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Summarize the information given below. | Edin Dzeko scored early in each half - the first inside a minute - and Yaya Toure added a third in stoppage time as City moved into second place and within three points of Chelsea with two games in hand.
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It was another sobering and thoroughly miserable night for United manager David Moyes as, for the second home league game in succession, the current gap in quality and strength between the reigning champions and their rivals was emphasised as City followed Liverpool by winning 3-0 and with plenty to spare.
City's hugely impressive display cut short Moyes's hopes of sparking a late run in this disappointing season and now they face a fight to even finish in the top six and claim a place in the Europa League.
Manuel Pellegrini's side have no such problems as they cruised to victory to complete an emphatic double over their arch-rivals after a 4-1 win at Etihad Stadium earlier this season and now move towards this weekend's game at Arsenal in ominously confident mood.
Yaya Toure completed 55 of his 60 passes in midfield (91.7%), scored his side's third goal and created three scoring chances (Source: Opta)
City started at blistering speed and were ahead inside a minute. In a blur of action Rafael's fine tackle stopped David Silva and when Samir Nasri's shot came back off the post Dzeko was perfectly placed to score.
United were torn apart by City's movement and creation and it took a fine diving save from goalkeeper David De Gea to stop Dzeko adding a second in front of the Stretford End.
As the half progressed City did not maintain their early pace and United, while clearly inferior, were able to at last find a foothold in the game but wasted two good opportunities when Marouane Fellaini shot tamely at Joe Hart and Juan Mata sidefooted over the top from a good position.
"Put simply, United were a mess against City. They looked and played like a team in disarray, led by a manager struggling horribly to get to grips with his task."
The giant Belgian was involved in a contentious moment when, while in possession himself, he senselessly elbowed Pablo Zabaleta and somehow escaped with only a yellow card from referee Michael Oliver.
United made a change at half-time when Tom Cleverley, who not surprisingly struggled in an unfamiliar role on the right flank, made way for Shinji Kagawa - but again City were faster out of the blocks and increased their lead after 56 minutes.
Dzeko was the scorer once more, showing great composure and technique to send a sidefoot volley high past De Gea at his near post - the signal for City's elated fans to start doing the "Poznan" celebration.
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It had been another unhappy night for £27.5m summer signing Fellaini and it was no surprise when he was substituted and replaced by Antonio Valencia after 66 minutes, a move that was well received by United's fans.
City keeper Hart had rarely been tested but he showed good reactions to block a flick from Danny Welbeck as United searched for a way back into a contest where they had been outplayed for long periods.
United had never looked like claiming anything from this game and the scoreline was given a more realistic appearance in stoppage time when Toure scored his 21st goal of the season with a low finish. | Manchester City increased the pressure on Premier League leaders Chelsea by disposing of Manchester United with almost embarrassing ease at Old Trafford. |
Provide a concise overview of the following information. | It left Rupert Shaw's Gledpark Farm in Borgue on Friday for Grangemouth before travelling by sea to Hong Kong.
Producers of Chinese medicine have valued Scottish red deer antlers at up to £16 per kilogram.
Future shipments are planned in what Mr Shaw said could prove to be a "very valuable market" for farmers already producing venison.
Having identified a potential buyer for the antlers through his website, a year-long process saw the Dumfries and Galloway farmer go on to secure the necessary export licence for the load and the complete the deal.
Most of the red deer antlers in the shipment came from Gledpark's herd of farmed red deer with several other Scottish venison producers contributing antlers to fill the container.
Antlers, exclusively found on stags, are cast annually and can be collected.
Mr Shaw, who is also NFU Scotland's regional chairman in Dumfries and Galloway, said: "Although it is early days, the potential demand for Scottish deer antlers in Chinese medicinal products could represent a very valuable market for those who are already producing venison, or are planning to keep deer in the future.
"At current prices of up to £16 per kilogram of antler, and many adult stags casting a set of antlers that could weigh more than 15 kilograms, there is a valuable return to be gained if we can secure a foothold in this market."
It has been granted a taxi operator licence by the Department of the Environment (DOE).
Part of the licence requirement means Uber drivers must have roof signs, something the firm has generally not been required to do in other cities.
The company already operates in more than 300 cities worldwide, including Dublin and London.
Drivers for the firm will have to hold the same taxi licence as drivers at conventional taxi companies.
Uber customers use an app that pinpoints their location and alerts drivers to a pick-up request.
Customers have to register credit or debit details with Uber and payment is taken automatically.
Kieran Harte, Uber's general manager in Belfast, said: "Over 10,000 people in Belfast have already downloaded and opened the Uber app in the last six months alone, so we know there is demand for the service in the city."
Uber has proven controversial in several locations and has often been accused of riding roughshod over local rules and regulations when it enters new markets.
The company said it "will comply with all necessary regulation." | A shipment of red deer antlers has started a 35-day journey from a south of Scotland farm to the Far East.
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The Uber taxi service has begun operating in Belfast. |
Give a concise summary of the following information. | The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Kurdish fighters had retaken the villages along the Khabur river in north-eastern Syria.
But some reports say Syrian government forces drove the IS fighters out.
Also on Wednesday it was reported that two of the hostages seized from the villages by IS had been freed.
The two elderly women arrived in the provincial capital of Hassakeh on Tuesday, activists said.
About 200 people from the villages are thought to still be in IS captivity.
The villages were cleared of IS fighters earlier this week but many residents have not returned for fear of any remaining IS fighters and booby traps, according to Afram Yakoub, chairman of the Assyrian Federation of Sweden.
Mr Yakoub said IS's retreat was largely due to an air campaign by Syrian government forces.
It is estimated that up to 40,000 Assyrians lived in Syria - alongside the overall Christian population of 1.2 million - before the country's civil war broke out in 2011.
The Assyrians, one of the world's oldest Christian communities, have been under increasing pressure since IS captured large parts of the country.
Some 1,000 local Assyrian families are believed to have fled their homes in the wake of the abductions.
Syria's beleaguered Christians
Bow Street station, on the Cambrian line north of Aberystwyth, was closed in 1965 as part of the Beeching cuts.
The Welsh Government is seeking £6.8m from the UK government to cover three quarters of the cost of a new station.
Mid and West Wales AM Eluned Morgan said there was a "very strong" economic case for the project, with a new university campus opening up.
"Rail infrastructure is crucial to opening up the connections to Aberystwyth and beyond," she said.
"There is a welcome upturn in economic activity in the area, including the new Aberystwyth University campus nearby.
"This rail stop will cut down on traffic, promote business, reduce pollution, provide a vital transport system for commuters and the elderly."
The Welsh Government has applied for a £6.8m grant for part funding from the UK government for the project which would include a new train station and interchange plus car parking and bus stops.
Economy Secretary Ken Skates said he had submitted a "strong" application for 75% of the cost of the new station - the maximum the UK Government could cover.
He said the Welsh Government would provide the remaining 25% of the funding - £1.7m.
Proposals for a new station at Bow Street have been shown at a public event and, if approved, is hoped will open in 2019.
It would be built a short distance south of the original station, which is now the site of a builders' merchants.
A spokesman for Ceredigion council said it had found "considerable support" for the scheme in consultation.
The authority expected to hear the outcome of the funding application early in 2017.
Ms Morgan said she also hoped Welsh ministers would also consider reopening Carno station, also on the Cambrian line, in Powys, which closed in 1963. | Islamic State fighters have been driven out of Assyrian Christian villages in Syria that they seized in February, activists say.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A new railway station in Ceredigion would have a big impact on the regional economy, a Labour AM member says. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | It happened in St James Mews, off the Antrim Road, at about 21:00 BST on Sunday. Police said two men entered a house and attacked the victim.
Police are treating it as attempted murder.
ACC Stephen Martin told BBC Radio Ulster: "He has quite severe injuries, I think he has several fractures."
The officer appealed for anyone with information about the attack to come forward.
The Irish News has reported that the victim had been under threat from dissident republicans.
During his interview with Good Morning Ulster, ACC Martin was asked if the police investigation was focused on any particular group.
"It's early days, but what I would move to reassure people is, we don't at this stage see anything that would make us think it's a sectarian motivation," the officer replied.
"We have to condemn this type of activity. Seventeen years after the all-party agreement - the Good Friday Agreement - this type of behaviour is just unacceptable." | A man shot in the face in a gun attack in north Belfast has been discharged from hospital. |
Summarize the provided section. | The businesses all rely on the US company's cloud computing division - Amazon Web Services - to power their internet operations.
Amazon has acknowledged that some of its servers lost power early on Sunday morning.
This coincided with a major storm.
Local reports have linked the severe weather conditions to the blackout, but this has not been confirmed by Amazon.
Affected services included:
AWS's status dashboard indicated that its automated systems had managed to restore the majority of its affected compute servers within 70 minutes.
However, it noted that "a couple of unexpected issues" had caused problems to persist into Monday.
By this point, however, most of the affected services were working as normal again.
AWS is designed so its customers can choose to power their online services via several of its data centres at the same time.
In theory, this means that even if one site stops working, the client's online service should continue uninterrupted.
It is not clear whether the affected services had made use of the facility.
Amazon competes with Microsoft, Google and others to sell virtual computing facilities.
They suggest they can save companies the greater cost of building and maintaining their own servers.
Sunday's fault - and others before it - highlight a potential risk in centralising online services together in this way.
But one expert highlighted how quickly AWS had been able to handle its blackout.
"The speed at which Amazon got stuff back up and running is impressive and represents one of the big plus points of going down the distributed cloud route," said Chris Green, a tech analyst at the consultancy Lewis.
"When problems do happen, it can rectify them or shunt systems off to another data centre far faster than most companies could do in-house."
Several banks in Australia also reported problems with their apps over the weekend.
Some customers were unable to make online purchases, while others could not use smartphone fingerprint sensors to log into their accounts.
Melbourne-based Members Equity Bank blamed "server issues that have affected several banks following the storms on the east coast".
An AWS spokesman told the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper that it was not involved with the banks' issues. | Australian food-ordering and ticket-selling apps, TV-streaming platforms and a car-sharing site temporarily stopped working because of problems at one of Amazon's data centres. |
Can you summarize the following content in brief? | The Swans want £50m for the 27-year-old, who scored nine goals last season.
Sigurdsson did not travel with the club for their summer tour of the United States, and has since been training with their under-23 side.
Monday's offer is the first Everton have made for the midfielder, while Leicester City have also made an unsuccessful bid for him this summer.
The Toffees have already signed goalkeeper Jordan Pickford, defenders Cuco Martina and Michael Keane, midfielder Davy Klaassen and forwards Wayne Rooney and Sandro Ramirez. | Swansea City have rejected a £40m bid from Premier League rivals Everton for Iceland international Gylfi Sigurdsson. |
What is the summary of the document provided? | Thousands of stargazers came out to watch the eclipse, which only lasted for a few minutes, using special protective glasses.
This particular eclipse is called an "annular eclipse".
It happens when the moon is farther away from the earth, making it appear smaller.
This means that when it passes in front of the sun, it doesn't completely block it out like a total eclipse.
Instead you can still see the outline of the sun behind it, creating the amazing "ring of fire" effect.
This happens because the the moon does not move in a perfect circle around the earth, it is more like a squashed circle or an ellipsis.
This means that sometimes it is closer and further away from the earth.
The next eclipse is due to take place in February 2017, and can be seen from parts of South America and Africa. | Take a look at this incredible "ring of fire" eclipse which could be seen across parts of Africa. |
Summarize the content given in the passage. | Haye, who has not fought since he stopped fellow Briton Dereck Chisora in 2012, is to hold a news conference at London's O2 Arena at which his next opponent will also be present.
The 35-year-old has been training with Shane McGuigan - son of former world champion Barry - and has indicated he wants to reclaim the world title he lost to Wladimir Klitschko in 2011.
Legendary former world heavyweight champion George Foreman believes Haye could be the only person who can take the belt from Ukrainian Klitschko.
Londoner Haye tweeted: "You sure know your stuff George Foreman and you'll be happy to know I'll be back to regain the heavyweight crown #HayemakerIsBack."
Klitschko, 39, is preparing to fight another Briton, Tyson Fury, in Germany on Saturday. He has not lost a fight since 2004.
Former two-weight world champion Haye - who has won 26 of his 28 bouts - says he has had offers to fight Liverpool cruiserweight Tony Bellew, Irishman Martin Rogan, American Malik Scott and Mark de Mori of Australia.
Yes and no. Haye's original plan was to retire before his 31st birthday but he has already come out of retirement once - to fight Chisora at Upton Park in 2012.
Two proposed fights against Fury have since been cancelled because Haye needed reconstructive surgery on his shoulder, after which he was advised to retire.
There is, however, a sense of unfinished business. He won the world title in thrilling circumstances when he defeated Russia's Nikolay Valuev, despite giving away seven stone to his 7ft opponent.
He followed that with victories over John Ruiz and Audley Harrison to set up a fight against Klitschko - the dominant force in the division - but was easily beaten, blaming a toe injury for his subdued performance.
Haye looked back to his best in dismantling Chisora, but a succession of injuries have stalled any plans to try to reclaim the world title.
When in peak fitness, Haye poses a threat to the best in the division because of his ability to mix speedy footwork with some heavy punching.
Since stepping up from the cruiserweight division, he has faced a succession of taller and heavier men but has managed to fuse his extra speed with power.
That appears to be behind his decision to link up with Shane McGuigan, who has overseen Carl Frampton's rise to the world title in the super-bantamweight division.
"Looking at all the British and world fighters, the one fighter that stood out for me was Carl," said Haye.
"Carl's speed, timing, accuracy and punch variety is something that I didn't have in my arsenal. The guy behind that is Shane, so he was the guy I sought out."
Haye will have to prove he is still operating at world-title level when he returns, but he will be keeping a close eye on Saturday's fight between Klitschko and Fury.
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He has been mocked by Fury after pulling out of two fights against his fellow Briton, and has spoken of his desire to put right his perceived wrongs against Klitschko.
A fight against Bellew should not be ruled out, while Haye is likely to also jump at the chance - should it present itself - of fighting unbeaten American Deontay Wilder, who holds the WBC belt.
Wilder, 30, is expected to fight again on 16 January in New York.
Could Haye be ready by then? It would be a risk, but one he might believe is worth taking. | Former world heavyweight champion David Haye will announce on Tuesday he is to return to the ring after an absence of more than three years. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | The claim: Home Secretary Theresa May says: "Free movement makes it harder to control immigration, but it doesn't make it impossible to control immigration.
Reality Check verdict: Free movement does make it harder to control immigration. But leaving the EU would not necessarily mean abandoning free movement, and the government has not managed to meet its immigration ambitions even for non-EU migrants, over whom it has greater control.
This compares with migrants from outside the EU, for whom the UK currently has a points-based system that allows in people with skills needed in the economy as well as students and some temporary migrants.
The UK is not signed up to the Schengen agreement, so passports are still checked at the borders.
EU passport-holders are not automatically allowed in, but the bar is set quite high if EU citizens are to be rejected - just having a criminal record is not enough, they must pose a current threat. Last year, 2,165 EU passengers were turned away.
The latest figures from the Office for National Statistics suggest the UK's annual net migration - the number who have come minus the number who have left - from the EU stands at 172,000.
From outside the EU, it is 191,000.
The Conservative manifesto in 2015 said the party would "keep our ambition of delivering annual net migration in the tens of thousands, not the hundreds of thousands".
Clearly, even for just the non-EU migrants, over whom the government has greater control, the country is still well over that limit.
It should be said Norway and Switzerland also currently accept free movement, despite not being part of the EU, in order to gain access to the single market.
But Justice Secretary Michael Gove said last week the UK could be part of the European Free Trade Area, allowing it to trade with the EU without having to accept free movement.
Even so, it is possible, if the UK were to leave the EU, an eventual trade deal would mean it still having to allow favourable terms for EU migrants.
Read more: The facts behind claims in the EU debate | Freedom of movement means people holding the passports of European Union member states may go and live, work or study anywhere else in the EU. |
Provide a concise overview of the following information. | Parents have been advised to actively encourage their children to pursue hobbies and interests that require physical exertion.
Children aged eight and under have been targeted in the move.
Finland is known for producing some of the most physically fit children in Europe.
It also produces some of the highest academic results among schoolchildren in the developed world.
Finland's Minister for Education and Culture, Sanni Grahn-Laasonen, believes this is no coincidence.
Ms Grahn-Laasonen said physical activity contributed to a child's happiness and promoted learning by developing a young person's ability to interact socially.
"When children exercise together they develop interaction skills and connect socially, and it's healthy, too," she told local media.
The minister's recommendation has been embraced by those who set the educational agenda, with the move expected to have a positive impact on results.
Anneli Rautiainen, head of basic education with the Finnish National Board of Education, told the BBC that schools would now be experimenting with new ways of teaching.
"In our new curriculum, we are looking at two to three hours a week of physical education and more outdoor activities. But we are also looking at non-traditional ways of teaching," she said.
These include removing desks and chairs from some classrooms, so that children are not sitting as much while learning regular subjects.
"Some children learn very well sitting at a desk and listening, others would benefit greatly from moving around the room talking with their classmates," said Ms Rautiainen.
"The child has an active role. We will emphasise personalised learning. The learning environment should be modern and support different learners."
Finland is one of the first countries to put forward these recommendations, which will use classrooms to connect physical exercise with traditional learning.
A report published last month by the child and family services change programme revealed that young people in Finland were in favour of more physical activity in schools.
The idea was widely supported among those questioned, who suggested using the school gym during breaks and increasing out-of-hours school club activities.
Guidelines issued by the World Health Organisation (WHO) suggest that children and young teenagers aged between 5 and 17 should perform at least an hour of moderate physical exercise a day.
But the public health body goes on to say that more than an hour will provide additional health benefits, including later in life.
Finland's obsession with health dates back to the 1970s, when it had the highest rate of deaths from heart-related issues in the world.
This was largely due to a thriving dairy sector, which played a large part in the Finnish diet.
In an effort to tackle the issue from a young age, schoolchildren were weighed on an annual basis and the results were recorded in end-of-year reports.
If there was a problem, a doctor was called in.
This led to the Finnish National Nutrition Council, a government body that issues dietary guidelines, eventually introducing a directive that schools should not only provide free lunches, but that the food should be nutritional.
According to the WHO, Finland's population is still among the healthiest, but economic, social and cultural developments through globalisation are having a detrimental impact.
As in many countries, health inequalities are on the rise in Finland.
Finland introduced child health clinics way back in the 1940s, a pioneering move that was later introduced in other nations.
The primary focus at the time was on physical development and nutrition, early identification of abnormal conditions or disease and immunisation.
With this latest focus on physical activity among schoolchildren, Finland remains a leading nation when it comes to the health of its young citizens.
Luis Enrique confirmed he will leave Barcelona at the end of the season, and former defender Koeman is being linked with a return to the Nou Camp.
The Everton boss, 53, won four league titles and the European Cup in his six years there as a player.
"For me personally and the lads, we obviously hope he stays," said Toffees defender Williams.
"He's started building a team here and we're all confident the future looks good for Everton.
"But he might have his own ambitions. I can't speak for what he wants from his managerial career but from our point of view, definitely we enjoy working with him," the 32-year-old added.
Koeman took over as Everton boss in June 2016 and his team are on course to finish in the top seven of the Premier League for the first time in three years.
Until Sunday's 3-2 defeat at Tottenham, they were unbeaten in nine league matches. | Children should spend at least three hours a day performing physical activities, according to the Finnish government.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Ashley Williams has urged Ronald Koeman to ignore speculation linking him with the Barcelona job and stay at Everton. |
What is the summary of the following document? | Sigurdsson, 30, scored Iceland's first goal in their 2-1 win against England in the knockout stages of Euro 2016.
The ex-IFK Goteborg and FC Copenhagen defender played every minute of Iceland's games at the tournament.
Prior to joining Krasnodar in 2014, the Icelander won the Danish Superliga and Danish Cup with Copenhagen.
Despite England taking the lead against Iceland through Wayne Rooney's fourth-minute penalty, Sigurdsson equalised two minutes later before Kolbeinn Sigthorsson's winning goal.
Meanwhile, Fulham midfielder Lasse Vigen Christensen has signed a one-year contract extension, keeping him with the west London club until the summer of 2018.
Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page.
Media playback is not supported on this device | Championship side Fulham have signed Iceland centre-back Ragnar Sigurdsson from Russian side FC Krasnodar for an undisclosed fee on a two-year deal. |
Can you provide a brief summary of the following information? | Manchester Crown Court heard the body of Sian Roberts, 36, was found at a flat in Salford in November 2015.
Police said after the prints were found, Glynn Williams "tried everything to get out of admitting his crimes".
The 53-year-old from Crumpsall, Manchester, was ordered to serve a minimum of 21 years in prison.
Supt Bob Tonge said the story Williams told officers "changed more than once" throughout the investigation.
"I'm glad we've finally got Sian's family the justice they deserve", he added.
Speaking after sentencing on Wednesday, Ms Roberts' daughter Shantay said her mum's life "might have been short-lived, but it was most definitely lived".
She said she had "never known a person to inspire and touch so many different lives in such a crazy and unorthodox way", adding that her "bestest friend in the entire world" was "finally at peace".
The executive order follows years of pressure from gay rights groups.
Mr Obama cannot extend the protection to all American workers, however.
The order comes after far broader anti-discrimination legislation stalled in the Republican-led House of Representatives.
The executive order will apply only to federal contractors, which employ nearly one-quarter of the US workforce.
"This is a major step forward in the struggle for freedom and justice for [lesbian, gay, transgender and "queer"] workers and their families," Rea Carey, executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, said in a statement. "Now millions of people will have the economic security they need to provide for their families."
The Employment Non-Discrimination Act (Enda) passed the Democratic-controlled US Senate last year but has since languished in the House amid ongoing partisan political gridlock.
That legislation would bar employers with 15 or more workers from making employment decisions - hiring, firing or compensation - based on sexual orientation or gender identity.
Mr Obama urged the House of Representatives to pass the bill in November, saying it had "the overwhelming support of the American people, including a majority of Republican voters, as well as many corporations, small businesses and faith communities".
"One party in one house of Congress should not stand in the way of millions of Americans who want to go to work each day and simply be judged by the job they do," he added, addressing House Republicans.
But Republican House Speaker John Boehner opposes the bill, arguing it could lead to lawsuits and hinder job creation.
Mr Obama has used the power of the executive order before, once raising the minimum wage for federal contractors and also expanding the number of workers eligible for overtime pay.
There is currently no word on when Mr Obama plans to sign the order, but a White House official told US media the president had asked his staff to prepare the order for his signature. | A man whose bloody footprints were found in the flat of a woman he had stabbed to death has been jailed for life for her murder.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
President Barack Obama will sign an order banning federal government contractors from discriminating against gay and transgender workers, officials have said. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | Tootle made 18 appearances for Town last season, but his last game was a 2-0 defeat by Port Vale on 31 October.
The 25-year-old joined the Shropshire side in June 2015, having previously played 224 times for Crewe, where he mostly featured as a right-back.
"I'm delighted to get it over the line," he told the Magpies website.
"It's a big club and from what I can see, everything that's happening at the club says it's going to be successful next season."
Earlier, Shrewsbury released a statement thanking Tootle in for "his hard work and dedication".
The Liverpudlian was one of Town boss Micky Mellon's close-season signings following promotion from League Two last summer.
He was tipped two summers ago to make a move higher up the leagues, has now been linked with a move to Scotland.
Town manager Micky Mellon has so far made seven summer signings as he attempts to rebuild following their League One relegation near-miss.
He released eight players, strikers Jean-Louis Akpa Akpro and Scott Vernon, defenders Jermaine Grandison, Zak Whitbread and Mickey Demetriou, midfielder Jordan Clark and wingers Elliot Grandin and James Caton.
The fresh contracts will keep O'Callaghan, 25, and Copeland, 28, at Thomond Park until 2018.
Centre Rory Scannell, a former Ireland Under-20 star, has signed a senior contract with Munster after impressing in the province's academy.
"Each player has their own individual attributes and are valuable members of our squad," said coach Anthony Foley.
"With Robin and Dave, we are maintaining the services of two hugely physical players who bring different skill-sets to our overall game.
"Both have proven their versatility over the years in playing across the back row and at lock, so we are delighted to have players of their calibre."
Copeland joined Munster at the start of the 2014-15 season and has scored six tries in his 24 appearances.
O'Callaghan, like Scannell a product of Munster's academy, has made 52 appearances for the province but is currently sidelined with a thigh injury.
Scannell, 22, is the younger brother of Munster hooker Niall.
"We are fortunate to have home-grown talent like Rory make their way up through the ranks," added Foley.
"For a young guy who has been playing at the next level for over a year now we are looking forward to seeing Rory's contribution develop." | League Two side Notts County have signed defender Matt Tootle on a two-year contract after Shrewsbury came to a mutual agreement on his release.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Munster back row pair Dave O'Callaghan and Robin Copeland have signed new two-year deals with the Irish province. |
Write a short summary of the following excerpt. | Media playback is unsupported on your device
4 August 2015 Last updated at 16:54 BST
It was announced on Friday that Beijing would host the 2022 Winter Olympics despite the city's lack of snow.
No-one was available for comment at either the Beijing Games' organising committee or Disney.
The official song is called "The Snow and Ice Dance" and here it is. | The official song for the Beijing Winter Olympics has come under criticism online for sounding rather like Disney's musical, Frozen. |
Please provide a short summary of this passage. | Rangers said its players and backroom staff were assaulted when fans invaded the pitch at Hampden Park on Saturday.
The former chief executive of the Scottish Football Association (SFA), Gordon Smith, warned that Hibs could face SFA sanctions over the incident.
Eleven people have been arrested for minor offences, according to Police Scotland.
Speaking to BBC Radio Scotland's Good Morning Scotland, Mr Smith said news of the violence was receiving international attention.
He said: "It is sad because this is going around the world - the world has seen this and it is a bad reflection on Scottish football and I think possibly there will be rules reset for future games.
