FT.com will bring you the crossword from Monday to Saturday as well as the Weekend FT Polymath.
Interactive crosswords on the FT app
Subscribers can now solve the FT’s Daily Cryptic, Polymath and FT Weekend crosswords on the iOS and Android apps
Probe follows reports Republican presidential candidate and running mate JD Vance were targeted
Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
FT.com will bring you the crossword from Monday to Saturday as well as the Weekend FT Polymath.
Subscribers can now solve the FT’s Daily Cryptic, Polymath and FT Weekend crosswords on the iOS and Android apps
The Clifton Suspension Bridge Trust are celebrating the prestigious award of Accredited Museum status by Arts Council England, a UK-wide benchmark recognising that the Trust meets the highest standards of management, education, care and access to their historic collections.
To celebrate the new Museum Accreditation status, the Trust is relaunching the Visitor Centre located on the Leigh Woods side of the bridge as the ‘Clifton Suspension Bridge Museum’ and unveiling a new brand.
Open to the public 7 days a week, the museum welcomes tens of thousands of visitors each year. Inside, visitors can discover objects from the museum collections and learn how the bridge was constructed and is maintained today. Free and ticketed tours run throughout the year, in addition to children’s activities for families and school groups.
The Museum Accreditation application process took approximately three years, during which time the Trust’s Archivist worked to ensure important documents, drawings, photographs and objects were properly catalogued, preserved and made accessible to the public. Many of the items can already be viewed online, with more exciting projects to follow before Christmas.
Bridge Master Trish Johnson said, “We are thrilled to announce Museum Accreditation for our heritage site. This award represents our commitment to preserving the rich heritage of our bridge. Ultimately, we aim to continue sharing captivating stories for present and future generations.”
Museum Archivist Dr Hannah Little added, “We are really pleased to achieve Museum Accreditation. While Clifton Suspension Bridge is familiar to many, our museum and its collections are less well known – these tell us how the bridge was seen, built and used in the past, enabling people to see Bristol’s famous landmark in new and different ways. It is important to preserve and share these objects and stories for the benefit of the public.”
FT Crossword: Number 17,878
COSTCO is selling a “fantastic” £21 gadget that will keep you warm throughout the winter – and is even cheaper than the Aldi version.
And, the simple, budget-friendly item could even save you money on your heating bills.
The Berkshire Life Heated Throw, a cosy electric blanket, is on sale on the Hot UK Deals website for a modest £21.58.
On the Costco website, it is listed for a reasonable £23.98.
Electric blankets work by having electrical wires embedded in the fabric.
The Costco version is made from faux fur, with a velvety underside, designed to keep you extra warm in the winter months.
It has four heat settings and a four-hour shut off setting to mitigate overheating or fire risks.
It is available in brown, grey and dark teal colours and is even machine washable.
The comforting throw is even cheaper than Aldi’s version, which retails for £29.99.
This Ambiano Heated Throw, which has nine settings, comes in a snowy white, cool grey, and toasty charcoal.
It is also cheaper’s than Asda‘s £30 electric teddy fleece.
However, shoppers looking to cut costs even further could opt for an £18.99 version on Amazon.
On the other end of the spectrum, Lakeland offers an £84.99 electric blanket, with The White Company version coming in at £150.
With heating costs being a hot topic of conversation this year, these blankets could be a solution to keeping those bills down.
Many homes are set to be subjected a detrimental change in their energy bill as the cold snap approaches, with some set to rise by £149 each year.
Electric blankets generally run at only a few pence per hour, while opting for cooler settings can further reduce costs.
SUN Savers Editor Lana Clements explains how to find a cut-price item and bag a bargain…
Sign up to loyalty schemes of the brands that you regularly shop with.
Big names regularly offer discounts or special lower prices for members, among other perks.
Sales are when you can pick up a real steal.
Retailers usually have periodic promotions that tie into payday at the end of the month or Bank Holiday weekends, so keep a lookout and shop when these deals are on.
Sign up to mailing lists and you’ll also be first to know of special offers. It can be worth following retailers on social media too.
When buying online, always do a search for money off codes or vouchers that you can use vouchercodes.co.uk and myvouchercodes.co.uk are just two sites that round up promotions by retailer.
