
That logo is dominating this morning,
The Mail headlines with
The Olympic logo revolt
spontaneous public revolt over the controversial 2012 Olympic logo broke out yesterday with organisers facing mounting calls to scrap the design.
As nearly 30,000 people signed a petition demanding that the £400,000 image be axed, Olympic chiefs were forced to pull a promotional video amid warnings it had triggered at least ten cases of epilepsy.
Experts said the garish launch film had led to a number of seizures with others reporting feeling "uncomfortable" after experiencing vomiting or headaches.
Within hours of the logo's launch on Monday, the Internet was flooded with hundreds of alternative designs from members of the public angry at the official choice.
According to the front page of the Sun
Olympic logo triggers epilepsy
THE controversial 2012 London Olympics logo was rocked by another blow last night — after it was ruled too dangerous to view on-screen.
An animated version of the symbol used on TV and the internet had to be dropped because it could trigger fits in thousands of people.
The £400,000 logo, a graffiti-style spelling of 2012 in shades of pink, blue, green and orange, was branded “hideous” when it was launched on Monday.
And Olympics bosses were left squirming with embarrassment after an epilepsy group reported 12 cases of people collapsing through looking at it.
Please look away ... it's the 2012 logo says the Guardian
The organisers of London 2012 may have foreseen some of the criticism they have received since unveiling the Olympic logo - variously derided as an uninspiring emblem, a puerile mess, an artistic flop.
But yesterday evening, they were forced to pull the promotional video for the new brand from the official website after complaints from a completely unexpected quarter - Britain's epileptics.
In the two and a half minute animation, the logo comes alive, springing from athletes' bodies and bouncing vividly across the city, and one flashing section has triggered seizures.
The Mirror leads with
PREZZA FEARS GROW
AILING John Prescott was last night moved to an acute hospital ward suffering from pneumonia.
Prezza, 69, who was first admitted to casualty with a mystery chest illness, is now so seriously ill he has to be monitored around the clock.
Anxious wife Pauline is keeping a daily bedside vigil and Tony Blair and Gordon Brown are being constantly informed about his condition.
MPs close to the Deputy PM admit that they are "shocked and worried".
Prescott is suffering from pneumonia says the Telegraph
The Deputy Prime Minister has been in hospital since Saturday after being taken ill on a train travelling between his Hull constituency and London.
He returned only days earlier from a trip to the United States and the Caribbean. At the time, officials said he was undergoing tests for a suspected chest infection, but insisted that the condition was not life threatening.
In a statement last night, Mr Prescott's spokesman said: "He has been moved to a high-dependency unit, not because of a deterioration in his condition but so that his condition can be monitored more closely.''
It leads with
One in six adults classed as a 'problem drinker'
The startling statistic - equivalent to one adult in six - comes as the Government makes its latest attempt to challenge booze culture.
People also do not know they are drinking too much.
According to figures from the Office of National Statistics and HM Revenue & Customs, people drink twice as much alcohol as they think they do.
An alcohol strategy, published yesterday by the Home Office and the Department of Health, will target supermarkets selling cheap beers and wine. Ministers blame low prices for a rise in drink-related illnesses and city centre disorder.
Meanwhile the Times leads with
Waiting list crisis as NHS cuts costs
Drastic cost-cutting ordered by the Government across the NHS has derailed its flagship policy to ensure that no patient waits longer than 18 weeks for hospital treatment.
A leaked e-mail seen by The Times reveals that the Department of Health is so worried that new data showing that some patients will have to wait “in excess of one year” will be highlighted by the media that it has issued special guidance on how to spin the news.
The Government is expected to announce today that the NHS has made a surplus of more than £500 million in the past financial year after an aggressive drive to reduce spending by health trusts.
The e-mail says that more than half of patients are still waiting longer than 18 weeks for treatment. It calls into question the Government’s ability to honour its key health pledge that all patients would be treated within this time by the end of 2008.
With the G8 Summit starting later today,the Guardian leads with
I can persuade George Bush on climate change - Blair
Tony Blair insisted yesterday that he could persuade President Bush to agree for the first time to a global target for a "substantial cut" in greenhouse gases within a framework sanctioned by the United Nations.
