the action unfolds at Euro 2016.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The owner of a care home where an 80-year-old woman was found dead under a fallen wardrobe has been ordered to pay £150,000 after being prosecuted. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | The survivors were picked up from wooden and rubber boats, in 17 separate operations by Italian and French ships.
An Italian ship landed nearly 900 people in Sicily early on Monday.
At least 1,750 people have died this year trying to cross the Mediterranean, a 20-fold increase on the same period in 2014 when 96 people died.
The final number of people rescued over the weekend is expected to rise. The busiest two days for rescues so far this year were April 12 and 13, when 6,500 people were picked up.
Many more migrants are expected to make the crossing in the coming weeks as smugglers take advantage of calmer weather.
In a separate incident on Sunday, three people died when a boat carrying migrants to Europe sank off Egypt's coast, according to Egyptian state media. Thirty-one migrants were reportedly rescued.
At an emergency meeting last month to discuss the crisis, European Union leaders said they would triple the funding for rescue operations run by EU border agency Frontex, and threatened to target smugglers' boats with military strikes.
Italy abandoned its Mare Nostrum search-and-rescue mission last year after some EU members - including the UK - said they could not afford to fund it.
The decision was widely criticised in April after more than 800 people died when a single boat sank - the deadliest capsize recorded in the Mediterranean.
Some of the 27 survivors of the accident described being beaten by smugglers in an attempt to load more migrants on to the boat
The overloaded vessel crashed into a cargo ship shortly after leaving Libya, causing panic on board. The dead were mostly Syrians, Senegalese, Eritreans, and Somalis - adults and children.
The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) has said "much more" needs to be done beyond the EU's current spending plans to tackle the migration crisis in the Mediterranean.
More on the Mediterranean's deadly migrant routes
Who are the people smugglers?
What happened on the sinking boat? | More than 5,800 migrants have been rescued and 10 bodies recovered off the Libyan coast over the weekend, the Italian coastguard says. |
Please summarize the passage below. | Paul Maynard told the Times Labour MPs had pulled faces at him in the Commons, saying he felt they were "taking the mick out of my disability".
Mr Phillips told the BBC Speaker John Bercow should look into the matter.
Labour MP Tom Harris, who was not at the debate, has said no MP would attack someone for having a disability.
Mr Maynard - who was elected MP for Blackpool North and Cleveleys in May - describes his cerebral palsy as being "very mild" and not really affecting how he lives.
But he told the Times on Saturday that some MPs had been making "exaggerated gesticulations, really exaggerated faces" at him during a debate about the abolition of the child trust fund last year.
He added: "Only they know for certain whether they were taking the mick out of my disability. But it felt like it."
Mr Phillips, head of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, told BBC One's Andrew Marr Show: "He was obviously being mocked, according to his account, by other members of Parliament - that to me is shocking, I felt physically sick when I read about it.
"If that had happened in a football ground, the people mocking him would have been on CCTV, and they would have been whipped out of the ground and not let back.
"That's one for the Speaker to look at as part of his drive to increase diversity."
Labour MP Mr Harris told BBC Radio 5 Live on Saturday that no MP would have deliberately targeted someone over their disability.
He was not there but said he understood people were jeering until they realised there was "another issue".
He said: "Nobody knew about Paul's disability. If anyone did know about it and still made fun of him that is absolutely appalling and unforgivable."
Mr Phillips was also asked about the row over comments on the BBC programme Top Gear about Mexicans - which resulted in an apology by the BBC last week.
The Mexican ambassador in London complained about presenters' comments that Mexicans were lazy and feckless - describing them as "offensive, xenophobic and humiliating".
The Sunday Times reports that Mr Phillips will make a speech next week criticising the "PC lobby" for being fixated with "the trivial" rather than the "truly dangerous".
Asked about the Top Gear row - which newspapers suggested could fall foul of the new Equality Act, Mr Phillips said: "I'm not going to get hot under the collar about schoolboy provocation which frankly is organised so that we can get into a ruck and sell more DVDs for Jeremy Clarkson - Jeremy is rich enough."
He said the comments were "juvenile, it's vulgar, it's unacceptable" - but that was for broadcasters and columnists to argue about, it was not a matter for the law.
He said the EHRC should look at how it should carry out its role most effectively - adding that the public mood had changed in recent years so people were less tolerant of inequality.
He said the sexism row over a Sky Sports pundit's off-air remarks demonstrated the change, he said adding that Sky did "the right thing" in dismissing him: "But we didn't have to ring them up." | Equalities chief Trevor Phillips has told the BBC he felt "physically sick" at reports that a Conservative MP with cerebral palsy was mocked by other MPs. |
What is the summary of the following article? | Other joiners include Informa, Mediclinic International and Paddy Power Betfair.
Sports Direct, Smiths Group, Hikma Pharmaceuticals and Aberdeen Asset Management leave the ranking.
The list of top 100 companies is redrawn every three months to reflect changes in companies' market values.
A rise or fall in the share price is multiplied by the number of shares in issue to assess a companies' market worth.
Once a company enters the list, its share price can receive a further boost from index tracker investment, which has to include all the shares in the top 100, and other investment vehicles that favour the best-known and biggest company shares.
Sports Direct shares have been a poor performer this year, losing 27% since the start of the year.
Aberdeen Asset Management's shares have lost 10% since the start of 2016, as the fund management firm has been affected by a fall on emerging markets.
The changes will be implemented on 21 March.
26 March 2017 Last updated at 14:15 BST
This video comes from the Night of the Jumps competition in Krakow, Poland.
Some of the biggest name in the sport were taking part.
They were doing crazy jumps with crazy names like the California Roll, Nac Flair, Seat Grab Flip, the Egg Roll and even the Lazyboy Flip!
Enjoy!
Officials said Mohammed Afzal Guru, who had been on death row since 2002, was executed at Tihar jail near Delhi.
Afzal Guru had always denied plotting the attack, which left 14 dead.
India has stepped up security and announced a curfew in Indian-administered Kashmir, where news of the execution was expected to spark unrest.
Executions are very rare in India - Afzal Guru's was only the second since 2004, after Mohammed Ajmal Kasab, the sole surviving attacker from the 2008 Mumbai attack was executed in November.
"This is only about the law taking its course," Home Secretary RK Singh said.
Hundreds of police and paramilitary personnel have been deployed in towns and cities across Indian-administered Kashmir to try to contain any unrest sparked by the execution.
Claimed in its entirety by both India and Pakistan, Kashmir has been a flashpoint for more than 60 years and two wars have been fought over it.
The December 2001 attack was one of the most controversial incidents in recent Indian history, correspondents say.
Five rebels stormed India's parliament in Delhi on 13 December 2001, killing a gardener and eight policemen before they were shot dead by security forces.
India blamed the attack on the Jaish-e-Mohammed militant group, which it said was backed by Pakistan.
Pakistan denied involvement in the attack but relations between the two countries nosedived as their armies massed about a million troops along the border.
Afzal Guru, a former fruit seller, was one of two men sentenced to death for helping to plan the attack, although the sentence of Shaukat Hussain was later reduced on appeal to 10 years in jail.
Guru was found guilty of arranging weapons for the attackers and of membership of Jaish-e-Mohammed, both of which he denied.
Two other people accused in the case, SAR Geelani and Afsan Guru, were acquitted due to a lack of evidence.
Afzal Guru's appeal was first refused by the Supreme Court and then the president.
The US-based Committee to Protect Journalists says press freedom has deteriorated significantly; it cites harassment of journalists and the removal of Ukrainian TVs from terrestrial airwaves and cable networks.
Most local broadcasters are pro-Russian. Only Crimean Tatar ATR TV remains more or less critical of the authorities.
Major Russian TV channels are widely available terrestrially. Top Ukrainian channels can only be watched online or via satellite.
Black Sea TV, once the most-popular TV station based in Crimea, is now only available via satellite and the internet.
Radio stations tend to focus on entertainment and operate as local outlets of major Russian broadcasters.
