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Pudsey Bear breaks 40 years of silence for mental health campaign | News

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Listen to Pudsey Bear speak for the first time in 40 years as part of a campaign designed to help children talk about their mental health.

To mark Mental Health Awareness Week 2026, the iconic yellow bear spoke to 11-year-old Dexter about the importance of talking about your feelings.

“You look worried,” he says to Dexter in the short film titled Pudsey Finds His Voice. “You look like you might need someone to talk to. Maybe I can be that someone,” he tells the 11-year-old.

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The Children in Need mascot last spoke in 1985 and until now, has remained mute.

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Medics in full hazmat suits rush two hantavirus patients to Atlanta hospital in shocking footage

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A passenger that had been on board the virus-stricken cruise ship the MV Hondius is now officially showing symptoms after returning home after the deadly outbreak on board.

Two hantavirus-infected cruise passengers have been rushed to hospital after returning home, with footage capturing healthcare workers dashing them into intensive care dressed head-to-toe in hazmat gear and PPE. The pair, who had just returned to the US after a five-week stint on board the MV Hondius, the vessel stricken with the deadly rat-borne virus that prompted an international incident after three passengers died while aboard the ship. Shocking video footage captures healthcare workers rushing out to ambulances in hazmat gear, stretchering off the two patients into critical care at Atlanta’s Emory University Hospital. The Georgia hospital has since confirmed that both passengers arrived from the MV Hondius cruise ship following the deadly outbreak at sea. One of the two patients is symptomatic and receiving care in Emory’s biocontainment unit, and the other is asymptomatic, undergoing evaluation and monitoring. The two had disembarked the virus-plagued cruise ship at the centre of the hantavirus outbreak at the Canary island, and have now been transported to Emory University’s Serious Communicable Diseases Unit in Atlanta, the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention told the Georgia Department of Public Health on Monday.

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A spokesperson from the Department of Public Health (DPH) said: “Federal health care workers are taking every precaution needed in each of these cases, and there is no risk to the public at this time.” Early symptoms of hantavirus infection include fever, chills, myalgia (muscle aches), headaches, and gastrointestinal symptoms and can become complicated by acute respiratory distress syndrome, respiratory failure and shock. DPH officials confirmed the US case fatality rate sits at about 35 per cent.

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There are nearly 40 strains of hantavirus found all over the world, and different strains cause different illnesses, but the rare Andes strain is the only one known to pass between humans. More often, spread occurs from rat faeces, saliva, and urine. But the symptomatic patient on US soil is no cause for alarm, officials have said.

Emory University epidemiologist Dr Jodie Guest has revealed that fewer than 900 cases of hantavirus have ever been recorded in US history, with the medical expert dubbing the disease a “dead-end virus”.

“Normally, we consider the hantavirus a dead-end virus, meaning one person gets it from a rodent, and then that is the only person who will get it,” Dr Guest said.

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“This will not become a global pandemic. The transmission does not work effectively that way.” Other health experts have echoed Dr Guest’s sentiment in an attempt to allay American fears of a second pandemic. University of Florida Health Shands Hospital chief epidemiologist and an infectious disease expert Dr Nicole Iovine explained that the hantavirus transmits from person to person is not the same as the flu or coronavirus. “These viruses affect the upper airways, mainly, so speaking and coughing can easily transmit it,” Dr Iovine said. “The hantavirus and the Andes virus tend to infect very deep in the lungs, so it is not as easily transmitted through the air.” There is no vaccine for the hantavirus infection, as perv the World Health Organisation.

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What it would have been like to experience the dinosaur-killing asteroid armageddon: a blow-by-blow account

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What it would have been like to experience the dinosaur-killing asteroid armageddon: a blow-by-blow account

A great Tyrannosaurus rex strides through the conifer trees of her territory, sniffing the air. She picks up the scent from the carcass of a dead horned dinosaur, Triceratops, that she was feeding on yesterday. She walks over and strips off some more shreds of meat, but the smell is foul even for her.

She goes down to the lake to drink and small crocodiles and turtles scuttle into the water. But she hardly sees them. Of more interest is an armoured dinosaur, Ankylosaurus, lurking nearby. However, she knows this dinosaur won’t be an easy kill and she isn’t desperate enough for food to risk a fight. Little does she know there are bigger dangers ahead. She looks up and sees a bright light racing downwards accompanied by faint crackling and sizzling noises.

