PSG were far better than Chelsea in their 8-2 last-16 aggregate win but also vastly more experienced. Chelsea’s second-leg XI had played 137 Champions League matches between them, PSG’s 545. That has to have counted for something. Sunderland and Brentford can attest. Granit Xhaka, 33, and Jordan Henderson, 35, respectively, have added football IQ, not just leadership, to their new teams.
The 34-year-old, who is expected to join Inter Miami when his contract expires this summer, has enjoyed a rebirth since Carrick arrived at the helm in January. However, there’s one thing in particular he has demonstrated in that time that Casemiro believes makes him stand out as a candidate for the permanent job.
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“He deserves to stay,” said the Brazilian. “The team plays very good. He will win any games. The team improves day by day. Game by game the team improves.
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“So for me it’s a big problem because in my opinion he deserved this opportunity. So, especially for me, because he played in the midfield, he talked with me as a midfielder to a midfielder, it’s easier. But for me, he deserved the opportunity because the team is very comfortable. The team plays very good. We have big wins. So for me he deserved this opportunity.”
Ferdinand, 47, enquired further about what it is about Carrick and his work that makes him so easy to play for. Casemiro explained it’s because “he’s played at this level,” likening him to former Real Madrid boss Carlo Ancelotti in that sense.
More specifically, however, Casemiro said the best thing about Carrick is his knowledge and experience of United. And he used the recent example of their meeting with Leeds last month to illustrate the manager’s intellect and knowing what’s important to the club.
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“He’s very intelligent,” Casemiro continued. “But for me, the best thing he knows about the club. He understands the club. I remember we played against Leeds, and the meeting is about the history this game…But not everyone knows about Leeds.”
He went on to note how Carrick also spoke about the 1958 Munich Air Disaster in the same week. And Ferdinand likened that kind of reference to his old boss: “Like Ferguson. This is what Ferguson does.”
“It’s amazing. Yeah,” said Casemiro. “Because you see in the meeting he knows where to be. He knows, and for me [this] is very important.”
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United went on to lose that fixture 2-1 at home to Leeds following two fine finishes from Noah Okafor. Casemiro himself scored United’s only consolation, while Lisandro Martinez was shown his marching orders.
Carrick would likely feel flattered being compared to his former United chief. And it’s true that historical nous and experience of playing at United is one thing that would set him apart from certain predecessor in the hot seat, like Ruben Amorim.
In that sense, the Old Trafford icon has used his time well in utilising the strengths he has at his disposal. So while he may still be somewhat inexperienced as a first-team manager, he’s clearly drawing on what advantages he does have to prove his worth.
Sega’s retro franchises aren’t getting any younger (Sega)
The Wednesday letters page is impressed by Sally Field’s dedication to Zelda, as a reader wonders why there’s so much controversy around Mixtape.
Games Inbox is a collection of our readers’ letters, comments, and opinions. To join in with the discussions yourself email gamecentral@metro.co.uk
Too little, too late While it’s good to know that Sega is giving up on live service games I still worry they’ve left things too late to start reviving their classic franchises. Even something like Sonic Adventure is over 25 years old at this point, let alone any of their Mega Drive or arcade games.
Shinobi: Art Of Vengeance wasn’t a hit and who can be surprised given how long it was since the last one and the fact that it kind of still looked like the old games anyway. The problem for Sega is they don’t have any old 3D games to remake, so they can’t follow the trend of doing Capcom style remakes.
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Most of those games are PS1 titles but the Sega equivalent to that was the Saturn, which hardly anyone had. I’d love them to do a remake of Panzer Dragoon Saga but there’s no way that’s going to make financial success.
Maybe they could try NiGHTS but, really, everything is either too old or too obscure for the big budget treatment. Decades of neglect are starting to take their toll. Ronson
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The Legend of Krystal So there’s a rumoured Star Fox ‘adventure’ game planned for next year or after, but what do we all hope this will be? I’m going to assume that when they say adventure they mean not just on-rails and probably where you can get out of the ship, which brings to mind the awful Star Fox Adventures.
It doesn’t have to though, it could be more like an actual space combat simulator or maybe a sort of Nintendo version of Elite. I could easily see that working well, if Nintendo adds some on-foot sections and a decent amount of humour.