In an interview with the Guardian on the eve of the G8 summit, the prime minister said both elusive goals were now achievable and that America was "on the move" in its position on climate change.
Although Mr Blair said it would take tough negotiations over the next three days and it was still unclear exactly what the president would agree to, he was sure Mr Bush's speech last week, in which he talked about establishing a US-led initiative to tackle global warming, was not a ploy to undermine the UN or the G8.
The Independent is not so optimistic,its front page saying
Blair and Bush: the final reckoning .It lists the favours that Blair has done for Bush,and finds only one reprocated back,the awarding of the Congress medal
Tony Blair will make a final appeal to George Bush to repay his loyal support over Iraq by signing up to a firm global target to cut carbon emissions at the G8 summit in Germany starting today.
Three weeks before he stands down as Prime Minister, Mr Blair will join forces with the German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, in an attempt to secure a breakthrough in the battle against climate change. They will press a reluctant US president to agree that the world should cut carbon emissions by 50 per cent from 1990 levels by 2050.
Such an outcome from the last international gathering that Mr Blair will attend with President Bush would at last allow him to answer critics who claim he has got little in return for his "shoulder to shoulder" support for the US President, notably on Iraq and other issues related to the "war on terror".
But other issues dominate behind the scenes
Bush defuses Cold War row, then attacks Putin's record on democracy says the Times
President Bush risked inflaming tensions with President Putin yesterday by declaring that Russia had derailed democratic reforms.
He said that Moscow’s failure to extend basic freedoms to its citizens was troubling.
His comments, delivered in the Czech Republic, part of the former Soviet Union’s sphere of influence, may widen the rift between Mr Putin and the West that is threatening to overshadow the G8 summit in Germany, which begins today.
Blair tries to defuse tension with Russia over US missiles says the Guardian
Tony Blair admitted he was fighting to be heard. Sitting in the sun in the Downing Street garden on the eve of his final G8 summit, the prime minister was not referring to negotiations with other powers over climate change or trade. The problem was the brass bands practising for trooping the colour. With a reference to the voguish calls for a British day, he laughed: "Gordon will be arranging for this every day".
Brown promises Britons first refusal on jobs reports the Indy
Gordon Brown yesterday promised his union backers for the leadership of the Labour Party that as Prime Minister he will ensure British people get first refusal on jobs in Britain.
His remarks were seen as a clear shift from Tony Blair's defence of cheap foreign workers as a means of boosting the British economy. Mr Blair has been accused by trade union leaders of trying to undercut British workers by opening the door to migrant workers from Eastern Europe.
But speaking yesterday at a conference of the general workers union, the GMB, Mr Brown said: "I want to ensure that by working with employers in all sectors we can make sure that people have the skills and are given the help so that the jobs, when they come available, can go to those people in Britain who are registered and looking for jobs at the moment."
GET BRITISH JOBLESS DOING BRITISH JOBS says the Mirror
Mr Brown told the GMB union conference in Brighton yesterday: "It's time to train British workers for the British jobs that will be available over the coming few years.
"I want to sign partnerships with all the major industries that they will help British workers to access the jobs."
Mr Brown said shops, hotels, security firms and hospitality companies working on the 2012 Olympics will alone create 200,000 jobs. And he wants long-term benefit claimants to get basic skills training and guaranteed job interviews. The drive will be a big theme of his Premiership.
Sarkozy urges Brown to back EU reports the Telegraph
Taking up where his predecessor Jacques Chirac left off, Mr Sarkozy made clear he too regards Britain as France's junior partner on the European stage.
In an interview before today's G8 summit in Germany - and a crucial meeting on the future of the EU in Brussels later this month - the French president said Mr Brown had to show he could graduate from being a very successful Chancellor to the role of an international leader who understands Europe.
The Mail reports on the
The battle for Britishness as Kelly calls for national Britain Day
We should have a Britain Day to celebrate 'civic values' and 'intergenerational links', Ruth Kelly will say today.
But the Communities Secretary insists the idea is not about Britons "standing in their front gardens and saluting the Union Jack".
The New Labour version of the planned public holiday would promote community relations and volunteering, rather than our national heritage.
Her comments led critics to dismiss the plans as a "gimmick".
They also pointed out the scheme was at odds with Gordon Brown's existing promise to put the flag at the heart of any celebration of Britishness.