Russian print media have expanded their presence. Most leading Moscow-based titles are available at local kiosks and many have set up offices in Crimea. Very few Ukrainian papers are sold.
The Australian, 27, joined the Red Devils in 2016 and has scored four tries in 21 league games this season.
Coach Ian Watson said he was "ecstatic" to re-sign "one of the best half-backs" in Super League, a day after Niall Evalds also signed a new deal.
"This again signals our intentions to bring in and keep top quality at this club," Watson added. | Supermarket chain Morrisons is back in the FTSE 100, following a rise in its share price, just three months after leaving the top group.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Check out these super-cool motorbike stunts!
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A Kashmiri militant sentenced to death over a 2001 plot to attack India's parliament has been hanged after his final clemency plea was rejected.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Crimea's media scene has seen major changes since Russia annexed the peninsula in March 2014.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Salford Red Devils stand-off Robert Lui has signed a new long-term contract at the Super League club. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | Richard Davies, 41, died of a single gunshot wound to the chest after shooting at firearms officers in St Neots, Cambridgeshire, in October 2015.
One officer, referred to as F7, told jurors: "I genuinely thought one of us was going to get shot and killed."
Last week, the inquest in Peterborough heard Mr Davies wanted to end his life after learning his marriage was over.
Jurors heard he tied up his children at the house in Duck Lane after spending the day drinking, but they managed to escape and call 999.
Firearms officer F7 told the inquest he and a colleague heard a loud bang and saw a "muzzle flash" from a downstairs window as their car arrived at the property.
He said: "We both jumped out of our skin at that point - it looked like it was coming towards our vehicle."
The officer said Mr Davies shouted abuse to try and "provoke" them to shoot.
"I can remember him goading," he added.
Mr Davies fired a total of six shots from a window before being shot by another officer, the inquest was told.
Asked why officers could not have contained the situation until a negotiator could arrive, F7 said: "How long do you want us to be shot at for?"
He said a Taser and baton gun would not have been effective as Mr Davies was inside the property and too far away from them.
The Independent Police Complaints Commission said a gun and two knives were found inside the home.
The jury inquest continues. | A man who took his three children hostage "goaded" police before he was shot dead, an inquest has heard. |
Can you summarize this passage? | A new Brexit forum bringing together the UK and devolved governments met on Wednesday.
Finance Secretary Mark Drakeford represented the Welsh Government at the meeting, attended by UK Brexit Secretary David Davis.
Mr Davis asked for the governments to present their analysis to help shape negotiation priorities.
In return, he would share the UK government's "latest thinking".
Mr Davis also offered a commitment to hold Brexit meetings monthly.
"Naturally, there are different standpoints around the table, but the meeting was constructive and amicable. We will meet regularly and share our latest thinking as the UK shapes its negotiating strategy," he said.
The new forum was set up following an earlier joint ministerial committee meeting on Brexit in October.
At the time, leaders of the UK's devolved governments were told not to "undermine" Brexit negotiations.
Mr Drakeford said: "We have to be fair that today was a genuine opportunity to put our point of view."
He said the Welsh Government needed to understand how the content of such meetings was having an influence "elsewhere".
The finance secretary said he spelled out the Welsh Government's position on Brexit, calling for "full and unfettered access" to the single market.
Last week, First Minister Carwyn Jones told the Senedd the Welsh Government "will be a reliable partner" in the committee process.
He had said it was "disappointing, and damaging to confidence, that the UK government has been unable, so far, to offer a coherent outline of its broad approach to EU negotiations".
Mr Jones added: "The excuses for not doing so are running thin, and the credibility of the UK is not helped by prevarication and, it must be said, confused and mixed messaging."
Denbighshire council's scrutiny committee decided on Thursday the future provision of all adult services in the county will also go before full council.
The council runs care homes in Ruthin, Denbigh and Corwen, with 200 residents and 130 staff.
The authority needs to save £18m over the next two years.
The average petrol price is currently £1.07 per litre, but some supermarkets are already selling petrol at £1.03 per litre.
A recent 2p drop in wholesale fuel prices could be passed on to consumers within a few weeks, the RAC said.
According to RAC figures, the last time petrol fell below £1 was in the summer of 2009.
A sharp fall in crude oil prices since last summer is behind falling prices at the pump. Brent Crude is now trading at around $44 per barrel.
"We've seen the wholesale price of petrol and diesel drop by a couple of pence recently," RAC chief engineer David Bizley told the BBC.
"There's typically about two weeks lag in the system. So there's a very good chance that within a few weeks people will be selling fuel at £1.01, and then the temptation to move that extra penny or so will be unavoidable," he said.
Supermarkets use competitive petrol prices to bring people into their stores, he added.
Since June 2014, oil prices have more than halved, falling from more than $100 per barrel.
In the UK petrol prices are also affected by how the pound is trading against the dollar, and taxation. UK fuel duty has been frozen since 2011.
Fuel price calculator: How much do you pay? | The Welsh Government has been offered a chance to help shape the UK's EU negotiations.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The future of council-run care homes in Denbighshire will be discussed in a community consultation.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
There's a "very good chance" petrol prices could fall to £1 per litre, or even below, the RAC has said. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | A 34-year-old man was arrested after a car crash at Springfield Road, west Belfast, on Friday.
He is being questioned on suspicion of drugs offences after a suspected cutting agent was found.
Later, police found what they believe to be cocaine with an estimated value of £60,000 in a follow-up search in Edenderry.
A 27-year-old woman was also arrested. | Police have arrested two people in connection with a £60,000 drugs haul in Belfast. |
What is the summary of the following article? | Trew became owner and chairman in 2010 but said he made the decision after his family were subjected to "foul and mindless abuse" in recent days.
Notts, who appointed Jamie Fullarton as manager in January, are 16th in League Two having been relegated last season.
"It is with very mixed emotions that I announce the end of my tenure," Trew wrote in an open letter to fans.
"This is not me backing away from a challenge, I do not do that and, indeed, if I'd have wanted to I would have done so some time ago because it has been a difficult journey at times.
"However, when my family are subjected to the kind of foul, mindless abuse that they have been in recent days, both in person and courtesy of the oh so brave keyboard warriors, regardless of whether this is just the minority ruining it for the larger supporter base, I have to make changes."
Trew paid £1 to buy the Magpies from then chairman Peter Trembling six years ago and took on debts of more than £1.5m, which were built up during Munto Finance's brief period as owners.
Despite initial success, with the club winning the League Two title at the end of Trew's first season, Notts have had nine full-time managers during his time.
Trembling bought Notts from Munto Finance for a nominal fee, only five months after the Middle Eastern consortium took over at Meadow Lane.
Steeplejacks are to scale the Giotto, Verona and Little Tower at Tower Works to re-point the brickwork.
Debris is also to be removed from the Giotto Tower and its glass tiles repaired and replaced on the "recognisable and unique landmarks".
The structures were dust extractors for a factory that made steel pins for the textile industry.
The works was founded by T.R Harding in 1864-66 and the towers' design was influenced by his love of Italian architecture.
The plan to transfer four listed buildings - the three towers and the Engine House in Holbeck - to Leeds City Council from the Homes and Community Agency was agreed in 2013.
The Giotto Tower, the largest of the three, is based on Giotto's Campanile in Florence, while the Verona Tower takes its design from the Torre dei Lamberti in Verona.
The Little Tower, the smallest of the three mimics a traditional Tuscan tower house.
Councillor Richard Lewis said the towers were "among the city's most recognisable and unique landmarks and the site as a whole is a hugely important part of the city's heritage".
The repair work to the towers is to be funded with money from the Homes and Communities Agency and is to start in June.
The rest of the site is to be developed by Carillion for mixed use as a "key element" of the plans for Holbeck. | Ray Trew has stepped down as chairman of Notts County and has announced that the League Two club is for sale.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Three imposing Italian-style towers in Leeds are to be restored and repaired, the city council has announced. |
Can you summarize the given article? | The group of retired generals and admirals declared the Republican nominee "has the temperament to be commander-in-chief".