"They [the SFA] will definitely be looking at this and bringing in some measures that would try and avoid this happening again."
An investigation by the SFA is likely to look at ways the violence could have been avoided, he added.
"It might have helped if there had been more of a police presence around the ground just to stop this happening because I think it was mainly stewards that were there and I don't think there was much of a police presence at that point when the final whistle blew," Mr Smith said.
Rangers have demanded an independent investigation into the "shameful scenes" following their 3-2 defeat.
It was the Edinburgh club's first cup win since 1902.
In a statement released on Sunday, Rangers criticised the response of the the SFA, Hibernian, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and the BBC to the incident.
One Hibs fan who went on to the pitch after the final whistle told BBC Radio Scotland's Kaye Adams Programme that most of those involved were not violent.
"I can understand why a lot of Rangers fans were scared but I don't understand why everyone's making it out to be that there was thousands of Hibs fans running on the pitch looking for trouble because that's not the case at all," he said.
"There was a minority looking for trouble and you get that with every team. I hope the Hibs fans who were there who attacked everyone get caught and get banned and aren't allowed back at football."
Another witness who watched the scenes from the hospitality area said she saw players being assaulted and people being attacked with a corner flag.
"I thought it was shameful and there's no place for this in Scottish football," she added.
"It happened because there wasn't enough policing, there wasn't enough stewards."
But Calum Steele, of the Scottish Police Federation, told Good Morning Scotland that the police response was "nothing short of remarkable".
He said: "The speed and the skill, the agility and indeed the brilliance with which the police officers from the police service of Scotland brought events under control is something that should be praised to the highest heavens."
He added: "It almost doesn't matter what the police service had done, they would have been criticised regardless.
"Had there been hundreds or many, many more hundreds of police officers on the track before the final whistle in a sea of yellow jackets and possibly even shields, I suspect today's discussions would have been about the very heavy-handed approach that the police had taken in what was otherwise a very enjoyable football match."
Police brought horses on to the Hampden pitch to control the crowds, including a section from the Rangers end of the ground.
The pitch invasion delayed the presentation of the trophy and there was no lap of honour for Hibs players.
Rangers players were not able to pick up their cup final medals.
After Saturday's game, SFA chief executive Stewart Regan said it was "appalled" by the scenes of disorder and the "contemptible behaviour that ensued".
"The Scottish FA, along with Police Scotland and the stadium management, have initiated a full investigation into the scenes that unfolded to understand how such a volume of supporters were able to enter the field," he added.
The Scottish government said it is also "liaising closely" with the organisations involved in the inquiry.
A spokeswoman added: "Violence has absolutely no place in football, either on or off the pitch.
"The First Minister condemns unreservedly any act of violence or disorder by anyone who attended the Cup Final.
"It is for the police to take action against anyone suspected of having committed an offence." | Police investigations are continuing into violence following Hibernian's win over Rangers in the Scottish Cup final. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | The man has been named by family members as Ryan Baird, who was originally from Northern Ireland.
His cousin, Louise Evanne Baird, said he was "amazing" and would be "sadly missed".
Police Scotland said a further 18 people were taken to hospital, and three were seriously hurt.
The crash happened at about 13:15 BST on Saturday on the A76 by the Crossroads Roundabout near Kilmarnock.
The coach was taking the Nith Valley Loyal Rangers Supporters' Club to Ibrox Stadium, where Rangers were due to play Partick Thistle in the Scottish Premiership.
Mr Baird's partner Sarah Hughes, paid tribute to him, saying he had loved the club.
The Nith Valley Loyal Rangers Supporters Club posted on its Facebook page: "The club would like to thank everyone for their good wishes & concern at this sad time."
RangersLinfieldFC tweeted: "We have been informed that the man who sadly passed away was a Rangers and Linfield fan named Ryan Baird from Larne, Northern Ireland, RIP."
In a club statement, Rangers said it was "deeply saddened" by the crash, adding: "Our profound condolences go to the gentleman who has died and our thoughts are with his family.
"We are also thinking of those who have been injured and taken to hospital."
Rangers managing director Stewart Robertson said: "Everyone at the football club and every member of our Rangers family is thinking of all of those caught up in this terrible accident.
"Clearly this is a deeply distressing time and the board extend our deepest sympathies and concerns."
Rangers assistant manager David Weir said he was sure the club "will be very supportive in regards to anything they can do to help the situation".
Celtic also passed on their condolences in a club statement, saying: "In relation to news of today's accident involving Rangers supporters on their way to the match, everyone at Celtic sends our sincere condolences following the death of a supporter."
One passenger said the bus, which had 37 people on board including the driver, had "swerved" before landing on its side on a grass verge.
Police Scotland said: "We can confirm a 39-year-old man has died following a serious coach crash on the A76 near Crossroads Roundabout.
"A report will be prepared for the Procurator Fiscal.
"Eighteen people are receiving treatment in hospital, three of whom are in a serious condition.
"This includes seven men under 20 years of age. Three men and three women aged between 30 and 59 and five men over 60." | Tributes have been paid to a 39-year-old man who died after a coach carrying Rangers fans overturned in East Ayrshire. |
Write a summary for this information. | The 31-year-old Manxman beat Team Sky's Elia Viviani and Astana's Andrea Guardini in a sprint finish.
"I'm happy with that," said the Dimension Data rider, who finished second in last Sunday's road race at the Road World Championships.
"We wanted to win. I felt good. It was a very chaotic sprint in which I lost my lead out in the second last corner."
The races continues on Saturday with a 150km stage that finishes with a 10km ascent to the summit finish at Jebel Hafeet, while Sunday's final stage is a 26-lap race around Yas Marina Circuit.
Stage two standings:
1. Mark Cavendish (GB/Dimension Data) 2 hrs 32 mins 21 secs
2. Elia Viviani (Ita/Team Sky) same time
3. Andrea Guardini (Ita/Astana)
4. Jakub Mareczko (Ita/Wilier Triestina)
5. Jean Pierre Drucker (Lux/BMC)
Overall standings:
1. Mark Cavendish (GB/Dimension Data) 5 hrs 48 mins 06 secs
2. Giacomo Nizzolo (Ita/trek Segafredo) +4 secs
3. Jens Keukeleire (Bel/Orica BikeExchange) +5 secs
4. Elia Viviani (Ita/Team Sky) +8 secs
5. John Degenkolb (Ger/Team Giant-Alpecin) Same time | Mark Cavendish won the second stage of the Abu Dhabi Tour on Friday to take the overall lead. |
Summarize the content given in the passage. | The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) said it would beam clearer images of cloud "waves", which contribute to turbulence, back to earth more quickly.
It is also set to give better estimates of wind speed, fog, ice and lightning.
Pilots have welcomed the advances, which are expected to be available from the second half of 2017.
GOES-R (Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite) is billed as the world's most advanced weather satellite.
It also claims to pick up on hurricanes, tornadoes, flooding, volcanic ash clouds, wildfires, lightning storms and solar flares more quickly.
The $1bn (£800m) satellite will scan the skies five times faster than previous versions and with four times greater image resolution, according to Noaa.
For airlines, the improved data and imaging will help pilots plan their routes to avoid hazardous conditions.
Steven Goodman, a senior programme scientist for GOES-R, said satellites had previously struggled to capture clouds in enough detail to show the "waves" that contribute to turbulence.
But the new satellite would deliver clearer views and send images back within minutes, he told the BBC.
"It will give the weather as it's looking now rather than the weather that happened 15 to 30 minutes ago," he said.
It was designed to also measure in-cloud lightning, wind speeds and fog patterns more accurately, he said.
Pilots will appreciate the promised advances in weather forecasting, according to Steve Landells, a flight safety specialist at the British Airline Pilots Association (Balpa).
Mr Landells, a pilot of 27 years, said turbulence caused by lightning storms was more predictable, but that other types were more difficult.
"If they can start predicting that to a great degree, and more timely, then that would be a significant help," he said.
Noaa teamed up with Nasa for the mission, which saw about 8,000 space programme workers gather at the launch site in Florida on Saturday.
The satellite is scheduled to reach an orbit of 22,300 miles (35,900km) in about two weeks and become operational within a year.
Once running, it aims to produce full images of the Western Hemisphere every 15 minutes and the continental US every five minutes. Specific storm regions will be updated every 30 seconds.
Officers were called to an address in Bryn Heulog, Old Colwyn, at 20:30 GMT on Thursday. David Kingsbury, 35, was found dead nearby.
Two 30-year-old men and a 50-year-old man have been arrested on suspicion of murder and are being questioned.
A 38-year-old woman arrested on Thursday has been released on bail.
A post-mortem examination revealed Mr Kingsbury died from a single stab wound.
In a tribute, Mr Kingsbury's family said: "David was a very loving, affectionate son, brother and uncle with a good heart.
"We all loved him to bits and will miss his happy, easy going nature, his infectious smile and sense of humour." | A new weather satellite that could help pilots avoid turbulence has launched into space.
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Three more people have been arrested following a fatal stabbing in Conwy county. |
Give a concise summary of the passage below. | School governors must ensure that deals allow parents to get good value for money, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has said.
Complaints from parents have prompted the CMA to write an open letter to governors and suppliers in England.
It has the power to fine suppliers if they are found to be anti-competitive.
The CMA said there was no intention to take any legal action at this stage, but it has joined forces with various associations to call on schools and suppliers to review their agreements.
The Schoolwear Association, which represents suppliers, said that exclusive deals often ensured that uniforms of good quality were available in all sizes.
The authority said that exclusive deals could mean parents were not getting value for money, with "strong evidence" that they had increased prices.
"Buying school uniforms can be very expensive and particularly hits low-income families and those with a number of children, so it is important parents and carers are able to shop around," said Ann Pope, senior director at the CMA.
"We will continue monitoring the sector and will consider taking enforcement action, if it is necessary."
The move follows a review of school uniform costs in 2012 which found:
The Children's Society said that many parents were being prevented from buying cheaper school clothing from supermarkets.
"School uniform costs can be a millstone around the necks of poorer parents, contributing to a cycle of debt and damaging the opportunities and well-being of lower income pupils," said Sam Royston, director of policy at the society.
The National Governors' Association said schools should do all they could to keep costs to a minimum.
Guidance for schools in England set by the Department for Education says that schools and governing bodies should ensure parents are getting good value for money.
The Schoolwear Association said it was keen to work with the CMA.
"There are some benefits to sole supplier arrangements, particularly because a single supplier is dedicated to the school and required to stock uniform all year round in all sizes," said the association's chairman, David Burgess.
"When there are two or more suppliers, that sense of duty diminishes, and the school has less power to demand best value and service levels. If a school decides on a sole supplier arrangement, we strongly recommend periodically putting contracts out to tender where quotations can be compared on quality, service levels, year-round stocking, ethical sourcing and price."
He added that suppliers were often local and independent and that they considered quality and sustainability.
"We are anxious that the focus on school uniform should not be solely on price at the expense of poorer quality. We should remember that children spend an average of 10 hours a day in their uniform, so comfort and durability are vital," he said.
The association has called on the government to remove VAT from school uniforms and introduce a voucher scheme, similar to childcare vouchers, to assist parents with the cost.
Welshman Page's side beat West Brom on penalties to set up the Sixfields tie.
"I've had a couple of pals texting me talking about when we used to collect the Panini stickers," said Page.
"There was a couple of Tottenham and Liverpool fans, and I was Man United. It's great to have those memories, I've always looked out for their results."
He added to BBC Radio Northampton: "It's a great opportunity for the players and they deserve that for the performance the other night."
The League One side have never beaten Manchester United in four matches, their most recent meeting being an FA Cup game in 2004.
But former Wales defender Page says his side must not lose focus on their league campaign, starting against Coventry on Saturday.
"They'll be able to get themselves up for the Manchester United game - if they don't they're in the wrong profession," said Page.
"What's important now is that we're grounded and realise it's the league campaign that's our priority and there's a lot of points to be gained from now until we play Manchester United." | The cost of school uniforms has risen by up to £10 an item owing to the use of exclusive suppliers, according to the UK's competition authority.
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Northampton Town manager Rob Page says "half the Rhondda Valley" wants tickets for his side's EFL Cup third round match against Manchester United. |
Can you summarize the following information? | Nimbus's Mum couldn't look after her when she was born, so zookeeper Jamie and his family stepped in to help.
She had to be bottle-fed by hand and lived in their bathroom until she was big enough to move into her new enclosure.
Martin has been to visit Nimbus in her new home and meet the family.
5 November 2015 Last updated at 00:50 GMT
If no action is taken, fish stocks will decline by between 9% and 59% over the next 30 years, depending on the species, it warned.
The study recommended dramatic reduction in all fishing activity, as Juliana Liu reports from Hong Kong.
Watch more reports on Asia Business Report's website
Judge Jeffrey Sutton of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals wrote definitions of marriage should not be changed by the courts.
The 2-1 decision is the first at the appeals court level in favour of gay marriage opponents.
It affects Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee.
In recent months, four other appeals courts have struck down state bans on same-sex marriage, ruling they violated the US constitution's guarantee of equal protection under the law.
Last month, the US Supreme Court declined to hear challenges against those decisions, effectively ratifying them and leading to same-sex nuptials in several more states.
But the high court did not make its own ruling on the matter, in large part because at the time there was no dispute among the appeals courts.
Gay marriage is now legal in 32 states and in Washington DC.
On Tuesday, Judge Sutton and Judge Deborah Cook upheld the four state bans, arguing in their opinion that states had the right to set their own rules for marriage.
"Surely the people should receive some deference in deciding when the time is ripe to move from one picture of marriage to another," Judge Sutton wrote, adding the plaintiffs had not convinced the majority it should be the court's responsibility to intervene.
While the ruling said "gay couples, no less than straight couples, are capable of raising children and providing stable families for them" the judges argued marriages had been created an as "incentive for two people who procreate together to stay together for purposes of rearing offspring" and was "still relevant".
Judge Sutton also argued a constitutional right to same-sex marriage could be used in support of legalised polygamy.
"If it is constitutionally irrational to stand by the man-woman definition of marriage, it must be constitutionally irrational to stand by the monogamous definition of marriage," he wrote.
In a sharp dissent, Judge Martha Craig Daugherty wrote, "the author of the majority opinion has drafted what would make an engrossing TED Talk or, possibly, an introductory lecture in political philosophy.
"But as an appellate court decision, it wholly fails to grapple with the relevant constitutional question in this appeal."
Judge Daugherty suggested the majority had deliberately upheld the ban in order to force the Supreme Court to take up the matter.
"Because the correct result is so obvious, one is tempted to speculate that the majority has purposefully taken the contrary position to create the circuit split," she wrote, adding a Supreme Court ruling would put "an end to the uncertainty of status and the interstate chaos that the current discrepancy in state laws threaten".
In a statement, Evan Wolfson, president of pro-gay marriage group Freedom to Marry, said the decision was out of step with the majority of Americans.
"This anomalous ruling won't stand the test of time or appeal," Mr Wolfson said.
A lawyer for two of the couples represented in the case said he would appeal against the decision to the Supreme Court. | A baby leopard called Nimbus has been raised by a family in their bathroom.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Territorial disputes in the South China Sea will hamper efforts to coordinate urgent action among Asian governments on overfishing, according to a study by the University of British Columbia.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A US appeals court has upheld bans on gay marriage in four states, a ruling that increases the chances the Supreme Court will soon rule on the issue. |
Give a short summary of the provided document. | The number of holidaymakers coming to the UK rose by 21.1% - although the number of business visitors declined.
Overall there were a record 8.3 million visits in the quarter, a rise of nearly 10% on the same period in 2016.
The visitors spent £4.4bn while in the country, also a record amount.
But at the same time the fall in the value of the pound did not discourage Britons from travelling overseas.
UK residents made 14.1 million trips abroad over the three months, a rise of 8.1% on 2016.
The decline in sterling makes it cheaper for foreign visitors to come to the UK, but more expensive for Britons going the other way.
The number of American visitors was particularly significant. Their numbers were up by 16%, while their spending grew 29% to £604m.
There were a record 54,000 visits from Chinese nationals, who spent a record £91m, and there was strong growth in the number of Australian and French visitors too.
Wales appears to have been one of the most popular destinations, with the number of overnight visits increasing by 28%.
But the "visitor balance of payments" remains tilted against the UK.
While visitors spent £4.4bn in Britain over the quarter, Britons spent nearly twice as much - £8.6bn - on trips abroad. a figure that has risen by 11.7% over the past year. | The weakness of sterling was behind a surge in the number of tourists visiting the UK in the first three months of 2017, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). |
Summarize the content provided below. | The British second seed broke the Frenchman's serve once in each set to win 6-4 6-4 in a rain-delayed match which finished at 01:30 local time.
Murray will now meet Kei Nishikori in the last four after the Japanese fourth seed overcame Rafael Nadal 6-2 6-4.
Top-seeded Wimbledon champion Novak Djokovic plays unseeded Jeremy Chardy in Saturday's other semi-final.
"I passed well," Murray, 28, said. "I came up with some good passing shots and that was the difference."
The first four games went with serve before Murray gained the opening break in game five courtesy of a fierce forehand up the line.
World number 24 Tsonga had two break points in game four of the second set, but passed up the first before Murray's first ace of the match took the game to deuce.
From there, the two-time Grand Slam-title winner held, before seizing the initiative with a lob to break Tsonga's serve on his way to taking the second set.
Should Murray reach the final in Montreal he will replace Swiss Roger Federer as number two in the world rankings. He last held the position - the highest of his career - in 2013.
Murray has now qualified for the ATP World Tour Finals at The O2 arena in London in November, having only secured his place last year 11 days before the event.
Wimbledon champion Djokovic saved two match points to beat Latvian Ernests Gulbis and set up his last-four meeting with Frenchman Chardy.
The Serb rallied from a set down to win 5-7 7-6 (9-7) 6-1 and extend his Master Series streak to 29 - last losing to Federer in Shanghai last year.
In the women's tournament in Toronto, world number one Serena Williams beat Italy's Roberta Vinci to reach the last four.
The 33-year-old American served 12 aces to win 6-4 6-3 in 79 minutes and set up a semi-final with Belinda Bencic. The 18-year-old Swiss beat Ana Ivanovic 6-4 6-2.
Romanian second seed Simona Halep faces Italy's Sara Errani in the other semi final. | Andy Murray reached the semi-finals of the Rogers Cup in Montreal by beating defending champion Jo-Wilfried Tsonga. |
Can you summarize this passage? | Alicja Dworakowska, 29, was reported missing from her home in Beeston in Leeds on Tuesday.
West Yorkshire Police issued an urgent appeal following the disappearance of the heavily-pregnant mother and young girl.
The force thanked the public and media for their assistance in locating them. | Police searching for a pregnant Polish woman and her five-year-old daughter say the pair have been found safe and well. |
Give a brief summary of the provided passage. | The ruling that the application be dismissed means that rhino horns can effectively be traded in the country.
Rhino breeders argue that legalising the trade could cut the number of rhinos slaughtered as horns can be sawn off anaesthetised live animals.
However many conservationists disagree with the proposed policy.
The department of environmental affairs said authorities were still considering the implications of Wednesday's judgment.
"It is important to note that permits are required to sell or buy rhino horn," the department's spokesman, Albie Modise, said in a statement.
The ruling only applies to the industry in South Africa as a ban on international trade remains in force.
Rhino breeders who have argued that open trade is the only way to prevent widespread slaughter of the animal welcomed the ruling.
"We are absolutely delighted at the ruling by the constitutional court," Pelham Jones, chairman of the Private Rhino Owners Association (PROA), told AFP news agency.
Breeders also argue that the process is not permanent as the horns grow back.
The Helping Rhinos organisation however tweeted that the ruling was "disastrous".
South Africa is thought to be home to around 20,000 rhinos, around 80% of the worldwide population. More than 1,000 rhino were killed by poachers in South Africa in 2016. | South Africa's constitutional court has rejected an attempt by the government to keep a ban on the domestic trade in rhino horns. |
Can you provide a summary of this content? | Media playback is not supported on this device
Manager Roy Hodgson fielded an England team with an experimental look - but it still had far too much class for the very limited Lithuanians, whose manager Igoris Pankratjevas resigned immediately after the match.
Ross Barkley's deflected shot gave England the lead before Harry Kane's effort rebounded in off the back of Lithuania keeper Giedrius Arlauskis after striking the post to make the outcome a formality even before half-time.
Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain's powerful shot rounded off a comfortable night for England that was only marred by brief skirmishes between rival groups of fans that had to be broken up by riot police.
England, who qualified for next summer's tournament in France with two matches to spare, are only the sixth team ever to reach the finals with a 100% record.
England's flawless record in qualifying has often been damned with faint praise shaped by the standard of opposition they faced.
There is an undoubted element of truth in the claim that England were handed a very favourable Euro 2016 draw - certainly very favourable for Hodgson after a World Cup that was little short of a debacle.
Hodgson's reputation as England manager would have been in serious danger with any significant defeats early on after that. Instead he was able to rebuild in a relatively comfortable group.
The bottom line, however, is that England have done everything asked of them and a flawless record in qualifying - in which they scored 31 goals and conceded just three - must not be dismissed lightly.
It should also be placed in the context of the problems faced by other so-called bigger nations. Netherlands - World Cup semi-finalists in 2014 - have struggled desperately, the highly rated Belgians were beaten by Wales, while Spain lost in Slovakia a year ago - their first qualifying defeat in eight years.
Tougher tests - much tougher tests - lie ahead and it is likely the true measure of England's progress since they went out at the group stage in Brazil will only be revealed once Euro 2016 begins and they face high-quality opposition in a competitive environment.
To question theirs and Hodgson's record in this qualifying group would be churlish and undeserved. They have completed the mission without a blemish and for that they deserve credit.
Hodgson insists he is proud at including - and keeping - Barkley in his squad from his early days as a teenager, even when he has been out of the Everton side.
Will his pride extend to putting the wonderfully gifted 21-year-old in England's starting line-up at Euro 2016?
It is a question that is growing in significance as Barkley, after a man-of-the-match performance in the 2-0 win against Estonia at Wembley on Friday, backed it up with another eye-catching display in Vilnius.
Barkley broke the deadlock with a deflected shot and almost added another with a header as his influence on England grows.
Hodgson still gets irked when reminded of his public criticism of Barkley following his performance in a friendly against Ecuador in Miami before the 2014 World Cup.
Then, he accused the media of having an "obsession" with Barkley before criticising the number of times he gave the ball away.
England and Barkley have moved on and Hodgson has since been very generous with his praise of the player.
He may, however, face a further "obsession" with Barkley if he continues to put in performances that will increase the clamour for him to be a first choice at Euro 2016.
Kane was unable to claim England's second goal after his left-foot shot hit the near post and rebounded in off the back of Arlauskis - but he can be pleased with his night's work.
The Tottenham striker gave an industrious display before being replaced by Danny Ings, showing a willingness to take every opportunity that came his way, forcing three saves from the keeper before his fourth attempt ended in a goal.
Hodgson wanted to see what Kane could give him in the absence of captain Wayne Rooney and he will be well satisfied as the 22-year-old showed mobility, composure on the ball and that pleasing knack of getting into scoring positions at international level, a habit that brought him three goals before this match.
Another excellent performance from a young player growing in international stature with every England game. Elegant, powerful and possessed of the ability to produce the unexpected - with a goal to decorate his display.
England manager Roy Hodgson: "This is an achievement. I am very proud of the players' performances. I thought it was excellent, in the first half especially. There was a lot of hard work put in, the quality of play was good and 10 wins out of 10 is very satisfying - we've got to take a lot of pride in that.
"I can't fault anyone tonight - a good performance, dominant and a nice way to end the qualifying campaign.
"It would have been a surprise if we had not qualified. But the upcoming friendlies are better, stronger sides. We'll see how we deal with that."
After England became the sixth side to reach the European Championship finals with a perfect 100% record, here's a reminder of the previous teams to achieve the feat - and how they fared the following summer.
France (Euro '92)
Played eight, won eight, scored 20, conceded six. France entered Euro 92 in buoyant form and boasting a side of Jean-Pierre Papin, Eric Cantona, Didier Deschamps and Laurent Blanc.
What could go wrong? Everything. The French drew 0-0 with England in a bad-tempered group match before losing to Denmark and it was an early au revoir. Like England, they went out in the group stage.
Czech Republic (Euro 2000)
Finalists in 1996, the Czech Republic won all 10 of their qualifiers on the road to Euro 2000, winning their group by a massive 12 points.
However, defeats by co-hosts Netherlands and France meant it was group stage and out for a team including Tomas Rosicky, Pavel Nedved, Jan Koller and Karel Poborsky.
France (Euro 2004)
Zinedine Zidane, Thierry Henry, Marcel Desailly et al - the irrepressible French team of 2002-03 cruised to a 100% record before meeting - and beating - England in the opening group game.
Remember that? Wayne Rooney was brilliant, Zidane scored twice in the last minute...
But the pesky Greeks put paid to France's chances in the quarter-finals on their way to a remarkable win.
Spain and Germany (Euro 2012)
Four years ago, Germany and Spain each put their respective opposition to the sword twice en route to the finals in Poland and Ukraine.
The Germans were in particularly ruthless mood, scoring 34 times on their way to the tournament.
But when it came down to it, Spain were the men to beat, picking up the trophy for a second consecutive time after thumping Italy - conquerors of Germany - in the final.
Match ends, Lithuania 0, England 3.
Second Half ends, Lithuania 0, England 3.
Phil Jagielka (England) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Deivydas Matulevicius (Lithuania).
Egidijus Vaitkunas (Lithuania) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Andros Townsend (England) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Foul by Egidijus Vaitkunas (Lithuania).
Attempt missed. Dele Alli (England) right footed shot from outside the box misses to the left. Assisted by Jonjo Shelvey.
Substitution, Lithuania. Deivydas Matulevicius replaces Lukas Spalvis.
Attempt saved. Jamie Vardy (England) header from the centre of the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Assisted by Andros Townsend with a cross.