Scanner apps are useful to have on your phone. Trolley.co.uk app has a scanner that you can use to compare prices on branded items when out shopping.
Bargain hunters can also use B&M’s scanner in the app to find discounts in-store before staff have marked them out.
And always check if you can get cashback before paying which in effect means you’ll get some of your money back or a discount on the item.
Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
UK chancellor Rachel Reeves has announced plans to raise rents for social housing by more than inflation over the next five or 10 years while also providing an immediate £500mn cash injection for housing associations and councils to boost affordable home building.
Reeves intends to introduce a formula in next week’s Budget that will increase annual rents in England by the consumer price index measure of inflation — currently 1.7 per cent — plus an additional 1 per cent.
The chancellor will issue a consultation in Wednesday’s fiscal setpiece looking at introducing this as a long-term settlement. The Treasury said it would be looking at a five-year CPI+1 deal, but added: “The consultation will also seek views on other potential options to give greater certainty, such as providing a 10-year settlement.”
The move is designed to stimulate the building of more affordable homes by providing certainty over cash flow for heavily indebted housing associations and councils. The government sets rent levels in subsidised social housing on the basis of a national formula.
At the same time Reeves will announce an additional £500mn for the Affordable Homes Programme, an existing £11.5bn five-year scheme allocating money to housing authorities and councils to build new homes.
Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister who is also secretary of state for housing, had held out during intense spending-round negotiations with the chancellor early this month to garner more money for the AHP.
Reeves also said she would use the spending review to set out the details of new investment for affordable housing for when the existing programme runs out in 2026.
“We need to fix the housing crisis in this country. It’s created a generation locked out of the property market, torn apart communities and put the brakes on economic growth,” she said.
In recent years local authorities have delivered only a trickle of new homes, leaving housing associations — not-for-profit organisations — to build most new social housing.
Guaranteeing higher rents will please housing associations but could prompt a backlash from millions of tenants while landing the government with a much higher benefits bill.
A previous Conservative administration made a similar promise in 2012 with a decade-long rent settlement based on the retail price index plus 0.5 per cent, but this was ripped up in 2015 to save money on housing benefits. A similar five-year deal in 2020 was temporarily dropped when inflation spiked in 2022.
Guaranteeing certainty on rents was a critical demand of 20 of the UK’s largest local council landlords who published a report this summer warning that England’s council housing system was “broken”.
The chancellor will also confirm plans to cut discounts on “right-to-buy” deals — where tenants buy a council property they have been renting. At the same time councils will be able to retain 100 per cent of the receipts generated by such sales.
Ministers hope the net effect will be for local authorities to receive more money to build social housing while still allowing long-standing tenants to buy their own homes.
Polly Neate, chief executive of housing charity Shelter, said the funding boost was a welcome step given Britain’s “rocketing homelessness”.
“For decades we’ve lost more social homes than we’ve built, causing private rents to soar to record highs and the homeless accommodation bill to hit the billions,” she said.
SHOPPERS have been left baffled by a strange new addition to Aldi’s Christmas range – that would never normally be seen at Christmas.
The budget supermarket revealed the new range earlier this month, with customers calling the strange new item “cursed”.
The hollow chocolate eggs, on sale for £1.99, seem more Easter-appropriate than Christmassy.
Riffing on the cross-seasonal concept, Aldi has playfully named them “Chreaster Eggs”.
The product, described as the “perfect stocking filler”, is available in red “Garry the Gingerbread Man” and blue “Parker the Penguin” versions.
Shoppers quickly rushed to social media to share their thoughts.
One celebrated the addition, saying on X: “I’ll take them all thank you!”
Another joked: “I love Aldi. Just when you think they can’t do better.”
They added: “This is so cursed I actually love it.”
However, others were more disturbed by the product, with one saying: “Eggs! Just no, Aldi. We all know that Christmas chocolate is either sphere, triangular, circular or hexagon shaped!”
Another cynic wrote: “I saw these in my Aldi on Saturday and I was so confused.”
Others have accused Aldi of not paying due regard to Christmas as a religious festival.
One said: “May as well cut the Christmas story short and ‘roll the stone away’ immediately with a Chreaster Egg, no point in prolonging it all.”
To this, Aldi replied: “We could turn the entire year into one big festive event.”