Our T. rex has excellent hearing for low frequency sounds and she is disturbed by the vibrations she can feel. But her upset only lasts for a moment. In a flash, she has been burnt to a crisp and her world changed forever.

This all happened 66 million years ago, when a huge asteroid famously hit the Earth in the area of what is now the Caribbean. At the end of the Cretaceous period, sea levels were 100–200 metres higher than today, so the shores of the Caribbean lay far inland over eastern Mexico and the southern United States. The impact happened entirely within these waters.

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The event triggered instant changes to our planet and its atmosphere and led to the extinction of the dinosaurs and about half Earth’s other species. But what would it have been like to experience such a gargantuan impact? What would you have seen, heard or smelled? And how would you have died – or survived?


The Insights section is committed to high-quality longform journalism. Our editors work with academics from many different backgrounds who are tackling a wide range of societal and scientific challenges.


As experts on meteoritics and palaeontology, respectively, we’ve created a detailed timeline, based on decades of research, to take you right there. So let’s start by travelling back in time to the very last day of the Cretaceous.

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T-minus one day

All is calm and the Cretaceous day proceeds as usual. In what will soon be ground zero, it is pleasantly warm, about 26°C, and wet. It often is. For about a week, the asteroid has been visible only at night. Because the giant rock is heading straight towards Earth, it looks like a motionless star. There is no dramatic tail; this is a rocky asteroid rather than a comet.

Illustration of dinosaurs walking in a valley.

The dinosaurs were enjoying nice weather before the big impact.
Orla/Shutterstock

In the last 24 hours, the light becomes visible during the daytime. But it still looks like a star or planet, getting brighter in the final few hours before impact.

T equals 0: the impact

If you were close by, you would first have experienced a brief light and sound show. Minutes to seconds before the impact, you’d have seen the bright fireball, and its accompanying crackling or fizzing noises. This sizzling sound is a result of the photo-acoustic effect: the intense light of the fireball warms the ground, which then heats the air above it, causing pressure waves, or sound.

Next, a deafening sonic boom, which occurs because the asteroid is travelling faster than the speed of sound. But the asteroid is so huge, perhaps 10km in diameter, that it almost certainly hits the ground before any living creature near the impact zone has time to run for cover.

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The asteroid’s enormous energy forms a crater through a series of processes that together take only a few seconds. As the asteroid collides with the surface, its kinetic (movement) energy is instantly transferred to the surface as a combination of kinetic, thermal (heat) and seismic energy (released during earthquakes). This results in a series of shock waves that heat and compress both the asteroid and its target.

As the shock waves propagate, rocks fracture, break up and are ejected, producing a bowl-shaped depression, or transient cavity, about ten seconds after impact. The heat and compression also melt and vaporise large volumes of material, including the asteroid itself, releasing a fountain of incandescent vapour (its temperature is more than 10,000 K, or 9726.85°C).

Over the next few seconds, the cavity increases in size to many times the diameter of the original asteroid. Simulations suggest that around 20 seconds after impact, the transient cavity is at least 30km deep – deeper than the deepest depth currently known on Earth, the 11km Challenger Deep valley, part of the Pacific Ocean’s Marianas Trench. The rim of the crater is over 20km high – more than twice the height of 8,900m Mount Everest.

But this enormous feature lasts for less than a minute before it starts to collapse. Within three minutes of the impact, the centre of the crater has rebounded to form a peak several kilometres high. The peak only lasts about two minutes before collapsing back into the crater.

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Whether a dinosaur or a dung beetle, if you were near the transient cavity you would have been incinerated instantly by the blast. But even if you were up to 2,000km from the epicentre, you’d likely have been killed quickly by the thermal radiation and supersonic winds now spreading out from the impact site.

T-plus 5 minutes

Five minutes after the impact, the winds have “eased” to those of a category 5 hurricane, flattening everything within about 1,500km of the impact. Destroying everything, that is, which has not already been burnt. Atmospheric temperatures in the region rise to over 500K (226.85°C). This would feel like being inside an oven – causing burns, heatstroke and death. Wood and plant matter ignite, creating fires everywhere.

Because the asteroid struck the sea, the atmosphere is also filled with super-heated steam, making the hurricane-force winds even deadlier.

Next come the tidal waves, triggered by the vast quantities of displaced rock and water. These 100-metre megatsunamis first strike the shores of what is now the Gulf of Mexico, engulfing the land before depositing huge amounts of debris as they retreat.