Mr Trump, who has highlighted veterans' issues during his campaign, called their support "a great honour".
He has meanwhile been dismissing claims of impropriety over a political donation to a Florida official.
The Washington Post reported on Monday that in 2013 Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi had been considering fraud charges against Trump University.
But she dropped the investigation after a $25,000 (£18,600) contribution to her political campaign from the Donald J Trump Foundation.
Mr Trump was fined because he did not disclose the contribution to the US tax authorities.
The letter released on Tuesday by his campaign was signed by four 4-star generals.
The former top brass stated they believe Mr Trump is "more trusted to be commander-in-chief than (Democratic nominee) Hillary Clinton".
"We believe that such a change can only be made by someone who has not been deeply involved with, and substantially responsible for, the hollowing out of our military and the burgeoning threats facing our country around the world," they added.
Both Mr Trump and Mrs Clinton will take part back-to-back in a national security forum on Wednesday.
The forum, to be hosted by the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, will include questions from an audience of military service members.
Also on Tuesday, Mrs Clinton released a campaign ad featuring veterans who are critical of Mr Trump.
Her ad includes a clip of Mr Trump from July 2015 casting doubt on leading Republican John McCain's war hero credentials.
Arizona Senator McCain was tortured for more than five years as a prisoner of the North Vietnamese.
Despite making support for the military a signature issue in his campaign, Mr Trump has at various times drawn criticism from military members.
Most notably, he was involved in a recent spat with family members of a Muslim-American soldier killed during the Iraq War.
Mr Trump, who has not served in the military, also created a stir last month when he accepted a veteran's gift of a Purple Heart.
"I always wanted to get the Purple Heart," he said of the medal, which is awarded to soldiers wounded in war.
"This was much easier."
A youth zone and a new public space are planned for the building, with the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) running the contest.
A panel featuring leading architects and council representatives will shortlist the five best designs.
Lancashire County Council (LCC) said the £13m redesign was "to make it more appealing to passengers".
The LCC and Preston Youth Zone plans include a sports hall, arts facilities and 36 bus bays.
Preston Bus Station was considered the largest bus station in Europe when it opened in 1969.
The site, which was under-threat from demolition, was given Grade II listed status in 2013.
West Midlands Police said the child, from Perry Barr, Birmingham, died in hospital on Wednesday. A post-mortem examination revealed several injuries.
Tomas Driukas, 25, from Crantock Road, Perry Barr, was remanded in custody at Birmingham Magistrates' Court earlier.
He is due to appear at Birmingham Crown Court on 7 April.
A 22-year-old woman, also arrested over the baby's death, has been released on police bail. | Donald Trump has been endorsed by 88 former military leaders in an open letter, according to his campaign.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
More than 90 entries have been submitted in a competition to redesign Preston Bus Station.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A man has appeared in court charged with the murder of a five-month-old girl who died after suffering a number of injuries. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | In his Mansion House speech Mr Carney will say individuals acted with a "culture of impunity".
But he will warn: "The age of irresponsibility is over."
Meanwhile, Chancellor George Osborne will say he plans to bind future governments to maintaining a budget surplus when the economy is growing.
Mr Osborne will give the Mansion House audience more details of the proposal he first announced in January.
Mr Carney will say markets responsible for trillions of pounds of global trade were stained by excess, collusion and abuse and "ethical drift" had taken hold.
"Criminal sanctions should be updated, with market abuse rules similarly extended and maximum prison terms lengthened," he will add.
He will say the Bank of England under his predecessor, Lord King, failed in the run-up to the financial crisis because of its arcane and ambiguous rules and its inability to identify risks in the banking system. It failed to effectively control markets where abuse was rife.
"Though markets can be powerful drivers of prosperity, markets can go wrong," according to Mr Carney.
"Left unattended, they are prone to instability, excess and abuse.
"Personal accountability was lacking, with a culture of impunity developing.
"All these factors contributed to an ethical drift. Unethical behaviour went unchecked, proliferated and eventually became the norm."
Mr Osborne, who is also speaking at the Mansion House, will say: "The public rightly asks: 'Why is it after so many scandals so few individuals have faced punishment in the courts?'
"Individuals who fraudulently manipulate markets and commit financial crime should be treated like the criminals they are - and they will be."
The chancellor and the governor will speak as the Fair and Effective Markets Review is published - a report by the Bank, the Treasury and the Financial Conduct Authority on strengthening controls in financial markets.
The report recommends a crackdown on rogue traders and a new Market Standards Board that would bring the "age of irresponsibility" to an end.
The review says that criminal sanctions for market abuse should be extended to traders in markets such as foreign exchange, one of the markets hit hardest by manipulation by banks.
It also says that maximum sentences for wrongdoing should be lengthened from seven years to 10.
The report argues that the Senior Managers' Regime of controls already agreed for banks should be extended to more people in financial services, including traders and brokers.
If agreed, that would mean that tens of thousands of people in financial services would be covered by the regulations which can punish wrongdoing with fines.
The Bank said it would immediately agree to be covered by the regime, including the Governor himself.
Mr Carney has reserved some of his harshest criticisms for the Bank of England itself and how it operated ahead of the financial crisis of 2007 and 2008.
"In the run up to the crisis, the Bank's contribution to the effectiveness of markets fell short," the Governor will say.
"Once under pressure, the Bank could not support the banking system.
"The Bank neither identified the scale of risks in the system nor spotted gaps in the regulatory architecture.
"[And] the Bank's arcane governance blurred the Bank's accountability and, by extension, weakened the social licence of markets."
The Bank of England's governance had now been reformed and more would be done to strengthen the way it operated, according to Mr Carney.
Site owner Westgate Oxford Alliance will showcase the plans at the Westgate Consultation suite in the centre from 10:00 to 17:30 BST until Wednesday.
The revamp includes 100 shops and 122 homes, as well as a cinema, eateries and a basement car park.
Permission to transform the 1973-built centre was granted in March.
Residents can also comment on the plans online and a further exhibition is planned for the summer to show how the designs have progressed.
The detailed designs will form part of a planning application due for submission later this year.
BDP Architects is co-ordinating the work of Allies & Morrison Architects, Dixon Jones Architects, Glenn Howells Architects, Panter Hudspith Architects and landscape architects Gillespies.
The redevelopment is expected to be completed by 2017.
Plans to redevelop the area have been considered since 1988, but various concerns delayed any progress. | Bank of England governor Mark Carney will call for longer prison sentences for bankers who break the law in an attack on ethics in the City later.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Detailed designs for the £500m redevelopment of Oxford's Westgate Centre will be unveiled at a public exhibition. |
Can you provide a brief summary for this document? | Raj Mohammed, of Lifford Street in Sheffield, has also been charged with breaching a restraining order which prohibits him entering Nottinghamshire.
The woman, from Sneinton in Nottingham, is still in hospital in a critical condition after being attacked on Wednesday.
Mr Mohammed, 52, is due to appear before magistrates in Nottingham.
The move would help "stability" in Afghanistan, the government said in a statement, while vowing to "respond to fear and terror with full force".
The US said on Thursday it would maintain 5,500 troops in Afghanistan into early 2017 - a shift from earlier plans to withdraw most by late 2016.
The Taliban has vowed to continue attacks on US troops to force them out.
There are currently 9,800 US troops stationed in Afghanistan, providing training and conducting counter-terrorism operations.
The US originally planned to withdraw all but a small embassy-based force of 1,000 troops by the end of 2016.
However, US President Barack Obama announced on Thursday that he would maintain current troop numbers for most of 2016, with 5,500 still in Afghanistan when he left office in 2017.
Read more on Afghanistan:
He described the policy shift as "the right thing to do", adding that the ending of Nato combat operations in December last year had come at a price, with many Afghan troops and civilians killed since the Taliban stepped up its insurgency.
The Afghan government said the move showed the "renewal of the partnership" between the two countries, and vowed to step up its anti-terror efforts.