Lukas Spalvis (Lithuania) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Andros Townsend (England) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Foul by Lukas Spalvis (Lithuania).
Attempt missed. Georgas Freidgeimas (Lithuania) right footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the right.
Substitution, Lithuania. Egidijus Vaitkunas replaces Vytautas Andriuskevicius.
Foul by Dele Alli (England).
Vykintas Slivka (Lithuania) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Attempt saved. Vykintas Slivka (Lithuania) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top right corner.
Jamie Vardy (England) is shown the yellow card.
Jonjo Shelvey (England) is shown the yellow card.
Foul by Jamie Vardy (England).
Mindaugas Panka (Lithuania) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Substitution, England. Andros Townsend replaces Ross Barkley.
Dele Alli (England) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Foul by Deimantas Petravicius (Lithuania).
Corner, England. Conceded by Tomas Mikuckis.
Attempt saved. Danny Ings (England) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Dele Alli.
Substitution, England. Dele Alli replaces Adam Lallana.
Attempt missed. Vykintas Slivka (Lithuania) left footed shot from the centre of the box is too high.
Offside, Lithuania. Fedor Cernych tries a through ball, but Arturas Zulpa is caught offside.
Substitution, Lithuania. Deimantas Petravicius replaces Arvydas Novikovas.
Goal! Lithuania 0, England 3. Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (England) right footed shot from the right side of the box to the top right corner. Assisted by Kyle Walker.
Delay over. They are ready to continue.
Delay in match Arvydas Novikovas (Lithuania) because of an injury.
Attempt saved. Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (England) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Adam Lallana.
Substitution, England. Danny Ings replaces Harry Kane.
Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (England) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Foul by Arturas Zulpa (Lithuania).
Attempt missed. Jonjo Shelvey (England) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Assisted by Adam Lallana.
Adam Lallana (England) wins a free kick on the right wing. | England completed the perfect 10 wins from 10 in their Euro 2016 qualifying campaign with an easy victory in Lithuania. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | Belgium's Pieters, 25, scored a five-under-par 65 at Firestone Country Club in Akron, Ohio and is one shot ahead of Scotland's Russell Knox.
Jordan Spieth was a shot further back, alongside Rory McIlroy, who was competing without caddie JP Fitzgerald.
McIlroy ended a nine-year partnership with Fitzgerald this week, with Harry Diamond taking his place temporarily.
Northern Ireland's world number four carded five birdies and two bogeys, the second coming at his final hole.
"It was good, a little weird at the start," McIlroy said.
"I'm taking a little bit more responsibility on myself and there were a couple of times where I probably should have hit another club, but that's on me, not anyone else.
"I'd much rather be frustrated at my own decision than someone else's. It's great to have my best mate on the bag and we're just having a good time.
"It was strange the first couple of holes but I stuck to it today and played pretty well. I guess it's the start of the next chapter in my career and we'll go from here."
Defending champion and world number one Dustin Johnson is one shot behind McIlroy after carding a two-under-par 68, while former Masters champion Danny Willett's miserable form continued with a 76.
McIlroy split with Fitzgerald after winning four majors together, saying "sometimes to preserve a personal relationship you have to sacrifice a professional one".
He has brought in Diamond, a friend since childhood, for the Akron tournament and next week's major, the PGA Championship in Charlotte.
"I just needed someone that knew me and that's why I took Harry for the next couple of weeks," he said on Wednesday.
"If something doesn't work out and Harry and I say two weeks is enough, I'll need to find someone else but I've got 10 days between the end of the PGA and the start of the Northern Trust to do that."
The bodies of Marta Galikowska, 27, and daughters Maja, five, and Olga, one, were found at a house on Sherwin Road, Stoke-on-Trent on 12 October last year.
The mother and girls were pronounced dead at the scene.
Coroner Ian Smith concluded they died from stab wounds and the girls were unlawfully killed by their mother.
He also ruled at North Staffordshire Coroner's Court that Mrs Galikowska committed suicide.
In a statement, Marcin Galikowska paid tribute to his wife and daughters.
"Marta was a fantastic wife and a loving mum who worshipped our daughters Maja and Olga," he said.
"My wife was a very special person who lit up my life. Maja and Olga were wonderful children whose smiles still shine brightly." | Thomas Pieters holed a 31-foot birdie putt at the last to take a first-round lead at the Bridgestone Invitational.
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A mother who killed herself and her two children was depressed because she mistakenly believed her eldest daughter had cancer, a coroner has concluded. |
What is the brief summary of the provided content? | A statement issued on behalf of Rooney, 31, called the images "inappropriate".
The Sun published images it said showed Rooney drunk at a party late on Saturday night - a day after England's World Cup qualifying win over Scotland.
The FA, meanwhile, says it will review its policies around players' free time.
Thursday's edition of The Sun claims that policy review was launched because 10 England players were at a nightclub until 04:30 GMT on Sunday.
The statement from Rooney's management continued: "Naturally Wayne is sorry that pictures taken with fans have been published.
"Although it was a day off for the whole squad and staff, he fully recognises that the images are inappropriate for someone in his position.
"Earlier today Wayne spoke privately to both Gareth Southgate and [FA technical director] Dan Ashworth to unreservedly apologise.
"He would like to further extend that apology to any young fans who have seen these pictures."
Rooney missed Tuesday's 2-2 friendly draw with Spain with a minor knee injury.
Rooney's apology came as the FA issued a statement saying "England personnel have a responsibility to behave appropriately at all times".
The governing body added: "We will be reviewing our policy around free time while on international duty." | Captain Wayne Rooney has "unreservedly" apologised to interim England manager Gareth Southgate after pictures emerged showing him at a wedding at the team's hotel while on international duty. |
Summarize the information given below. | McGowan was a free agent after the Buddies decided not to offer him a new deal.
And the club have beaten off competition to secure McGinn, who was voted into the Championship team of the year last term.
"I'm delighted both have agreed to join," said Dundee boss Paul Hartley.
The Dens Park men are gearing up for their return to Scotland's top flight, after winning the Championship last term.
McGowan, who spent four years at St Mirren, started his career at Celtic where he played alongside his new boss Hartley.
"He was always good with me so it was a big factor in me joining," said the 26-year-old.
"I was shocked to be released by St. Mirren. My mobile kept ringing from the next day but I didn't answer as I didn't know the number.
"It turned out to be Paul [Hartley] and I met him and Scot Gardiner [chief executive] on the West Coast and they sold me on the club and team, I was convinced from then and it was just a matter of getting the deal done."
And the manager was also a key factor in the capture of McGinn.
"I was flattered by a lot of clubs showing interest in me but speaking to Paul Hartley made my mind up," said the 23-year-old right back. | Dundee have signed former St Mirren midfielder Paul McGowan and ex-Dumbarton defender Paul McGinn on two-year contracts. |
Can you provide a summary of this content? | Sir Nicholas Winton was 29 when he smuggled 669 boys and girls, destined for concentration camps, out of Czechoslovakia in 1939.
The 101-year-old attended the service earlier at Maidenhead railway station in front of a crowd of onlookers.
The piece, forming part of a bench, is on the station's platform three.
It was unveiled by Maidenhead MP Theresa May.
Sir Nicholas, of Pinkneys Green, was joined by members of the Maidenhead Rotary Club, where he is also a member.
Scrapbook found
A motion was unanimously passed to install the £20,000 statue, created by local sculptor Lydia Karpinska, by the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead Council last year.
It depicts Sir Nicholas relaxing on a park bench, reading a book which contains images of the children he saved and the trains used to evacuate them.
Councillor Derek Wilson, who put forward the motion, called Sir Nicholas "a true hero".
He added: "He played a valuable contribution in evacuating these children at a time when it was extremely difficult.
"We should never forget the contribution of the members of our community that put their own lives at risk.
"He is extremely modest but I felt it was important that in Maidenhead we recognised his achievements."
Sir Nicholas kept quiet about his work for 50 years until his wife found a scrapbook.
Realising the danger that the imminent Nazi invasion posed, he worked to find British families willing to put up £50 to rescue the children and look after them until they were 17.
His efforts have been likened to the work of the world famous "saviour" of Jewish prisoners Oskar Schindler.
Sir Nicholas was knighted by the Queen in March 2003 and a year earlier was finally reunited with hundreds of the children he saved - including Labour peer Lord Dubbs and film director Karel Reisz.
The Stoke City striker is struggling with an Achilles injury and missed Saturday's 3-0 defeat by Belgium.
"Jon didn't train [on Tuesday] - I'd have to say he'd be very doubtful for the game," said O'Neill.
The Irish need to beat Italy, who are guaranteed top spot, in order to progress into the last 16.
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Walters was forced off with the injury after 64 minutes in the opening draw with Sweden.
The Republic head into the game propping up Group E but they could face an Italian team featuring as many nine changes.
Reports suggest Azzurri boss Antonio Conte will rest key players with qualification already assured.
O'Neill hopes his side can repeat their impressive display against the Swedes in the must-win encounter.
"We have to play the game with a lot of energy and just be mindful of how decent the Italians are," he said.
"We must just be mindful ourselves of what we achieved against Sweden... and take that sort of performance into consideration when you're thinking about the game.
"It's a fairly lengthy evening. We know at the end of it we have to be in front. It's a case of being very strong to begin with. I think we've to be fresh, alert.
"Whatever comes or goes the players are ready for it. We've done a little bit of training with those who haven't participated in the games and if called upon they're ready."
Media playback is not supported on this device | A statue has been unveiled to honour the man dubbed the "British Schindler" for his work saving Jewish children from Nazi invasion.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Republic of Ireland boss Martin O'Neill rates forward Jonathan Walters as "very doubtful" for the crunch Group E clash with Italy in Lille. |
What is the summary of the following article? | The move follows a similar extension for the independence referendum last year.
The age extension was also supported in last year's Smith Commission on further devolution for Scotland.
The voting age will be lowered next spring, allowing 16 and 17-year-olds to take part in May's Holyrood election.
Extending the franchise to 16 and 17-year-olds during the referendum was widely considered a success in terms of engaging young people in politics.
Deputy First Minister John Swinney said: "It has been a long-standing policy of this government to lower the voting age to 16 where we can and that policy now has, I am pleased to say, cross-party support across the chamber.
"I am delighted to have reached consensus on the principle.
"Building on that, I have been impressed by the thoughtful and passionate contributions that young people have made to the debate on the current proposals to extend the franchise permanently."
He said the Scottish Elections (Reduction of Voting Age) Bill "provides a detailed, workable and practical framework to allow 16 and 17-year-olds to register for and vote in Scottish elections", replicating the work done during the referendum.
He added: "I think it is a real missed opportunity on the part of the UK government not to enable 16 and 17-year-olds to vote in the EU referendum."
Labour's Lewis Macdonald said: "This bill is notable in delivering a significant amount of change with a minimum of fuss and a maximum of agreement.
"In passing this bill we should celebrate the democratic participation of all our citizens, the 100,000 or so 16 and 17-year-olds, the million over-65s and everyone in between.
"We are extending the franchise precisely because we know from experience that democracy works."
Conservative MSP Annabel Goldie told MSPs that the bill was an important moment for young people and democracy.
"This bill heralds an exciting era for our young people," she said.
"I think it is an opportunity for them to continue their high level of engagement in topical affairs that we saw with the independence referendum."
Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie said: "The ball is now in the court of Scotland's 16 and 17-year-olds to demand a fairer deal from all of Scotland's political parties.
"The right to vote comes with a responsibility to take part in our democratic debate.
"From cuts to college places to the crisis facing our hospitals, there are many issues which will benefit from the voice and power of 16 and 17-year-olds."
MSPs rejected a plea from Liberal Democrat Alison McInnes for the legislation to be altered so that Scottish ministers could decide if some young offenders could vote.
Young people aged 16 and 17 were not allowed to vote in the recent general election, and they will not be able to take part in the forthcoming referendum on the UK's membership of the European Union.
The UK government used a so-called "section 30" order, which avoids primary legislation, to pass power to the Scottish Parliament.
This mechanism was used to lend Holyrood the unequivocal legal authority to hold the independence referendum.
Margaret Miller, 45, of Gretna, pleaded not guilty to driving in the town on Thursday with 114 microgrammes of alcohol on her breath. The limit is 22.
She also denied driving dangerously when pupils were leaving a nearby primary and with a child in her car.
A trial date was fixed for June at Dumfries Sheriff Court.
The sheriff has ordered the forfeiture of the car.
The 27-year-old has played more than 100 games for the Blues after recovering from a stroke suffered during a game in 2010.
Brecon-born Hobbs previously played for Pontypridd and represented Wales at a U-19s and U-20s level.
"I am really looking forward to the new challenge ahead at Newport Gwent Dragons," said Hobbs.
Dragons director of rugby Lyn Jones added: "I have always been impressed with Sam as an all round player.
"When we were made aware of his availability, we had no hesitation in making him an offer to stay in Wales, beating off offers from England.
"He will add a great deal of experience and character to a maturing Newport Gwent Dragons squad."
Hobbs had to take a six month break from rugby after suffering a "small blood clot" on his brain in 2010. | A bill allowing 16 and 17-year-olds to vote in the Scottish and local government elections has been passed unanimously at Holyrood.
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A woman has denied driving near a primary school in the south of Scotland while more than five times over the drink-drive limit.
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Prop forward Sam Hobbs will join Newport Gwent Dragons from Cardiff Blues at the end of the season. |
Summarize the information given below. | Aamir Siddiqi, 17, died after being stabbed at his home in the Roath area of the city in 2010.
Two men, Jason Richards and Ben Hope, were jailed for life in 2013.
A third man, Mohammed Ali Ege, was arrested in India in 2011 after being accused of conspiracy to commit murder over the A-level student's death.
Mr Ege, 41, who is originally from Cardiff, also faces a series of court cases in India over allegations of passport and identity forgery.
It was after a hearing last week connected to a passport charge that the suspect was reported to have given police the slip, while using a toilet at a train station.
Police commander Mahendra Kumar Rathod told newspapers: "After the court proceedings, the accused was being brought back to Hyderabad by a train.
"The escort team reached the Hazrat Nizamuddin railway station to board a train to Hyderabad and were waiting at the Government Railway Police room.
"The accused requested the police to allow him to go to the washroom, and he escaped from there by removing the window grills of the washroom."
South Wales Police said it could not comment on Mr Ege's escape from custody.
However, a police official said: "Officers are obviously continuing to engage with the authorities in relation to the ongoing extradition proceedings and will continue to liaise with Aamir Siddiqi's family, providing them with any relevant information as it becomes available."
Drug addicts Richards and Hope were both told they must serve a minimum of 40 years for stabbing the Cardiff student to death on his doorstep, in what was described as "staggeringly incompetent" contract killing.
Their trial was told they had been paid £1,000 in cash by a businessman angered by a collapsed property deal, but had gone to the wrong house.
Both men were arrested within days and immediately blamed each other for the killing.
They were convicted of murder and attempted murder after a trial lasting four-and-a-half months.
An appeal against both their convictions and the sentences was dismissed by judges in June 2014. | A man wanted in connection with the murder of a Cardiff teenager has escaped from police custody in India. |
What is the summary of the following document? | One local official, speaking to AFP, said 50 people had died in the southern town of Roche-a-Bateau alone.
New images from remote and cut off areas in the south-west of the country show scenes of devastation.
The hurricane has again been upgraded to a Category Four storm, the second highest hurricane classification, as it heads for the US state of Florida.
Hurricane Matthew - the most powerful Caribbean storm in nearly a decade - is currently pounding the Bahamas, after slicing through Haiti and Cuba.
Hurricane Matthew is already the deadliest Atlantic storm since 2012, when Hurricane Sandy directly killed at least 147 people.
Sandy was a category three storm. Matthew is a category four, after being downgraded from category five - the highest classification.
Category five hurricanes are rare, and not always the most deadly. Circumstances, rather than wind speed, dramatically affect how dangerous a storm is.
In 2005, Hurricane Katrina was a category three when it made landfall in the United States. It left 1,800 people dead, and was the costliest storm in US history with damage estimated at $108 billion (£85bn).
The last category four storm in the Atlantic, Hurricane Joaquin in October 2015, killed 34 people - 33 of which were on board the cargo ship El Faro, which sank during the storm.
At least 130 people were killed in Honduras and Nicaragua during the last category five Atlantic storm - Hurricane Felix - which hit Central America in 2007.
Haiti has seen some of the worst of the devastation, with the south-west largely cut off after the collapse of a key bridge on Tuesday.
An earlier death toll given by Haiti's civil protection service stood at 23, but as emergency services gained access to some of the more remote areas on Thursday, the number rose rapidly to more than 100.
"The whole southern coast of Haiti, from the town of Les Cayes to Tiburon, is devastated," Pierre-Louis Ostin told the AFP news agency.
Aerial images from the town of Jeremie show hundreds of homes flattened.
It was "pretty much wiped out from the seaboard all the way to the cathedral", a radio host in Haiti's capital of Port-au-Prince told the BBC on Thursday.
"The devastation that we are seeing is horrible...The town is really in dire straits and it's very, very bad down there."
The authorities say early assessments show nearly 2,000 homes were flooded and at least 10 schools were damaged across the country, the French Itele website reports.
Haiti's presidential election due this weekend has been postponed because of the hurricane.
The country is one of the world's poorest, with many residents living in flimsy housing in flood-prone areas.
Four people also died in the storm in the neighbouring Dominican Republic on Tuesday.
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Thompson, 24, took the title in a time of 10.71 seconds, just 0.01 seconds outside her personal best.
Compatriot Fraser-Pryce, 29, who was attempting to become the first woman to win three successive golds in the event, finished third in 10.86.
USA's Tori Bowie won the silver medal in 10.83.
Dutch star Dafne Schippers, second behind Fraser-Pryce at the 2015 World Championships, finished fifth in 10.90.
Thompson said: "When I crossed the line and glanced across to see I was clear, I didn't know how to celebrate."
Fraser-Pryce said: "What I'm most happy about is the 100m title is staying in Jamaica. I'm on the podium with my training partner. I'm proud of Jamaica."
Britain's Desiree Henry, 20, failed to make the final after finishing fourth in 11.09 in her semi-final, while Asha Philip was eighth in 11.33 in her race.
"I guess it wasn't the Olympic ending I was really hoping for in terms of trying to make the final," said Henry.
"But I'm proud of myself for growing as an adult and believing that I could run up against these girls and really trying to make it to the final."
Team-mate Philip said: "I'm not doing as well as I want to be doing, but I'm still at the Olympics and I've made a semi-final.
"I am bitter inside because I came here to at least run a personal best." | Hurricane Matthew has left 108 people dead in Haiti, the interior minister has told AFP news agency.
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Jamaica's Elaine Thompson won the women's 100m at the Rio Olympics as two-time champion Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce had to settle for bronze. |
Give a short summary of the provided document. | University College London researchers said more creative ways of reaching them were needed, like using social media instead of sending letters.
Women who miss out tend to be younger from poorer families or non-native English speakers, the research found.
Cervical cancer screening has been falling in the UK since 2011.
The death of reality TV star Jade Goody from cervical cancer in 2009 is widely accepted to have contributed to a rise in women being screened - but this effect no longer appears to be working.
The percentage of eligible women screened has dropped from 75.7% to 72.7% from 2011 to 2016 in the UK.
The UCL survey suggests that many young women don't get round to cervical screening, even when they intend to go.
Some 4% of women surveyed, particularly older ones, had decided not to go for a smear test at all and around 6% of women said they were completely unaware of the test.
Lack of awareness was higher in women from lower income families and ethnic minority groups.
Women are also known to find the test embarrassing and often difficult to organise.
The findings are based on a survey of 3,100 women aged 24 to 64, published in the European Journal of Cancer, in which 800 said they were not up-to-date with cervical screening.
Dr Jo Waller, who led the study at UCL, said it was "worrying that so many women don't know about cervical screening".
In the UK, women aged 24-49 are invited for a smear every three years, while women 50-64 are invited every five years.
Dr Waller said it was time to find better ways of communicating with women about screening.
"The results around lack of awareness suggest that campaigns using TV, radio, social media or face-to-face visits may be better... than relying on letters in the post, which is the current method."
She said extra reminders and specific appointment slots for first time screenings could make a difference and "potentially save lives".
Around 3,200 women are diagnosed with cervical cancer each year in the UK and 900 women die from it.
Cervical screening is thought to prevent about 2,000 deaths each year.
Sarah Williams, health information manager at Cancer Research UK, said: "We may need to be more creative in our efforts to help specific groups of women, rather than resorting to conventional 'one-size-fits-all' awareness campaigns."
Jo's Trust - a cervical cancer charity - launched #SmearForSmear campaign earlier this year which was shared at least 14,000 times on social media. | Nearly a quarter of women who don't make cervical screening appointments are unaware that the process even exists, according to a UK survey. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | Paul and Sandra Dunham from Northampton appeared at Westminster Magistrates' Court after being transferred from hospital.
Judge Howard Riddle said the couple had taken enough drugs to do themselves "real harm".
He rejected arguments from their legal team that they would not try again.
They had been due to surrender to the authorities at Belgravia Police Station in London on Thursday morning.
When reporters went to their home on Windingbrook Lane for arranged interviews that morning no-one answered the door and police were called.
Officers forced their way into the property.
Later that day, Paul Dunham told BBC Radio Northampton he and his wife, Sandra, both 58, had attempted to kill themselves.
At Friday's hearing the judge said Mrs Dunham had told a nurse at Northampton General Hospital it had been a "cry for help".
Judge Riddle said: "There is simply no other conclusion that I can reach on the face of it than, at the very least, it was to delay or prevent the [extradition] process from taking place."
The court heard Home Secretary Theresa May had granted the couple 14 days before further attempts were made to extradite them.
"In 14 days or thereabouts a decision will be taken that extradition is imminent and at that stage, despite the protestations that they won't, there is a real risk they will take steps to harm themselves," the judge said.
The Dunhams had previously said they were ready to kill themselves rather than face extradition and a lengthy period of detention in the US.
They had fought and lost an extradition battle over concerns about their health and possible treatment in US custody.
Mr Dunham had been chief executive and president of Pace, a US company manufacturing soldering irons for the electronics industry.
He was indicted on 13 counts of fraud and money laundering by a grand jury in Maryland in December 2011.
Mrs Dunham is accused of aiding and abetting him. The couple worked in the US between 1999 and 2009.
They were due to attend Belgravia police station at 10:00 BST on Thursday before being taken to Heathrow Airport to meet US marshals to be extradited.
The US marshals said they were unsure of the next step and were consulting the overseas investigation department.
The Latics parted company with Dunn on Tuesday after a run of seven league games without a win.
Former Plymouth and Chesterfield boss Sheridan, 51, had been in charge of League Two Newport since 2 October.
He was previously Oldham manager for nearly three years before leaving Boundary Park in March 2009.
"Everyone knows how much I love this club," he told the club website.
"I was here for a long time as both a player and a manager so I'm really chuffed and excited to be back.
"I feel like I've got unfinished business from last time and I'm looking forward to the challenge. It's a big one, but I'm really excited about it."
Sheridan's assistant Warren Feeney and first-team coach Michael Flynn will take charge of Newport for the rest of the season.
In his three-month spell in charge at Rodney Parade, Sheridan led Newport from the bottom of the table to 20th, with five wins, seven draws and five defeats from 17 games in all competitions.
The Welsh club suggested they might take action against the Latics.
"The board of directors would like to put on record their thanks for the work John has done during his brief spell at the club," County said in a statement.
"Whilst John leaves with our best wishes, we are disappointed with the way that Oldham have conducted themselves during this process and are considering our position."
Oldham were 19th in League One when Dunn first took charge on a temporary basis in September, before being confirmed in the role after a month, but they have since fallen to 22nd, five points adrift of safety.
The 36-year-old, who joined the Latics as a player last summer, won just three of his 20 games in charge.
The team failed to win a home league match under his management, and have not done so since beating Fleetwood in August.
Dunn's assistant Dean Holden and first-team coach Keith Brown have also left the club. | A retired British couple facing extradition to the US on fraud charges have been remanded in custody after an apparent suicide bid.
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League One side Oldham Athletic have appointed Newport County boss John Sheridan as their new manager following the sacking of David Dunn. |
Summarize the content provided below. | Neither the report or chairman of the inquiry called for his resignation.
But there was enough in the 1,700 pages to make life extremely uncomfortable for him - particularly with the Daily Mail dubbing him the "Man with No Shame"
Firstly, the report was scathing about the culture in the NHS, saying it put "corporate self-interest" ahead of patients over the failings, which led to hundreds of needless deaths because of neglect and abuse.
As head of such an organisation, Sir David clearly had a case to answer.
But it went further than that.
The inquiry also dealt with his time as head of the health authority which oversaw Stafford Hospital.
He was on the panel that appointed Martin Yeates as Stafford's chief executive, the individual who ordered the cost-cutting measures which led to the "appalling" standards of care.
Over the next few months documents show that Sir David was concerned about the performance of the trust, but letters from the hospital's bosses convinced him they were tackling the problems.
The inquiry suggested this could have been viewed as the trust being in denial rather than engaged with the difficulties.
Questions were also asked over why there were no objections over the decision to recommend Stafford for elite foundation trust status in the summer of 2007 when it went through the Department of Health validation process.
He was, by this point, the department's most senior civil servant.
He is also reported to have dismissed Cure the NHS, the campaign group set up by local Stafford Hospital patients, as "simple lobbying" in a meeting with the NHS regulator in 2008.
The findings were enough to prompt campaigners and MPs to call for his head.
The government resisted, saying he was the right person to lead the NHS.
At the time, the health service was little over a month away from the biggest reorganisation in its history.
It is also likely ministers felt a great deal of loyalty to Sir David.
Over the past two years he has developed a close working relationship with Number 10 - so much so that it was Sir David rather than Andrew Lansley that the prime minister turned to most when the NHS reforms were nearly derailed by opposition within the health service.
Sir David has also proved extremely effective at keeping a tight control on the purse strings.
When he took over in 2006, NHS trusts were running up deficits.