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Image of a tsunami wave.
Tsunamis waves were over 100 metres hight.
FOTOKITA/Shutterstock

By now, the crater has almost reached its final dimensions – 180km across and 20km deep. But making an enormous hole in the ground isn’t the only outcome of the impact. All the rock and vapour displaced during the collision has to go somewhere. Several locations in Northern America show that metre-sized blocks of debris from the impact were thrown distances of hundreds of kilometres.

So if you were 2,000km to 3,000km from the epicentre and survived the first few seconds, you’d most likely die from overheating, earthquakes, hurricanes, fires, tsunami-driven floods or being hit by impact melt.

But what is happening much further away? In the first five minutes after impact, dinosaurs roaming the Cretaceous forests of what are now China or New Zealand are so far undisturbed.

But it won’t be long before that changes.

T-plus one hour

Shockwaves on land and sea are only minor inconveniences compared with the fire that is still radiating down from the sky. Some of the impact energy has been transferred into the atmosphere, heating the air and dust to incandescence.

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Angry firestorm texture background in full HD ratio
Fires were a common part of the asteroid aramgeddon.
fluke samed/Shutterstock

An hour after impact, a belt of dust has circled the globe. Deposits of solidified molten droplets (impact spherules) and mineral grains have been found in numerous locations from New Zealand in the south to Denmark in the north. In these locations, you would not have been aware of the tsunamis around the Americas or the wildfires, but the skies would certainly have begun to darken.

T-plus one day

By now, huge tsunamis are moving east across the Atlantic and west across the Pacific, entering the Indian Ocean from both sides.

They are still around 50m high – causing death and destruction across many coasts around the world. By comparison, the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami reached heights of up to 30 metres. Tsunamis kill fishes and marine life that are washed high on the shore and then dumped, just as they kill coastal trees and drown land animals. But the tsunamis gradually fade away and probably don’t wipe out any entire species – at least on their own.

The hurricane force winds have also died down, but tropical storm strength winds are whipping up debris and causing further chaos and destruction across the tsunami-affected areas. The burning sky is also triggering wildfires across the globe – which, in turn, carry ever more soot into the atmosphere. The sooty signature of these wildfires has been found deposited as carbon particles in sediments from the K-Pg boundary – a 66-million-year-old thin clay layer.

Further away, in what is modern Europe and Asia, the skies continue to fill up with dust and soot, as they do everywhere. Temperatures start to drop as sunlight is blocked. Trees and plants in general, including phytoplankton, close down as if for winter, unable to photosynthesise. Any animals that rely on warm conditions ultimately hunker down and die.

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T-plus one week

It’s getting darker and darker. Simulations of solar radiation reaching the Earth’s surface following the impact indicate that, after about a week, the solar flux (the amount of heat and light per a certain area) is just one thousandth of that prior to the impact. This is caused by particles of dust and soot in the atmosphere.

The continued decrease in light levels is accompanied by a global drop in surface temperatures of at least 5°C. This means that most of the dinosaurs and other large flying and swimming reptiles probably die from freezing within the course of this first week (smaller reptiles with slower metabolisms or more flexible diets could survive longer). Cooling temperatures and cloud cover also lead to rain. But not just any rain. Storms of acid rain fall across the Earth.

Two separate mechanisms generate acid rain. The first is down to the geology of the impact region. The asteroid happened to hit an area of sediments rich in sulphur, which vaporised and caused sulphur oxides (acidic and pungent gas compounds composed of sulphur and oxygen) to be part of the plume of plasma blasted into the atmosphere. Second, the energy of the collision was sufficient to turn nitrogen and oxygen into nitrogen oxides – highly reactive gases that can form smog.

The dropping temperature ultimately allows water vapour to condense into drops, and the sulphur and nitrogen oxides dissolve to form sulphuric and nitric acids. This is sufficient to generate a rapid drop in pH. Early models suggest that the pH of the rain might be as low as 1 – the same acidity as battery acid.

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At this point, Earth is not a great place to be. Rotting vegetation, choking smoke and sulphur aerosols combine to make the planet stink. Plants and animals on land and in shallow seas that have survived the darkness and cold succumb to the corrosive acid rain and ocean acidification. Acid rain also kills trees by leaching nutrients such as calcium, magnesium and potassium from the soil. Shallow marine shellfish, crustaceans and corals also die as acid seawater destroys their skeletons.

T-plus one year

Winds die down, wildfires are extinguished and the oceans are once again calm. It might appear that the asteroid collision is just a scar on the ocean floor. But its effects are still destructive. The atmosphere is still filled with dust and the Sun hasn’t shone for a year. Temperatures have continued to drop, with the average surface temperature now 15°C lower than before the impact. Winter has come.