It added that it remained open to the prospect of peace talks with the Taliban.
Meanwhile, Afghan politician Shukria Barakzai told the BBC's Newsday that "more troops, more aid, more co-operation... can be the only way that we can survive [in] Afghanistan."
The Taliban said it a statement that the US extension would not stop the militant group's "speedy progress", and said attacks on US troops would increase, forcing the US to reverse its "cruel strategy".
Last week, the top US military commander in Afghanistan, Gen John Campbell, described the security situation as "tenuous" and said an enhanced military presence would be necessary if the Taliban were to be repelled.
He was speaking days after the Taliban briefly seized the northern city of Kunduz - their most significant military gain since being ousted from power in 2001.
After the Taliban's surprise attack on Kunduz, Afghan government forces managed to retake control of key areas of the city with the aid of Nato special forces and US air strikes.
But the city's brief capture was seen as a setback for the Afghan authorities, under pressure to show they can keep the country secure without the backing of international forces.
The south-eastern city of Ghazni has also seen fierce clashes between Taliban insurgents and US-trained Afghan troops in recent days.
Barnes, 24, who rides for Canyon-SRAM, outsprinted Lotta Lepisto (Cervelo-Bigla) and Kirsten Wild (Cylance) to win the 100km stage from San Fior to San Vendemiano in Italy.
Dutch rider Anna van der Breggen (Boels Dolmans), the 2016 Olympic road race gold medallist, leads the general classification.
The 10-stage race ends on 9 July.
The Giro Rosa is the only grand tour race left on the women's circuit after the Tour de France Feminin was cancelled.
Barnes was among a group of eight riders, including Van der Breggen and defending champion Megan Guarnier, to split the peloton over the top of the climb at Muro Ca' del Poggio.
Elena Cecchini attacked but was caught by the group and Barnes proved strongest in the sprint for the line.
Barnes was ruled out of competition for eight months after breaking her ankle in August 2015 at the USA Pro Challenge and Sunday's triumph is her first following her lengthy recovery. | A man has been charged with attempting to murder an 80-year-old woman who was attacked in her own home.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The Afghan government has welcomed the US's decision to extend its military presence in Afghanistan beyond 2016.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Great Britain's Hannah Barnes won stage three of the Giro Rosa on Sunday - her first Women's World Tour stage victory. |
What is the summary of the following document? | It was exactly what England needed at the time after they had lost three quick wickets to leave them 49-3, and helped them reach 179-4 at the close.
Captain Alastair Cook suffered his first duck in 40 innings and I was surprised by Joe Root, who looked well set and confident but was dismissed by the spinners' first delivery of the day, which did turn - perhaps a sign that spin will play a part in proceedings once the sun comes out and dries the pitch.
But to have players other than Joe Root and Alastair Cook coming in and playing well when England were facing a problem is a good thing for the side. It shows they have others who can step into the breach.
I think everyone recognises that Taylor is a really promising young player. At 25, he is now completely different at the crease than when he first played Test cricket in 2012. He is much more confident.
Even Test Match Special summariser Graeme Smith was paying tribute to him today for the change he has seen in him at the crease.
He played really well, and it was sad that he got out in the dying moments of the day, as Dale Steyn picked up his third wicket of the innings.
Compton is the one who had a lot to prove after being dropped following the home series against New Zealand in May 2013.
Having received quite a lot of sympathy for losing his place after scoring two centuries away to the same opponents two months earlier, he has come back and started to prove a point.
Media playback is not supported on this device
The technique he showed today is exactly what you want from a number three when the team is in trouble.
The ball did a bit, although not much, but the team was in trouble and it was a very good examination of him. The pressure was not on him to score particularly quickly, therefore he could get in and bat, and that is what he likes to do.
He gave a very discreet clenched fist pump when he got to 50. He is an intense individual but he is also a good player.
Opener Alex Hales will obviously be a bit of a talking point. His dismissal was of the type his detractors point to as an illustration of how his technique will let him down in Test cricket.
The ball from Dale Steyn wasn't a half volley - it was wide and he chased it. Unfortunately, in Test cricket, you can't take that amount of risk early in your innings.
The 26-year-old has a great eye, he has scored explosive hundreds in one-day cricket and there is an argument for saying let him play his natural game.
That's OK, except when you are in circumstances like this on the first morning of a series and you have two of the best bowlers in the world running in with the ball doing a bit. Do you really want to be throwing your bat at a wide length ball? The odds are already stacked in the bowler's favour. You want to even up the odds, and that means leaving well and playing solidly with tight footwork.
Some people will judge him on today's dismissal but England have got to give him a chance and persevere with him. He is a talented batsman - it will be a steep learning curve and he will realise he needs to tighten up a bit.
Hopefully he will find some flatter pitches than this as the series goes on.
Jonathan Agnew was speaking to BBC Sport's Phil Dawkes. | James Taylor and Nick Compton produced a very disciplined, hard-fought partnership on day one of the first Test in Durban. |
Can you summarize the given article? | Sutton took control of the game with two goals inside the opening 10 minutes, first Coombes firing into the top corner from 25-yards with just five minutes on the clock before May doubled the lead three minutes later with a fierce 20-yard strike.
Jamie Collins made the points safe four minutes before half-time with a free-kick which floated over the wall and into the top corner with goalkeeper Alex Lynch rooted to the spot, and then supplied the cross for Coombes to head home his second in the 46th minute.
The hosts made it five in spectacular fashion as a corner was headed clear only for Nicky Bailey to rifle the ball home from 30-yards on the half-volley.
James Alabi took advantage of a mistake by goalkeeper Will Puddy to reduce the arrears in the 79th minute from a tight angle and three minutes later he struck again when he collected a pass from Tom Shaw, cut inside and fired home.
Match report supplied by the Press Association.
Match ends, Sutton United 5, Chester FC 2.
Second Half ends, Sutton United 5, Chester FC 2.
Goal! Sutton United 5, Chester FC 2. James Alabi (Chester FC).
Goal! Sutton United 5, Chester FC 1. James Alabi (Chester FC).
Goal! Sutton United 5, Chester FC 0. Nicky Bailey (Sutton United).
Substitution, Sutton United. Daniel Spence replaces Dean Beckwith.
Substitution, Sutton United. Craig Dundas replaces Maxime Biamou.
Substitution, Sutton United. Jack Jebb replaces Jeffrey Monakana.
Substitution, Chester FC. Wade Joyce replaces Sam Hughes.
Goal! Sutton United 4, Chester FC 0. Adam Coombes (Sutton United).
Second Half begins Sutton United 3, Chester FC 0.
First Half ends, Sutton United 3, Chester FC 0.
Goal! Sutton United 3, Chester FC 0. Jamie Collins (Sutton United).
Goal! Sutton United 2, Chester FC 0. Adam May (Sutton United).
Goal! Sutton United 1, Chester FC 0. Adam Coombes (Sutton United).
First Half begins.
Lineups are announced and players are warming up.
The team have struggled in the first four races, with a best result of fifth place for Jenson Button in China.
Button said he was "pragmatic" about the upgrade's potential impact.
He said: "There'll be elements that work, elements that perhaps work in a different way than anticipated and elements that don't work. That's life."
McLaren ended last season with the fastest car, with Lewis Hamilton and Button winning the last two races of 2012.
McLaren have accrued just 23 points after the first four races of 2013, compared to 92 at the same time in 2012
But they chose to make major design changes for 2013 while most other teams evolved their previous cars, and its aerodynamics have not worked as expected.
The car has been suffering from a lack of downforce and poor ride and McLaren were so desperate to make some progress after the first two races that they introduced some new parts for the third race in China without them going through the team's normal rigorous simulation process.
Button said he hoped that running the car again on the Circuit de Catalunya, where two of the three pre-season tests took place, would give McLaren fresh insight into the car.
"It's been difficult for the team to make consistent progress in the first four races," he said, "but I think returning to a circuit where we undertook two of the pre-season tests will give us a useful benchmark for our progress so far.