He enforced tighter fiscal management by keeping a firm grip - some would say too firm - on what the NHS was up to.
In fact, a sign of his control can be seen in the fact that the latest savings drive - the bid to save £20bn by 2015 - is known as the "Nicholson challenge".
But this focus on spending led to accusations he was too controlling and at times bullying.
Many will argue this is an inevitable for someone who is a leader of an organisation the size of the NHS - it has 1.3m staff and a turnover of more than £100bn.
And those who have worked closely with him describe him as being a passionate and caring man.
But despite all his success during his 35-year NHS career, for many he will be known as the man who was in charge when the NHS forgot to care.
The seven-bedroom house is situated in Long Island, where Fitzgerald set much of his 1925 novel.
Fitzgerald and his wife, Zelda, lived in the home - in the New York hinterlands - from 1922 until 1924.
The author is understood to have completed The Great Gatsby after moving to France, where he set his subsequent novel Tender is the Night.
A spokeswoman for the estate agency said the asking price for the Mediterranean-style home, in the village of Great Neck Estates, is in excess of $3.8m (??2.4m). She declined to identify the current owner.
Fitzgerald was inspired to write The Great Gatsby, his seminal portrait of the Jazz Age, while living among the socialites of Long Island's "Gold Coast" region.
The book focuses on a mysterious millionaire, Jay Gatsby, owner of a lavish home in the fictional town of West Egg - a stand-in for Great Neck - on prosperous Long Island in the summer of 1922.
Several mansions in the area are believed to have served as inspiration for Gatsby's mansion, such as Oheka Castle and the now-demolished Beacon Towers, but not Fitzgerald's own home. | The moment the public inquiry into the Stafford Hospital scandal was published on 6 February it was clear retiring England NHS boss Sir David Nicholson was in trouble.
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The suburban home where F Scott Fitzgerald is believed to have written The Great Gatsby has gone on sale. |
Please provide a summary for the content below. | Sgt Craig Davenport and Sgt Stephen Suffield took items including body armour, distraction grenades, flares, and night-vision goggles from Stirling Lines Army Camp in Hereford.
Portsmouth Crown Court heard these were then passed to Andrew Stevens, who sold globally through contacts on Ebay.
All three admitted conspiracy to commit theft.
Some of the stolen items were on an official list of items Attractive to Criminal and Terrorist Organisations (ACTO), prosecutor Adam Norris said.
"The significance is our security forces, if dealing with a situation, would not want to be confronted with the sort of equipment they themselves use," he said.
Military gaming business owner Stevens, 41, from Horndean in Hampshire - who was arrested after radioactive material in night-vision goggles set off an alert in Heathrow airport in June 2015 - was sentenced to two years in prison.
Nina Tavakoli, his lawyer, said her client had become "blinded with his obsession with collecting military paraphernalia".
She said: "He no longer wants anything to do with it, he is now collecting Star Wars paraphernalia instead."
Thirty-year-old Afghanistan and Iraq veteran Davenport, from Crewe in Cheshire, was jailed for 22 months.
Judge Claudia Ackner told him: "You have thrown away all you have achieved from your long career."
Suffield, 28, who resigned from the Royal Logistics Corp in Chippenham, was handed an 18-month prison sentence suspended for two years and ordered to carry out 200 hours of unpaid work and pay £2,500 compensation.
His lawyer said he got involved to pay off £16,000 if gambling debts. | Two soldiers and an accomplice have been sentenced for stealing £45,000 of SAS equipment from an army camp. |
Give a concise summary of the passage below. | The mayor and the London Assembly make up the Greater London Authority (GLA).
Transport, policing, environment, and housing and planning in London are the four big areas which the mayor controls.
The mayor also creates policies for arts and culture, business, fire, health, regeneration, sport and young people in London.
The London Assembly debates the mayor's policies,
The assembly must also be consulted over the GLA budget. It can reject mayoral policies or amend the draft budget if two-thirds of assembly members agree to do so.
Polling stations are open from 0700 until 2200 on 5 May.
Registered voters will be given three ballot papers - pink, yellow and orange.
After polls close, ballot boxes are stored overnight and counting begins from 0900 on Friday.
Results are expected on Friday evening.
Using the pink ballot paper, voters choose their first and second preferences for mayor.
The votes are counted and if a candidate has won more than 50% of first preferences, they are elected mayor.
If no candidate has won more than 50%, all but the top two candidates are eliminated.
Any second preferences for the top two candidates from the eliminated candidates are added to their totals. Whoever has the most votes combined is declared the winner.
Second preferences on the ballot papers of the top two candidates for one of the other top candidates are not counted.
Voters have two ballot papers to choose the two types of London Assembly member.
The yellow ballot paper is used to choose the constituency member. Voters choose one candidate, who if elected will represent their area of London.
Ballots are counted and whoever has won the most is elected.
The orange ballot paper is used to choose one of the 11 additional London-wide assembly members, who represent the whole city.
This time, voters choose one political party or an individual standing as an independent candidate.
London-wide seats are allocated using proportional representation, using a mathematical formula called modified D'Hondt.
The 45-year-old, who beat Larry Butler 4-0 in round two, is top of the BDO rankings after a successful 2015.
"I'd rather be favourite. When I was the outsider, nobody was interested.
"Maybe I have got a target on my back but since winning the World Masters, everything's gone really well, so bring them on," he told BBC Sport
Martin Adams and Jeffrey de Graaf, who were seeded second and third respectively at Lakeside, were beaten in the first round.
But Middlesbrough's Durrant said he has not been affected by other leading contenders making shock exits from the tournament, adding: "The seeds have gone in the bottom half of the draw.
"Everything's gone as planned in the top half of the draw, so who I thought I'd be playing is still on.
"It's the bottom half, people like Scott Mitchell and Jeff Smith, who will be licking their lips."
Durrant recovered from a narrow World Championship semi-final defeat by Adams 12 months ago to win six ranking titles last year.
"My confidence is sky high," he continued. "I'm in the quarter-finals at Lakeside - that's what we practice for, why we play local leagues, county darts and the tour. I'm in a great place."
The body was found at a property on Carlton Road, Bordesley Green, at about 23.30 BST on Friday.
The man is yet to be formally identified but police said he was believed to be a 34-year-old from the Yardley area, reported missing on Thursday.
They said they believed the 11 people arrested were known to the man.
They are: Five men aged 45, 33, 28, 24 and 23, four women aged 50, 41, 25 and 19 and two boys, both aged 15.
A post-mortem examination is yet to take place.
West Midlands Police called on anyone who saw the man's car - a white Toyota Yaris registration FM64 PHU - in and around Carlton Road in the last two days to come forward.
The car was found about a mile away in Adderley Road on Friday.
Det Insp Warren Hines said: "We are currently treating his death as suspicious and we took swift action to arrest 11 people at the scene - who we believe were known to the man - on suspicion of his murder." | On 5 May 2016 Londoners go to the polls to elect a mayor and 25 members of the London Assembly.
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Glen Durrant said he is enjoying the scrutiny that comes with being the number one seed after reaching the last eight of the BDO World Championships.
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Eleven people have been arrested on suspicion of the murder of a man found dead in a Birmingham shed. |
Can you summarize the following content in brief? | Currently, students in Northern Ireland receive maintenance loan and grant payments three times a year, usually at the beginning of each academic term.
Student leaders say that making the payments monthly would help students make ends meet more easily.
DEL said it would cost between £250,000 and £350,000 to implement the changes.
Most students in Northern Ireland take out a loan to cover living costs, but many also receive additional support grants.
Unlike loans, the grants are means tested and do not have to be repaid.
In 2013/14 over 42,000 students in Northern Ireland borrowed a total of £131m in maintenance loans.
However, just under 25,000 students - around 60% - were also given a support grant to help with living costs, costing DEL just over £68m.
The level of grant a student receives depends on household income.
If it is £19,203 or less, students are eligible for the maximum grant of £3,475 a year.
However, students coming from households where the total income is between £19,203 and £41,605 receive a partial grant, and in 2013/14, 38% of students in Northern Ireland got the full grant and 22% received a partial grant.
Like maintenance loans - where a student gets £3,750 a year if they are living with their parents and £4,840 a year if they are living independently - the grants are paid in September, January and April.
However, a monthly system is currently operating in Scotland, where students get a relatively large initial payment in September, followed by smaller monthly payments from October to June.
NUS-USI President Fergal McFerran said that monthly payments would be better for students.
"Having monthly support payments, with the September payment being larger than the other 11 months, could help students pay for accommodation deposits, household equipment or study materials that they need to buy at the start of the academic year," he said.
However, there is no indication that the level of maintenance loan or support grant is set to rise.
Launching the consultation, DEL Minister Stephen Farry said: "While there is little flexibility in the current financial context with the overall level of support available to students, there is scope to consider the profiling of that support."
The consultation closes on Sunday 27 September.
Tuition fee loans, currently at £3,805 per year for a Northern Irish student studying at Queen's or Ulster University, are paid directly to the university and would not be affected by any changes.
The firm said work on the structure at Ufton Nervet, in Berkshire, would start in 2016, subject to planning permission.
The rail operator has previously been criticised for not building a bridge sooner.
It had described the site as "complicated and constricted".
Brian Drysdale had been waiting for the results of an HIV test when he parked his car on the crossing in 2004, killing himself and six people aboard a train.
A further 140 were injured, the Office of Rail and Road said.
Four people have since died at the site.
Julian Burnell, from Network Rail, said the bridge had been "specifically designed to blend in with the environment as much as possible".
He said it would be no more than 9m (29ft) high and would have earth banks on either side and be planted with native trees.
"Notoriety" and "misuse" of the level crossing had led to the need for a bridge, Mr Burnell said.
He added that it had "been in the pipeline for a very long time".
Network Rail said it had been working closely with West Berkshire Council on the plans and hoped to submit a planning application after the election.
The council said the bridge proposal was not a "joint partnership" with Network Rail, but added it had received amended plans from the firm after its "initial safety concerns".
The authority added it would "carefully assess those before responding".
Once work starts, the rail firm said it would take less than 12 months to complete.
Mr Burnell said Network Rail had closed 900 level crossings over the past five years, with 600 more expected to close by the end of 2019. | The Department for Employment and Learning (DEL) has launched a consultation on whether grants should be paid to students every month.
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A design for a bridge replacing a "notorious" level crossing where 11 people have been killed since 2004 has been unveiled by Network Rail. |
Can you write a short summary of this section? | April Oliver, 21, from Norfolk, posted the black-and-white image alongside a message on Facebook.
She wrote: "Your daddy would be proud of you my little one and would love you as much as I do."
RAF gunner Mr Mckeague, 23, has been missing since he disappeared on a night out in September.
A search of a landfill site is currently taking place.
It emerged Miss Oliver was pregnant with the couple's child in January.
Follow updates on the search for Corrie Mckeague
The mystery of the missing airman
The photograph, uploaded on Thursday, shows Miss Oliver sitting on the end of a bed, cradling her baby bump.
She is holding a pair of baby boots, similar in style to the ones Mr Mckeague was wearing on the night he went missing.
The personal trainer had met Mr Mckeague via a dating site five months before he went missing on 24 September.
She is due to give birth in late spring or early summer.
On Facebook, she wrote: "I can't help but be truly unconditionally in love with my baby and your [sic] not here yet.
"You bring so much pain yet just as much joy."
Mr Mckeague was last seen in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk.
Search teams are in their tenth week of trawling the landfill site at Milton, Cambridgeshire.
I struggle with finding the right words because Sometimes when you have to be strong and [put] on a brave face you forget about the precious moments that pass by.
Yesterday was an emotional but exciting day, and sometimes it only takes one person to help you see what you have.
I miss and love Corrie with every part of my body and little things set off different emotions.
I can't help but be truly unconditionally in love with my baby and your [sic] not here yet.
You bring so much pain yet just as much joy and Your daddy would be proud of you my little one and would love you as much as I do.
Corrie will be a part of both of us forever and no one can take that away
Mummy loves you little baby | The girlfriend of missing airman Corrie Mckeague has shared a photo of herself in the later stages of pregnancy in an emotional online post. |
Please summarize the passage below. | 7 November 2016 Last updated at 07:08 GMT
One of the big issues being talked about by politicians and the American public in the election is immigration.
Immigration is when people come into a country, where they weren't born, to live - usually to work or study.
Ayshah visits the US cities of Detroit and Findlay to find out what children there think about immigration and its impact on the country. | People in the United States are deciding who will be their next president on 8 November. |
Summarize the following content briefly. | Just a week after passing his First Aid badge, Henry Hersey was on his way home from school with his father and younger sister, when he heard cries for help.
Between them, the family rescued 90-year-old Sylvia Downer who had fallen in her garden and was unable to move.
"It's amazing that someone so young kept calm and knew what to do in an emergency," said Mr Grylls.
Henry, a member of the 3rd Ringwood Scout Group in Hampshire, immediately raised the alarm when he heard Mrs Downer calling as he walked past her garden in June this year.
He told his father Will someone needed help.
The family worked out where the shouting was coming from and found Mrs Downer, who had been lying on the ground for hours with a severe cut to her head.
Will called for an ambulance, leaving Henry and his sister Anna, five, to find a blanket and reassure her that help was on its way.
Henry, who is now seven, then stood outside the house to flag down the ambulance and help the paramedics find their way inside.
They later said they were impressed by the calm way he handled the situation.
"Henry is a real hero, I'm so proud of his actions," said Bear Grylls.
"Scouting has given him these skills and Sylvia is living proof of how important they are."
Hampshire Scouts recognised Henry's actions at an award ceremony last month.
"My Mummy and Daddy are really proud of me, I'm so happy that I managed to help Sylvia and that she's feeling better.
"I really enjoyed getting my First Aid badge and learning how to help people who are hurt," said Henry.
Mrs Downer, who is recuperating in a nursing home, has also described Henry as a hero.
His sister is so impressed that she is planning to join the Scouts as soon as she turns six in September.
"At Scouts we teach young people skills for life and in this case they have saved a life," said David Evans, a volunteer at 3rd Ringwood Scouts.
"Scouts is about having an adventure and making an impact in our community." | A six-year-old scout who helped save a life has been hailed a hero by Chief Scout and TV adventurer Bear Grylls. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | It's quiet on Capgrave Crescent in Brislington, Bristol when I visit on a wet November morning.
The flat where Bijan Ebrahimi lived has another tenant now and there is nothing to indicate it was the scene of an horrific crime in July 2013.
Iranian-born Mr Ebrahimi was hounded by a mob who gathered outside his ground-floor council flat, chanting abuse, after wrongly branding him as a paedophile.
But police called to the scene arrested him instead, while the mob cheered. Days later, he was beaten to death and set alight by a neighbour, Lee James.
Mr Ebrahimi's family say he had been the victim of racism and he had been "let down" by the police for years.
Two years on and workmen hoist scaffolding on the three blocks of flats which flank the small green space where Mr Ebrahimi was attacked.
There's no sign of the residents when I visit. Many do not answer the door when I knock.
Those that do, do not wish to be interviewed on camera. Two women tell me Capgrave Crescent is "a friendly place" and what happened to Mr Ebrahimi "could happen anywhere".
But others paint a picture of anti-social behaviour and drug use. "Ninety per cent of people won't answer the door to you, they are up to no good," one man says. "There's a lot of drugs and burglary here."
Another man from the wider area told me that, like Mr Ebrahimi, he had also been abused - for being different. He said police were "not interested".
"It's very rough here, there's drugs everywhere," he said.
"You find needles in the kids' play area and dog foul everywhere. People don't care about this area anymore," he said.
"After the Ebrahimi death, things have just spiralled down to even worse situations because people think they can get away with stuff."
Bristol East MP Kerry McCarthy said the man's story "reflects what I've heard from other people about life on that estate".
"There are very clearly major problems - they've been going on long before the Bijan Ebrahimi murder and it's a constant battle - obviously the police are stretched, the council are stretched - trying to get the attention of the authorities to do something about it."
Alex Raikes, from anti-racism charity SARI, said Mr Ebrahimi had dealt with racial harassment "by a large number of people in his neighbourhood" for years.
She said: "There were other people suffering in his area who have been too frightened to come forward. Bijan was one of those brave, courageous people that said: 'I'm not going to suffer in silence, I'm going to tell people what's happening. I want justice, I want these people to be dealt with."
Avon and Somerset Police and Bristol City Council say the area has been given priority, with weekly meetings try to identify problems and address underlying tensions.
They say the man we spoke to was being supported and was a priority for rehousing.
Insp Nigel Colston, who is in charge of neighbourhood policing for south Bristol, said Mr Ebrahimi's murder had had a "significant impact on people" in the area. The police's challenge, he said, was to "make sure that people continue to feel safe" with officers working together with those in the neighbourhood.
"Brislington is no worse than many other parts of south Bristol," he said.
"Yes it has occasional issues... sometimes people's perceptions of what is going on are far worse than what is actually going on."
Brislington East is not the most deprived ward in Bristol by some way, it ranked 22nd most deprived out of 35 wards in 2015.
Neighbourhood crime statistics suggest anti-social behaviour is still the most frequently reported crime - 254 times in the year to October 2015, 16 of which were on Capgrave Crescent and Capgrave Close.
It is not vastly better or worse than surrounding neighbourhoods. But violent crime is up 45% this year, compared to the previous 12 months and concerns have been raised about the closure of Brislington Police Station - just around the corner from Capgrave Crescent - following budget cuts.
Councillor Mike Wollacott said media focus on the estate had been difficult for residents, who were "trying to put it behind them".
"It was a shock for the whole community. But they shouldn't be defined by that. It was one individual who was particularly volatile who created that situation."
Additional reporting by Emma Griffiths. | After a police officer and a community support officer were convicted of misconduct in a public office over their response to a disabled man's calls for help, what is life like on the Bristol estate where he was beaten to death, two years on? |
Can you provide a summary of this content? | Both will be in contention to feature for the Ports in Saturday's Irish Cup game at Loughgall.
Dolan, 28, has had spells at several Irish League clubs including Ballymena United, Carrick Rangers, Ards and Warrenpoint Town.
Duffin, 24, was on Cliftonville's books for four years before moving to their neighbours Crusaders in 2014.
Ports manager Niall Currie signed the duo just before the transfer window closed on Tuesday night.
Dolan played under Currie during his stint at Ards and the Ports boss believes he will be a good acquisition for the Shamrock Park outfit.
"He had a bad injury last season that put him out for a long time but we've got him up a few times over the last six weeks to monitor where he was at," Currie told the Portadown website.
"He did that off his own bat with no guarantee of a contract and has shown me his desire to help us in the situation we are in.
"He's played many times in the Premiership and his experience and quality will be a great boost for our squad."
Matt Hazley, who signed for the Ports earlier in the transfer window, will also be available for Saturday's Irish Cup tie. | Portadown have signed striker Shane Dolan and former Cliftonville and Crusaders goalkeeper Jack Duffin. |
Can you summarize this passage? | It is only the third time the Canadian has had a solo Top 10 song in the UK, and his first since 2012's Boyfriend.
That number two hit notched up sales of 55,000, a total well beaten by his new song's combined sales total of 84,000.
What Do You Mean has had more than 21 million streams worldwide on Spotify, setting a new record for the service.
In the UK alone it has racked up 3.2 million plays on streaming services, the most any single has recorded in the UK in its first week.
The previous record was set last month by One Direction, whose Drag Me Down had 2.03 million plays in its first week on release.
Bieber's chart triumph comes at the expense of last week's number one, Rachel Platten's Fight Song, which drops one place to two.
The Weeknd - who, like Bieber, hails from the Canadian province of Ontario - follows at three with Can't Feel My Face.
Demi Lovato is the week's biggest climber, jumping 105 places to seven with Cool for the Summer, her fourth Top 10 single.
The Weeknd - real name Abel Tesfaye - tops the UK album chart with his latest release, Beauty Behind the Madness.
The record is one of three new entries in this week's top five, which also includes new records from Foals and Ella Eyre.
What Went Down, indie rockers Foals' fourth studio album is at three, while Eyre's debut album Feline follows at four.
Additional new entries, at nine and 10, from Halsey and Motorhead result in a Top 10 with half its slots occupied by new releases.
Bad Magic, Motorhead's 22nd album, is the veteran rockers' fourth Top 10 record and their first record in the Top 40 since 1991.
See the UK Top 40 singles chart
See the UK Top 40 albums chart
BBC Radio 1's Official Chart Show
The Official Chart with Greg James is on BBC Radio 1 every Friday from 16:00 BST. | Pop singer Justin Bieber has scored his first UK number one track with What Do You Mean, his fastest-selling single in the UK to date. |
Can you summarize this content? | The Spanish football league body wants talks with the club about the agreement they came to with the Spanish Public Prosecutor's Office over the signing.
In June, Barcelona paid a €5.5m (£4.3m) fine over the 24-year-old's move from Santos. The La Liga club were accused of tax fraud, which they denied.
Club president Josep Maria Bartomeu had blamed the dispute on "a mistake... in tax planning".
Barcelona said it paid €57m (£43m) for the forward, with the player's parents receiving €40m and Santos €17m.
But investigators said the fee was closer to €83m and that Barcelona had concealed part of the deal. The club denied the claim.
Spain's La Liga has announced an investigation into the circumstances surrounding Brazil star Neymar's 2013 transfer from Santos to Barcelona.
Bartomeu added at the time: "It was better to accept this agreement than continue on with the uncertainty that has dragged on for a long time over the Neymar case."
A La Liga statement on Thursday read: "Following widespread media reports, La Liga confirms an informative hearing will be launched with FC Barcelona in relation to the agreement reached between the club's board and the Spanish Public Prosecutor's Office in the Neymar legal case."
Neymar signed a new five-year contract with Barcelona in July.
The forward, who won Olympic gold with Brazil in Rio de Janeiro in August, has scored 55 goals in 94 La Liga games for his club.
Rhiannon Gautama was travelling in a car along Croydon Road in south London during Monday morning rush-hour.
She said a cyclist thumped the car roof as he passed and when the car overtook him she leaned out of the window and told him to be more considerate.
Moments later, the cyclist caught up with the car and smashed the window.
"It was terrifying," Miss Gautama said.
She had been supervising her partner Barnaby Reardon, 33, who is a learner driver, as he drove to work.
Their son Jasper was in the back seat.
Miss Gautama said: "My partner saw the cyclist get his bicycle lock and smash the car window that shattered all over the inside of the car.
"I was in complete shock. I checked on Jasper to make sure he was ok, then I called the police straight away.
"Jasper was asleep the whole time but when I took him out of his car seat there was all this glass falling out of the seat everywhere, but he was just smiling.
"I guess, in hindsight the cyclist may have thought we were too far on his side of the road and there wasn't enough room to get past us, but he still managed to cycle past us.
"When we caught up with him I leaned out of the window and said: 'Have some consideration, we've got 'L' plates on and a baby in the back'.
"Then we hit more traffic and I turned to my partner and said, 'he's going to catch up with us,' but I had no idea he was going to smash the window."
Jasper was uninjured but the family was deeply shaken by the experience.
"I think I will never say anything again, you just don't know who you are speaking to," she added.
The Met said it was investigating but no arrests have been made yet.
Miss Gautama said the cyclist had long blonde hair worn in a pony tail and was wearing a bright yellow jacket, see-through cycling glasses and black cycling shorts. | Neymar's 2013 transfer to Barcelona is to be investigated by La Liga.
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A mother has described the "terrifying" moment a cyclist smashed her car window spraying glass over her three-month-old son in an alleged act of road rage. |
Write a short summary of the following excerpt. | He had already flown from Kansas to Colorado, but was denied boarding the next flight to Los Angeles, from where he would have flown to Melbourne.
Mr Newman was due to speak at events promoted by the group Right to Life Australia.
He has previously called for the execution of abortion doctors.
Australian Labor MP Terri Butler, who wrote to Australia's immigration minister to ask that Mr Newman's visa be denied, called him an "anti-choice extremist".
The minister, Peter Dutton, confirmed to local media that he cancelled the visa amid concerns Mr Newman's presence could incite violence against abortion doctors and the women using them.
Mr Newman has called women who have abortions "murderers".
But the website for Mr Newman's organisation Operation Rescue insisted that "Newman has never advocated violence and in fact, urges pro-life activists to work within the governmental and legal system to accomplish change".
The group also wrote that it, and Right to Life Australia, were "working furiously" to turn the situation around.
Writing on his Facebook page, Mr Newman wrote "RED ALERT!!!... It is clear that the pro-abortion crowd does not want anyone to hear the truth about Planned Parenthood's illegal actions."
"Please pray for me I'm stuck in Denver airport like a man without a country," he added.
The visa decision comes days after the government said it was unlikely American singer Chris Brown would be given a visa because of his record of domestic violence. | US anti-abortion campaigner Troy Newman has been stopped from flying to Australia after his visa for the country was revoked. |
Summarize the following content briefly. | Cooking smoke is estimated to shorten the lives of 1.9 million people a year; it also contributes to climate change.
The Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves is a partnership between the US government and other nations along with charitable foundations.
It is believed to be the first major attempt to tackle the issue worldwide.
The project will attempt to build on national programmes already underway in India, Mexico and Peru.
It aims to introduce modern low-pollution stoves to the homes of 100 million poor people by 2020.
Clean stoves run on biomass (with chimneys and clean-burn mechanisms), or gas, or on solar power.
The stoves programme would help to protect poor people from eye disease, lung disease and cancer; save forests from being ravaged for fuel; reduce CO2 emissions and reduce emissions of black smoke, which also contributes to global warming.
But it is a huge challenge for a global partnership to deal with the scattered homes of the estimated 3 billion poor people who cook on stoves or open fires.
The Alliance is co-ordinated by the UN Foundation. The US government is pledging $50m, with other partners adding a further $10m over five years. More funds are being sought to expand the scheme.
Finance from carbon trading has not so far been used for cookstoves, even though it would be a highly effective way of combating climate change.
There has been wrangling over the rules of the Clean Development Mechanism, which refuses funding for projects that might have happened otherwise.
