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  • Little Boots aims to ’empower’ aspiring musicians at Bath Spa Uni

    Little Boots aims to ’empower’ aspiring musicians at Bath Spa Uni

    Bath Spa University Victoria Mason wearing a black dress with puffy sleeves that go down to her elbows, and gold stars on the collar. She is sitting in an orange leather chair with her elbow resting on a producer's desk. She appears to be in a recording studio, with lots of large technical equipment on wooden shelves filling the whole wall behind her, with buttons and dials and light-up switches. Victoria has light blonde hair which goes just down to her shoulders, with slightly darker routes and a short block fringe. She is wearing dark eyeliner and red nail varnish, and is smiling at the camera.Bath Spa University

    Victoria Mason joins the faculty alongside Emmy-award winning lecturers and songwriters for famous artists

    A professional singer and DJ has joined a university faculty to “empower” the next generation of musicians with her 20…

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  • Exciting new Sanzaar 5-year-calendar announced » allblacks.com

    All Blacks fans can look forward to an exciting new international schedule following the announcement of a new-look five-year calendar for the southern hemisphere’s SANZAAR partners.

    From 2026 to 2030 the All Blacks…

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  • Farmers near Newbury blame extreme weather for poor harvest

    Farmers near Newbury blame extreme weather for poor harvest

    BBC Dan stands in front of a pile of grain, he is wearing a grey zip hoodie with a grey polo shirt with yellow trim. He is wearing a light grey baseball cap. BBC

    Dan Willis says the impact of the weather on his crop has been “horrific”

    Farmers have blamed extreme wet weather followed by prolonged dry spells for a very poor harvest.

    Dan Willis, who runs a farm near Newbury, said the weather had been “horrific”.

    While George Brown, who also farms in West Berkshire, said he thought the conditions could lead to some farmers selling up.

    Provisional government figures for the 2025 English barley harvest showed a 14% decrease compared to last year, while spring barley had fallen 23%.

    Dan Willis runs the 1,500-acre Rookery Farm near Newbury. He said it had been a terrible harvest.

    “Probably the worst I’ve recorded in my career, over 40 years.

    “The weather has played its part horrifically. We had an extremely wet autumn, an extremely wet winter, followed by an extremely dry spring and summer.

    “It really did impact the yields. Something in the order of between 50 and 70% in places.

    But he believed farmers were very ingenious.

    “They will find ways around things. They’ve got great resolve, that’s why we still produce food,” he said.

    “If we didn’t have that resolve farming would be long gone in this country.

    “You draw deep that you have friends which are in a similar position that you can talk it through with and you’ve got your family, and you’ve got to lean upon them.”

    Government figures also revealed the majority of the main cereal crops saw lower yields this year compared to last year, with winter barley a notable exception.

    Despite there being a nearly 10% increase in land dedicated to growing oats, that crop also showed a decrease in yield this year.

    George Brown George stands with a lush green field behind him. He has a brown overcoat and a navy jumper. His hair is fair, as is his beardGeorge Brown

    George Brown thinks that some farmers will decide to sell their land

    George Brown runs Priors Farm near also Newbury. He said it stayed dry for so long “I guess you can be grateful that you got any sort of crop”.

    “Coming through June I think we were all very worried that we weren’t getting to a harvest at all at that point,” he said.

    George thinks some farmers are selling up because of the financial pressures they are facing.

    “If you look, there’s a huge amount of farm auctions, farm dispersal sales going on constantly at the moment,” he said.

    “There’s a lot of land for sale. People don’t have the confidence to carry on.

    “I absolutely want to keep farming, it gets to the point where if there’s no money in it then you’ve got to take a change of tack,” he said.

    Dr Paola Tosi, an associate professor in Crop Science at the University of Reading, thinks farmers may have to get used to these conditions.

    She said: “They’ve been extreme in the sense that they’re some of the worst we’ve seen on record, but I’m not sure we should use the term ‘unusual’.

    “Last season was also not good.

    “This could be the new usual. We need to come to terms with and tackle and make sure we prepared to fight it. To control it, to mitigate it.