Any dinosaurs or marine reptiles that survived the first week of freezing conditions would have died very soon after. A year after the impact, only rotted skeletons of these behemoths remain. Here and there, smaller animals like mammals the size of rats and insects would be nestling in crevices, barely surviving on their reserves and decaying plants.

Indeed, it has not been a good year for life on Earth: over 50% of plants have died out because of the cold and lack of sunlight. And similar losses have occurred among terrestrial animals and species in the acidified, shallow sea waters.

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Shot of pyritized ammonite fossil, capturing metallic shine and intricate prehistoric shell structure.

Ammonites soon die out.
Domenichini Giuliano/Shutterstock

While most plant groups and many of the modern groups of insects, fishes, reptiles, birds and mammals recover reasonably rapidly, things don’t look great for other species. Dinosaurs and pterosaurs living on land are extinct, as are many marine reptiles, ammonites, belemnites and rudist bivalves in the oceans. Ammonites and belemnites are high in their food chains, and so suffer not only from the cold and acidification but also from the loss of abundant food resources, such as smaller marine organisms.

T-plus ten years

The Earth is still in the grip of a fierce winter. Although most of the sulphur has rained out of the atmosphere, dust and soot particles remain. The average surface temperature is still about 5°C lower than before the impact. The main oceans have not frozen, but inland lakes and rivers around the world are iced over.

Clearly, there were no humans about at this time – there weren’t even any larger mammals. But given the only species that survived were those that could burrow or live below water, it is unlikely that you could have survived this long.

Surviving plant and animal groups such as turtles, smaller crocodiles, lizards, snakes, some ground-dwelling birds and small mammals repopulate the Earth at this point. But they are forced back to limited areas of relative safety a long way from the impact site. These areas are now receiving sufficient sunlight for plants and phytoplankton to photosynthesise again. As leaves and seeds provide the basis for the food chains on land and in the sea, life begins to rebuild.

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Eventually, life returns to the devastated landscapes, but ecosystems are very different and the dinosaurs are no more.

T-plus 66 million years

Today, 66 million years after the impact, the scars of the collision are hidden within geological strata – and scientists have started deciphering them. It was in 1980 that researchers first reported evidence of the impact. In their classic paper, Luis Alvarez, a Nobel-prize-winning physicist, and co-authors, described a sudden enrichment in the element iridium in a specific clay layer in Denmark and in Italy.

Iridium is rare in surface rocks because most of it was sequestered in Earth’s core when the planet first formed. However, iridium is found in meteorites, and Alvarez and colleagues inferred that the rate of accumulation of the metal in the sediments was so high that it could only have been produced by impact of a gigantic meteorite.

Because the scientists had only observed the iridium spike in two locations, the impact hypothesis was rejected by many scientists at the time. However, through the 1980s, iridium spikes were identified in clay layers at more and more locations – in muds laid down on land, in lakes, in the sea.

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Support for an impact hypothesis strengthened when a crater of the correct age was found in 1991. The crater is buried beneath younger rocks, but clearly visible in geophysical surveys, lying half on land in the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico, and half offshore. Since 1990, evidence for the impact has increased, not least when scientists discovered that there was indeed a sharp cooling event at the end of the Cretaceous.

Possible T-Rex track near Anasazi at Philmont in 2022.

Possible T rex footprint from New Mexico.
Wikipedia, CC BY-SA

In total, it is estimated that half the species of plants and animals alive at the end of the Cretaceous disappeared. It was once thought that surviving groups such as many plants, insects, molluscs, lizards, birds and mammals somehow escaped unscathed. But detailed study shows that this is not the case – they were all hit hard.

But, by chance or luck, enough individuals and species were able to survive the cold and absence of food, or were in parts of the world where the effects were less extreme. As the world returned to normal, they had the opportunity to expand rapidly into their old niches, but also to occupy the space vacated by extinct groups. In fact, one important consequence of the extinction of the dinosaurs, apex predators in their heyday, was the successful spread and evolution of mammals.

When Alvarez and colleagues first described the drop in temperature following the impact, they called it a “nuclear winter”, reflecting the political climate of the early 1980s. Now we might be more inclined to describe the effects as a global climate change – similar events are currently resulting from increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere (flooding, temperature fluctuations).