Typically carbon finance has tended to favour big projects anyway, which has made it hard for the sort of small-scale packages with tailor-made cooking solutions in poor nations.
Cooking is estimated to produce about 20% of the world's emissions of black carbon. The main sources of black carbon are forest burning and incomplete combustion of fossil fuels like coal and diesel, but cookstoves are a particular problem in Asia.
The role of black carbon in climate change is still being quantified and will be the source of debate for the next IPCC report. Some scientists believe it is the second largest contributor to climate change after CO2, with upper estimates suggesting it could be responsible for as much as 55% of the warming from CO2.
In areas covered in snow and ice where albedo - reflectivity - is reduced by deposits of atmospheric carbon, it may equal the warming effect of CO2.
The clean cookstoves programme also claims less obvious benefits: collecting biomass for cooking and heating forces women and children to spend hours each week collecting wood. Women face severe perÂsonal security risks as they forage for fuel, especially from refugee camps and in conflict zones.
Cooking with wood also increases pressure on habitats and wildlife. | The US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has announced a global partnership to tackle the scourge of toxic smoke from indoor cooking fires. |
What is the summary of the given information? | The collection at Althorp House features more than 150 personal objects including her Emanuel wedding dress.
A spokesman for Earl Spencer said it had been a "celebration" marking Diana's "charitable works and glamour".
Having raised more than £1.2m to help disadvantaged people around the world, it will close in August 2014.
The spokesman added: "The exhibition has been admired by thousands of people around the world and has been a wonderfully tasteful celebration of the late Diana, Princess of Wales's life and achievements."
Born Diana Spencer, at Park House near Sandringham, Norfolk, in July 1961, she became Lady Diana Spencer after her father inherited the title of Earl Spencer in 1975.
Diana moved to Althorp House in 1976 and was said to love the grounds and house, which was bought by Sir John Spencer in 1508.
The exhibition, which opens to the public throughout July and August, opened on 1 July 1998, which would have been her 37th birthday.
Following her death in a car crash in Paris in 1997, Diana's remains rest on an island in an ornamental lake known as The Oval within the grounds of the Althorp estate.
The decision removes any chance of Russia competing this year, the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) said.
Ukraine is refusing to allow Julia Samoilova to perform at Eurovision because she has visited Crimea, the peninsula seized by Russia in 2014.
The EBU has condemned the ban.
It says Ukraine is undermining the non-political nature of the contest.
The union, which produces Eurovision, said it had offered two possible solutions to Channel One. The proposals were for Ms Samoilova to perform via satellite from Russia or for another contestant to be allowed to travel to Ukraine to take her place.
Both were rejected and the broadcaster has now announced it will not televise the event.
"Unfortunately this means Russia will no longer be able to take part in this year's competition," the EBU said. "We very much wanted all 43 countries to be able to participate and did all we could to achieve this."
The Eurovision tension explained
X Factor singer to represent UK
Ukraine's travel ban on the Russian performer "thoroughly undermines the integrity and non-political nature" of the contest and its mission to unite nations in friendly competition, Frank Dieter Freiling, chairman of the event's steering committee said.
But he added: "Our top priority remains to produce a spectacular Eurovision Song Contest in May."
Russia and Ukraine have been at loggerheads since the annexation of Crimea and the subsequent separatist conflict in east Ukraine which Moscow is accused of stoking.
Ukraine is hosting Eurovision because its singer, Jamala, won in Sweden last year. She took the crown with 1944, a song about Josef Stalin's mass deportation of Crimean Tatars during World War Two.
The alleged political overtones of the song annoyed many Russians.
Moscow is especially irked by the ban on Samoilova, 28, as she uses a wheelchair and the slogan of this year's Eurovision is "Celebrate diversity". | An exhibition chronicling the life of Princess Diana, based at the Spencer family's Northamptonshire home since 1998, is set to close next year.
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Russian broadcaster Channel One will not broadcast the Eurovision Song Contest next month because the country's competitor has been barred from host country Ukraine. |
Please provide a summary for the content below. | Large majorities in the state House and Senate dismissed objections by Democratic Governor Pat Quinn.
The state had been under court order to adopt a concealed carry law.
The debate over gun rights in the US has raged since December, when a gunman killed 26 people, including 20 children, at a school in Connecticut.
Gun rights proponents say the US constitution protects an individual's right to carry guns, while opponents of the concealed carry law feared it would allow virtually unregulated possession of handguns in the city of Chicago, which is grappling with a severe gun violence epidemic.
In December, a federal appeals court struck down Illinois' ban on carrying a concealed weapon as a violation of the US constitution's guarantee of the right to bear arms. The court gave the state six months to write a law legalising it.
Mr Quinn vigorously opposed a concealed carry law, but the Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal.
In May, the state legislature passed a bill despite his objections. He vetoed the bill, suggesting restrictions on concealed weapons that would satisfy him.
On Tuesday, legislators in the House and Senate easily mustered a two-thirds majority needed to override Mr Quinn's veto, barely beating the court deadline.
"Following a weekend of horrific violence in Chicago in which at least 70 people were shot and 12 killed, this was the wrong move for public safety in Illinois," Mr Quinn said in a statement after the vote.
He said legislators had "surrendered" to the National Rifle Association, a powerful gun rights lobby funded in part by weapons manufacturers.
He warned the new law would allow people to carry guns in pubs and bars, and allow people to carry virtual arsenals on their persons.
Gun rights proponents, meanwhile, celebrated.
"This is a historic, significant day for law-abiding gun owners,'' Representative Brandon Harris, a southern Illinois Democrat said, according to the Associated Press.
Referring to the clause in the US constitution that refers to gun ownership, he said, "They finally get to exercise their Second Amendment rights."
The 38-year-old ended his playing career with the Blues in 2014 and has been working as a television pundit.
Iwelumo replaces Ian Sharps, who moved to League One side Walsall to become their first-team coach.
"Can't wait to get started at such a brilliantly run club," he said on Twitter.
Iwelumo scored once in 10 games for Chester before retiring after a career which saw him play for 19 different clubs including Stoke City, Wolves, Colchester, Burnley and Watford.
Jersey marked 71 years since its liberation from Nazi occupation on 9 May with a service and re-enactment in Liberation Square.
Bailiff, William Bailhache, gave his speech twice as the power cut hit just before he was due to speak.
Heavy rain also caused a number of people in the audience to leave early.
Hundreds still turned up to mark the event, seen as the island's national day including ex-servicemen and occupation survivors.
Organisers had planned a change to the traditional order of service, moving the Bailiff's speech to before the religious portion of the programme.
As the power cut hit just before the Bailiff was due to speak he was asked to give his speech again, with amplification, during the religious portion, returning to the normal order.
Jersey Electricity say the power was off in both islands but did not say why. The power cut lasted about 20 minutes.
In his speech, William Bailhache urged people to be tolerant of other people's religion, describing Jersey as a tolerant society.
He said: "In this Island today let us be beacons of tolerance, respecting those of different backgrounds, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation or religion."
A traditional part of the service is the singing of Jersey's unofficial anthem, Beautiful Jersey.
For decades it has been sung by Sadie Rennard, but for the first time student Rachel Hayden performed the song.
The re-enactment saw Jersey's army cadet force replicate the original liberating forces journey through a packed Liberation Square in 1946.
This was then followed by a parade of the Jersey Field Squadron, bands, cadet forces and classic vehicles. | Illinois has become the last state in the US to allow residents to carry concealed handguns, after lawmakers overrode the governor's veto.
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National League side Chester have appointed former Scotland international striker Chris Iwelumo as assistant to manager Jon McCarthy.
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Jersey's Liberation Day celebrations were hit by an island-wide power cut, causing the big screens and public address system to fail. |
Please provide a concise summary of the following section. | It has become the latest UK force to investigate the claims, first raised by former players in England.
A UK-wide hotline has dealt with more than 250 reports in just one week since it launched.
A senior Scottish officer confirmed that the force is working with partners, including the Scottish Football Association (SFA).
In a statement, a Police Scotland spokesman said: "We can confirm we have received reports in connection with non-recent child abuse within football.
"We are working with both Operation Hydrant and the NSPCC to ensure there is a co-ordinated UK police response.
"It would be inappropriate to comment further."
Det Ch Supt Lesley Boal added: "We will continue to work with partners, including the National Police Chiefs Council through Operation Hydrant, the Scottish Football Association and the NSPCC to ensure a co-ordinated police response is in place and that we maintain an accurate picture of child abuse investigations.
"Speaking out about any form of child abuse is incredibly difficult and disclosures are often made many years after an incident took place.
"Police Scotland will listen to any such disclosure, regardless of the passage of time, and will investigate as well as work with partner organisations who have access to advocacy and support during the process of disclosure and investigation."
The police pointed out that a range of organisations can be contacted through Survivor Scotland.
"Keeping children and young people safe is a top priority for Police Scotland and everyone has a role to play in protecting the country's children," said Supt Boal. "Where reports are made, we will assess any current risks and ensure appropriate action is taken." | Police Scotland has confirmed its officers have received reports of historic child abuse within football. |
Can you summarize the given article? | Painted by Italian prisoner-of-war Domenico Chiocchetti, the artist had made return visits to the chapel after the war to restore parts of his work.
But since his death in 1999, the interior artwork had remained untouched.
Professional art restorer Antonella Papa from Rome has now offered her services to restore the frescos.
A regular visitor to the islands she says she was moved by the story behind the chapel's creation. Ms Papa is to spend a month working on the chapel's interior.
The chapel was built by Italian prisoners-of-war during World War Two, using scrap metal and leftover concrete to create a unique place of worship.
Two Nissen huts were transformed into a tiny basilica-style space filled with images of angels and the Virgin Mary under the title Regina Pacis - Queen of Peace.
The chapel is now one of the island's most popular visitor attractions.
Secretary of the Italian Chapel Preservation Committee John Muir said it was a "once in a lifetime" opportunity to have someone with Ms Papa's skills working on the building. | Restoration work is being carried out on wartime frescos adorning the walls and ceiling of Orkney's Italian Chapel. |
Write a summary for this information. | A suicide bomb exploded near the national intelligence headquarters on Sunday morning. The sound of heavy gunfire was reported from the area.
Government officials say that they have "foiled the attack" and four militants are dead.
The militants have vowed to intensify attacks during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, which began on Wednesday.
Al-Shabab claims to have killed several intelligence officers inside the building, something the government denies.
Interior ministry spokesman Mohamed Yusuf said security forces had successfully repulsed the attackers.
"They were trying to storm the premises but they have been taken out before they reached their objective. There was no casualty on our side," he told reporters.
Bodies of al-Shabab militants were shown to the media.
Witnesses reported a loud explosion signalling the start of the fighting.
"There was a heavy explosion and in seconds heavy gunfire broke out. We cannot go outside the house because of the shooting," local resident Abdulahi Yare told the AFP news agency.
Security in the country has improved but al-Shabab still attacks Mogadishu regularly. The group has targeted the intelligence headquarters before.
Various armed groups have been battling for control of Somalia since the overthrow of President Siad Barre in 1991.
In April, al-Shabab militants launched an assault across the border in Kenya on a university in the north-eastern town of Garissa.
The attack killed 148 people in what was the deadliest ever attack by the group. | The Somali jihadist group al-Shabab has launched a major attack in the country's capital Mogadishu. |
Summarize the information given below. | Police said they were called to a disturbance in Carolside Drive, Drumchapel, at about 10:30.
The man had been stabbed and was taken by ambulance to Queen Elizabeth University Hospital where he is being treated for serious injuries.
Officers said their inquiry into the attack was ongoing and appealed for witnesses to contact them. | A 30-year-old man is in a serious condition after being attacked in the north of Glasgow. |
Can you provide a brief summary for this document? | More than 150 people were killed when security forces opened fire on thousands of anti-government protesters at the capital's main stadium.
Women there were raped and dozens of people were never seen again.
An inquiry was launched in 2010, after Capt Camara was ousted and fled to Burkina Faso, where he still lives.
Capt Camara was indicted by magistrates who came from Guinea on Wednesday to question him about his alleged involvement in the September 2009 massacre, his lawyer Jean-Baptiste Jocamey Haba told AFP by telephone from Ouagadougou, the capital of Burkina Faso.
Capt Camara's Patriotic Front for Democracy and Development said the interrogation was a "purely political" reaction to his announcement that he intended to run for president in elections due in October.
Hundreds of victims have given evidence to the massacre inquiry, local and international rights organisations say.
Capt Camara seized power in 2008 when long-time leader Lansana Conte died.
Thirteen other members of the military government are facing charges in relation the massacre, in addition to eight people already indicted. | Guinean former military ruler Moussa Dadis Camara has been indicted in over a 2009 massacre in Conakry, his lawyer has told AFP news agency. |
Can you provide a brief summary for this document? | Rail and Maritime Transport (RMT) union members are protesting about the relocation of Tube drivers. Central, Waterloo and City lines are affected.
Maintenance workers on London Underground have separately voted to strike over a breakdown in relations. No date has been set for action.
Meanwhile, Southern Railway conductors are also set to walk out on Wednesday.
The dispute centres on a long-running row over the role of train guards.
Tuesday 21 February
Wednesday 22 February
Normal services are not expected to resume until Thursday.
Peter McNaught, operations director for the Central Line, said the Tube drivers' strike was "unnecessary".
He added: "We have made all reasonable efforts to resolve this dispute through talking."
Maintenance workers have voted to strike by two to one, and by nine to one for other forms of industrial action.
The RMT is now considering what form action should take.
General secretary Mick Cash said the "door has been slammed in our faces", despite "strenuous efforts" to resolve the dispute.
"If London Underground is allowed to get away with this move on the Central Line they will start shunting drivers around at the drop of a hat, regardless of the consequences," he added.
Southern said it hoped to run as many trains as possible during the strike on Wednesday.
During the previous conductors' strike on 23 January, about three-quarters of its regular service ran, the firm said.
The prohibition was imposed on Damien "Dee" Fennell as part of conditions under which he was granted bail at the High Court in Belfast on Wednesday.
A judge decided the 33-year-old could be released from custody after he pledged to abide by all terms.
They also included an order not to post any material online.
Mr Fennell, from the Ardoyne area of north Belfast, is also accused of inviting support for a proscribed organisation.
The charges relate to a speech he gave during a 1916 commemoration event at St Colman's graveyard in Lurgan, County Armagh on Easter Sunday.
His address was recorded and broadcast on the internet, only to be removed following media reports that police were investigating the contents.
PSNI officers searched Fennell's home on April 20 and recovered one page of the hand-written speech behind a kitchen microwave, a prosecution lawyer said.
The accused denied encouraging any terrorism following his arrest.
During police interviews his lawyer read a prepared statement where he described comments about the armed struggle and existence of the IRA as his personal opinion.
Mr Fennell, a spokesman for the Greater Ardoyne Residents Collective which opposes Orange Order marches through his neighbourhood, was said to have been addressing an event organised by the Irish Republican Prisoners Welfare Association.
Part of the speech claimed a "British micro-minister" would later be attending the same graveyard.
Prosecution counsel said this was believed to be a reference to one of the Sinn Fein ministers at Stormont.
Opposing bail, she claimed Mr Fennell did not recognise the court and would not comply with any conditions set.
However, a defence lawyer said Mr Fennell had fully participated in each court appearance.
His alleged opposition is a fallacy advanced in a bid to stop him being released, she claimed.
The judge asked Fennell, who appeared via a prison video-link, if he would comply with release conditions and turn up at court.
He replied: "I will."
Following his assurance, the judge said: "On the basis of you giving me your word I will admit you to bail."
Mr Fennell was instructed to live at his home address - which is not to be published - and report to police three times a week.
The judge also directed: "You are to refrain from any public speaking, and you are not to post or cause to be posted any material on the internet or social media pending the outcome of this case." | Tube passengers face disruption after drivers walked out in a 24-hour strike at 21:00 GMT.
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A prominent dissident republican activist charged with encouraging terrorism has been banned from making any public speeches. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | Humber NHS Foundation Trust said it wanted to connect the 11-bed unit with its children's centre on Walker Street.
It comes after a long campaign by Sally Burke whose daughter Maisie, 15, had to travel 60 miles for treatment because there are no beds for children locally.
The trust expects the facility to open in July if it is approved.
Chief operating officer Teresa Cope said the inpatient unit for youngsters aged between 13 and 18 would "not only significantly reduce the number of out-of-area placements, which currently see children treated far from home, but reduce hospital admissions and lengths of stay".
"The submission of the planning application is another important step forward in our ambition to provide outstanding services for children and young people from Hull, the East Riding of Yorkshire and North and North-East Lincolnshire," she added.
"Our exciting proposals are in line with local, regional and national NHS objectives and, most importantly of all, will meet the requirements of our young patients and their families, who have been calling for specialist facilities of this type for so long."
Under the proposals, the facility will include activity, gaming and sensory rooms as well as a lounge, dining area, kitchen, laundry, treatment and quiet rooms.
The trust, which was awarded a 10-year contract to develop the service, will be able to treat patients with depression, psychoses, eating disorders, anxiety and emerging personality disorders.
Campaigners have been fighting for a 24-hour service after a residential unit in Hessle, that Maisie used to attend, closed four years ago. | Plans for a new multi-million pound mental health unit for young people in Hull have been submitted to the city council. |
What is the brief summary of the provided content? | It's a malicious virus that locks the user out of their computer and demands a fee to return their files.
A report published by the Australian government claims 72% of businesses surveyed experienced ransomware incidents in 2015.
The figure was just 17% in 2013 .
It's also a growing threat for mobile devices as it can be hidden in an app, says Gert-Jan Schenk, vice-president at internet security company Lookout.
"For the most part, we've seen ransomware delivered through drive-by downloads - it pretends to be a popular app, increasing the chances that you'll click on it," he explains.
"To avoid these threats, users should be very careful about what apps they install, and where they come from - read the reviews on Google Play, and avoid side-loading from untrusted sources."
Like most computer viruses, ransomware often arrives in the form of a phishing email, or spam, or a fake software update - and the recipient clicks a link or opens an attachment.
The virus then sets to work encrypting the user's files.
Once the computer is effectively locked down, it demands a fee - often in bitcoins because it is less easy to trace - for the return of the files.
The fee is generally one or two bitcoins - the equivalent of about $500 (£330).
It is less common now, but in the earlier days of the malware - about five years ago - the ransom note could take the form of a law enforcement notice.
The user was directed to a web page that appeared to be from, for example, the FBI, falsely claiming illegal images of children had been been found on the machine and a fine was payable.
There is generally a time limit to comply, after which the ransom increases.
Sometimes it is just a threat, but mostly the virus really does encrypt files.
The only way to retrieve your files without paying the ransom is to go to a backed-up version.
Neil Douglas, from Edinburgh-based IT company Network Roi, has just helped a small business client whose server was hit by ransomware.
"We had to recover everything from back-up. We'd had a back-up two minutes before the infection, so the timing couldn't have been any better - but it did result in quite a bit of downtime," he says.
"You could risk paying them - but it's a bit like paying a blackmailer. We would only recommend it as a last resort.
"You don't know whether they'll come back for more, you don't know that they'll clear the infection."
Cybersecurity expert Prof Alan Woodward says paying also leaves you vulnerable to further cybercrime.
"As soon as you pay up, you get on a suckers' list and you'll probably get contacted again," he says.
"It's low-hanging fruit for the criminals."
While all the expert advice is, of course, not to pay, plenty of people do - even those you would least expect to.
Tewksbury Police, in the US, admitted they had paid up when their main server had been attacked and locked down at the end of last year.
"Nobody wants to negotiate with terrorists. Nobody wants to pay terrorists," Police Chief Timothy Sheehan told the town's local paper.
"We did everything we possibly could.
"It was an eye-opening experience, I can tell you right now. It made you feel that you lost control of everything.
"Paying the bitcoin ransom was the last resort."
Ransomware is lucrative for criminals because so many victims pay rather than face the shame of false accusations - or like the police department, they just desperately need their files.
"Some companies have set up bitcoin accounts in case it happens to them," says Prof Woodward.
"I would recommend that nobody ever pays up.
"The only way to deal with it is to be sure you have a virus checker and back up."
"It tends to be organised crime," says Prof Woodward.
"They do make millions out of it. It's opportunistic... they just try it on everybody. You keep third parties out of it - the bank isn't involved."
Recent research by Palo Alto Networks and industry partners suggested one family of ransomware known as Crypto Wall had generated about $325m (£215m) for the gang behind it.
"In the volume cybercrime space, ransomware is one of the most prolific problems we face," Greg Day, chief security officer for Europe at Palo Alto Networks, told the BBC last month.
"Credit card theft is getting to the point where the value of each card is very low. As a result, ransomware has stepped into that gap and gives a higher value for each victim." | Ransomware is the fastest growing form of computer malware, experts warn. |
Summarize the content provided below. | She is understood to have been kicked by a horse while riding her pony during a ride with the Cotswold Hunt in Miserden, near Stroud, on Saturday.
Her school's head teacher described her as a "truly lovely, talented girl" and said the community was "devastated".
Police said her family and the coroner had been told of the death.
"Bonnie, the daughter of a member of our staff, was a truly lovely, talented girl who was bright, kind, compassionate, gentle and full of joy," said Andrew Nott, head of St Hugh's School near Faringdon in Oxfordshire.
"Our love, thoughts and prayers are with her parents, Nick and Polly, and siblings, Zach and Mamie, at this profoundly difficult time."
Gloucestershire Police said she suffered serious injuries and was taken by air ambulance to Gloucestershire Royal Hospital where she later died.
A source told the Press Association: "My understanding is that she was riding slightly behind a bigger horse that kicked out at her pony.
"The kick caught her. It was a tragic accident."
Another said: "She is believed to have been kicked off her horse by another horse. It is an extremely sad incident."
In a statement, the joint masters of the Cotswold Hunt said: "A sense of overwhelming shock and sadness is with us all as we try to come to terms with her family's overwhelming loss and grief, and I hope that the strength of our community together with the power of our prayers and the sincerity of our condolences will be of some comfort to the family.
"In truth we find it hard to write this, as a young life lost is very, very hard to bear.
"We would also like to thank the emergency services who did their very best." | A nine-year-old girl killed in a horse-riding accident while out with a Gloucestershire hunt has been named locally as Bonnie Armitage. |
Please summarize the following text. | Brown joined City after his contract at Cheltenham Town, who were relegated from League Two in May, came to an end.
"There was a lot of chopping and changing last year. Four managers and 44 players is a lot to deal with," the centre-back told BBC Sport.
"There seems to be a definite stability here with the manager, who's been here for a number of years," he added.
Brown was a virtual ever-present in the Cheltenham side last season as they finished four points from safety and were relegated to the National League after 16 years in the Football League.
But he feels that he could be fighting at the opposite end of the League Two table with Exeter this season:
"Everyone really gets on and there's a good bond there, and that's me saying that and I'm new coming into it.
"That bodes well for the season as out on the pitch everyone will be fighting for each other.
"We've got the quality there to match so I don't see why we can't be challenging for good things."
The election was due this year anyway. Former President Blaise Compaore's plans to serve another five-year term sparked a popular uprising. He had been in power for 27 years.
It has been a bumpy road to the current elections, and Mr Compaore's supporters themselves staged a short-lived coup on 17 September. The elite Presidential Security Guard were behind the attempt to scuttle the transition. They were disbanded after the coup failed.
Crisis-weary citizens hope that democratic rule will be restored when they vote for members of parliament and a new president. But some of the practices surrounding the vote are already being called into question, because the transitional government has barred members of the former ruling party the Congress for Democracy and Progress (CDP) from contesting the presidency.
Their exclusion has deepened political divisions, and could undermine the credibility of the elections and weaken confidence in any future government. CDP politicians have threatened to hold protest rallies, but most commentators say widespread violence is unlikely .
The electoral commission has promised "reliable and transparent elections, with results accepted by all".
There have been isolated reports of fake voter cards being mass-produced at a local internet cafe in the capital, Ouagadougou, but the polls are widely expected to be peaceful. There have been no major incidents during the campaign period.
Burkina Faso's Muslims coexist peacefully with Christians and other religious groups. But it is vulnerable to the extremist violence from other West African Islamists groups in neighbouring countries. Malian militant group Ansar Dine has threatened to attack the country.
Suspected Islamists from Nigeria's Boko Haram militant group have also attacked Christians at a Burkinabe police camp near the border with Mali. In November, the authorities introduced security measures to address the jihadist threat.
The president is elected by popular vote and, if no candidate wins an absolute majority in the first round, a second round is held.
The run-off, which must be held 15 days after the results of the first round have been declared, is won by a simple majority. A total of 127 seats are up for grabs in the parliamentary election.
Fourteen people - including two women and four independent candidates - are vying for the presidency.
Local media reports suggest that Zephirin Diabre and Roch Marc Christian Kabore are the front-runners. Mr Diabre was once a minister of finance before he fell out with Mr Compaore in 2010.
Mr Kabore served as prime minister and chairman of the CDP before leaving the party in 2014, after opposing plans to extend Mr Compaore's rule.
The veteran opposition politician and former presidential candidate Benewende Sankara comes a distant third, despite enjoying the support of the wife of slain military leader, Thomas Sankara.
He is not related to the late leader, who remains an iconic figure in the history of Burkina Faso.
Thomas Sankara renamed the country from Upper Volta to Burkina Faso (land of honest men) in an attempt to set a new standard of governance.
He adapted radical left-wing polices, and was killed in a coup led by Mr Compaore, who went on to introduce multi-party politics.
BBC Monitoring reports and analyses news from TV, radio, web and print media around the world. You can follow BBC Monitoring on Twitter and Facebook. | Troy Brown says his decision to move to Exeter City was influenced by the stability at the League Two club.
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Burkina Faso holds crucial general elections on 29 November after a turbulent year under a transitional government that stepped in to restore order following a popular uprising in October 2014. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | Watson, 25, has scored 14 tries in 29 games for Falcons, and was in the Great Britain Sevens team which won a silver medal at the Rio Olympics in 2016.