"There's been a lot of talk about the importance of next weekend's upgrades but, as with every upgrade, they're simply part of the series of continuous improvements that are made across the season."
He added: "Of course, I'm hopeful that it'll move us a step closer to the destination."
Team principal Martin Whitmarsh said only that the team were "pushing ahead to develop MP4-28 and will be hoping for a productive weekend that will allow us gather a useful data set for the races ahead". | Adam Coombes and Adam May struck their first goals for Sutton in guaranteeing another season in the fifth tier with a comfortable victory over Chester, who slumped to their fifth successive defeat but are unlikely to be relegated.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
McLaren do not expect the major upgrade they are introducing to their car at the next race in Spain to catapult them back to the front. |
Please summarize the passage below. | The settlement is expected to be announced later this week.
It follows a lengthy investigation of European banks by US authorities into illegal dollar transactions.
In 2013, Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) was fined $100m by US regulators for violating sanctions against Iran, Sudan, Burma and Cuba.
Credit Agricole stands accused of transferring billions of dollars to accounts held by entities from those same countries between 2003 and 2008.
The bank is paying the fine as part of a so-called deferred prosecution agreement.
The agreement means the bank will not have to plead guilty to any charges as long as it meets certain requirements.
It is understood that some of the bankers responsible for the wrongdoing have already been dismissed from their jobs at the bank.
In August, Credit Agricole set aside $350m in provisions in relation to the case, saying it was at an "advanced stage" in discussions over the alleged sanctions violations and expected to reach a settlement in autumn 2015.
Rival French bank BNP Paribas was ordered to pay a record $8.9bn fine earlier this year for similar alleged violations.
Other European banks including Deutsche Bank, Societe Generale and UniCredit have already said they are co-operating with US investigations into alleged sanctions violations.
From 1 September, the MenB vaccine will be added to the NHS childhood immunisation programme in Wales.
The disease can cause meningitis and septicaemia, which can both be fatal.
In the past 20 years, 500 to 1,700 people have developed MenB disease every year in England and Wales - around half of them under five-years-old.
The UK is the first country to routinely offer the jab, alongside the MenC vaccine, which is given to children when they are three months old.
Babies will be offered the three-dose vaccine with other routine jabs at two months, four months and 12-13 months.
Children born on or after 1 July this year will get it alongside their other immunisations.
Meningitis is an infection of the membrane that surrounds the brain and spinal cord.
Symptoms in babies and young children can include a fever, vomiting and refusing to feed, drowsiness or being unresponsive, rapid breathing or having an unusual high-pitched or moaning cry.
Other symptoms include pale, blotchy skin, a stiff neck, red rash that does not fade under a glass and sensitivity to bright lights. | French bank Credit Agricole is understood to have agreed to pay $800m (£516m) to settle charges it broke US sanctions in Iran and other countries.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A new vaccination to protect children and babies against meningococcal group B disease is now available. |
Write a brief summary of the provided content. | The departure of Bevington, who was appointed in March, comes a month after David Bernstein and Lord King resigned from the club's board.
Villa, who finished bottom of the Premier League, were relegated to the Championship in April.
Owner Randy Lerner has been seeking a buyer for the club since May 2014.
The club are also awaiting to appoint a new manager after the sacking of Remi Garde in March.
Bevington said he told chairman Steve Hollis that he would not be taking on a full-time role with the club.
"I know how hard Steve is working on a number of levels and I hope he can conclude the ownership and managerial positions very soon," Bevington said in a statement.
"There is a huge amount of work ahead for Aston Villa. A club of its size with its great support should be competing at the higher levels of the Premier League, not in the position it currently finds itself.
"To move forward, now more than ever, it is crucial the club makes the right calls on the big decisions it is faced with." | Former Football Association executive Adrian Bevington has left his advisory role at relegated Aston Villa after less than two months in the post. |
Write a summary of this document. | The 29-year-old, capped 48 times by his country, has scored 101 points in 27 appearances for the Premiership side since joining from Scarlets in 2015.
Centre Max Clark, 21, has also agreed a new deal after scoring on his Premiership debut, against Saracens, in December.
Full-back Tom Homer, 26, is the third player to extend his contract.
The former England Under-20 international joined from London Irish in 2015 and has played in all but one of Bath's games this season.
"Rhys, Max and Tom are all really integral members of the squad, and it's great news for the club going forward that they have agreed to stay here," said Bath director of rugby Todd Blackadder.
"They are all at slightly different stages in their careers - Max having just broken through into the first team, Tom is continuing to show his quality and consistency this season at full-back, whilst Rhys is a hugely experienced, world-class international who has been unlucky with injury this season.
"But they are really excited about the future with Bath." | Wales international fly-half Rhys Priestland is one of three players to sign a new contract with Bath. |
Summarize the information given below. | The report found that shrimp producers in Thailand forced labourers to work 16-hour days for little or no pay.
The prawns are found in products sold in the US, Europe and Asia.
AP said it had tracked shrimp produced under these conditions through to products sold by major retailers.
The news agency reported that many workers could end up being tricked or sold into factories where they were forced to work 16-hour days with no time off and little or no pay.
Some workers have been trapped for years at a time and even locked inside factories.
Chris Smith, a Republican Congressman from New Jersey and a member of the House foreign relations committee, said: "All of us may find ourselves eating a slave-made product without knowing it, but once we know it, we all have a moral obligation, I believe, to make a personal decision to boycott it."
Thai Union - one of the world's leading shrimp producer and one of the producers named in the scandal - admitted it was unaware of where all of its shrimp came from.
The company, which owns brands including John West, said it would change its employment practices from 1 January.
Thai Union said that AP's report was a "wake-up call" to both the company and the wider industry.
Its chief executive, Thiraphong Chansiri, said the use of internal labour was "a positive step towards our goal of ridding the Thai seafood sector of illegal labour practices".
In July, Greenpeace called for a boycott of Thai Union after another AP report revealed abuses at Indonesian processing plants used by the company.
The Thai embassy in Washington said it was investigating the allegations.
The embassy said: "We are determined to ensure that the country's seafood supply chain is free of human trafficking and forced labour."
Last month global food giant Nestlé said it had discovered slave labour was being used in the processing of fish sourced from Thailand and set out a plan to resolve the issue.
According to Nestlé's study, nearly all US and European companies that purchase fish from Thailand face the same risk of supporting this forced labour.
Seafood exports generate $7bn (£4.6bn) a year for Thailand. | US politicians and human rights groups have called for a boycott of fish and shrimp products linked to slave labour in Thailand following a report from the Associated Press. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | Caroline Everest, 18, was last seen by friends at the Corporation nightclub in Milton Street in the early hours of Sunday.
Officers found the body in a river in Summerfield Street at about 03:45 GMT.
South Yorkshire Police said she had not been formally identified, but "believe it to be Caroline Everest", and said her family had been informed.
Updates on this story and more from around South Yorkshire.
Police said they were trying to "to establish the circumstances surrounding her death". Officers have been seen searching undergrowth close to where the body was found.
The force appealed to anyone who may have seen Ms Everest after she left the nightclub to contact them.
Dapo Adaramewa, president of the students' union at Sheffield Hallam University, where Ms Everest was studying Biosciences and Chemistry, said he was "deeply saddened".
"Our thoughts are with her family at this time," he said.
Flowers have been laid at the police cordon on Ecclesall Road, with a note that read: "RIP Caroline. Another young life taken too early. Thoughts are with your family at this sad time."
The body was found in an area of modern office buildings and car dealerships between the city centre and the Eccleshall Road area, where many university students live.
The scene is about half a mile from the Corporation club and close to the city's inner ring road. | Police searching for a missing Sheffield Hallam University student have found a woman's body in a river. |
Write a summary of this document. | Sussex seamer Chris Jordan has been called up and will arrive in the United Arab Emirates during the first Test.