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It is salutary to think that without the asteroid collision, primates might never have reached the level we are at today. But it is equally salutary to consider that modern humans are causing some of the same changes to the atmosphere that ultimately killed our reptilian forbears and may one day also lead to our own demise.


For you: more from our Insights series:

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Newscast – Labour MPs Move Against Starmer

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Newscast - Epstein Files: New Mandelson and Andrew Allegations

Available for over a year

Today, more Labour MPs have called for Keir Starmer to step down, but is an actual leadership challenge imminent?

In a speech on Monday morning Keir Starmer vowed to prove his “doubters” wrong, but the number of Labour MPs calling him to go continues to rise. Dozens of MPs have urged Starmer either to step down immediately or set out a timetable for his departure.

Adam, Chris and Alex discuss.

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You can now listen to Newscast on a smart speaker. If you want to listen, just say “Ask BBC Sounds to play Newscast”. It works on most smart speakers.

You can join our Newscast online community here: https://bbc.in/newscastdiscord

Get in touch with Newscast by emailing newscast@bbc.co.uk or send us a WhatsApp on +44 0330 123 9480.

New episodes released every day. If you’re in the UK, for more News and Current Affairs podcasts from the BBC, listen on BBC Sounds: https://bbc.in/4guXgXd

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Newscast brings you daily analysis of the latest news stories from the BBC. The presenter was Adam Fleming. It was made by Jack Maclaren with Jem Westgate. The social producer was Joe Wilkinson. The technical producer was Philip Bull. The assistant editor is Chris Gray. The senior news editor is Sam Bonham.

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Donald Trump branded ‘unfit to serve’ after ‘falling asleep’ during meeting in Oval Office

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Video footage appears to show Donald Trump with his eyes closed and barely moving for a prolonged period during an Oval Office health briefing, prompting critics to question his fitness to serve

Donald Trump has been labelled “unfit to serve” as President following fresh accusations that he was “falling asleep” during a meeting at the Oval Office.

Video footage appears to capture Trump with his eyes shut and barely moving for an extended period during a formal health briefing.

The incident occurred while Dorothy Fink, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Women’s Health, was presenting figures on reductions in maternal mortality rates, specifically noting that the Perinatal Improvement Collaborative hospitals reduced maternal mortality by 41.5% (compared to a 5.9% decline in benchmark hospitals).

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However, many online users were instead distracted by Trump’s conduct.

One user wrote: “Trump is about to hit REM sleep on camera in the Oval Office.”

Another commented: “Trump fell asleep with his face drooping in the Oval Office during a meeting today. This is a real video that should concern every American. He’s not fit to serve.”

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A third remarked: “Trump appears to fall asleep while a doctor discusses maternal mortality.”

While a fourth observed: “Today is Monday. That means trump falls asleep at yet another high profile event with cameras rolling.

“Imagine what happens when there are no cameras.”

The official White House Rapid Response account hit back at the allegations, declaring: “He was blinking, you absolute moron,” though the footage does not appear to show any blinking.

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This follows Trump’s recent claim that the month-long ceasefire between the US and Iran is on “massive life support”. Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office on Monday, he described the ceasefire as “unbelievably weak” despite it remaining in place.

Iran set out its conditions for ending the conflict and reopening the Strait of Hormuz in a counter-proposal delivered to the US on Sunday. Trump dismissed the offer, branding it “totally unacceptable” and a “piece of garbage”.

Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei hit back, insisting Tehran’s proposals were “responsible” and “generous”.

According to Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency, Tehran’s proposal includes an immediate cessation of hostilities across all fronts — a nod to the ongoing Israeli strikes against Iran-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon — along with a halt to the US naval blockade of Iranian ports and assurances against any further attacks on Iranian soil.

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Curator role up for grabs at Bowes Museum in Barnard Castle

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Curator role up for grabs at Bowes Museum in Barnard Castle

The Bowes Museum in Barnard Castle is recruiting for four positions across its collections, curatorial, visitor experience, and catering teams.

Each role supports the museum’s ambition to develop its visitor experience and expand public engagement.

Collections assistant

This full-time, permanent post carries a salary of £26,522.50, with applications closing at 5pm on Friday, May 22.

The collections assistant will take charge of maintaining and improving the museum’s collections records, supporting a database migration, and ensuring documentation is accurate and accessible.

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The role also involves coordinating loans, supporting object movement, and contributing to the care and management of the museum’s works.

(Image: STUART BOULTON)

Curator (co-production)

This is a part-time role on a fixed-term contract until 2029, with an annual salary of £18,708.50 (based on three days per week).