You’d still have the excuse for lots of dogfighting and could even throw some on-rails sections in there. It could expand it into more of an action adventure kind of game, but rather than just copying Star Fox Adventures and trying to be a bit like Zelda this would be its own thing. Paul
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Lost decade I really fear for Rocksteady with this Warner Bros. buyout. If some bean counter looks at their records, they’re going to see the only thing they made in more than a decade was a massive flop. Back in the Batman: Arkham era they seemed like one of the biggest developers in the world, one of the real up-and-commers, but now the best you can hope is that they don’t get shut down.
I liked the idea of a Batman Beyond game but if they don’t go for that there’s a billion other versions of Batman they could go for. Maybe they’ll try and tie it into the DCU, but I think that would be a mistake given how difficult that would be to organise. Much better to make a connected game universe, if you ask me, so the different characters can appear in other games. Maybe starting with this new Injustice style game. Tamol
9999 AD That story about the gamer that got banned for 7,973 years from playing Forza Horizon 6 completely baffles me.
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I’m really not tech savvy enough to know how they can accomplish this.
For me it’s the equivalent of being banned from ever eating Snickers bars again, What’s to stop him playing it round a friend’s house or pretending to be someone else online?
Who is actually going to monitor it and are they really going to take him off their naughty list in 7,973 years’ time?
Or is it just good publicity for them? Hence, I’m talking about it on your website. freeway 77
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GC: They just increased the ban date to the highest it would go, which was the year 9999. They’re also currently threatening to ban people from the entire franchise, not just one game.
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Under new management Katsuhiro Harada is starting his own studio under SNK?! Now that is a news story I didn’t expect to see. He must’ve really begun to hate it Bandai Namco because I would’ve thought they would’ve given him his own studio and let him do whatever he wants, especially after Tekken 8 was a big hit.
I guess sometimes you just want to move on. Good for him, but I hope he’s made the right choice with SNK, because The King Of Fighters was an embarrassment, in terms of the amount of interference in the game. I really don’t want to be playing not-Tekken 8 starring Ronaldo.
I’d say it’d be interesting to see him make a non-fighting game but even the name of the studio tells you it’s not going to be that. That’s fine, I just hope it works out for him. Now who’s going to make Tekken 9? Winston
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Losing patience I can 100% relate to not being ashamed about looking up solutions in games. As someone who will be 50 next year, but still enjoys playing video games, I have found time to be more finite but also I am doing more chores than ever. Something else I have noticed in older age is having less patience to replay the same level over and over again to get past a certain point, or trying to work out a puzzle.
An example are the Resident Evil games, I always enjoy them but going back and forth to find out how to unlock a door gets tiresome really quickly. In my youth I would not have minded doing this, but I don’t have the luxury of time anymore that most young people usually enjoy.
I want to progress and enjoy the game, it becomes too much being frustrated every so often. I am not one of these people who brag on social media or forums, ‘I completed the whole game without dying’. Who cares? Games are to be enjoyed and that is it. The only thing that I still don’t agree with is online cheating and pay to win mechanics, because I always believe in fair and balanced gameplay. orionz25
The Legend of Sally Field Those comments from Sally Field about Zelda were hilarious (and boy has she aged well, good for her!). I don’t know who this dweeb is she was in the film with but if he’s 33 that means he’s a millennial so how did he manage to not ever hear about Zelda and think you could play it on a PC?
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If he was a Gen Z I could kind of understand but this is a grown man who’s been shamed by someone about to enter her 80s on his gaming knowledge. I might watch Mrs. Doubtfire again after this, as a tribute to both Robin Williams and Sally Field – people with good gaming taste. Hacker
Same old, same old Man, I wished I hadn’t of looked up why people were getting upset about Mixtape.
You have the DEI message hating lot that seem to have lumped it in with that argument. Not sure why, it’s pretty bog standard teen stuff.
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Then it seems there are those that see the game as a corporate lie, a game passing itself off as indie but is financed by billionaires, thus sucking out the indie room oxygen from real indie developers. The cost of the licenced soundtrack being the primary evidence of the sort of thing a normal indie couldn’t afford.
In that frame of mind some see the whole 90s nostalgia vibe as an angle and plastic.
Due to being financed by a big publisher. I remember Dave The Diver got similar criticism and at the BAFTAs, I think, when winning an award, they thanked BAFTA for not putting them in the indie category.