Finn, 26, claimed 4-16 in the second tour match against Pakistan A before being ruled out of the current series opener in Abu Dhabi.
"Gutted to be heading home from this UAE tour," he tweeted.
The England and Wales Cricket Board said Finn will return home for a "period of off-loading to aid recovery".
Former England spinner Graeme Swann told BBC Test Match Special: "It's a safe selection. They know what they will get with Chris Jordan.
"I can see why people might bemoan the lack of variation. On this occasion, Jordan probably deserves to be out here."
Finn returned to the Test side this summer after a two-year absence, taking 14 wickets in England's Ashes victory over Australia.
Jordan, 27, has taken 21 wickets at an average of 35.80 from eight Tests, the most recent of which was the defeat by West Indies in Barbados in May.
England play three Tests, four one-day internationals and three Twenty20s against Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates.
They tour South Africa over Christmas, with the first Test in Durban starting on Boxing Day.
England Test squad: Alastair Cook (capt), Moeen Ali, James Anderson, Jonny Bairstow (wk), Ian Bell, Stuart Broad, Jos Buttler (wk), Alex Hales, Samit Patel, Liam Plunkett, Adil Rashid, Joe Root, Ben Stokes, James Taylor, Mark Wood, Chris Jordan.
England ODI squad: Eoin Morgan (capt), Moeen Ali, Jonny Bairstow (wk), Sam Billings (wk), Jos Buttler (wk), Alex Hales, Adil Rashid, Joe Root, Jason Roy, James Taylor, Reece Topley, David Willey, Chris Woakes, Mark Wood, Chris Jordan.
The animal was spotted in Applecross in Wester Ross on the north west coast earlier this week.
Several red deer graze around houses in the village and the stag snagged the item of underwear while passing a washing line.
Megan MacInnes managed to get the snap of the deer with its colourful antler decoration.
Her friend Anne Macrae, who also lives in Applecross and has photographed the deer in the village, said the animals were not tame, but bold enough to come close to houses to feed.
She said the deer come down from a nearby hill, the Bealach, to forage.
The incident happened at Baltimore Harbour on Tuesday evening.
Irish state broadcaster, RTÉ, said the two who died have been named locally as Barry Ryan from Baltimore and Niamh O'Connor from Glanmire in Cork city.
A Coast Guard helicopter has joined the search for Mr Ryan's son and Ms O'Connor's boyfriend, Barry Davis Ryan.
It is understood the victims were part of a group walking close to Baltimore harbour when one of them fell into the sea.
Two others then went into the water in an attempt to rescue the first person, but all three got into difficulties.
The alarm was raised at 18:40 local time by a member of their group who remained on the shore.
Mr Ryan Sr, who was in his 50s, and Ms O'Connor were brought ashore by a Baltimore-based lifeboat but they were both later pronounced dead.
The search for Mr Ryan Jr was called off due to fading light on Tuesday night, but resumed early on Wednesday. | England pace bowler Steven Finn has been ruled out of the Test and one-day series against Pakistan with a stress injury of the left foot.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A red deer stag has been photographed in the Scottish Highlands with a bra tangled in its antlers.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A search has resumed for a man who is still missing after his father and girlfriend drowned off the Cork coast in the Republic of Ireland. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | The infant weighs the same as a six-month-old in a country where new-born babies normally weigh 2.5-3.5kg.
Her mother Nandini, 20, gave birth by a Caesarean section, at a hospital in the southern state of Karnataka.
Doctors said they were conducting tests to find out the reason why the baby was so heavy.
"It is the biggest baby in India, I can say. Whether it is the biggest in the world, I cannot say right now," Dr Venkatesh R, district health official in Hassan district, told BBC Hindi's Imran Qureshi.
The baby is not just heavy, she is also very tall, doctors said.
"The baby's height is 62cm (24.4in) as against the normal Indian baby's height of 50cm," said Dr SR Kumar, who is looking after Nandini and her baby.
Since overweight newborns are normal in cases where the mother is diabetic, the first thing the doctors did was to check if Nandini had diabetes, but they found to their surprise that she had had no such complaints.
"We have done an ultrasound and conducted blood tests on Nandini, but we didn't find any abnormality," Dr Kumar said.
"We have sent the samples for a test called an inborn error of metabolism. We should get the result after 48 hours."
The record so far for the heaviest Indian baby is held by a boy, born to Firdous Khatun of Uttar Pradesh in November 2015. The baby boy weighed 14.77lb (6.7kg).
The world record for the heaviest baby was for a boy born to Carmelina Fedele in Aversa, Italy, in September 1955. The boy weighed 22lb 8oz (10.2 kg). | An Indian woman has given birth to a 15lb (6.8kg) baby girl that doctors say could possibly be the heaviest child ever born in the country. |
Give a brief summary of the following article. | Gloucestershire Warwickshire Steam Railway (GWSR) currently runs between Cheltenham and Laverton but wants to extend to Broadway in Worcestershire.
A public share scheme raised more than £500,000 in 2014 and GWSR said "over £35,000 per day" was coming in.
It is hoped funding will enable the opening of a station in Broadway in 2018.
Ian Crowder, from GWSR, said money was "coming in at an unprecedented rate".
He said investments had come from a "mixture of supporters and local people as well as railway enthusiasts".
"We've come to the end of the era of the trainspotter image, this is a serious business and a significant contributor to the tourist economy of the Cotswolds," Mr Crowder said.
The public share offer - called "Broadway: The Last Mile" - aims to raise funds to buy rail and ballast, complete civil engineering works, and install the infrastructure.
It would enable trains to be run into Broadway for the "first time in more than half a century". | An appeal for £1.25m to complete the "last mile" of a heritage railway line has raised £250,000 in one week. |
Please provide a concise summary of the following section. | The charity put out a tweet in June speaking of a "perfect storm" caused by "zero hours contracts, high prices, benefit cuts and unemployment".
The watchdog said Oxfam "should have done more to avoid any misperception of political bias".
Oxfam said it had reviewed its social media policy as a result.
The tweet was put out to promote an Oxfam report, called Below the Breadline, which warned of the "relentless rise of food poverty" in the UK.
The Commission launched an investigation following a complaint by Conservative MP Conor Burns.
At the time, Mr Burns said he was "shocked" by the "overtly political" campaign. "I cannot see how using funds donated to charity to campaign politically can be in accord with Oxfam's charitable status," he said.
In its report, the Charity Commission said the tweet and accompanying embedded picture "could have affected the views of those who received it and could be misconstrued by some as party political campaigning".
Political campaigning is allowed if it "supports the charitable purposes" and if "perceptions of the charity's independence are unaffected," the commission said.
It went on: "Although we accept that the charity had no intention to act in a party political way, we concluded that the charity should have done more to avoid any misperception of political bias by providing greater clarity and ensuring that the link to the 'Below the Breadline' report was more obvious.
"We appreciate that tweets by nature are short. Nevertheless, consideration must always be given as to how they might be perceived when received in isolation."
Oxfam chief executive Mark Goldring said he was pleased the commission had said the tweet was not political.
He added: "At a time when increasing numbers of British people are surviving on food hand-outs, we have a responsibility to draw attention to their plight and challenge the politicians who have the power to help them.
"The commission found that in relation to this tweet we did not do enough to avoid people misunderstanding our intentions and we accept that. We have reviewed our social media procedures to reduce the risk of tweets being misconstrued in future."
The commission also said another Oxfam advert, during the Gaza conflict, was within its guidelines on campaigning and political guidelines. | An Oxfam tweet linking benefit cuts to poverty could have been "misconstrued as party political campaigning", the Charity Commission has said. |
Summarize the provided information. | The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) is now overseeing 43 such inquiries, up from 29 announced last year.
All concern the Metropolitan Police.
They relate to allegations of wrongdoing in cases involving prominent individuals or police officers.
The IPCC said the claims being looked at related to "child sex offences dating from the 1970s to the 2000s".
It is overseeing probes by the Met's Professional Standards Department.