The curator (co-production) will help embed co-production practices across the museum’s work as part of the Art Fund’s Going Places programme, backed by the National Lottery Heritage Fund and The Julia Rausing Trust.

The Bowes Museum is part of the Founding the Future network, working alongside Watts Gallery in Guildford and Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum in Bournemouth.

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The post will play a key role in a collaborative touring exhibition programme running from 2026 to 2029, leading community co-production for planned exhibitions in 2027 and 2028/9.

Welcome team supervisor (temporary cover)

This fixed-term, six-month position offers 34 hours per week at a rate of £13.27 per hour (£23,461.36 per annum, pro rata).

Candidates must be enthusiastic, self-motivated, and comfortable working in a visitor-facing, customer service environment.

Strong people-management skills and a passion for developing others are essential.

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Applications close on Friday, May 22, with interviews scheduled for Thursday, May 28.

Chef

The museum is seeking a chef for its catering team to help deliver a high-quality, locally sourced menu for the museum café and events.

This permanent role is for 32 hours per week (four days), with a salary of £22,481.44.

The chef’s work will help create a warm, memorable experience for visitors through food.

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Applications close on Friday, May 29, with interviews taking place on Thursday, June 4.

Visit thebowesmuseum.org.uk/jobs-and-volunteering/

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Southampton could be KICKED OUT of Championship play-offs as Middlesbrough row escalates

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Middlesbrough could make the Championship play-off final even if they lose their semi-final second leg, should rivals Southampton be removed from the postseason

An independent disciplinary commission could kick Southampton out of the Championship play-offs if they are found to have filmed and observed a Middlesbrough training session. The Saints are charged with breaching two EFL regulations around acting in good faith and watching other teams train in the days before they are scheduled to play against them.

Boro complained to the league about their alleged unauthorised filming on private property. It is said that the club’s hierarchy will push for their expulsion.

Any hearing would only happen after Tuesday’s semi-final second leg. There would then be 11 days until the final at Wembley Stadium.

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The Mail claims that the North East club will continue training even if they exit the post-season, because Boro may still replace their under-investigation opponents. They want Southampton to receive a ‘sporting’ sanction rather than a financial one, as Marcelo Bielsa paid for Leeds United seven years ago.

READ MORE: Southampton face further scrutiny as Middlesbrough ‘approached by other clubs over spy fears’READ MORE: Hull City reach Championship playoff final as Millwall suffer more heartbreak at The Den

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Their coach, Kim Hellberg, said of potential punishments for their opponents: “Who will get the fine? Should they just pay (it) to the EFL?

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“So, they see everything we do, and that’s OK? I just think it’s weird (that) they do that and try to cheat in this type of game.

“I know Bielsa paid £200,000, but that was not the law then. I think a lot of clubs will pay that amount to try to get an advantage by seeing you in the two sessions before a game.

“If it’s a game of this magnitude, clubs would pay that, but it’s not legal, so they should not do it. What the punishment should be, that is not my decision to make.

“It’s not the players that have done anything, it’s not the fans that have done anything. So, it’s not my decision to make. I’m just telling you the facts, and you can see the facts too. We will see what happens.”

Southampton, meanwhile, have said little about the situation. The south coast club says it: “Acknowledges the statement issued by the EFL in relation to alleged breaches of EFL Regulations.

“We can confirm that we will be fully cooperating with the League throughout this process. Given the ongoing nature of the matter, the club is unable to comment any further at this time.”

Their head coach, Tonda Eckert, has refused to expand on what the club have said publicly. He repeatedly referred to their statement when facing questions before and after the first leg on Saturday, which finished 0-0.

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The Guardian reported this week that other clubs have approached Middlesbrough to speak of their own suspicions of being spied on by Southampton. The Saints finished the season with a remarkable 19-match unbeaten run that helped propel them to a top-six finish.

Sky Sports, HBO Max, Netflix and Disney+ with Ultimate TV package

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Sky has upgraded its Ultimate TV and Sky Sports bundle to now include HBO Max, Netflix, Disney+, discovery+ and Hayu, as well as 135 channels and full Sky coverage of the Premier League and EFL.

Sky broadcasts more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more with at least 215 live from the top flight alongside Formula 1, darts and golf.

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Peterborough man jailed after anti-social behaviour and illegal waste disposal business

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Cambridgeshire Live

The man had previously been served with a Criminal Behaviour Order

A man from Peterborough has been found guilty of operating a waste business illegally. Mark Wheeler, 36, of Lakeview Way in Hampton, already had a Criminal Behaviour Order (CBO) after behaving anti-socially towards his neighbours.