Millionaire's daughter dies after severe beating reports the Telegraph
Girl, 2, dies as her father faces psychiatric tests says the Times
two-year-old girl died last night from head injuries inflicted by her father, a City executive with Swiss Re.
Police said that Yanire Izaga had been unable to recover from the head trauma she suffered in the assault on Sunday at home in Central London. Her father, Alberto, 36, born in Spain, who earns £500,000 a year as a leading figure in the insurance world, has been sectioned under the Mental Health Act. His wife, Ligia, and her family had kept a vigil at Yanire’s bedside at St Thomas’ Hospital, where the child was on life support for two days.
A psychiatrist was preparing to interview Mr Izaga, whose medical background was being investigated. When he was taken to Brixton police station on Sunday he was judged unfit to be interviewed.
Police said that a post-mortem examination would be scheduled and an inquest opened and adjourned.
Channel 4 rejects princes' plea to drop Diana photos reports the Guardian
Channel 4 insisted yesterday it would include pictures of the crash that killed Princess Diana in a documentary to be aired tonight despite a strongly worded personal plea from her sons, Prince William and Prince Harry.
The broadcaster refused to back down after Clarence House made public a letter on behalf of the princes asking for photographs of the crash scene, which would cause "gross disrespect" to their mother's memory, to be removed from the programme.
In the letter, their private secretary, Jamie Lowther-Pinkerton, said: "They will cause the princes acute distress if they are shown to a public audience, not just for themselves, but also on their mother's behalf, in the sense of intruding upon the privacy and dignity of her last minutes".
Princes in fury at Di death pic says the Sun
PRINCES William and Harry were furious last night after Channel 4 refused to back down over plans to screen snaps of their mother’s death.
An aide wrote to station chiefs calling for several shots of the 1997 Paris crash to be removed from a documentary shown tonight.
The photos include one of Princess Diana receiving oxygen from a doctor as she lay dying.
The Princes’ private secretary Jamie Lowther-Pinkerton told Channel 4 the pictures would cause them “acute distress”. And they believed their use was a “gross disrespect” to their mother’s memory.
The Mail headlines with
The Olympic logo revolt
spontaneous public revolt over the controversial 2012 Olympic logo broke out yesterday with organisers facing mounting calls to scrap the design.
As nearly 30,000 people signed a petition demanding that the £400,000 image be axed, Olympic chiefs were forced to pull a promotional video amid warnings it had triggered at least ten cases of epilepsy.
Experts said the garish launch film had led to a number of seizures with others reporting feeling "uncomfortable" after experiencing vomiting or headaches.
Within hours of the logo's launch on Monday, the Internet was flooded with hundreds of alternative designs from members of the public angry at the official choice.
According to the front page of the Sun
Olympic logo triggers epilepsy
THE controversial 2012 London Olympics logo was rocked by another blow last night — after it was ruled too dangerous to view on-screen.
An animated version of the symbol used on TV and the internet had to be dropped because it could trigger fits in thousands of people.
The £400,000 logo, a graffiti-style spelling of 2012 in shades of pink, blue, green and orange, was branded “hideous” when it was launched on Monday.
And Olympics bosses were left squirming with embarrassment after an epilepsy group reported 12 cases of people collapsing through looking at it.
Please look away ... it's the 2012 logo says the Guardian
The organisers of London 2012 may have foreseen some of the criticism they have received since unveiling the Olympic logo - variously derided as an uninspiring emblem, a puerile mess, an artistic flop.
But yesterday evening, they were forced to pull the promotional video for the new brand from the official website after complaints from a completely unexpected quarter - Britain's epileptics.
In the two and a half minute animation, the logo comes alive, springing from athletes' bodies and bouncing vividly across the city, and one flashing section has triggered seizures.
The Mirror leads with
PREZZA FEARS GROW
AILING John Prescott was last night moved to an acute hospital ward suffering from pneumonia.
Prezza, 69, who was first admitted to casualty with a mystery chest illness, is now so seriously ill he has to be monitored around the clock.
Anxious wife Pauline is keeping a daily bedside vigil and Tony Blair and Gordon Brown are being constantly informed about his condition.
MPs close to the Deputy PM admit that they are "shocked and worried".