While others have jokingly suggested extending the chocolate eggs to Halloween too, saying: “Where are the Chreasterween eggs?”
Indulging in the online discussion, Aldi replied that its “final destination” was “Easumalloweemas eggs”.
Julie Ashfield, Managing Director of Buying at Aldi UK, said: “At Aldi we’re always looking for fun and creative ways to enhance our Christmas range.
“The ‘Chreaster egg’ trend has really taken off because it blends Easter’s most popular treat, the Easter Egg, with the beloved season of Christmas.
“Whether it’s a stocking filler or a conversation starter, we hope shoppers love our charming Dairyfine Hollow Character Eggs.”
WE all love a bit of chocolate from now and then, but you don’t have to break the bank buying your favourite bar.
Consumer reporter Sam Walker reveals how to cut costs…
Go own brand – if you’re not too fussed about flavour and just want to supplant your chocolate cravings, you’ll save by going for the supermarket’s own brand bars.
Shop around – if you’ve spotted your favourite variety at the supermarket, make sure you check if it’s cheaper elsewhere.
Websites like Trolley.co.uk let you compare prices on products across all the major chains to see if you’re getting the best deal.
Look out for yellow stickers – supermarket staff put yellow, and sometimes orange and red, stickers on to products to show they’ve been reduced.
They usually do this if the product is coming to the end of its best-before date or the packaging is slightly damaged.
Buy bigger bars – most of the time, but not always, chocolate is cheaper per 100g the larger the bar.
So if you’ve got the appetite, and you were going to buy a hefty amount of chocolate anyway, you might as well go bigger.
How to unsnarl a tangle of threads, according to physics
Is sharing your smartphone PIN part of a healthy relationship?
Hyperelastic gel is one of the stretchiest materials known to science
‘Running of the bulls’ festival crowds move like charged particles
Maxwell’s demon charges quantum batteries inside of a quantum computer
Would-be reality TV contestants ‘not looking real’
X-rays reveal half-billion-year-old insect ancestor
Sunlight-trapping device can generate temperatures over 1000°C
Liquid crystals could improve quantum communication devices
Ukraine is using AI to manage the removal of Russian landmines
সারাদেশে দিনব্যাপী বৃষ্টির পূর্বাভাস; সমুদ্রবন্দরে ৩ নম্বর সংকেত | Weather Today | Jamuna TV
Quantum ‘supersolid’ matter stirred using magnets
Samsung Passkeys will work with Samsung’s smart home devices
Massive blasts in Beirut after renewed Israeli air strikes
Rangers & Celtic ready for first SWPL derby showdown
Navigating the News Void: Opportunities for Revitalization
A new kind of experiment at the Large Hadron Collider could unravel quantum reality
Laser helps turn an electron into a coil of mass and charge
3 Day Full Body Women’s Dumbbell Only Workout
▶ Hamas Spent $1B on Tunnels Instead of Investing in a Future for Gaza’s People
When to tip and when not to tip
Boxing: World champion Nick Ball set for Liverpool homecoming against Ronny Rios
‘Uncrowned queen’ Kayla Harrison tastes blood, wants UFC title run
Physicists have worked out how to melt any material
Why this is a golden age for life to thrive across the universe
Pereira vs. Rountree prediction: Champ chases legend status
‘Blacks for Trump’ and Pennsylvania progressives play for undecided voters
Microphone made of atom-thick graphene could be used in smartphones
Dana White’s Contender Series 74 recap, analysis, winner grades
Why does Prince William support Aston Villa?
Wales fall to second loss of WXV against Italy
Man City ask for Premier League season to be DELAYED as Pep Guardiola escalates fixture pile-up row
Quantum forces used to automatically assemble tiny device
▶️ Hamas in the West Bank: Rising Support and Deadly Attacks You Might Not Know About
Meta has a major opportunity to win the AI hardware race
Russia is building ground-based kamikaze robots out of old hoverboards
DoJ accuses Donald Trump of ‘private criminal effort’ to overturn 2020 election
This AI video generator can melt, crush, blow up, or turn anything into cake
Julianna Peña trashes Raquel Pennington’s behavior as champ
Aaron Ramsdale: Southampton goalkeeper left Arsenal for more game time
ITER: Is the world’s biggest fusion experiment dead after new delay to 2035?