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He had been served with a two-year CBO and 16-week suspended prison sentence in June 2025 after being found guilty for repeatedly carrying out car repairs on the highway and causing anti-social behaviour.

Wheeler was then found guilty of breaching his CBO by carrying out further car repairs. During a hearing at Peterborough Magistrates’ Court on March 26, council officers produced additional evidence that Wheeler was operating a waste collection/disposal business illegally by failing to provide waste transfer documents.

Officers requested that magistrates increase the conditions of Wheeler’s CBO to include prohibitions preventing him from operating any business or trade which deals in the collection, carrying, or disposal of waste or scrap metal without permission from Peterborough City Council.

They also requested that Wheeler be prevented from advertising or promoting services for the collection, carrying, or disposal of waste or scrap metal.

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At a recent sentencing hearing, magistrates agreed to add the conditions to Wheeler’s CBO as requested by officers. The 36-year-old was also sentenced to 16 weeks in prison for breaches of a suspended sentence.

Councillor Angus Ellis, Cabinet Member for Environment and Transport, said: “We want to remind residents to always check that a waste carrier is licenced before hiring anyone to dispose of your waste. This includes companies that provide skips, waste collectors and tradespeople doing work at your property.”

He continued: “This prosecution shows that we take this issue extremely seriously and will look to take action against anyone operating illegally.”

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123 forgotten First World War dead to be included on County Down cenotaph

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Belfast Live

Three new plaques wil be added to Comber War Memorial

An additional 123 names have been found for a World War Memorial in a County Down village.

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The names are those of casualties from the First World War, covering the period 1914 to 1918, who were omitted from the war memorial in Comber.

The Comber Branch of the Royal British Legion were provided with a historically researched and compiled list of individuals who were previously not included.

READ MORE: Bangor seafront spot to be bulldozed for carpark despite thousands of objections

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A report by officials at the Ards and North Down Borough Council Environment Committee states: “Upon receipt of (the list), the Branch agreed to initiate a process in accordance with War Memorial Trust Guidelines. This included the establishment of a working group to undertake detailed scrutiny of the names and to commence a formal verification process.

“Council officers have since been collaborating with the working group and all missing names are now believed to have been collated and verified. In total, 123 names have been collected and verified by the working group.”

Officers are proposing the names will be distributed over three plaques, situated on the existing war memorial. The council has approached a local foundry for production, with an initial budget approximated at £5,000 for the plaques.

DUP Alderman Trevor Cummings said at the council’s May Environment Committee meeting: “I want to put on record my particular thanks for the diligent work of Dr Sange and the working group who behind the scenes have brought the final list together. The council report comes at a good time, as the working group are making their final appeal to families. They don’t anticipate any further information coming forward, and they should have a comprehensive list.”

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He said the group were hoping to do the unveiling this year, to tie in with the 110th anniversary of the Battle of the Somme.

DUP Councillor Libby Douglas said: “It is incredibly important that we as a council do everything we can to keep the memory alive of all the individuals who lost their lives during the First World War. I look forward to the plaques with the individual’s names being added to the Comber War Memorial, and I give a special mention to the Comber branch of the Royal British Legion.”

SDLP Councillor Joe Boyle said: “I thank Alderman Cummings for bringing a very sensible and meaningful report. I don’t tend to take to my feet too often in these types of situations, but there is a humane side, and for 123 names that once were forgotten, for them to be now on display, is very special. For those families, it is a wonderful bit of work. I have to congratulate the working group, it is a mammoth task to unearth 123 names.”

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The major developments set to change Catterick by 2027

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The major developments set to change Catterick by 2027

From Shute Road to the farmland between Catterick Garrison and Colburn, the way people live, work and access services here is set to change dramatically.

Here are the major developments set to change Catterick by 2027, what they involve and what they could mean for residents, soldiers and businesses.


Catterick’s £21m town centre revamp on Shute Road

The most visible change is the multi‑million‑pound redevelopment of Catterick Garrison town centre, focused around Shute Road and Coronation Park.

Planning permission has been granted and demolition work has already taken down a number of existing buildings on Shute Road, allowing construction to begin.

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The redevelopment, being delivered by contractor Willmott Dixon, is expected to be completed by late 2026 or 2027.

At its heart is a new town square designed as a civic space for events and everyday use.