Prescott is suffering from pneumonia says the Telegraph
The Deputy Prime Minister has been in hospital since Saturday after being taken ill on a train travelling between his Hull constituency and London.
He returned only days earlier from a trip to the United States and the Caribbean. At the time, officials said he was undergoing tests for a suspected chest infection, but insisted that the condition was not life threatening.
In a statement last night, Mr Prescott's spokesman said: "He has been moved to a high-dependency unit, not because of a deterioration in his condition but so that his condition can be monitored more closely.''
It leads with
One in six adults classed as a 'problem drinker'
The startling statistic - equivalent to one adult in six - comes as the Government makes its latest attempt to challenge booze culture.
People also do not know they are drinking too much.
According to figures from the Office of National Statistics and HM Revenue & Customs, people drink twice as much alcohol as they think they do.
An alcohol strategy, published yesterday by the Home Office and the Department of Health, will target supermarkets selling cheap beers and wine. Ministers blame low prices for a rise in drink-related illnesses and city centre disorder.
Meanwhile the Times leads with
Waiting list crisis as NHS cuts costs
Drastic cost-cutting ordered by the Government across the NHS has derailed its flagship policy to ensure that no patient waits longer than 18 weeks for hospital treatment.
A leaked e-mail seen by The Times reveals that the Department of Health is so worried that new data showing that some patients will have to wait “in excess of one year” will be highlighted by the media that it has issued special guidance on how to spin the news.
The Government is expected to announce today that the NHS has made a surplus of more than £500 million in the past financial year after an aggressive drive to reduce spending by health trusts.
The e-mail says that more than half of patients are still waiting longer than 18 weeks for treatment. It calls into question the Government’s ability to honour its key health pledge that all patients would be treated within this time by the end of 2008.
With the G8 Summit starting later today,the Guardian leads with
I can persuade George Bush on climate change - Blair
Tony Blair insisted yesterday that he could persuade President Bush to agree for the first time to a global target for a "substantial cut" in greenhouse gases within a framework sanctioned by the United Nations.
In an interview with the Guardian on the eve of the G8 summit, the prime minister said both elusive goals were now achievable and that America was "on the move" in its position on climate change.
Although Mr Blair said it would take tough negotiations over the next three days and it was still unclear exactly what the president would agree to, he was sure Mr Bush's speech last week, in which he talked about establishing a US-led initiative to tackle global warming, was not a ploy to undermine the UN or the G8.
The Independent is not so optimistic,its front page saying
Blair and Bush: the final reckoning .It lists the favours that Blair has done for Bush,and finds only one reprocated back,the awarding of the Congress medal
Tony Blair will make a final appeal to George Bush to repay his loyal support over Iraq by signing up to a firm global target to cut carbon emissions at the G8 summit in Germany starting today.
Three weeks before he stands down as Prime Minister, Mr Blair will join forces with the German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, in an attempt to secure a breakthrough in the battle against climate change. They will press a reluctant US president to agree that the world should cut carbon emissions by 50 per cent from 1990 levels by 2050.
Such an outcome from the last international gathering that Mr Blair will attend with President Bush would at last allow him to answer critics who claim he has got little in return for his "shoulder to shoulder" support for the US President, notably on Iraq and other issues related to the "war on terror".
But other issues dominate behind the scenes
Bush defuses Cold War row, then attacks Putin's record on democracy says the Times
President Bush risked inflaming tensions with President Putin yesterday by declaring that Russia had derailed democratic reforms.
He said that Moscow’s failure to extend basic freedoms to its citizens was troubling.
His comments, delivered in the Czech Republic, part of the former Soviet Union’s sphere of influence, may widen the rift between Mr Putin and the West that is threatening to overshadow the G8 summit in Germany, which begins today.
Blair tries to defuse tension with Russia over US missiles says the Guardian
Tony Blair admitted he was fighting to be heard. Sitting in the sun in the Downing Street garden on the eve of his final G8 summit, the prime minister was not referring to negotiations with other powers over climate change or trade. The problem was the brass bands practising for trooping the colour. With a reference to the voguish calls for a British day, he laughed: "Gordon will be arranging for this every day".
Brown promises Britons first refusal on jobs reports the Indy
Gordon Brown yesterday promised his union backers for the leadership of the Labour Party that as Prime Minister he will ensure British people get first refusal on jobs in Britain.