Ben Harris, 27, made one appearance for Wasps earlier this season after joining on a short-term loan deal.
Antonio Harris, 21, has scored seven tries in 18 games this season.
"We already know a lot about Ben and believe he has real potential at this level. TJ [Antonio] Harris has also impressed us in the Championship and we think he still has lots of growth in him," director of rugby Dai Young said.
"We always want an exciting back three, with pace on the wing, as we feel we have great distributors in our inside backs. We want to make sure we have deadly finishers to execute the chances they create.
"Marcus certainly fits into that category brilliantly, as he has shown already at international level on the sevens circuit and in the Aviva Premiership."
The 350 acre (142 hectare) site was previously owned by BAE Systems and has been bought by YTL Utilities for an undisclosed sum.
Planning permission for 2,675 new homes and 62 acres (25 hectares) of office and industrial use was granted by South Gloucestershire Council in July.
The airfield closed in 2012. Three schools, a community centre and a care home are included in the plans.
Colin Skellett, chairman of YTL Homes UK, said "We are delighted to have acquired this significant site which is a strategically important development for South Gloucestershire and the South West region."
Mike Craddock from BAE Systems said: "We wanted to ensure that we chose a buyer with the skills and track record to deliver the vision for the redevelopment of this regionally important brownfield site."
Part of the old Filton Airfield site will be used by the new Bristol Aerospace Centre, which will house a Concorde museum, and is due to be completed next year.
The development is part of wider plans to build about 5,700 new homes on the edge of Bristol over the next decade.
The body of Hannah Wynne Richards was found inside Penybryn Veterinary Centre in Sketty on 20 January.
She lived above the surgery, had previously worked for the RSPCA and campaigned against puppy farms.
South Wales Police said there were no suspicious circumstances and the matter has been referred to the coroner.
Celtic will begin their title defence at home to Hearts on Saturday, 5 August.
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St Johnstone | Wasps have signed winger Marcus Watson and prop Ben Harris from Newcastle, along with Nottingham hooker Antonio Harris, for the 2017-18 season.
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The former Filton Airfield in Bristol has been sold to Malaysian developers.
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A Swansea veterinary centre is closed following the sudden death of its vet.
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The Scottish Premiership fixtures for 2017-18 have been released. |
Please provide a summary for the content below. | Jonathan Cairns was 18 when he was attacked on his way home from a night out on 25 April 1999.
A man was jailed for five years for helping to dispose of his body, but no-one has ever been convicted of his murder.
His body was found in Loughermore Forest the day after his murder.
Jonathan's father Raymond remembers the day his son's body was discovered.
His clothes were found at the site of a nearby school the day after he went missing.
"There was a pair of shoes with trousers and a shirt and all on top of it soaked in blood. So I went across and I knew it was Jonathan's clothes," said Raymond.
Jonathan's body was found after in a shallow grave in Loughermore Forest, not far from his home.
"In among the trees there was a bit of fresh digging and someone gave it a lift and out came Jonathan's arm out of the ground," added Raymond.
Hazel Cairns said time does help but that the hurt does not go away.
"I can see him smiling, he was always smiling anyway. He was just happy."
Jonathan's room has been left untouched since the day he was killed.
"I go into the room and his clothes are there, his bed is the same and nobody sleeps in his room," said his mother.
"I'll never be anything else but angry. They took Jonathan away from me. Why did they not come forward and say why?
"They didn't really know him, so why touch him? The evil was in their mind that's all, they wouldn't do it to an animal."
The family have now setup a Facebook page called 'Justice for Jonathan Cairns'. Hazel hopes that it will encourage people to come forward with vital evidence.
"Please keep on trying, if you find anything, hear anything, hear whispers or anything. Don't be sitting back," said Hazel.
"Jonathan knew I loved him, he did. He was a good boy and all his family loved him."
In a statement Det Ch Insp John McVea, who is leading the murder enquiry, said that the investigation remains open and police would encourage anyone who has information that could help bring Jonathan's killer, or killers, to justice to contact them.
A £30,000 reward is still in place. | The family of a murdered teenager from Ballykelly, County Londonderry have turned to social media in a bid to find answers to his death 16 years ago. |
Please summarize the following text. | The acting duo were awarded honorary doctorates in drama from Royal Conservatoire of Scotland (RCS) in Glasgow.
The pair have starred in films together, including The Winter Guest.
Nanny McPhee star Thompson won an Oscar for her lead role in the 1992 movie Howards End.
Thompson said: "It was so much fun. It's our best starring role together, definitely.
"We've not received anything like this before and we both feel slightly fraudulent because when I told my son he asked 'how many essays did you have to write to get that?'
"We've both had so much work as actors and are still working so to get a degree for it is great, I suppose in a sense it's a reward for hanging in there.
"So many actors fall by the wayside so maybe this is recognition because we're still going."
Law joked: "It's certainly not for our looks, it's a dreadful mistake to be born exquisitely beautiful because it wears off by 28.
"Thankfully we didn't need to worry about that."
Law, who was born in Glasgow and was married to actor Eric Thompson from 1957 until his death in 1982, has appeared in many documentaries and interviews concerning her late husband's narration on The Magic Roundabout and was in the original London cast of La Cage Aux Folles at London Palladium.
The 81-year-old will receive a second degree when she becomes honorary doctor of letters from Glasgow Caledonian University later in the week.
Law said: "It's great fun to be able to do this together, much better than collecting it on your own and to get it in Glasgow is great.
"It's quite silly that I'm getting another one but it means I'll have two and Emma will be in the audience this time to see me."
Thompson is married to Royal Conservatoire alumnus Greg Wise and said she is delighted to keep up the family tradition, even if her husband is not.
"Greg graduated from here in the 80s or 90s and he's fit to be dead and spitting feathers at home because he had to do so much work and exams to get his degree and we just had to turn up to become doctors."
The honours for the mother and daughter see them join the likes of singer Annie Lennox, comedian Billy Connolly and actor Tilda Swinton, who have all received honorary doctorates from the Conservatoire, previously the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama.
Also receiving honorary doctorates were opera singer Patricia MacMahon and Jenny Sealy, a producer for the London 2012 Paralympics opening ceremony. | Emma Thompson has said receiving an honorary degree alongside her mother Phyllida Law is their "best starring role together". |
Please provide a short summary of this passage. | With two thirds of results in he has 55% of the vote against 44% for his rival, Raila Odinga, figures show.
Mr Kenyatta is hoping for a second term in office but faces a tough challenge.
Voting has passed off largely peacefully and the electoral commission has urged people to wait calmly for all the results.
"During this critical phase, we urge all Kenyans to exercise restraint as we await official results from the polling stations and indeed as they start trickling in," the commission said.
Many fear a repeat of the violence that followed the disputed 2007 election. More than 1,100 Kenyans died and 600,000 were displaced.
Some polling stations remained open after the scheduled 17:00 (14:00 GMT) closing time in areas where heavy rain and other problems had hampered voting.
Despite Mr Kenyatta's early lead, the BBC's Tomi Oladipo says it is too early to tell which way Kenyans have voted.
To win outright, a candidate needs more than 50% of the vote, and at least 25% in 24 of Kenya's 47 counties. If that threshold is not met, a run-off vote between the top two candidates will be triggered.
Voting for the national and local assemblies has also been taking place.
People started queuing early to ensure they could cast their vote. Long queues could be seen, and video footage at one polling station showed people injured after an apparent stampede.
There was also the failure of some voter-identification equipment and one in four polling stations were apparently without mobile phone coverage meaning that officials would have to drive to the nearest town to send results.
There were reports that one man had been killed in clashes in the Kilifi area.
But there was one heartening moment when a woman gave birth to a baby girl as she queued in West Pokot to cast her ballot. New mother Pauline Chemanang called the circumstances of the birth a "blessing" and called her baby Kura, Swahili for "ballot", according to local radio.
Casting his vote in his hometown of Gatundu, north of Nairobi, Mr Kenyatta said he would accept the outcome of the election.
"To my competitors, as I have always said, in the event that they lose, let us accept the will of the people. I am willing, myself, to accept the will of the people," he said.
Opposition leader Mr Odinga cast his ballot in the Nairobi slum of Kibera.
Speaking outside the voting centre, he told his supporters: "Let's turn out in large numbers and vote."
By Alastair Leithead, BBC News, Mathare
The queues were long and the voters impatient. Many arrived in the middle of the night to cast their ballots early and the electronic system is taking quite a while to verify voters.
If fingerprints don't register, ID card numbers have to be typed in to the electronic tablets and then there's a manual backup.
The responsibility lies with the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission to deliver a free and fair election.
The test will come when the polls close, the votes are counted and the results have to be transmitted to the tallying centres.
The presidential race is expected to be close.
Mr Odinga, 72, has run for president three times and lost each time. President Kenyatta, the 55-year-old son of Kenya's founding president, beat him in the last election in 2013, but their rivalry is generations old - their fathers were political opponents in the 1960s.
Mr Kenyatta and his running-mate William Ruto were indicted by the International Criminal Court for their alleged roles in the bloodshed a decade ago. The case ultimately collapsed due to lack of evidence, and after key witnesses died or disappeared.
Decoding the poll
Vote strains mixed ethnicity marriages
What first-time voters make of it all
View of those behind 2007 poll violence
Chief EU observer Marietje Schaake said much would depend on the faith people hold in the new electronic voting system.
Before election day, a top election official was murdered, there were claims of vote-rigging and hate speech flyers and rhetorical text messages began circulating.
Some nervous Kenyans stockpiled food and water, while police prepared emergency first aid kits in the event of violence. | Kenya's incumbent President Uhuru Kenyatta has taken an early lead as votes are counted after Tuesday's election. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | Media playback is not supported on this device
The 33-year-old suffered several broken bones after suffering an accident while leading the Dundrod 150 Superbike race in August.
The TT racer and television personality, who has returned to work as a truck fitter, is now recovering.
"I still want to race, but I'm not going to rush into deciding what or where I'm going to race," Martin said.
"Having a few days off work gave me time to think about what I want to do, and realise all the things that have had to go on hold."
Media playback is not supported on this device
Martin says he does not remember anything about the crash at Dundrod on 6 August.
He lost control of his Tyco BMW at Ireland's Corner on the circuit as he was leading the Superbike race by less than a second from Bruce Anstey.
"I headbutted the ground at 130mph, then skidded into a dirt field and catapulted off a few things," Martin added.
"The impact I hit the ground with was massive.
"I broke five vertebrae and they had to rod my spine because I broke my sternum too. I broke five ribs and two metacarpals in right hand, too, and my hand's been plated.
"There's no better physio than working on trucks and I know when I'm doing too much, I'm not planning to do anything that puts the recovery back."
The problem is on the rise across Northern Ireland and particularly in south Belfast which, for the past 10 years, has consistently seen the highest levels.
Despite its prevalence, it is estimated that just one in six bike thefts are reported to the police.
In an effort to tackle the problem, police have introduced a bike registration scheme.
PSNI Sgt Pete Cunningham said that "people are leaving their bikes unattended, which provides a unique opportunity for others to take them".
"We need to secure bikes when we are out and about," he warned.
"Even if it is just for a short period of time, they need to be secured and left in a well-lit area."
Paul Manton, manager of south Belfast bike retailer McConvey's Cycles, told the BBC that people in Northern Ireland are not spending enough on bike security.
"Usually, theft is the last thing on anyone's mind when they are buying a bike," he said.
"We would recommend that people spend at least 10% of the value of their bike on a lock, but very few people rely on good quality locks.
"You could have a two or three thousand pound bike in your shed, which only has a £5 padlock on its door and no lock on the bike itself," he added.
Claire McLernon of the cycling charity Sustrans, said the figures should not put people off cycling to work, because there are "so many things you can do to minimise the risks".
"If you're committed to buying a good bicycle, you need to be equally as committed to buying a good lock," she said.
"I had a bicycle that had the lock cut through in south Belfast, but it was a cheap chain from a hardware store.
"I'm hearing more about bikes being stolen, but I try to take the positive from that, that more people must be cycling.
"People are learning how to deal with bike theft and there are improvements being made.
"Nobody should be put off cycling by bike theft - just make sure you protect yourself against it."
The PSNI's bike registration scheme is available through local crime prevention units, where police mark bikes, free of charge. | Motorcyclist Guy Martin still wants to race but will not be rushed into making a comeback.
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Bicycle theft is "almost like the new car theft", the PSNI has said. |
Summarize the following content briefly. | Media playback is not supported on this device
Berahino had said he would not play after a move to Tottenham was blocked.
Spurs had four bids rejected for the 22-year-old, who has been left out of the team for the past three matches.
"Saido is immature at times but I'm more concerned with getting him back playing," Pulis told BBC WM.
"The fact that he wants to play for a top team, I wish most of the players here would have those expectations and ambitions.
"The problem Saido has is in the way he's gone around it. He's not shown the respect to people around this club that he should have.
"It's unfortunate that Saido's been exploited by a system I've said I don't like and I think it should be changed."
West Brom play Southampton at home in a 15:00 BST kick-off, with Pulis' side 15th in the Premier League table with four points from their first four matches. | West Brom boss Tony Pulis has criticised Saido Berahino for lacking respect and being "immature" but says he sympathises with the striker, who is available for selection on Saturday. |
Please summarize the following text. | A photo was posted online of the 29-year-old - who has three caps - before a game for club side Persepolis.
Iran has strict clothing laws and ISNA news agency said the penalty was for "inappropriate conduct".
The Iranian football federation's morality committee cited Makani's clothing as one reason for the ban.
The photo was initially posted on social media on 6 May, causing the country's media to liken Makani's trousers to the American animation character.
The ruling is not final and can be appealed, but could also be related to a previous controversy in January.
Then Makani, who played for Iran at the 2014 World Cup, was arrested and taken to Tehran's Evin prison after pictures of him in the presence of a woman were leaked.
Iran also has strict laws against the mixing of unrelated men and women.
Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox. | Iran goalkeeper Sosha Makani has been suspended for six months after wearing what was described as SpongeBob SquarePants trousers. |
Summarize the following piece. | The hospital trust said the major incident is likely to last a week, and asked patients to visit Accident & Emergency only if they have a "serious or life-threatening condition".
The CQC raised "safeguarding concerns" following an inspection on Wednesday.
The watchdog found staff struggling to cope with "unprecedented demand".
The hospital's interim chief executive Dr Lucy Moore said the focus was on "discharging patients."
She told the BBC: "By declaring a major incident and running a sort of command and control process, we ask all our staff to prioritise that."
Dr Moore added that by "diverting resources away from things that can wait", staff could "treat as a priority the discharge of patients".
The CQC has confirmed that it raised a "small number of safeguarding concerns" with the hospital.
One involved a patient's note detailing that an invasive procedure had been carried out when that patient could not give their consent.
But the CQC is refusing to give any more details about safeguarding issues, saying that its latest report on the hospital was due and that further inspections at the trust would be carried out.
Liberal Democrat MP for Colchester Sir Bob Russell called the decision to declare a major incident "very worrying".
"We've had a year, eighteen months of problems at Colchester General Hospital, the former chief executive, chairman and numerous members of the board have all gone, there's a new team in there and I'm hoping that they will turn it around.
"There's no criticism here by the way of the front-line medical staff and support staff, the criticism I have is the management historically and I'm just hoping the new management team are going to sort it out, but clearly this is very worrying."
In July the hospital was given an overall rating of "requires improvement".
Wednesday's inspection focussed on the hospital's accident and emergency department and emergency assessment unit.
The Department of Health says: "For the NHS, a major incident is defined as:
"Any occurrence that presents serious threat to the health of the community, disruption to the service or causes (or is likely to cause) such numbers or types of casualties as to require special arrangements to be implemented by hospitals, ambulance trusts or primary care organisations."
Each individual NHS organisation must plan to handle incidents in which its own facilities "may be overwhelmed".
Examples of such incidents include serious fire, breakdown of utilities, equipment failure, hospital-acquired infections, violent crime and dealing with contaminated individuals.
Peter Blackman, who chairs a patients' association group in Essex, said: "Clearly this shows that Colchester Hospital is still in trouble. It is very concerning for patients that the hospital has still not got to grips with the underlying problems."
The pressures on A&E services meant a requirement for additional resources, he said, and the possibility that people from outside were needed "who have the expertise to sort this out".
News of the hospital's problems came the day after government announced an extra £300m would go towards helping the NHS cope during the winter months by boosting staff numbers and services, particularly at weekends.
But Dr Mark Porter, of the British Medical Association, described the extra funding as a "sticking plaster" designed to mask "the fact that a funding gap of £30bn is opening up in the NHS". | Colchester Hospital has declared a "major incident" following an inspection by the Care Quality Commission (CQC). |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | Media playback is unsupported on your device
24 May 2015 Last updated at 12:33 BST
Jeralean Talley was born in 1899 in the US state of Georgia.
She's celebrating her birthday twice, including a party at her church, and was given $116 - a dollar for every year - at a special event on Thursday. | A woman thought to be the oldest in the world has just celebrated her 116th birthday. |
Summarize the content given in the passage. | Soul singer Al Green, 9 to 5 star Lily Tomlin and ballet dancer Patricia McBride were also saluted at the White House ahead of a gala concert.
Sting, 63, said it was "rare" for an Englishman to receive the honour.
"I'm not sure when I'll wear it again, but I think I look rather fetching in it," he said of his rainbow ribbon.
The former Police frontman is set to join the cast of his Broadway musical The Last Ship, about shipbuilding in the north east of England.
Hanks, who won Oscars for his roles in Philadelphia and Forrest Gump, said he "couldn't believe it" when he was told he was among the honourees.
Tomlin, 75, also admitted she had been surprised by her selection, saying she had "never been privy to the insider's circle".
Sunday's White House reception saw this year's recipients presented with their ceremonial ribbons by President Obama.
The event preceded a concert at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts which saw Lady Gaga, Bruce Springsteen and Bruno Mars sing Sting's hits.
The musician told reporters it was "quite something [to] have other people sing my songs and have to do virtually nothing but smile".
Jennifer Hudson and Usher kicked off proceedings with a medley of Green's hits, before film director Steven Spielberg described Hanks as "America's favourite son".
"Tonight, Washington puts the arts above politics," said host Stephen Colbert. "Because no matter what party you belong to, everybody wants a selfie with Tom Hanks."
The John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts has been honouring stars of the stage, screen and concert hall since 1978.
This year's concert, which also featured appearances by Earth, Wind and Fire, Jane Fonda and Glee actress Jane Lynch, will be broadcast on the CBS network on 30 December.
Hanks was joined in Washington by his actress wife Rita Wilson, who is set to follow her husband onto the Broadway stage.
Following Hanks' 2013 appearance in Nora Ephron's play Lucky Guy, Wilson will appear in Larry David's new comedy Fish in the Dark from 2 February. | British singer Sting and Oscar-winning US actor Tom Hanks have been feted in Washington as recipients of this year's Kennedy Center honours. |
Summarize the provided section. | In an interview for the BBC on Sunday, the Democratic Unionist Party leader called it "a very violent attack on the state".
It was one that "gave succour to violent republicanism", she said.
Mrs Foster is about to become Northern Ireland's youngest ever leader.
She will also be the first woman to hold the role when she takes the reins at Stormont on Monday, the day MLAs return to their debating chamber after the winter break.
The 1916 Easter Rising was the seminal event that led to Irish independence and, in some ways, to the creation of Northern Ireland.
It was a republican rebellion that lasted from 24 April (Easter Monday) to 30 April 1916.
The aim was to end British rule in Ireland and to establish an independent Ireland as a republic.
Despite its military failure, the Easter Rising is seen by many as being a significant stepping-stone in the eventual creation of the Republic of Ireland.
Arlene Foster, 45, is already a Stormont Executive veteran and the longest serving woman in it.
She has been a minister since 2007 and has held three portfolios - environment, enterprise and finance.
Arlene Foster has experience of some of the most high-profile posts in Northern Ireland politics and has long been tipped for Stormont's top job.
The Fermanagh politician has had a rapid rise through the DUP ranks since joining the party from the Ulster Unionists in 2004.
She was born Arlene Kelly in Roslea in 1970.
Her first experience of Troubles violence came when she was just eight years old.
Her father was a part-time policeman and was shot by the IRA at the family farm.
When she was a teenager in 1988, a bomb exploded under her school bus.
Profile of Arlene Foster
Speaking to Radio Ulster's Sunday News, she said she had always been involved in politics, not because of her gender, but because of her passion for it.
"People do want to see real change," she said, adding that she would be looking towards the future.
Mrs Foster said last year had been "turbulent" for Northern Ireland, but underlined: "We dealt with it by talking to each other, negotiating and planning for the future."
Her priority would be the economy, she said, and that would offer hope to young people.
She also spoke about her own past and how that had shaped her.
Her father was a part-time policeman and was shot by the IRA at the family farm when she was eight years old.
"I have been a victim of IRA violence, I carry that with me, I want to look to the future and build for that," she said.
"We have the vision for Northern Ireland moving forward. We believe in Northern Ireland as a country."
Although she said that it would not be right for her to take part in the centenary commemorations of the Easter Rising, she was clear that she would represent everyone who is a democrat.
"People are nuanced enough to know that I am very open and will represent democratic nationalists and democratic unionists in Northern Ireland," she said.
"I certainly will not be representing violent republicanism."
Mrs Foster said she hoped her position as the first woman to be leader, would give confidence and aspiration to other women, regardless of their background to get involved in politics.
On a personal level, she said Monday would be "a mix of emotions" for her. There would be sorrow that her father did not live to enjoy the day.
But there would be happiness too.
"My mum and my husband will be present. It will be a very joyous day," she said.
"I am conscious of the fact that I step forward as the leader of Northern Ireland, that is a huge responsibility and I am aware of that." | Northern Ireland's first minister-in-waiting, Arlene Foster, has said she would not attend any events to commemorate the centenary of the Easter Rising. |
What is the summary of the following article? | Media playback is not supported on this device
Former Linfield defender Chris Casement scored the opening goal five minutes into the second half.
Ross Redman, who seconds earlier had cleared off the line from Andrew Waterworth, set up the score with a great run down the left wing.
Marcio Soares made it 2-0 as the match was entering stoppage time.
It was a breakaway goal, with Gary Twigg unselfishly squaring the ball for substitute Soares to score into an empty net.
Just before that Linfield had mounted pressure but home keeper David Miskelly made a number of good saves.
Linfield stay in fourth because the team immediately below them, Glenavon, were beaten 2-0 at Glentoran.
It is the first time Linfield have lost four league games in a row since March 1997.
And this latest defeat will place additional pressure on Northern Ireland's record scorer Healy who was only appointed Blues manager in mid-October when the they were joint top with Crusaders.
Now Linfield find themselves 12 points behind the defending champions after 18 matches of the league campaign.
Next week Linfield are at home to Coleraine who are up to second in the table after an unbeaten run of 11 Premiership matches.
Portadown assistant manager Kieran Harding: "The real turning point was the clearance off the line by Ross Redman who then got up the other end to set up the goal.
"He got to the bye-line to pull the ball back for what was an outstanding goal from our perspective.
"We had to defend for our lives and overall it was a great team performance."
Linfield manager David Healy: "I thought today we probably didn't get the rub of the green, but I am not one for excuses and we have lost another game of football.
"I have told the players to get their heads up because we have a big game on Tuesday against Carrick in the semi-final of the Shield.
"I have been working 100% every day to try to turn this club around and make it as successful as it has been before." | Linfield slumped to a fourth successive league defeat under former Northern Ireland striker David Healy as Portadown sealed a 2-0 home victory. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | Police said the Class A drug was found within a commercial property near a school and a house in the Livingston area.
It was estimated to have a street value of about £24,000.
The men, aged 34 and 23, were due to appear at Livingston Sheriff Court on Monday.
The teenager was also reported to the children's reporter.
Evan Mawarire told the BBC people should stay at home as part of a campaign against corruption, economic mismanagement and unemployment.
He said the campaign was serious about wanting change.
Mr Mawarire was freed on Wednesday when a court in Harare dismissed a legal case against him.
His lawyers successfully argued that the charge of subversion had been added at the last minute, denying him a fair trial.
The pastor has been at the heart of a social media campaign denouncing the government's management of the economy.
He said the #ThisFlag movement's goal was to "get as many citizens as possible involved in nation-building".
The crowds that gathered for the court appearance of Pastor Evan Mawarire show the power of social media in Zimbabwe. Those who were able packed into the courtroom and reacted in shock and then derision when prosecutors added a new charge of subversion, meaning the state believed the preacher was attempting to overthrow President Robert Mugabe.
But the ambush tactics did not work as the defence team was able to argue that the last-minute charge denied the pastor a fair trial. It was still a brave decision by a magistrate given the prevailing difficult political circumstances.
Many of those who showed up in solidarity were draped in the national flag: It is no longer just a symbol of national pride, but a statement that the country should not be monopolised by a political elite. Social media activists have taken the fight for political reforms to new levels and the authorities are having difficulty controlling and monitoring them.
It is a pastor with no known political credentials who has managed to galvanise the nation, calling for an end to corruption. The stay away call may be muted - with civil servants not wanting to give the authorities an excuse not to pay them - but the unprecedented scenes outside court mark a change of tone in Zimbabwean activism.
The pastor's latest call for people to stay away from work in protest at the economic crisis went largely unheeded, with most businesses opening as normal on Wednesday.
Mr Mawarire admitted the protest was not as successful as last week's - when the country's cities were deserted - but said the strike should continue on Thursday.
He said: "Let's all shut down and send a message to our government that enough is enough, we need changes in very simple things, in very simple areas.
"And our protest - non-violent, non-inciting, stay-at-home - is the best because it is within the confines of the law.
"Every Zimbabwean who does not participate is robbing us of a great opportunity to add to the momentum of where our country is going."
MCC chose not to enforce the follow-on and reached 145-7 in their second innings at the close, 298 runs ahead.
Harry Podmore (3-25) and James Harris (2-30) led the Middlesex fightback, while MCC opener Adam Lyth made 42.