A new community and enterprise building will provide offices for small businesses, co‑working areas, rooms for community groups, food retail, and space for activities linked to Coronation Park.

Plans also include major upgrades to Coronation Park, with improved play areas, a skate park, sensory and reflective spaces, woodland planting and community gardens.

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(Image: NORTH YORKSHIRE COUNCIL)


Integrated Care Campus: new health hub for military and civilian communities

Alongside the physical town centre changes, a flagship Integrated Care Campus is being built in Catterick Garrison.

The project is funded by the NHS and Ministry of Defence to bring together GP, community health and care services for both the military and civilian population of Catterick and wider Richmondshire.

Health officials say the campus will replace outdated facilities with modern, purpose‑built clinical space, helping to cut duplication and improve access to care for thousands of patients.

It is designed to make it easier for Army families and residents to see the right professional in one place rather than travelling between different sites.

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How the outside of the Integrated Care Centre could lookUndated handout computer generated image (CGI) issued by the Ministry of Defence of Catterick (Image: Defence Medical Services Crown copyright/PA Wire)


Colburn Grange: up to 450 new homes between Catterick Garrison and Colburn

Just to the west of Catterick Garrison, on land between the garrison and Colburn, a major new housing estate is being proposed.

Developer Keyland has submitted outline plans for up to 450 homes on roughly 20–21 hectares of agricultural land north of Catterick Road, on a site branded Colburn Grange.

The masterplan shows a new neighbourhood with a mix of housing types, green spaces and walking and cycling connections into existing communities.

Residents and campaigners have raised concerns about the number of houses, the impact on roads and services, and the loss of open countryside.

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The application is now with North Yorkshire Council, and if approved could see construction begin during the second half of the decade.

A computer generated image of the Colburn Grange development.


What this could mean for Catterick by 2027

By 2027, Catterick Garrison’s Shute Road area is expected to look very different, with a new town square, community and enterprise hub, improved park and better walking and cycling links replacing older buildings and car‑dominated streets.

The integrated care campus should be operating alongside those changes, giving the town a modern health facility that serves both the Army and wider community.

If the Colburn Grange estate is approved, the first phases of up to 450 homes could also be underway, bringing new families into the area and raising fresh questions about traffic, services and the balance between military and civilian life around the garrison.

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What do you think of the plans? Let us know in the comments.

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Transgender MSP applies for visa renewal so they can work in UK

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The non-binary, newly-elected Green MSP, who uses they/them pronouns, is currently in the UK on a student visa.

A newly elected MSP is applying for a visa renewal to allow them to work in the UK for longer. Dr Q Manivannan, one of two transgender Green MSPs elected this week, is in the process of applying for a graduate visa.

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The non-binary politician, who uses they/them pronouns, is in the UK on a student visa but said they will also apply for a global talent visa to allow them to remain in the UK for the duration of their parliamentary career. But some social media users have said their right to work in the UK could be under threat due to their student visa status.

Dr Manivannan said: “Every MSP from every party represented in the Scottish Parliament unanimously voted to allow everyone with the right to live here to stand in elections, including new Scots on visas like me. I am a Commonwealth citizen and am currently on a student visa which will expire later this year. Having passed my grant-funded PhD and viva, I am able to work full-time.

“I am in the process of transitioning to a graduate visa which will allow me to stay in the UK for a further three years. At the same time, I am also applying for a global talent visa, recognising my contributions to the country, which will allow me to stay in the UK for the entire of my parliamentary term and beyond.”

The MSP, originally from the Tamil Nadu region of India, said the Home Office can be “dehumanising” towards migrants, and that they will seek to change that in their time serving as a politician in the UK. They said: “I am proud of my heritage and who I am. I am also proud to be a voice for all my constituents, including migrants and people on visas who are often shut out of our national debate.

“I am also proud to have been awarded and recognised for my local work in arts and culture, academia, and human rights in Scotland — serving our people during my time here. Scotland is home, in every way. The Scottish Greens want to build a fair and humane system that treats people with dignity and respect rather than the current Home Office system that is costly, difficult, and often dehumanising. With my election, I seek to represent that goal.”

A Scottish Parliament spokesperson said: “It is the responsibility of individual candidates and political parties to ensure that all relevant qualifications for standing for election are met. There is no role for the Parliament in carrying out checks on candidates who are elected.”

Green Party co-leader Gillian Mackay previously said the party would do “anything we can do to support Q” in their renewal process, though she believes it is “unlikely” they will be rejected in their visa renewal. The Home Office was approached for comment.

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