It sparked the usual debate of what exactly is indie these days. Is it budget, team size, is it sensibilities? No one knows to this day.
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It seems also that IGN’s, admittedly crazy, 10/10 makes some suspicious of that backing money being used for influence.
To be fair there are legitimate criticisms like the characters not being relatable. I wouldn’t go that far but I did find them a bit too self aware for my liking. Also, that it’s not a game but an interactive experience, which is true.
But mostly it just seems like the usual rubbish of social media types creating controversy for clicks. Simundo
GC: It’s just sexism and weird conspiracies, the same as always.
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Inbox also-rans All this speculation about Capcom is fun but unfortunately we might not get an answer on what they’re doing next until next year. The new Onimusha still hasn’t got a date and they’re not going to want to start hyping anything else up until it’s out. Flowey
Personally, I’d like to see the next Soulslike be not open world. I miss the tight level design of the earlier games and feel that Dark Souls 3 and Bloodborne were plenty open enough. Not that Elden Ring was bad, but I didn’t like it as much. Korey
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Benefit claimants are being urged to check the list immediately or risk penalties and Universal Credit fraud charges
Benefit claimants throughout the country are being urged to stay vigilant as the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) steps up its demands for the prompt reporting of any alterations to personal circumstances.
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Officials have cautioned that neglecting to keep the government department informed is not simply regarded as an administrative error, but may be deemed benefit fraud. This could result in substantial financial sanctions or the complete withdrawal of vital support.
The DWP insists that because benefits are worked out using accurate information from a claimant’s circumstances, any departure from that information can lead to considerable overpayments.
Those who neglect to inform the authorities of alterations may be required to repay substantial amounts of money and could face an automatic £50 penalty, reports the Manchester Evening News.
For those claiming Universal Credit, the consequences are even more serious, with the threat of substantial fines and possible court proceedings for those discovered to be in violation of their reporting duties.
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The range of reportable alterations is extensive, covering virtually every significant life event. Below are list of things you must notify the DWP of.
Changes you need to report
Changing your name or gender
Finding or finishing a job, or working different hours
Your income going up or down
Starting or stopping education, training or an apprenticeship
Moving house
People moving into or out of the place you live (for example your partner, a child or lodger)
The death of your partner or someone you live with
Having a baby
Starting or stopping caring for someone
Getting married or divorced
Starting or ending a civil partnership
Planning to go abroad for any length of time
Going into hospital, a care home or sheltered accommodation
Any changes to your medical condition or disability
Changing your doctor
Changes to your pension, savings, investments or property
Changes to other money you get (for example student loans or grants, sick pay or money you get from a charity)
Changes to the benefits you or anyone else in your house gets
You or your partner getting back-pay (sometimes called ‘arrears’) for salary or earnings you’re owed
Changes to your immigration status, if you’re not a British citizen
For more information about how to report a change in circumstance and when, visit the gov.uk website.
He was sentenced in 2012 for sex offences including rape and sexual assault
A man convicted of historic sex offences has died in a Cambridgeshire prison. Barry Ford died aged 77 in August 2025 while serving his sentence at HMP Littlehey in Perry, according to a recently published report.
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Ford was sentenced to 18 years in prison in December 2012 after being found guilty of sex offences. Ford was jailed for six counts of rape and 10 of sexual assault, as reported by the BBC. Some offences were committed with his son, Craig McKellar, who was also convicted.
A Prison Service spokesperson confirmed that Ford was born on January 31, 1948 and died on August 29, 2025 at the prison.
A report by the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman stated Ford died of a brain condition caused by frailty in old age. The report says that HM Littlhey prison confirmed that Ford had no identified next of kin.
A clinical reviewer said the care Ford received at the prison was “equivalent to that which he could have expected to receive in the community”. The reviewer also found that the end of life care was of a “high-standard” and no recommendations were made.
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An inquest into his death was held on October 8, 2025 where the coroner concluded that Mr Ford died of natural causes.
An amazing and rare job opportunity for two people in the Scottish Highlands has come up, and it would be perfectly suited to those wishing to live and work in spectacular natural surroundings. Among the perks of the roles is that it comes with free accommodation.