Earlier, Lewis Gregory (5-32) and Craig Overton (4-37) impressed as Somerset bowlers took all 10 Middlesex wickets.
After Gregory's early burst of 3-1 in eight balls had left Middlesex in trouble, Dawid Malan (56) and John Simpson (49) coped well with the combined spin threat of Jack Leach, Mason Crane and Lyth during a sixth-wicket stand of 96.
MCC captain Alex Lees, who was unable to call upon injured Yorkshire team-mate Liam Plunkett, turned to his quicker bowlers in the fading light as he searched for a breakthrough.
Overton obliged immediately with two wickets in three balls to start a Middlesex collapse of five wickets for 15 runs.
Lyth and Lees hit five boundaries in the first nine balls of MCC's second innings, but Podmore struck twice in an over and Harris showed quick reactions in taking a smart return catch to dismiss Ben Duckett for 13.
Yorkshire left-hander Lyth could not survive until the close, slog-sweeping Ravi Patel straight to Tom Helm on the boundary eight runs short of a half-century, but MCC are in a strong position with two days remaining. | A 15-year-old boy has been reported to the procurator fiscal and two men have been charged after half a kilo of cocaine was recovered in West Lothian.
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A Zimbabwean pastor who was detained after organising a nationwide strike last week has called on people to keep protesting.
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Middlesex fought back with seven late wickets on day two after being bowled out for 179 by MCC in the Champion County game in Abu Dhabi. |
Please provide a concise summary of the following section. | The 25-year-old Frenchman will now remain at the Amex Stadium until the end of the 2020-21 campaign.
Knockaert, who joined the Seagulls in January 2016 from Belgian side Standard Liege, has scored 11 goals in 33 appearances this season.
"Anthony has been an integral member of the squad since his arrival," boss Chris Hughton told the club website.
"This new contract recognises the hard work and relentless effort he has given to the team." | Brighton & Hove Albion winger Anthony Knockaert has extended his contract with the Championship club. |
Please summarize the following text. | It has also been refused permission to appeal to the Supreme Court.
Weller and his wife won the damages last year after pictures of his three youngest children were "plastered" on Mail Online in 2012.
The couple complained that the un-pixellated shots were "plainly voyeuristic".
They sued Associated Newspapers, which publishes the Daily Mail, the Mail on Sunday and Metro, for misuse of private information on behalf of their daughter Dylan, who was 16 when the pictures appeared online, and twin sons John-Paul and Bowie, who were 10 months old.
Associated Newspapers appealed against the ruling because it said it created what was, in effect, an "image right" - that is, giving legal control to the subject of the photograph - for the first time and this would have far-reaching adverse effects on the freedom of the UK media.
However three High Court judges today dismissed the appeal and refused Associated Newspapers permission to appeal to the Supreme Court.
Seven paparazzi photos were published in October 2012 under the headline "A family day out: Paul Weller takes wife Hannah and his twin sons out for a spot of shopping in the hot LA sun".
A photographer had followed the family on a shopping trip in Santa Monica, California, and took photographs without their consent despite being asked to stop.
Lawyers for Mail Online had argued the publication of the images was entirely in line with the law in California where they were taken by a freelance photographer.
The judge agreed the images could have been published legally in California, but said their appearance in the UK violated the right to privacy enshrined in the European Convention on Human Rights.
Since their win at the High Court, Hannah Weller has campaigned to stop papers publishing photos of children without their parents' consent.
They face Germany on Tuesday, the same opponents who inflicted a 4-0 defeat on them in the final eight years ago.
Five of Stuart Pearce's XI would go on to earn senior caps - the same number of German players who started their World Cup final win five years later.
But can you match the players who started in 2009 to their career paths?
This content will not work on your device, please check Javascript and cookies are enabled or update your browser
Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox. | Associated Newspapers has lost its challenge to a High Court decision to award £10,000 privacy damages to rock star Paul Weller.
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England Under-21s have reached the semi-finals of the European Championship for the first time since 2009, when they finished as runners-up. |
Can you summarize this content? | Coulson, who will miss the rest of the current season with an ankle ligament injury, made 12 appearances for the U's in all competitions this term.
The 27-year-old has played a total of 269 games for the club, having made his debut in December 2008.
"I want to thank everyone at the club for looking after me at this tough time," he said.
"I can now concentrate on getting my ankle right and returning to fitness as soon as possible to repay their loyalty."
In exchange for an empty bottle or jar, children will get a free ticket to a showing at the renovated Hippodrome cinema in Bo'ness, near Falkirk.
The picture house was re-opened last year after a £2m restoration.
The offer will see film fans who donate a clean, empty jam jar (with its lid) given two tickets for the price of one at special screenings.
This season's offer will allow movie-goers access to the silent Buster Keaton classic, Steamboat Bill Jr.
The jars will be used by the Georgian Kitchen in nearby Callendar House in Falkirk for jam-making.
Astrid Shearer, audience development officer at the cinema, said: "We're really proud of the Hippodrome's unique heritage and we like to think that, although we do show the latest releases, we also celebrate our place in cinema history, and give our audience the opportunity to see some exceptional and rarely screened films."
North Wales Police said officers were trying to intervene as the man, in his 30s, attempted suicide in Ruabon Road, Johnstown, at about 10:20 GMT.
Supt Alex Goss said the man died in hospital despite efforts to save him. The officer's injuries were superficial.
The incident has been referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC).
The watchdog said its investigators had been told the man in his 30s sustained self-inflicted knife injuries.
IPCC commissioner Jan Williams said: "Our thoughts are with the family of the man who died following this tragic incident.
"We are in the initial stages of carrying out an investigation into the circumstances and the police interaction with the man.
"We have met with his relatives to explain our role and we will keep them updated throughout our inquiries."
The union said it had no other option after the failure of talks at the conciliation service Acas.
The RMT is campaigning against the increased use of trains without guards, with the driver opening and closing the doors at stations.
ScotRail has said such operations are already common on the network, particularly on suburban services.
The operator has also promised to ensure a second member of staff was onboard every train to assist the driver in emergencies.
Phil Verster, managing director of Scotrail Alliance, said: "This industrial action by the RMT is not about safety, it's not about a second person on a train and it's not about jobs or pay and conditions.
"It is about modernisation of the railway and preparing us for a railway that Scotland can be proud of for the next 40 or 50 years."
But the union claims the absence of a dedicated guard would make trains less safe.
The strike is the latest of several held during the dispute. Another one-day strike is due be held next Sunday, 31 July.
Scottish Labour has called on Transport Minister Humza Yousaf to intervene to try to reach a negotiated settlement.
Mr Yousaf, however, tweeted that he had already discussed the dispute with ScotRail and the RMT, and would continue to do so.
He also called for the suspension of strike action while dialogue took place.
Transport Scotland said it had been assured by ScotRail that over 80% of services would run as normal this weekend.
Passengers are advised to check the ScotRail strike information web page before they travel. | Cambridge United defender Josh Coulson has signed a new contract to stay with the League Two club until June 2018.
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Scotland's oldest cinema is set to revive the 'jeely jar' ticket, with a special offer dating back to the 1920s.
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A man has died and a police officer has been injured in an incident in Wrexham.
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Members of the RMT union at ScotRail have begun another one-day strike in their dispute over driver-only trains. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | The world number 35 rattled the jaw of the pocket against Anthony McGill in the fourth frame of their final qualifying round to level at 2-2.
The miss cost him an £8,500 bonus, plus the £1,000 highest break prize.
He also missed the black on 140 against Neil Robertson in the third round of the UK Championship in December.
The 30-year-old later claimed he did not know that there was a £44,000 prize for a maximum.
Un-Nooh, who has never qualified for the World Championship, currently trails Scotland's McGill 6-3 at the interval.
Media playback is not supported on this device | Thailand's Thepchaiya Un-Nooh missed the final black of a 147 attempt for the second time this season during World Championship qualifying. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | Leicester City loanee Tom Lawrence opened the scoring with a trademark goal, running from deep and smashing home via the underside of the bar.
Jordon Mutch equalised on his Reading debut, finding space in the box to roll home his first goal since March 2014.
Lawrence then slotted past Ali Al-Habsi for his eighth goal in eight games, before Obita's powerful leveller.
After a 3-0 home drubbing by Derby on Tuesday, Mick McCarthy made five changes to his starting line-up, including debuts for Emyr Huws and Steven Taylor.
As a first half edged by Ipswich drew to a close, Lawrence lit up the game with a stunning strike by finishing off a clinical counter-attack.
Liam Kelly almost replied for the promotion-chasing visitors seconds later, but his half-volley rose over the bar, before Taylor headed just wide for Ipswich in a frantic end to the first half.
Mutch, one of three players signed on loan by Jaap Stam on transfer deadline day, restored parity when he slid the ball beyond Bartosz Bialkowski after being given too much space in the Ipswich box.
Ipswich again took the lead through Lawrence's 10th of the season after he was sent free by David McGoldrick, but Obita's low strike ensured a share of the spoils.
Reading stay third, four points from the automatic promotion places, while Ipswich move up two places to 15th.
Ipswich manager Mick McCarthy: "It was certainly a positive reaction from Tuesday night when we were comprehensively beaten. That performance was unacceptable and unpalatable but today was completely different.
"I made a few changes and the new faces have helped liven up the place and gave us all a spark.
"I thought the performance was great and I think we probably deserved to win it."
Reading boss Jaap Stam: "I don't think we were ever in the race for the top two. We are just beginning to build something this season after finishing 17th last year.
"If we have a chance to achieve something we should go for it, but I was never under any illusion that we are in the race for the top two against Newcastle, who have spent 60 to 70 million pounds, and Brighton, who have worked towards this for three years.
"It makes it very hard when you have to equalise twice. I don't think we deserved any more but it was an important point for us."
Match ends, Ipswich Town 2, Reading 2.
Second Half ends, Ipswich Town 2, Reading 2.
Jonas Knudsen (Ipswich Town) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Yann Kermorgant (Reading) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Jonas Knudsen (Ipswich Town).
Yann Kermorgant (Reading) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Christophe Berra (Ipswich Town).
Attempt blocked. Christophe Berra (Ipswich Town) header from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Jonas Knudsen.
George Evans (Reading) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Foul by George Evans (Reading).
Grant Ward (Ipswich Town) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Attempt missed. Yann Kermorgant (Reading) right footed shot from the centre of the box misses to the left.
Attempt blocked. Jordon Mutch (Reading) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Yann Kermorgant.
Liam Moore (Reading) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by David McGoldrick (Ipswich Town).
Jordon Mutch (Reading) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by David McGoldrick (Ipswich Town).
Lewis Grabban (Reading) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Foul by Lewis Grabban (Reading).
Jonas Knudsen (Ipswich Town) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
George Evans (Reading) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Grant Ward (Ipswich Town).
Substitution, Reading. George Evans replaces Liam Kelly.
Substitution, Ipswich Town. Teddy Bishop replaces Emyr Huws.
Substitution, Ipswich Town. Jordan Spence replaces Toumani Diagouraga.
Attempt blocked. Tom Lawrence (Ipswich Town) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.
Foul by Jordon Mutch (Reading).
Grant Ward (Ipswich Town) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Offside, Reading. Chris Gunter tries a through ball, but Lewis Grabban is caught offside.
Goal! Ipswich Town 2, Reading 2. Jordan Obita (Reading) left footed shot from outside the box to the bottom left corner following a corner.
Corner, Reading. Conceded by Christophe Berra.
Corner, Ipswich Town. Conceded by Garath McCleary.
Foul by Yann Kermorgant (Reading).
Emyr Huws (Ipswich Town) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Corner, Reading. Conceded by Steven Taylor.
Yann Kermorgant (Reading) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Toumani Diagouraga (Ipswich Town).
Attempt blocked. David McGoldrick (Ipswich Town) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Toumani Diagouraga.
Foul by Tyler Blackett (Reading).
Tom Lawrence (Ipswich Town) wins a free kick in the defensive half. | Jordan Obita's 25-yard strike rescued a point for Reading, who twice came from behind to draw at Ipswich. |
Summarize this article briefly. | It said most of the extra deaths would happen in patients having colorectal surgery, blood cancer chemotherapy and hip replacements.
UK experts said the study confirmed their fears that antibiotic resistance would affect routine surgery.
England's chief medical officer has called the issue a "ticking time bomb".
In this report, a team of scientists from a number of different American institutions estimated that as many as half of all bacteria that cause infections after surgery are resistant to antibiotics in the US.
They also estimated that one in four infections treated with antibiotics after chemotherapy treatment was now drug-resistant.
For the report, the researchers looked at what could happen to people having common operations and being treated for cancer with chemotherapy if antibiotic resistance increased by a third - in line with current trends.
They calculated that in the US there would be 120,000 more infections and 6,300 more deaths each year.
Lead study author Prof Ramanan Laxminarayan, director of the Centre for Disease Dynamics, Economics and Policy in Washington DC, said antibiotics were the bedrock of modern medicine but their reduced effectiveness was a "significant challenge".
He explained: "The danger is that antibiotic resistance is squeezing the value out of modern medicine."
He said antibiotic resistance was already killing newborns in the developing world and mostly elderly people in the developed world.
And as the elderly population increased, they would have more operations and be more at risk of infections, he said.
He urged public health experts to come up with "new strategies for the prevention and control of antibiotic resistance at national and international levels".
Prof Laura Piddock, director of Antibiotic Action and professor of microbiology at the University of Birmingham, has previously warned of the potential effects of antibiotic resistance on routine operations.
"It is good to see evidence from the US that supports these serious concerns that antibiotic resistance will impact upon many areas of medicine, including that it is undermining the treatment of cancer patients."
She said she hoped the report would be "a loud 'wake-up call' to pharmaceutical companies" to research and develop new treatment for bacterial infections.
"Without them, patients will be less likely to survive cancer and so unable to take advantage of new life-extending cancer therapies," she said.
However, in the UK at present, there are no major signs of antibiotics failing to control infections after routine surgery.
In fact, data shows that UK infection rates are falling slightly, according to a Public Health England report.
But Prof Nigel Brown, President of the Microbiology Society, said the study was relevant to the UK.
"Antibiotic resistance is a global problem and it is likely that routine surgery such as hip replacement and elective caesarean sections will become much rarer in the UK, unless steps are taken to prevent its spread."
BBC iWonder - Human vs superbug: Too late to turn the tide? | More than 6,000 deaths a year could be caused by a 30% fall in the effectiveness of antibiotics in the US, a report in The Lancet suggests. |
What is the brief summary of the provided content? | Customer services and sales jobs will be based at Merthyr Tydfil as well as Darlington and North Tyneside.
A total of 15 apprenticeships are also being offered in south Wales in a link up with College Merthyr Tydfil.
Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney MP Dai Havard said the decision was a "vote of confidence" in the local community.
The Labour MP added: "EE knows that Merthyr Tydfil is a place of opportunity and I am pleased to work with them to build our digital economy."
EE, owner of Orange and T-Mobile, provides mobile and broadband services and has over 15,000 employees and 27m customers.
It was also the first to offer a 4G network in the UK which provided increased broadband speed.
Assembly member Huw Lewis praised the company's commitment to create the 15 new apprenticeships in November on top of 25 due to start soon.
"I was pleased to visit the EE customer centre here in Merthyr Tydfil recently and to meet with 12 of the new apprentices who were all incredibly enthusiastic about working for the company," he said.
"Today's announcement of additional jobs is a welcome boost for Merthyr Tydfil and a sign of the confidence EE rightly has in its Merthyr workforce."
Recruitment starts this month.
Dr Kath Ringwald, from the business school at the University of South Wales, told BBC Radio Wales an influx of 200 jobs was always extremely welcome, especially in an area like Merthyr Tydfil where there is a high level of unemployment.
She said call centres make a significant contribution to the Welsh economy.
"The significance of the apprenticeships is that it signifies that these are jobs that are going to endure and go on in the longer term and will offer some good training and security in the longer term," she said.
Francoise Clemes, EE's chief of customer service, said the town was already home to one of its customer centres and would be good news for local job-seekers.
"As well as providing a much-needed jobs boost for an area which has been badly hit by the downturn, the increase in employees at our customer centres reinforces our commitment to providing the best service possible to all EE customers," she said. | Up to 200 jobs are being created by mobile phone company EE at its call centre in south Wales with another 100 in north east England. |
Summarize the content of the document below. | Alice Nutter was one of the Pendle witches, a group of women tried for murder by witchcraft in 1612.
Her statue will sit in Roughlee, where she lived before being taken to Lancaster Castle for trial.
Parish councillor James Starkie said the work would "raise awareness of the true story of the witches".
The statue, which will be placed on Blacko Bar Road on ground donated by a descendant of Ms Nutter, is yet to be designed and the parish council has asked interested artists to get in touch.
Strict guidelines have been set about what any sculptor should consider when designing it, including an insistence that the artwork "needs to celebrate a resident who was unfairly treated" and "should represent 1612".
Mr Starkie said the piece, which must also include somewhere for people to sit, was "to commemorate the leaving of Roughlee village by a gentlewoman".
He said it was a chance to "move on" from her image as a witch.
"Alice was slightly different [from the other women] - it was a case of her being in the wrong place at the wrong time," he said.
The Pendle Trials were some of the most famous witch trials in English history and records show that Alice was perceived as different from the others being judged.
She was wealthier than the rest and barely spoke at her trial, offering no plea or defence against the accusation of murdering Henry Mitton by witchcraft.
She was found guilty and executed at Lancaster Castle on 20 August, 1612, for having bewitched to death "by devilish practices and hellish means".
The statue of Alice Nutter is expected to be completed by April 2012 to be installed ahead of the 400th anniversary of her execution.
There was little for the supporters to get excited about in the first period. Will Hatfield found space but shot wide for the visitors, and Craig Braham-Barrett fired just over for Braintree.
Jerome Okimo helped to break the deadlock early in the second half, coming up from the back to head in a set-piece, getting the Braintree faithful dreaming of salvation in two weeks' time.
Michael Cheek added a second from close range on 71 minutes to put matters beyond Adam Lockwood's men.
Match report supplied by the Press Association.
Match ends, Braintree Town 2, Guiseley 0.
Second Half ends, Braintree Town 2, Guiseley 0.
Substitution, Braintree Town. Kyron Farrell replaces Sam Corne.
Substitution, Guiseley. Alex Purver replaces Simon Walton.
Substitution, Guiseley. Michael Rankine replaces Adam Boyes.
Goal! Braintree Town 2, Guiseley 0. Michael Cheek (Braintree Town).
Substitution, Braintree Town. Kristopher Twardek replaces Craig Braham-Barrett.
Substitution, Guiseley. Derek Asamoah replaces Jordan Preston.
Goal! Braintree Town 1, Guiseley 0. Jerome Okimo (Braintree Town).
Second Half begins Braintree Town 0, Guiseley 0.
First Half ends, Braintree Town 0, Guiseley 0.
First Half begins.
Lineups are announced and players are warming up. | A statue of a Lancashire woman accused of being a witch is to be placed in her former village to commemorate the 400th anniversary of her death.
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Braintree kept Guiseley firmly entrenched in the survival struggle with a 2-0 win at Cressing Road, considerably enhancing their own prospects of staying in the National League. |
What is the summary of the following document? | Abbott, who bowled the ball that led to the death of Phillip Hughes in 2014, took 5-16 as the hosts posted 152-9.
The 24-year-old paceman's haul bettered Nathan Lyon's 5-23 in 2015.
However, the Sixers were subsequently bowled out for 104 - England's Sam Billings top-scoring with 40.
Abbott's figures are second on the Bash's all-time list, behind Sri Lankan Lasith Malinga's 6-7 for Melbourne Stars in 2012.
Big Bash - Australia's Twenty20 franchise competition - is in its sixth year.
Other English representatives include Stuart Broad, Chris Jordan, Eoin Morgan, Jason Roy and Kevin Pietersen. | Sean Abbott returned the best bowling figures by an Australian in Big Bash history, but it was not enough to prevent Sydney Sixers sliding to a 48-run defeat against Adelaide Strikers. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | Members of the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) and technical union Bectu voted in favour of the walkouts.
The latest industrial action follows a one-day strike by NUJ members on 18 February which affected programmes.
Another strike by union members in Scotland that had been due to take place on Friday and Monday has now been called off.
The BBC is cutting about 2,000 jobs over five years as part of its Delivering Quality First programme.
The NUJ vote was 61% in favour of stoppages, while backing among Bectu members was 56%.
Both unions were also in favour of action short of a strike, with 80% of NUJ members and 81% of Bectu's supporting it.
"BBC staff have today rejected management's attempts to create a modern-day BBC sweatshop," said Bectu leader Gerry Morrissey.
"Current demands on staff are unacceptable and with more job cuts planned it is essential that the BBC takes stock of the impact of DQF on its workforce."
Those sentiments were echoed by Michelle Stanistreet, general secretary of the NUJ, who accused the BBC of deciding "not to properly engage" with its members' concerns.
NUJ members staged a 24-hour walkout on 18 February that changed some schedules and affected several programmes, including BBC Breakfast and Radio 4's Today.
Next week's strike, which is over job cuts, workload and claims of harassment, has the potential to affect Easter bank holiday schedules.
In a statement, a BBC spokesperson said the corporation had had "constructive meetings" with the unions in recent weeks but said its position on compulsory redundancies remained unchanged.
"We must progress with those given the significant savings we have to make and strike action simply will not change this," the spokesperson continued.
"We continue to work extremely hard to redeploy staff and have already succeeded in redeploying nearly double the number of people that have been made redundant.
"We hope with such a low turn-out and relatively small numbers voting for a strike that the unions will reconsider taking industrial action."
Bectu told the BBC News website that 39% of the 3,800 BBC Bectu members affected by DQF had voted in the ballot. The NUJ declined to provide a similar breakdown.
The 22-year-old was part of the Hornets' youth set-up before signing a five-year contract in 2012.
He spent time on loan at Wigan Athletic last season, scoring once in eight appearances in all competitions.
The former Republic of Ireland Under-21 international made a total of 50 league starts for Watford.
Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page. | BBC staff are to stage a 12-hour strike from 12 noon on Thursday, 28 March in a continuing row over job cuts.
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League One club Swindon Town have signed Watford midfielder Sean Murray on a free transfer on a one-year deal, with the option of a further year. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | The regulator ordered telecoms operators to block mobile access to certain sites, reports AFP.
The government has banned protests, deployed the army and shut down the main independent radio station.
There have been days of protests over President Pierre Nkurunziza's decision to stand for re-election in June.
Social media messaging services have been used to coordinate the protests which are the biggest in Burundi since the civil war ended in 2005.
African Public Radio, known as "voice of the voiceless", is one of three radio stations whose live broadcasts have been stopped. The government said the radio station was disrupting the peace.
Mr Nkurunziza, a former rebel leader, has warned that anyone who wants to create problems for the governing party would find himself "in trouble".
At least three people were killed on Sunday as police dispersed crowds with live ammunition.
Under the constitution, presidents can only be elected to two terms in office but Mr Nkurunziza's allies say his first term does not count as he was appointed by parliament.
Mr Nkurunziza has been in power since 2005, when a 12-year civil war officially ended.
More than 300,000 people died in the conflict between the minority Tutsi-dominated army and mainly Hutu rebel groups, such as Mr Nkurunziza's CNDD-FDD.
The United States has condemned the president's bid for a third term saying in a press statement that the country is "losing an historic opportunity to strengthen its democracy". | Messaging services including Facebook, Whatsapp, Twitter and Tango have been cut off in Burundi amid protests over the president seeking a third term. |
Provide a concise overview of the following information. | The International pits the best players of a game called Dota 2, created by developer Valve, against each other.
NewBee defeated rival Chinese team Vici Gaming to win the title.
The total prize money was $10.9m, with the runners-up getting $1.4m, and $4.5m distributed among the other 19 teams taking part in the tournament, which began on 18 July in Seattle.
Valve donated $1.6m of the prize money, but the rest was raised by some of the millions of people who regularly play the game.
Dota 2 is as a multiplayer online battle arena game for the PC.
Each player assumes the role of one of 107 different heroes and must work together to defend their own and destroy their rival's "ancient" - an artefact sitting in a fortress sited in one corner of the game map.
Video streams of the matches have been shared online, and Valve even ran a "newcomer" series to educate people new to the game.
In addition, some bars, pubs and gaming centres around the world held parties for people keen to see the finals in a crowd.
The final was also shown on one of the ESPN channels.
"Valve have put an awful lot of thought into packing digital sports up as actual things for people to actually follow and watch and enjoy," wrote Alice O'Connor in a blogpost on the Rock, Paper Shotgun website.
Michael O'Dell, manager of the UK's Team Dignitas, said: "This year has certainly been the banner year for e-sports, with massive tournaments in Dota, League of Legends and CS:GO (Counter-Strike: Global Offensive). And there are more to come. The scene is very vibrant right now." | Chinese team NewBee has taken home $5m (£2.9m) after winning the world's most lucrative gaming contest. |
Please summarize the passage below. | He has been charged with being concerned in the supply of a class A controlled drug and possession of a class B controlled drug.
The woman, who was in her 30s, died at a house in Orior Park in Bessbrook.
Police were called to Princess Way at around 03:00 GMT on Sunday. A man, 34, was taken to Morriston Hospital but later died.
No weapons were used during the incident, but his death is being treated as suspicious.
The 23-year-old arrested man is in custody at Swansea police station.
The area remains cordoned off while police examine the scene.
The man's family have been informed and are being supported by specially-trained officers. | A man has been charged with drug offences relating to the sudden death of a woman in County Armagh on Tuesday.
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A man has been arrested on suspicion of murder following the death of a second man after an incident in Swansea city centre. |
What is the summary of the given information? | Crowds gathered in Parliament Square, in central London, for Thursday's Million Mask March, many wearing the "Guido" masks of the Anonymous group.
Mounted officers formed a barrier against a densely packed crowd on The Mall while, away from the main rally, a police car was set on fire.
At least 50 arrests were made, mainly for public order offences.