A IPCC spokesman said: "They all concern allegations of suppressing evidence, hindering or halting investigations, or covering up alleged offences because of the involvement of prominent individuals or police officers."
Many of the investigations stem from allegations made by retired Met Police officers.
The IPCC said it was also managing one investigation into Essex Police, while there is another, independent investigation being carried out into Sussex Police - making a total of 45.
One of the 43 Met inquiries relates to the actions of police investigating the case of Vishal Mehrotra, an eight-year-old boy who went missing on the day of the Royal Wedding in 1981.
His remains were found six months later in Sussex.
Police have begun a murder inquiry and a man has been arrested on suspicion of murder.
Police said the victim and the alleged assailant were residents in the home.
Officers were called to De La Mer House care home in Naze Park Road, Walton-on-the-Naze, at about 09:00 GMT after reports a woman was seriously injured.
DCI Simon Werrett said: "At this stage we are not looking for anyone else in connection with the investigation and our inquiries are ongoing."
The premises are being guarded while forensic searches are conducted.
Nearby resident and retired financial adviser John Knights said security was tight at the care home.
He said: "My mother had to go into De La Mer about two years ago, and I can tell you that it was quite tricky to get in and out of there.
"You couldn't just go up to the building and get in. You needed a security code to get in. It had electronic key pads on the door, so to get inside you needed to know those."
A spokeswoman for the care home said there would be no comment until staff had spoken to police.
Douglas Carswell, the UKIP MP for the area, said he was "very shocked".
He said: "If you have got a loved one in a care home, you expect them to be safe. Walton-on-the-Naze is supposed to be one of the most peaceful and tranquil places there is. Of all the places you expect this to happen, this is the last."
The Ligue 1 side received special dispensation from the French league to appoint the Italian, as he reached the manager's age limit of 65 last year.
Ranieri guided the Foxes to the Premier League title in 2015-16 when the club defied odds of up to 5,000-1.
But he was sacked in February with the club battling relegation after a run of five league losses in a row.
Ranieri succeeds Sergio Conceicao after the former Portugal winger left Nantes in order to take over at Porto.
Conceicao, 42, took charge of the Ligue 1 side in December 2016 and immediately oversaw four straight wins in the league as they finished seventh in France's top tier.
Ranieri has experience of working in France, overseeing Monaco's promotion to Ligue 1 in 2012-13 and then guiding them to second place behind Paris St-Germain the following season before being released.
Nantes will be Ranieri's 17th job in a managerial career that has spanned 31 years and has included all the major Italian clubs except AC Milan.
Atletico Madrid, Chelsea and Valencia twice are the other clubs he has managed outside Italy during that time.
His league win with Leicester - which came after a dismal spell in charge of Greece - remains his only top-flight title.
Nantes have won the French title eight times but have not done so since 2001, which was their last major honour. | Fourteen further investigations have been launched into alleged police corruption relating to historical child sex abuse claims, the police watchdog has said.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A woman believed to be in her 80s has died after apparently being shot by a fellow resident at a care home in Essex, police have said.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Former Leicester manager Claudio Ranieri is the new boss of French side Nantes. |
Give a brief summary of the provided passage. | Thomas Duncan, who caught the virus in his native Liberia, is now in a serious condition in hospital. This is the only Ebola case recorded so far in the US.
The flat in Dallas where he lived before being isolated is being cleaned by hazardous materials specialists.
The four people living there have been moved to a private home offered by a volunteer.
Louise Troh, thought to be Mr Duncan's girlfriend, her 13-year-old son and two nephews have spent days inside the flat under the orders of health officials.
The family was driven away from the home in a police car, after officials failed to find shelter for them.
Hotels, flats and others had refused to offer them accommodation, before a private residence was offered.
"No one wants this family,'' said Sana Syed, a Dallas city spokeswoman.
More than 3,431 people have died in four West African countries in what has become the world's worst ever Ebola outbreak.
Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm John Kirby said the US could deploy as many as 4,000 troops to West Africa to help contain the outbreak.
Although Mr Duncan is the first person to be diagnosed within the US, four Americans have contracted the virus in Liberia.
Three aid workers have recovered after flying back to the US for treatment but a fourth, photojournalist Ashoka Mukpo, 33, is expected to be flown home over the weekend.
Mr Duncan's diagnosis was confirmed on Tuesday, 10 days after he arrived in the US to visit relatives and friends.
As well as the four who shared his flat, another six people who had contact with Mr Duncan have been identified by Texas health officials as higher risk.
Mr Duncan, a courier driver, is believed to have taken a sick patient to a clinic in Liberia.
Authorities there have accused him of lying on an Ebola questionnaire prior to leaving the country and say they plan to prosecute him upon his return.
On Friday, Howard University hospital in Washington DC said a patient had come in with symptoms "associated with Ebola".
He was being kept in isolation while he was tested for the disease. He had recently travelled from Nigeria.
Ebola virus: Busting the myths
The governor of Japan's Kagoshima prefecture gave his approval, marking the final hurdle for the restart, which is now likely to happen next year.
Before the accident, caused by a massive quake and tsunami, about 30% of Japan's power was nuclear-generated.
All 48 plants were shut down but PM Shinzo Abe has lobbied for a restart.
Mr Abe's government has argued that the shutdown has hurt the economy, forcing Japan to import expensive fossil fuels to make up the power shortfall.
Despite public anxiety, earlier this year Mr Abe approved an energy plan backing the use of nuclear power.
Local authorities were given the final say on whether to restart their commercial plants. The plant's host town, Satsumasendai, had already voted in favour.
"I have decided that it is unavoidable to restart the No. 1 and No. 2 Sendai nuclear reactors," Kagoshima Governor Yuichiro Ito told a news conference on Friday, reported Reuters news agency.
"I have said that assuring safety is a prerequisite and that the government must ensure safety and publicly explain it thoroughly to residents."
The reactors, operated by Kyushu Electric Power, will likely restart next year as further operational checks need to be passed.
In a vote on Friday 38 out of 47 of the Kagoshima's prefectural assembly backed the restarting of the reactors.
Protesters present in the assembly hall stood up before the vote with pink signs that said "NO restart", reported Reuters. Yelling from opponents drowned out the final vote.
In September, Japanese regulators gave the Sendai reactors their final approval saying safety standards introduced after the Fukushima disaster had been met. | The occupants of a flat in Texas where a man lay sick for days with Ebola have been moved from their home.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Two reactors at Japan's Sendai nuclear plant are due to become the first to be restarted in the country since the 2011 meltdown at the Fukushima facility. |
Please provide a concise summary of the following section. | The National Trust for Scotland (NTS), which monitors the archipelago's bird population, said numbers were falling across a range of seabird species.
Across seven monitoring sites there was just one kittiwake nest this season. The only chick that hatched died later.
The islands are 64km (40 miles) north-west of the Western Isles.
They are recognised as one of the most significant sanctuaries for seabirds in the Atlantic.
But the NTS said its annual survey suggested that after a century of growth, seabird populations on the archipelago were rapidly falling.
It is thought that significant changes in the marine ecosystem, with plankton moving 1,000km (621 miles) to the north is reducing a key food source around St Kilda.
Dr Richard Luxmoore, senior nature conservation adviser at the trust, said: "Seabirds are essentially part of the marine ecosystem. Although they breed on land they spend most of their life out at sea and they can tell us a lot about its health.
"In the last 30 years plankton communities have shifted northward by 1,000km, more than the distance from Edinburgh to Paris, and it's having a huge impact.
"If vegetation shifted by a similar distance there would be pandemonium, but because it's happening in the sea we tend not to notice."
This year's seabird survey, which monitors breeding abundance and success, also recorded significant declines in the populations of fulmars, guillemots, puffins and razorbills.
Seven of the seabird species found on St Kilda have significant local populations and four of them - the northern gannet, Atlantic puffin, great skua and Leach's storm-petrel - are important on an international scale.