At the moment, a large estate in the Scottish Highlands that features various properties is looking to hire a couple on a live-in basis. One member of the couple will be employed as the estate’s gardener and handyman, while the other will be employed as its housekeeper.
The salary for the positions is listed on the job advertisement as £70,000, though the exact figure will depend on experience. Meanwhile, the accommodation is comprised of “rent-free” lodging—with “council tax paid” according to the Greycoat Lumleys website.
Meanwhile, in terms of the jobs themselves, the gardener and handyman will be responsible for looking after and maintaining the grounds and policies around the main house. This will include looking after all of the garden equipment, and taking on all associated garden work.
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Other tasks the gardener and handyman will be expected to carry out include minor maintenance works, such as the replacement of slates, the cleaning of chimneys, and painting. They will also be responsible for maintaining estate machinery, fences, gates, hedges, and ditches.
Additional roles include assisting with holiday lettings, undertaking viewings of both holiday and let properties on the estate, and reading electricity meters as and when required. The gardener and handyman will also occasionally assist the River Bailiff with the maintenance of the boats on the estate and the maintenance of river banks and paths.
According to Greycoat Lumleys, the gardener and handyman will also occasionally be tasked with assisting of the herding of animals that may be grazed on the fields adjoining the property. Finally, they will act in the capacity of caretaker of the premises when they are unoccupied by the employer.
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Meanwhile, the housekeeper’s main responsibilities will be housekeeping and maintaining the main house and associated houses, cottages, and buildings on the estate. This will include, among other things, taking on the laundry and ironing of the properties on the estate.
The housekeeper will also be expected to assist with looking after domestic pets and animals if required, and assist with in-house tasks over occasional weekends. Additionally, like the gardener and handyman, they will sometimes be responsible for assisting with holiday lettings, undertaking viewings of both holiday and let properties, and reading electricity meters.
The Scottish Highlands are world-famous for their dramatic and breathtaking scenery, with a near-limitless supply of walks, beauty spots, and castles to explore during your time off. There are also countless charming villages and towns dotted around the region that are home to historic pubs, independent shops, and more.
The job listing states: “Greycoat Lumley’s client is seeking a Couple to manage a Private Estate in the Scottish Highlands.
“Managing the property, equipment, and third-party contractors, ensuring an effective balance between maximising profitability and maintaining the estate’s landscape, while also providing housekeeping services across the properties.”
The start date for the job is listed as June 2026. More information can be found on the Greycoat Lumleys website.
As reported by the Daily Record, a Scottish nature reserve is also hiring staff in an “exceptional opportunity” for wildlife lovers. The role will see the successful applicant spend a large amount of time outdoors in beautiful surroundings and remote locations.
A Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) spokesperson said: “The Pensions Commission is examining how we can ensure secure retirements for tomorrow’s pensioners, while our newly passed Pension Schemes Act will bring about major reform to the UK pensions system, benefitting millions of workers to the tune of up to £29,000 by the time they retire.
BEIJING (AP) — President Donald Trump is set to arrive in Beijing on Wednesday for his highly anticipated summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping at a restless moment for a world worried about war, trade and artificial intelligence.
“We’re the two superpowers,” Trump told reporters as he departed the White House on Tuesday. “We’re the strongest nation on Earth in terms of military. China’s considered second.”
While Trump likes to project a sense of strength, the visit occurs at a delicate moment for his presidency as his popularity at home has been weighed down by the U.S. and Israel’s war with Iran and rising inflation as a consequence of that conflict. The president is seeking a win by signing deals with China to buy more American food and aircraft, saying he’ll be talking with Xi about trade “more than anything else.”
The Trump administration hopes to begin the process of establishing a “Board of Trade” with China to address differences between the countries. The board could help prevent the trade war ignited last year after Trump’s tariff hikes, an action China countered through its control of rare earth minerals. That led to a one-year truce last October.
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But Trump comes to Beijing at a time when Iran continues to dominate his domestic agenda. The war has led to the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, stranding oil and natural gas tankers and causing energy prices to spike to levels that could sabotage global economic growth. The U.S. president declared that Xi didn’t need to assist in resolving the conflict, even though Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi was in Beijing last week.
“We have a lot of things to discuss. I wouldn’t say Iran is one of them, to be honest with you, because we have Iran very much under control,” Trump told reporters Tuesday.