A slight curve helps rocks make the biggest splash
Nerve fibres in the brain could generate quantum entanglement
Nuclear fusion experiment overcomes two key operating hurdles
Why Machines Learn: A clever primer makes sense of what makes AI possible
How to wrap your mind around the real multiverse
Gmail gets redesigned summary cards with more data & features
Musk faces SEC questions over X takeover
Microsoft just dropped Drasi, and it could change how we handle big data
New documentary explores actor Christopher Reeve’s life and legacy
Sturm Graz: How Austrians ended Red Bull’s title dominance
Family plans to honor hurricane victim using logs from fallen tree that killed him
Ketlen Vieira vs. Kayla Harrison pick, start time, odds: UFC 307
2024 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup: Pakistan beat Sri Lanka
Time travel sci-fi novel is a rip-roaringly good thought experiment
▶️ Media Bias: How They Spin Attack on Hezbollah and Ignore the Reality
Woman who died of cancer ‘was misdiagnosed on phone call with GP’
China Open: Carlos Alcaraz recovers to beat Jannik Sinner in dramatic final
Wetherspoons issues update on closures – see the full list of five still at risk and 26 gone for good
The best budget robot vacuums for 2024
Pereira vs. Rountree preview show live stream
Sterling slides after Bailey says BoE could be ‘a bit more aggressive’ on rates
Texas is suing TikTok for allegedly violating its new child privacy law
The search for Japan’s ‘lost’ art
Stark difference in UK and Ireland’s budgets
Coco Gauff stages superb comeback to reach China Open final
World’s sexiest referee Claudia Romani shows off incredible figure in animal print bikini on South Beach
Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney renews blast at ‘gatekeeper’ platform owners
Bank of England warns of ‘future stress’ from hedge fund bets against US Treasuries
Markets watch for dangers of further escalation
Chancellor Rachel Reeves says she needs to raise £20bn. How might she do it?
J.B. Hunt and UP.Labs launch venture lab to build logistics startups
OpenAI secured more billions, but there’s still capital left for other startups
UFC 307 preview show: Will Alex Pereira’s wild ride continue, or does Khalil Rountree shock the world?
Head of UK Competition Appeal Tribunal to step down after rebuke for serious misconduct
‘I was fighting on automatic pilot’ at UFC 306
The best shows on Max (formerly HBO Max) right now
Alex Pereira faces ‘trap game’ vs. Khalil Rountree
Simo Valakari: New St Johnstone boss says Scotland special in his heart
German Car Company Declares Bankruptcy – 200 Employees Lose Their Jobs
Hull KR 10-8 Warrington Wolves – Robins reach first Super League Grand Final
the pick of new debut fiction
Our millionaire neighbour blocks us from using public footpath & screams at us in street.. it’s like living in a WARZONE – WordupNews
Liverpool secure win over Bologna on a night that shows this format might work
Rosie Duffield’s savage departure raises difficult questions for Keir Starmer. He’d be foolish to ignore them | Gaby Hinsliff
Pub selling Britain’s ‘CHEAPEST’ pints for just £2.60 – but you’ll have to follow super-strict rules to get in
Balancing India and China Is the Challenge for Sri Lanka’s Dissanayake
If you’ve ever considered smart glasses, this Amazon deal is for you
Heavy strikes shake Beirut as Israel expands Lebanon campaign
Love Island star sparks feud rumours as one Islander is missing from glam girls’ night
Phillip Schofield accidentally sets his camp on FIRE after using emergency radio to Channel 5 crew
Heartbreaking end to search as body of influencer, 27, found after yacht party shipwreck on ‘Devil’s Throat’ coastline
Popular financial newsletter claims Roblox enables child sexual abuse
NHS surgeon who couldn’t find his scalpel cut patient’s chest open with the penknife he used to slice up his lunch
Amazon’s Ring just doubled the price of its alarm monitoring service for grandfathered customers
Apple iPhone 16 Plus vs Samsung Galaxy S24+
Maayavi (මායාවී) | Episode 23 | 02nd October 2024 | Sirasa TV
How to disable Google Assistant on your Pixel Watch 3
UK’s ‘happiest islands’ have white sand beaches and attractions older than the Egyptian pyramids
Physicists are grappling with their own reproducibility crisis
You must be logged in to post a comment Login