Dr Luxmoore added: "If the inhabitants of St Kilda were to come back now nearly 90 years after their evacuation and see the cliffs that were once teeming with seabirds now almost empty, they would be horrified to see what has happened on the island where they once lived." | Kittiwake numbers on St Kilda have plummeted to their lowest level, with experts fearing the population is at risk of collapse. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | The Reds go into match on a high after a 2-0 win over Glentoran on Tuesday night kept their title hopes alive.
"I can't wait for the game - it's massive for everyone involved and the boys are raring to go after the victory over the Glens," said Lyttle.
"This is not make or break for our season but we're determined to win."
Another north Belfast quarter-final sees Premiership pacesetters Crusaders take on Carrick Rangers at Seaview.
Rangers gave up home advantage because of continuing problems with their Belfast Loughshore Arena pitch.
Crues defender Joshua Robinson has been named the Northern Ireland Football Writers' Association Player of the Month for February.
Robinson will soon be travelling to English League One side Fleetwood Town on trial.
There a chance of a shock in the other two quarter-finals with Championship One sides chasing a spot in the semi-finals.
Loughgall meet Glenavon at Mourneview Park while Lurgan Celtic face Portadown in a mid-Ulster derby.
Media playback is not supported on this device
Celtic, who are managed by former Glenavon boss Colin Malone, are a team in form while Portadown have struggled this season
Lurgan striker Shea Conaty is one of three former Ports players in the squad - he was on the Shamrock Park team's bench for last season's Irish Cup final defeat by Glentoran.
"We're underdogs and that's exactly how we want it," said Conaty.
"No-body expected them to be so poor this season while we are flying high - we've nothing to lose." | Cliftonville boss Gerard Lyttle is looking forward to Saturday's "massive" Irish Cup quarter-final against Linfield at Solitude. |
Summarize the provided section. | The 56-year-old architect has designed a range of buildings to help victims of natural disasters and refugees.
Ban, whose work also includes a paper cathedral in Christchurch, New Zealand, said it was "a great honour" to win the Pritzker, architecture's top prize.
His "commitment to humanitarian causes" is "an example for all", said judges.
"Innovation is not limited by building type and compassion is not limited by budget. Shigeru has made our world a better place," said Tom Pritzker, head of The Hyatt Foundation which awards the prize.
Ban has spent two decades travelling the world to help design "low-cost but dignified housing" for people in disaster zones, including Japan, Rwanda, India, Sri Lanka, Haiti, Italy and is currently in the Philippines.
However the architect said he "must be careful" with the honour, which he felt had come "too early", adding: "I haven't achieved enough".
"I see this prize as encouragement for me to keep doing what I am doing - not to change what I am doing, but to grow," said Ban.
Ban added: "I must continue to listen to the people I work for, in my private residential commissions and in my disaster relief work."
The architect often works using recyclable materials such as locally-sourced cardboard tubes for columns, walls and beams, which are easy to put up and take down and can also be made flame-resistant and waterproof.
His humanitarian work began in 1994, in response to the Rwandan genocide that displaced millions. The UN hired him as a consultant after he proposed building paper-tube shelters for refugees in the central African country.
In the wake of the 2009 earthquake in L'Aquila, Italy, he created a temporary auditorium so the city's musicians could continue to play; and he used paper columns to build temporary classrooms for children affected by 2008's Sichuan earthquake.
While dealing with the aftermath of Japan's earthquake and tsunami in 2011, Ban created partitions to help families keep their privacy in makeshift shelters like gymnasiums, before building a three-story temporary shelter to house 19 families in the grounds of a baseball stadium.
"This is my life's work," said Ban in an interview earlier this week.
"After I became an architect I was very disappointed in our profession. Because we are mostly always working for privileged people, with power and money," he explained.
"So I thought that architects needed to have more of a social role. I thought we could use our experience and our knowledge for people who need help in a natural or man-made disaster.
"Even something like temporary housing, we can make more comfortable and more beautiful," he added.
Outside Ban's humanitarian work, his projects include the Centre Pompidou-Metz, a modern art museum in France featuring a curved roof made of timber which is inspired by a Chinese hat.
He also designed Swiss media firm Tamedia's seven-storey headquarters, built with an interlocking wooden frame that has no metal joints; and the Metal Shutter Houses in New York, which feature a unique metal shutter system to open them up to the city air.
The architect - who has offices in Tokyo, Paris and New York - was born in Tokyo to a Toyota employee father and a mother who was a haute couture designer.
He attended the Southern California Institute of Architecture, and earned his degree in architecture from Cooper Union in New York City in 1984.
He now teaches at architecture schools around the world and is a professor at Kyoto University of Art and Design.
The prestigious prize comes with a $100,000 (£60,500) grant and will be presented at a formal awards ceremony in Amsterdam in June.
It is the second year in a row that a Japanese architect has won, after last year's prize was given to Toyo Ito. | Japanese architect Shigeru Ban - who uses cardboard tubes to make temporary housing in disaster zones - has won 2014's Pritzker Architecture Prize. |
Summarize the provided information. | Sanit Nitigultanon was faced with the typical photographer's challenge when tackling a wedding shoot for Thai couple Max and Mint.
"I asked the couple if there was anything special about them, but they said all they liked to do was go around and eat," said Mr Nitigultanon.
"So the first thing that came to mind was going to all their favourite restaurants."
You might also like:
The man behind India's '$74m wedding'
How a 102-year-old scientist won a battle to keep working
The Chinese golden smartphone that's selling for over £2,000
The couple sampled everything from chicken rice to egg noodles in the one day they spent travelling around Bangkok in search of food.
"All my friends told me that I have to lose lots of weight before my pre-wedding photoshoot," said Mint, 27.
"But I thought, why do I have to change into someone that I am not? I'm just going to be myself and have fun with it."
And the couple did just that.
"We've been together for two years and I think I've gained around 10kg during that time because we keep eating together!" said 28-year-old Max.
Reaction to the photographs have been huge, with the album receiving some 31,000 likes on Facebook.
This is only one of many pre-wedding photoshoots by Mr Nitigultanon, who is known for his creative ideas.
Pre-wedding photoshoots are especially common in Asia, with some even travelling overseas in order to capture the perfect moment.
"We just expected our friends and family to like the photos," said Max.
"Many other albums look cute or beautiful, but ours just shows us and our lifestyle as it is."
The alliance said the measures would focus on seven key areas including military training, cyber defence, and reforming the security sector.
The training will take place in Turkey and Jordan, Nato said in a statement.
Iraq has seen a surge in violence in the past year, with the highest monthly death toll in January for six years.
Jens Stoltenberg, Nato Secretary General, said the assistance program had been developed at Iraq's request and in close consultation with Iraqi authorities.
The programme will also develop Iraq's security sector, bomb disposal capabilities, military medicine, and civil military planning, Mr Stoltenberg said.
Nato will complement what is already being done by the US-led coalition against Islamic State, as well as actions by individual NATO allies, the European Union and the UN, he added.
President Barack Obama in June ordered the deployment of 450 more US troops to Iraq's Sunni heartland to advise and assist Iraqi forces, adding to the existing 3,100 US troops in the country.
The Nato agreement comes just a few days after Turkey sought Nato endorsement for its campaign against militants in Syria and Iraq.
The alliance previously had a team training Iraqi security forces but it was withdrawn at the end of 2011 when no agreement could be reached on the legal status of Nato troops in the country.
26 November 2015 Last updated at 17:42 GMT
The project aims to improve their confidence and self-esteem.
The choir is in rehearsal for a performance of The Passion, which will take to the stage next Easter.
Composer and conductor James MacMillan said the programme, run in collaboration with Streetwise Opera and ensemble The Sixteen, was "such a wonderful way to use the gift of music to transform people's lives and make people happy". | Reporting by the BBC's Yvette Tan.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Nato members have agreed measures to strengthen Iraq's security forces, which have suffered near-collapse in the face of an Islamic State offensive.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Dozens of homeless people and those who used to live on the streets are learning opera at the Booth Centre in Manchester. |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.