Taiwan and trade are high on the agenda
The status of Taiwan also appears to be a major topic as China is displeased with U.S. plans to sell weapons to the self-governing island that the Chinese government claims as part of its own territory.
Trump told reporters Monday that he would be discussing with Xi an $11 billion weapons package for Taiwan that the U.S. administration authorized in December but has not yet begun fulfilling.
At the same time, Taiwan — as the world’s leading chipmaker — has become essential for the development of AI, with the U.S. importing more goods so far this year from Taiwan than China. Trump has sought to use Biden-era programs and his own deals to bring more chipmaking to America.
Trump says relationship with Xi is on solid footing
But Trump was already portraying the trip as a success before he left White House grounds. He openly mused about Xi’s planned reciprocal visit to the U.S., lamenting that the ballroom under construction would not be completed in time.
“We’re going to have a great relationship for many, many decades to come,” Trump said of the U.S. and China. “As you know, President Xi will be coming here toward the end of the year. So that would be exciting. I only wish we had the ballroom finished.”
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Trump said he had spoken with the Chinese leader and the meeting would be “positive” as he embarked on Air Force One with a coterie of aides, family members and business world titans, including Nvidia’s Jensen Huang and Tesla and SpaceX’s Elon Musk. He will arrive in China on Wednesday evening and, after a ceremonial greeting, go to his hotel. He will attend a state banquet Thursday and have a working lunch with Xi on Friday before returning to the U.S.
Despite Trump’s outward confidence, China appears to be entering the meeting from “a much stronger place,” said Scott Kennedy, a senior adviser on Chinese business and economics at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank.
China would like to reduce tech restrictions on accessing computer chips and find ways to reduce tariffs, among other goals.
“But even if they don’t get much on any of those things, as long as there’s not a blow-up in the meeting and President Trump doesn’t go away and look to re-escalate, China basically comes out stronger,” Kennedy said.
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Trump wants a three-way nuclear arms deal
Trump also intends to raise the idea of the U.S., China and Russia signing a pact that would set limits on the nuclear weapons each nation keeps in its arsenal, according to a senior Trump administration official who briefed reporters ahead of the trip. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the White House.
China has previously been cool to entering such a pact. Beijing’s arsenal, according to Pentagon estimates, exceeds more than 600 operational nuclear warheads and is far from parity with the U.S. and Russia, which each are estimated to have more than 5,000 nuclear warheads.
The last nuclear arms pact, known as the New START treaty, between Russia and the United States expired in February, removing any caps on the two largest atomic arsenals for the first time in more than a half-century. As the treaty was set to expire, Trump rejected a call by Russia to extend the two-country deal for another year and called for “a new, improved, and modernized” deal that includes China.
The Pentagon estimates China has more than 600 operational nuclear warheads and will have over 1,000 by 2030.
The Cavern Club in Liverpool, the nightclub birthplace of the Beatles, promotes itself as “the place where it all began”. On May 11, Apple, the Beatles’ management company, announced its re-acquisition of 3 Savile Row, London, the building they might usefully conceive of as “the place where it all ended”.
In the Beatleverse, 3 Savile Row is perhaps most associated with the Beatles’ iconic yet bittersweet rooftop performance. Iconic because this improvised concert was first captured for posterity in their 1970 film (and album) Let It Be. It was then digitally zhuzhed up for Peter Jackson’s epic retelling, Get Back, in 2021. Bittersweet because that performance on a chilly January day in 1969 was the last time the world ever saw the magic of John, Paul, George and Ringo gigging together. Or in the words of the promotional trailer for Let It Be: “rehearsing, recording, rapping, relaxing, philosophising … creating.”
The Savile Row building was the Beatles’ third London office. They moved there after outgrowing 94 Baker Street, which had previously housed the Apple Boutique in 1967, and following a short-lived stay at 95 Wigmore Street in early 1968.
Purchased for a snip at £500,000 in June of that year, 3 Savile Row became general HQ for all things Beatles. It had a recording studio in the basement, offices for each of the Fab Four and, of course, an impromptu gig space on the roof. Beatles fans, immortalised in George Harrison’s song Apple Scruffs (1970), would gather round the front entrance, hoping for a glimpse, a quick chat or a hug from their favourite Beatle. Yet few would ever have the opportunity to cross that elusive threshold. Until now.