    “At the University of Reading there is research going back to 1990 saying that this was going to happen and that crops were going to suffer,” she said.

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  • ‘I make people laugh but I couldn’t make myself smile’

    ‘I make people laugh but I couldn’t make myself smile’

    Catherine MooreBBC News NI

    Serena Terry images Ms Terry is sitting on a light blue chair. She is looking at the camera with a confused expression. She is wearing a black and white checked t-shirt, yellow tie and green waistcoat and trousers. She has long blonde hair. It is a PR promo image.Serena Terry images

    Serena Terry said she was in the “depths of depression”

    Serena Terry is well-known for her brutally honest stand-up comedy.

    But after selling out her previous two UK and Ireland tours and becoming the…

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    Reference…

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  • ‘Reality of dementia’ as fan forgets being England FC’s mascot

    ‘Reality of dementia’ as fan forgets being England FC’s mascot

    A football fan with dementia who led out the England men’s team at Wembley last week feels frustrated he can no longer remember the big moment.

    Adron, 81, was one of 22 people living with dementia who walked out with the England and Wales team…

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  • TV tonight: Niamh Algar and Tom Hollander’s big hide-and-seek thriller | Television

    TV tonight: Niamh Algar and Tom Hollander’s big hide-and-seek thriller | Television

    The Iris Affair

    9pm, Sky Atlantic

    There’s a propulsive opening to Niamh Algar and Tom Hollander’s cat-and-mouse thriller. Iris Nixon (Algar) is an elusive puzzle-solving genius who is invited by entrepreneur Cameron Beck (Hollander) to solve…

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  • Why does the Peebles Bronze Age hoard have a silvery ‘glow’?

    Why does the Peebles Bronze Age hoard have a silvery ‘glow’?

    Giancarlo RinaldiSouth Scotland reporter

    NMS A Bronze Age rattle which has been conserved and clean and has a silver colour to itNMS

    Initial conservation work has revealed the “exceptionally rare” silver-coloured objects

    Initial conservation work has revealed “exceptionally rare” silver-coloured items in a hoard of Bronze Age artefacts…

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  • ‘Unsafe’ Crosby Village GP practice shut down

    ‘Unsafe’ Crosby Village GP practice shut down

    A GP practice deemed “unsafe” and “no longer fit for purpose” has been permanently closed down by NHS bosses.

    Services were terminated at Crosby Village Surgery by the NHS Cheshire and Merseyside Integrated Care Board (ICB) after a period of temporary closure and following several reviews.

    Councillors at Bootle Town Hall were told the providers running the surgery, Crosby Village Surgery Ltd, had proposed to close it due to the building’s condition.

    Patients will continue to be seen at two other surgeries, Crossways Practice and Thornton Practice.

    Tracy Jeffes, interim place director at the ICB, told councillors the decision to close the surgery was “reasonable” due to the state of the building.

    Councillor David Roscoe suggested the decision was removing a facility from a “densely populated area” and questioned whether the right infractructure was in place to meet demand.

    He asked: “Is there any updates about getting some sort of health facility in that area, particularly located around Crosby village?”

    Ms Jeffes responded: “At present, there isn’t a particular scheme [planned] in Crosby. As we discussed previously, there has been a limited amount of investment or capital investment available.

    “I have to be honest, that has been a challenge – to improve the quality of the estate – but we’ve been trying our best to to bring investment in, to bring capital in where we can, and we’ll continue to refresh our estate plans.”

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  • Disabled Bristol hotel guest said he had to sleep in wheelchair

    Disabled Bristol hotel guest said he had to sleep in wheelchair

    Rohan Tarry Rohan Tarry is in his wheelchair trying to access a sink but he cannot get close enough to it to reach it. He is looking at the camera.  Behind him is a bath with a disabled seating platform over itRohan Tarry

    Rohan Tarry said he could not turn his wheelchair around in the bathroom

    A man said he had to sleep in his wheelchair in a hotel for three nights despite the room he booked being advertised as accessible.

    Wheelchair user Rohan Tarry,…

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