Earlier, London's Met Police said three men - aged 38, 50 and 55 - had been arrested in Trafalgar Square on suspicion of being in possession of offensive weapons.
Police say they found knives, smoke and paint grenades, gas canisters and lock picks.
The Met said three officers sustained injuries while policing the march, but they were not life-threatening. Two people were arrested for assaulting a police officer.
One officer, who was riding a police horse, suffered a fractured wrist. Six police horses were injured during the clashes, says Scotland Yard.
Some protesters were treated for injuries and were given first aid at the scene.
The Million Mask March was organised by Anonymous to hit back at austerity measures and perceived inequality brought about by the government.
The protest had started in Trafalgar Square.
Eyewitnesses described a sudden surge of activity about half an hour into the event, as people at the front of the protest broke away and ran towards the Churchill War Rooms.
Crowds gathered outside Buckingham Palace, a distance away from the agreed route.
Some tried to enter Great George Street - a short distance from Conservative Party headquarters - which had been closed off.
Bottles were thrown over the barriers towards officers and fireworks and flares were set off.
Police said the car that was set alight was parked in a side street and was unattended when it was attacked.
"This was an isolated incident with a small number of people involved, away from the main protests," the Met said in a statement.
One activist, who gave her name as Lola, said she had travelled from Hull to the capital to speak up for others.
"There are people who aren't represented; they should be here," she said.
"The media twist it. We are peaceful, we are doing this in a peaceful manner, but the media focus on the 1% who cause trouble."
After years of restoration work and with help from volunteers, Chapel Bay Fort and Museum at Angle officially opened on Friday.
Completed in 1891, the coast artillery fort is the earliest known fort in the world constructed in concrete.
Built in the 19th Century, it the last of 12 such forts built to defend the Milford Haven Waterway.
Visitors to the fort will be able to view the biggest gun and shell in Wales; a 25-pounder gun howitzer, a 5.5 inch gun and a 10 inch, 18 ton rifled muzzle loading gun. | Three police officers have been injured and treated in hospital after clashes with anti-capitalist protesters.
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A Pembrokeshire Victorian fort and its accompanying museum has opened its doors to the public for the first time. |
Can you summarize this content? | In November, the Sun alleged an attack took place in May at a Eurovision results party in Ben Howlett's constituency.
The Conservative MP strenuously denied the claim and voluntarily attended a police station to speak to detectives.
Mr Howlett's office said it "understood the matter is now closed".
A CPS spokesman said: "In November 2016, the CPS received a full file from Avon and Somerset Police relating to an allegation of sexual assault in Bath.
"This file has now been considered by a specialist lawyer who has concluded that it does not meet the evidential threshold, and no charge has been authorised." | No action will be taken against a Bath MP over sexual assault allegations, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) has said. |
Write a summary of this document. | He needs to do just that. Otherwise this family affair could have grave consequences indeed on his chances to be the next French president.
"Judicial time is not political time is not media time," says BFMTV's political commentator Laurent Neumann.
"The prosecutors may take weeks examining the allegations. [Mr] Fillon needs to squash them now," he added.
According to Mr Fillon's lawyers, the documents currently being fast-tracked to the prosecutors' office will demolish the central charge that for more than eight years Penelope Fillon was paid for non-existent work as his parliamentary assistant.
But the problem for Mr Fillon is that even if he provides proof that his wife did indeed earn her 500,000 euros (£430,000; $534,000), that does not mean the end of the affair.
All may have been done strictly according to the law - and indeed to common parliamentary practice - but the image many voters will retain is of yet another senior politician feeding from the public trough.
Add in the second allegation carried by Le Canard Enchaine - that Mrs Fillon was paid 100,000 euros for a sinecure publishing job provided by a billionaire friend of her husband's - and you can see why right now Republican Party eyes are distinctly unsmiling.
Thursday's French media were full of what is now inevitably being called Penelope-gate - with Mr Fillon's enemies relishing what they hope will be an embarrassing fall from grace.
For the left-leaning French newspaper Liberation, Mr Fillon has "built his political personality around an image of rigour, sobriety, financial sacrifice and public morality.
"A bit like the sinning preacher, Francois Fillon now has to his explain his contradictions to the faithful. Three months from a decisive election, it is a perilous exercise."
Le Monde recalls that successive presidential elections in the past have been rocked by "boules puantes" (stink bombs) - allegations of corruption stored up by political enemies and then released at the most damaging moment.
The paper says it is "anything but evident" that Mrs Fillon did the work that earned her the large salary. In its original report, Le Canard Enchaine quoted another of Mr Fillon's assistants as saying: "I never worked with her. For me she was the minister's wife."
But it is not just Mr Fillon's image as a man of probity that is in danger, says Le Monde.
There is also the fact that in his economic message he is urging the French to tighten belts and prepare for tough times. In the nation's current mood, there is little tolerance for politicians who come across as hypocrites.
Less has been made of the second part of Le Canard Enchaine's story - the 100,000 euros allegedly paid to Mrs Fillon for work as literary adviser on La Revue Des Deux Mondes.
The highbrow magazine is owned by the billionaire businessman and patron of the arts Marc Ladreit de Lacharriere, who is also a friend of Mr Fillon.
According to Le Canard Enchaine, the only work Mrs Fillon produced between May 2012 and December 2013 consisted of two 400-word book reviews.
And it quotes the then-director of the magazine, Michel Crepu, as saying: "I am stupefied. I have never met Penelope Fillon and I never saw her in our office."
Less has been made of the allegation, because there is no public money involved. But the potential damage is no less real.
Mr Fillon's supporters are furious that the allegations have been made public just now - a sign, they are sure, that the affair is politically orchestrated.
They are right: the timing is almost certainly deliberate, and Mr Fillon's enemies may indeed be responsible.
But that in itself is not an answer. | Francois Fillon has promised to hit back fast with the facts that show his British wife Penelope is above suspicion, after prosecutors launched a preliminary investigation into claims that she received public money improperly. |
Can you summarize the given article? | Woods, 40, has not played competitively since August and has had two operations in an attempt to cure the problem.
The American insists he is "making progress" in his recovery but has put no timescale on his return to action.
"I've decided it's prudent to miss this year's Masters," read a statement. "I've been hitting balls and training daily, but I'm not physically ready."
Former world number one Woods also pulled out of the tournament in 2014 with a back problem and finished in a tie for 17th last year.
"I've said all along that this time I need to be cautious and do what's best for my long-term health and career," he added. "Unfortunately, playing Augusta next week wouldn't be the right decision.
"I'm absolutely making progress, and I'm really happy with how far I've come, but I still have no timetable to return."
The 14-time major winner, who has slipped to 472nd in the world rankings, will attend the Champions Dinner at Augusta National on Tuesday. | Four-time champion Tiger Woods will not take part in next week's Masters because of a back injury. |
Summarize the following excerpt. | Kyle Coetzer's team, who were beaten by Hong Kong on Sunday, were bowled out for 173 in Dubai, despite Richie Berrington's half-century.
Imran Haider and Zahoor Khan each took three wickets for UAE.
A 62-run stand between Muhammad Usman and Adnan Mufti guided the hosts home with more than eight overs to spare.
UAE take on Hong Kong on Thursday to decide who wins the series.
The prince will travel to Christchurch, New Zealand, where more than 160 people died in an earthquake last month.
He will also go to Greymouth, near the site of the Pike River mine disaster in New Zealand in which 29 people died.
William will then travel to Australia, where he will visit areas hit by flooding in Queensland and Victoria.
The prince will visit the two countries on behalf of the Queen following invitations from the prime ministers of New Zealand and Australia
He will not be accompanied by his fiancee Kate Middleton on the trip which takes place from 17-21 March.
The prince will meet those affected by the recent disasters, and members of the emergency and other support services.
William will attend a national memorial service in Christchurch as well as carrying out other engagements in the area.
In Australia, he will go to several locations in Queensland over two days followed by a visit to north-west Victoria.
A St James's Palace spokesman said: "The prince's visit comes after an invitation from the prime ministers of New Zealand and Australia.
"William will be travelling on behalf of the Queen and the wider Royal Family."
The spokesman added: "The Royal Family have been watching the natural disasters with the same shock and sadness as everyone else.
"They wanted to show their solidarity with the people of New Zealand and Australia, and the decision was taken with the prime ministers' offices and the royal household that Prince William should attend and visit the countries."
The magnitude 6.3 earthquake struck the city of Christchurch on New Zealand's South Island on 22 February this year.
Also on the South Island, 29 miners became trapped by a gas explosion at the Pike River coal mine in Atarau on 19 November last year.
Parts of Australia were affected torrential rains starting in November last year, forcing rivers to burst their banks.
Prince William was last in New Zealand in January 2010, when he represented the Queen in Auckland and Wellington.
He made a private visit to Sydney and Melbourne in Australia the same month. He first visited Australia as a baby on his parents' tour in 1983.
Firefighters believe the fire started accidentally just before 24:00 GMT in the spare bedroom of her semi-detached bungalow at Iniscarn Court.
Gemma McDaid became aware there was something wrong when her lights flickered in the kitchen as the fire was affecting the electrics.
A man who was passing by helped her to safety.
"He saved my life and I wouldn't be here today but only for him", she said.
"I must have turned on my electric fire and there must have been something near it.
"It took me a while to realise that the fire was coming from my house."
Fire officer David Nicholl said that the house did not have a working smoke alarm.
"I cannot stress enough the need for everyone to have a working smoke alarm," he said.
"It gives you an early warning which can save lives." | Scotland lost their second successive match in the United Arab Emirates Tri-Nation Series, this time by four wickets against the hosts.
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Prince William will visit New Zealand and Australia next week to tour areas devastated by recent natural disasters, St James's Palace has said.
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A woman in her 70s has said she is lucky to be alive after a fire at her home on Monday night in Londonderry. |
Summarize the information given below. | The Save Concorde Group (SCG) said it met the firm on Tuesday to present its plan which would cost £1.5m.
Another bid by the Concorde Trust for £2.9m of lottery funding towards a £9m museum has been rejected.
The jet was on display in Filton until late 2010 but was closed by Airbus, which has been loaned the jet, so the firm could carry out maintenance.
The firm has spent £1.4m repairing Concorde with water leaks a particular problem because it has been left on an open runway since 2003.
Ben Lord from SCG said: "It is vital that not only do we preserve Concorde, but educate our future generations what Concorde symbolises."
Mr Lord added his group has become "increasingly concerned" with the Concorde Trust and how they had handled the proposed move to a new museum.
"Following the controversial closure of the temporary museum, it was revealed that the trust were seeking to develop a £9m heritage centre.
"In our opinion [it] was incredibly over exaggerated in terms of cost, and would take an unreasonable amount of time to become open."
A spokesman for the Concorde Trust said it was important that all interested parties worked together to make the Concorde museum a reality.
"The Concorde Trust is happy to work with all stakeholders and to consider any ideas and plans."
The spokesman added that plans must be financially viable and help to conserve the region's aviation heritage.
Mr Lord from SCG said the discussions with BA "went very very well" and had taken the plans away for discussion with Airbus who are looking after the jet at its Filton base.
He said his group's plans were "not quite as glossy" as that of Concorde Trust and would see the jet brought under a hangar at a site earmarked for the museum at Cribbs Causeway.
He said £840,000 of funding from Airbus, with £300,000 already saved for the museum would be supplemented with funding from commercial sources.
The plane - called Concorde 216 or Alpha Foxtrot - was the last of the fleet to fly when Concorde was withdrawn from service by British Airways in 2003 due to increased running costs.
The Concorde Trust plans for the museum at Cribbs Causeway were first submitted in 2007 but building work has never started because of a lack of funding.
The museum was given a £840,000 cash boost by Airbus last week but has almost £8m still to raise.
The jet has been at Filton since 2003 and was closed to the public in October 2010 for maintenance.
Filton Airfield, where the jet is based, is to close from the end of 2012, meaning a new home will soon have to be found for the jet. | Alternative plans for a Concorde museum in Bristol have been submitted to British Airways. |
Provide a summary of the section below. | The French student was last seen in Edinburgh College's Milton Road Campus at about 22:30 on 24 October, when he "suddenly" left a group of friends.
His body was recovered from the loch on 2 December after searches in which members of Mr Maury's family took part.
Police Scotland said a report had been sent to the procurator fiscal.
Ch Insp Kevin McLean said: "Our thoughts are with the family of Antoine, whose courage and dignity throughout this harrowing time has been unparalleled.
"I would like to thank those members of the public and media who assisted in our search, their support was essential.
"We are supporting Antoine's family through an appointed family liaison officer. We will continue to work with them and offer assistance throughout this difficult time."
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9 May 2013 Last updated at 06:35 BST
The sharks were transported more than 200 miles from Weymouth to their new home in Manchester.
It involved a year of planning and an overnight drive using special vehicles with tanks.
Aquarium staff are hoping to get the sharks to breed, to help boost declining numbers of the species.
Black tipped reef sharks are naturally found in shallow waters in the Indian and Pacific Oceans.
Their fins are black at the ends, which gives them their name! | Police have confirmed the body of a man found in Duddingston Loch in Edinburgh was that of missing student Antoine Maury.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Six black tipped reef sharks have been moved to a new aquarium - and it was no easy task! |
Give a short summary of the provided document. | The Borg El Arab Stadium will host the match on Sunday 13 November.
Restrictions on fans at matches in Egypt have been in place since 2012, when 72 Al Ahly fans died in violence at a match in Port Said.
The EFA will also allow 40,000 fans to watch the Champions League final second leg also in Alexandria.
Zamalek will host that match against South African side Mamelodi Sundowns on Sunday 23 October.
The first leg ended in a 3-0 defeat for the Egyptian side.
Egypt fared better in their opening World Cup qualifier, beating DR Congo 2-1 to move into an early two-point lead in Group E.
Only the group winners will earn a place at the tournament in Russia. | The Egyptian Football Association has announced it will allow 50,000 fans to attend Egypt's 2018 World Cup qualifier against Ghana in Alexandria. |
Can you write a brief summary of this passage? | It tells the true story of the American prisoners of war (PoWs) captured by the North Vietnamese. For years the imprisoned US servicemen were mentally and physically tortured.
Everett Alvarez, a former US Navy pilot who was held captive for eight and half years, was one of the film's advisers.
Meeting him today, it's hard to equate the agonising scenes in the movie with the impeccably dressed 76-year-old.
After retiring from the navy in 1980, Mr Alvarez went on to enjoy a high-profile government career.
And for the past 26 years he has owned and run two successful IT and management consultancy businesses, including his current company, Alvarez & Associates.
But Mr Alvarez insists that his experience of being a PoW, horrific though it was, taught him invaluable lessons that he has applied to his life and work.
"It's about character," he says. "Character is the all-encompassing description of a person's moral sense of ethics, of responsibility, of commitment, of loyalty. It's a sense of personal integrity and honour.
"That's what's helped me, and I think it's also led to the personality of the company [Alvarez & Associates]."
In 1964, Mr Alvarez, the grandson of Mexican immigrants, was a 26-year-old Navy pilot based on the USS Constellation aircraft carrier in the South China Sea.
On 5 August he was part of a bombing mission over North Vietnam sent in retaliation after a reported North Vietnamese attack a day earlier on two US destroyers.
The alleged attack (whether it actually took place was subsequently questioned) was known as the Gulf of Tonkin incident, and marked the start of a significant escalation of US military action in the Vietnam War.
Mr Alvarez's plane was hit and he ejected safely, only to be captured and taken to Hoa Lo Prison in North Vietnam's capital Hanoi, which American PoWs went on to sarcastically nickname the Hanoi Hilton, after the international hotel chain.
"Getting accustomed to captivity was difficult because I didn't know what to do," says Mr Alvarez, who was the prison's first US inmate. "The question was: how should I conduct myself?"
He decided on a course of resistance, refusing to aid the enemy even when their demands seemed relatively innocuous.
That resolve brought Mr Alvarez several times to the point of physical and mental breakdown, but he survived thanks to the mutual support of the other prisoners who communicated with each other by tapping on the prison walls.
"We had a philosophy that you didn't ever let your fellows down," he says. "If they couldn't take care of themselves you took care of them because you knew darned well they would do the same.
"And we had a goal. We were determined to come home with our personal integrity, our reputation, and with our honour."
In 1973 Mr Alvarez and all other PoWs were released after the US agreed to withdraw its forces from South Vietnam.
Mr Alvarez was awarded several military medals, and upon his return to the US became an overnight celebrity, which helped him form important political contacts.
When he retired from the Navy in 1980 - after reaching the rank of commander - he was asked to join the administration of then-US President, Ronald Reagan.
Still keen to serve his country, Mr Alvarez accepted the job of deputy director of the US Peace Corps, and then as deputy administrator of the Veterans Administration, which provides healthcare to former military personnel.
For five years he also took night classes to obtain a law degree.
"I came out of that prisoner of war camp after eight and a half years wanting to catch up," says Mr Alvarez.
"My whole life since then has been pursuing those dreams that I thought about as I was sitting in those cells. I've never looked back, always looked forward."
In 1988 Mr Alvarez left the Reagan administration to launch his first business, a management consultancy in Virginia.
Drawing on his eight years with the government, and the knowledge he had built up of public contracts, he decided he had the expertise to launch a company to bid for and win work with government departments.
In setting up the firm Mr Alvarez was helped by a government aid programme for disabled veterans. The years of torture and malnourishment had left him with nerve damage, and arthritis linked to the broken bones and other injuries he suffered.
In 2003 he sold this first business and a year later launched Alvarez & Associates.
In addition to management consultancy work the company manages IT contracts for the US government, and employs 28 people, many of whom, like Mr Alvarez himself, are military veterans.
It recorded $180m (£110m) in revenues last year, and Mr Alvarez says it is doing "comfortably."
Throughout his business career Mr Alvarez has drawn on his experience of government contracts. His advice to young entrepreneurs is to equally discover their own niche or area of expertise and to fully embrace it.
"You must also have a real interest in the thing you want to build your business on - understand your passion and be willing to take a risk," he says.
"If you don't truly believe in yourself and in the product, don't go for it. You have to be passionate about what it is you want to do."
In spite of the high-profile government positions, and the respect he's earned for surviving his ordeal (only one other American was held for longer), Mr Alvarez says he doesn't take success for granted.
"I still have to prove myself, so they [the customers] trust we can do a good job," he says. "It's still dependent on personal relationships.
"No matter how technical business becomes, depending on automation and technology, it still takes personal relationships to be successful. | The 1987 Vietnam War movie The Hanoi Hilton can be gruelling to watch. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | And lobbying on an eye-watering range of subjects: historic buildings, herbal medicine, the albatross, healthy food and sustainable fishing.
It's a wonder the heir to the throne has time to sleep.
Royal officials insist he has done nothing inappropriate and at no stage, in any of the correspondence, did he stray into party political matters.
These letters have resonance and relevance because of his proximity to the throne.
Charles's challenge is that their content will not generate a unified response to the activities of a prince who'll one day occupy the unifying role of head of state.
His critics will accuse him of secret meddling.
His supporters insist he cares about the issues he raises and he is only doing his duty. | The publication of Prince Charles's secret letters offers the briefest of glimpses of Charles, the lobbying prince. |
Provide a concise overview of the following information. | An ankle injury forced Townsend, 23, to miss the World Cup but he played the first 45 minutes of the 3-3 draw.
Penalties from Roberto Soldado and Iago Falque helped Spurs come from behind twice in the second half.
New boss Pochettino moved to White Hart Lane from Southampton in May.
Townsend was ruled out for up to 10 weeks when he damaged ankle ligaments against Stoke City on 30 April.
He completed 45 minutes against the leaders of Major League Soccer's Western Conference before being replaced by Erik Lamela.
Midfielder Gylfi Sigurdsson, linked with a return to former club Swansea City that could see full-back Ben Davies, 21, move to Spurs, was initially named in the starting 11 but withdrawn before kick-off.
American goalkeeper Brad Friedel was one of three Spurs players, along with Ezekiel Fryers and Tom Carroll, to play the full 90 minutes in Seattle.
"We've been working extremely hard. Pre-season has been very demanding under the new boss and I think that showed," Friedel said. | Tottenham's England midfielder Andros Townsend returned from injury in a pre-season friendly against Seattle Sounders - Spurs' first outing under manager Mauricio Pochettino. |
Summarize the content provided below. | Of more than 1,500 Anglicans polled, 45% said same-sex marriage was right while 37% thought it was wrong.
The Yougov poll also indicates a large increase in support of same-sex marriage over the past three years.
The Church of England's official stance is that marriage can be only between a man and a woman.
Three years ago, a similar YouGov poll found 38% of Anglicans in support and 47% believing same-sex marriage to be wrong.
In the latest poll, support was highest among younger Anglicans, with at least half of those aged under 55 believing it was right and 72% of those aged 25-34 also in favour.
The lowest support rate was found in Anglican men aged over 55, with 24% backing same-sex marriage.
Support for same-sex marriage was higher among the general population, with 56% of the more than 6,000 British people surveyed backing it, compared with 27% of people who opposed it.
Jayne Ozanne, a gay evangelical Anglican and a member of General Synod - the Church of England's ruling body - commissioned the survey.
She said the figures showed the Church was "seriously out of step" with its members "and even more so with society at large".
"It is deeply worrying that the one group that appears less open to change than any other is Anglican men over the age of 55, who are the least likely to approve of same-sex marriage," she added.
"Unfortunately, this is exactly the profile of those in the senior positions of power and influence power within the Church."
A spokesman for the Church of England said it was holding "shared conversations" on the issue and would continue to do so at General Synod this summer.
Earlier this month, the Archbishop of Canterbury apologised for "hurt and pain" caused by the worldwide Anglican Church to the LGBT community.
The Most Reverend Justin Welby made the comments as he defended the decision to restrict a liberal US branch of the Church for allowing same-sex marriage. | More Anglicans in England support gay and lesbian couples marrying than oppose it, a poll has suggested for the first time. |
Summarize the content given in the passage. | The latest New Zealand government figures show that last month it had a net inflow of 100 Australian migrants.
New Zealanders traditionally flocked to Australia which had a booming economy and offered higher wages.
But Australia's mining-reliant economy has slowed while New Zealand's is still doing well.
Both countries have an agreement allowing their citizens to live and work freely in either state.
In the past, an estimated 40,000 New Zealanders would migrate to Australia every year, adding to the complex rivalry between the two countries.
"From the Kiwi point of view, Australia was the land of milk and honey, a rich big brother who would help set you up for life," wrote The Australian's associate editor Cameron Stewart in a piece last month titled Revenge of the Kiwis.
"[The New Zealanders] were dubbed Bondi Bludgers who either stole our jobs or sucked up our welfare."
The brain drain also worried New Zealand, which has been working to attract more skilled migrants.
However, in recent years the number of New Zealanders moving to Australia has steadily fallen.
It lost 1,900 of its people to Australia between April 2014 and April 2015 - the smallest net loss since 1992, reported Radio New Zealand.
One major reason appears to be a reversal in economic fortunes.
Australia is grappling with the end of a decade-long mining boom and a slowdown in China's demand for minerals.
In recent months Australia has seen some of its highest unemployment rates in the past decade, and some project that the rate will hit 7% by the end of the year.
In contrast New Zealand's economy has steadily grown. On Thursday its government said unemployment was due to fall to 4.5%, and the country is expected to have a budget surplus by the next financial year. | For the first time in 24 years more Australians have moved to New Zealand to live and work than the other way around. |
Summarize the information given below. | The Crown Office said new legislation would allow it to hold such a hearing for the first time.
The fatal accident inquiry will be held in the Lothian and Borders sheriffdom.
It will consider the deaths of Joy Robson at the Snowman Rally in 2013 and Iain Provan, Elizabeth Allan and Len Stern at the Jim Clark Rally in 2014.
A statement said the inquiry would examine the full circumstances surrounding the deaths and "help to avoid such incidents happening in the future".
The decision follows a change in legislation to allow for a single fatal accident inquiry to be held in relation to deaths in different parts of Scotland.
The Crown Office said the two events held "similar questions in relation to spectator safety at rallies" and added that the Lord Advocate considered that it was in the public interest that the issues be explored together.
It is working to identify an appropriate location and dates for the inquiry.
The Crown Office also confirmed there would be no criminal proceedings in relation to either event, though that "may be reconsidered should additional evidence come to light".
Ettrick, Roxburgh and Berwickshire MSP John Lamont said he hoped the move could pave the way for the Jim Clark Rally to be held once more.
The event has not been staged on closed public roads since the accident, and was cancelled this year due to low entries.
"I hope the fatal accident inquiry can be carried out as quickly as possible and that Scottish Borders Council, the police and the Crown Office will do all they can to facilitate the holding of the rally as soon as possible," said Mr Lamont.
"The Snowman Rally, which will also be considered by the FAI, has been allowed to continue and I hope the same flexibility can be applied to the Borders."
Organisers of the Jim Clark Rally and the Snowman Rally have declined to comment on the decision at this time.
However, Andrew Henderson, a partner with Thompsons Solicitors who represent the family of Ms Robson, said: "This announcement by the Crown Office has been welcomed by Joy's family who always felt that only a fatal accident inquiry could provide them with the answers about events that led to their mother's death.
"They were also greatly concerned that, unless lessons were learned through the FAI process, more families could be affected by tragic accidents at motorsport rallies.
"Sadly they were proved to be correct as the awful events at the Jim Clark Rally in 2014 have shown."
Mr Henderson said the family had always been motivated by the belief that rallying in Scotland could be made "safer for everyone" and the Crown Office decision to hold an inquiry was "a very important part of that process". | A joint fatal accident inquiry is to be held into the deaths of four people at the Snowman Rally in Inverness and Jim Clark Rally near Coldstream. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | Media playback is unsupported on your device
3 May 2015 Last updated at 11:48 BST
Lots of TV crews are there too, excited about the baby girl.
Leah's been there hearing what kids think of the royal baby... | Royal fans have been gathering outside Buckingham Palace following the news of the royal birth. |
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