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The Beatles perform Don’t Let Me Down during the famous Saville Row performance.
Apple’s new venture heralds seven floors of unseen material from Apple Corps extensive archives, rotating exhibitions, a fan store and the recreation of the original studio where Let it Be was recorded.
It will also give fans the opportunity to tread in the band’s footsteps as they relive the iconic rooftop concert on exactly the spot where it happened. In other words, it promises the rarest of Beatles finds: a genuinely new experience.
The Fab Four in the flesh
As we are so accustomed to seeing in Liverpool, Beatles fans the world over demonstrate a ceaseless fascination with the band’s origin story. In part, this is because no book, film or theatrical production can so tangibly communicate the extraordinary ordinariness of the Beatles’ lives as being there can do: seeing for yourself the sheer magnitude of the improbability of four young Liverpudlians’ journey from two up-two down terraced houses in south Liverpool to the 20th century’s most successful pop group.
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In the same way as standing in the front room of the McCartney family home in Forthlin Road, at the gates of Strawberry Field or in the middle of the roundabout in Penny Lane, there is little doubt that clambering onto the roof of 3 Savile Row, gazing across the London skyline and standing in the very steps of John, Paul, George and Ringo will foster in Beatles people a kind of indescribable wonder: making the imagined real and the real imagined.
With the re-acquisition of 3 Savile Road back into the Beatles’ property portfolio, Apple has made a genius move. The museum will connect the flesh and blood, bricks and mortar world of the 1960s Beatles to the social media and big screen worlds of the post-60s Beatles. And theirs is undeniably a big story to tell. It took Peter Jackson nearly eight hours of documentary time. Sam Mendes requires four feature-length films. And coming soon to a rooftop near you: the chance to experience all the Beatle magic for yourself.
Kilsyth Academy was visited by HM Inspectors of Education in February and the organisation has now written to the families of pupils with their findings.
Kilsyth Academy has received a positive report from education inspectors.
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The North Lanarkshire secondary school was visited by HM Inspectors of Education in February and the organisation has now written to the families of pupils with their findings.
With the school rated as “good” in both categories of assessment, the inspectors highlighted the “warm and collaborative culture” across the school, including the creation of the Learning and Teaching Charter which led to more consistent learning for young people.
The young people were also commended for their pride in the school, working well with staff to establish a calm and inclusive learning environment.
It was also noted that the pupils were making good progress in literacy and numeracy, helped by regular progress checks from their teachers, who used the information gained from these to provide effective support.
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Improvements the inspectors want to see were further development of high quality learning and assessment, with teachers continuing to collaborate on improvements in learning and teaching, while senior staff should continue their focus on the use of tracking to support improvements and raise levels of attainment in national qualifications.
In their letter the inspectors stated they were satisfied the school would continue to improve without the need for further visits in relation to this inspection.
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Jerome Christian Clough, 30, of Prince of Wales Terrace in Scarborough, appeared at York Magistrates’ Court yesterday (May 11) after an attack which took place in the early hours of Saturday morning.
He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 26 weeks in jail for affray, with a further eight weeks for possessing a bladed article.
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Clough was seen on CCTV during a heated conversation, before taking a pair of scissors from his pocket and lunging at another man on Saturday, May 9.
Although the victim did not make a formal complaint, North Yorkshire Police were made aware of the incident by CCTV operators by 6.38am and arrested Clough two minutes later. He was then charged based on the CCTV evidence.
Detective Constable Alfie Thomlinson, the investigating officer, said: “Clough was seen in broad daylight – as the town was waking up and busy with workers, residents and visitors – clearly lunging at a man with a pair of scissors.
“The swift action of the CCTV operators followed by the immediate response of officers on the ground meant he was detained within two minutes of the report coming in to us.
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“By the following morning, he was charged and remanded by detectives working with the Crown Prosecution Service and by Monday morning he was sent to jail by Magistrates.”
In his police interview, Clough claimed the scissors were for art and craft purposes and that he was demonstrating a stabbing technique he had seen in a video.
DC Thomlinson said: “Hopefully he can now take time to reflect on his behaviour and understand how serious this violent act could have been if contact was made with the man.
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“Violent behaviour involving blades will simply not be tolerated on the streets of North Yorkshire.”
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