His remarks were seen as a clear shift from Tony Blair's defence of cheap foreign workers as a means of boosting the British economy. Mr Blair has been accused by trade union leaders of trying to undercut British workers by opening the door to migrant workers from Eastern Europe.
But speaking yesterday at a conference of the general workers union, the GMB, Mr Brown said: "I want to ensure that by working with employers in all sectors we can make sure that people have the skills and are given the help so that the jobs, when they come available, can go to those people in Britain who are registered and looking for jobs at the moment."
GET BRITISH JOBLESS DOING BRITISH JOBS says the Mirror
Mr Brown told the GMB union conference in Brighton yesterday: "It's time to train British workers for the British jobs that will be available over the coming few years.
"I want to sign partnerships with all the major industries that they will help British workers to access the jobs."
Mr Brown said shops, hotels, security firms and hospitality companies working on the 2012 Olympics will alone create 200,000 jobs. And he wants long-term benefit claimants to get basic skills training and guaranteed job interviews. The drive will be a big theme of his Premiership.
Sarkozy urges Brown to back EU reports the Telegraph
Taking up where his predecessor Jacques Chirac left off, Mr Sarkozy made clear he too regards Britain as France's junior partner on the European stage.
In an interview before today's G8 summit in Germany - and a crucial meeting on the future of the EU in Brussels later this month - the French president said Mr Brown had to show he could graduate from being a very successful Chancellor to the role of an international leader who understands Europe.
The Mail reports on the
The battle for Britishness as Kelly calls for national Britain Day
We should have a Britain Day to celebrate 'civic values' and 'intergenerational links', Ruth Kelly will say today.
But the Communities Secretary insists the idea is not about Britons "standing in their front gardens and saluting the Union Jack".
The New Labour version of the planned public holiday would promote community relations and volunteering, rather than our national heritage.
Her comments led critics to dismiss the plans as a "gimmick".
They also pointed out the scheme was at odds with Gordon Brown's existing promise to put the flag at the heart of any celebration of Britishness.
Millionaire's daughter dies after severe beating reports the Telegraph
Girl, 2, dies as her father faces psychiatric tests says the Times
two-year-old girl died last night from head injuries inflicted by her father, a City executive with Swiss Re.
Police said that Yanire Izaga had been unable to recover from the head trauma she suffered in the assault on Sunday at home in Central London. Her father, Alberto, 36, born in Spain, who earns £500,000 a year as a leading figure in the insurance world, has been sectioned under the Mental Health Act. His wife, Ligia, and her family had kept a vigil at Yanire’s bedside at St Thomas’ Hospital, where the child was on life support for two days.
A psychiatrist was preparing to interview Mr Izaga, whose medical background was being investigated. When he was taken to Brixton police station on Sunday he was judged unfit to be interviewed.
Police said that a post-mortem examination would be scheduled and an inquest opened and adjourned.
Channel 4 rejects princes' plea to drop Diana photos reports the Guardian
Channel 4 insisted yesterday it would include pictures of the crash that killed Princess Diana in a documentary to be aired tonight despite a strongly worded personal plea from her sons, Prince William and Prince Harry.
The broadcaster refused to back down after Clarence House made public a letter on behalf of the princes asking for photographs of the crash scene, which would cause "gross disrespect" to their mother's memory, to be removed from the programme.
In the letter, their private secretary, Jamie Lowther-Pinkerton, said: "They will cause the princes acute distress if they are shown to a public audience, not just for themselves, but also on their mother's behalf, in the sense of intruding upon the privacy and dignity of her last minutes".
Princes in fury at Di death pic says the Sun
PRINCES William and Harry were furious last night after Channel 4 refused to back down over plans to screen snaps of their mother’s death.
An aide wrote to station chiefs calling for several shots of the 1997 Paris crash to be removed from a documentary shown tonight.
The photos include one of Princess Diana receiving oxygen from a doctor as she lay dying.
The Princes’ private secretary Jamie Lowther-Pinkerton told Channel 4 the pictures would cause them “acute distress”. And they believed their use was a “gross disrespect” to their mother’s memory.
Meanwhile the paper reveals that
Jailbird Paris does a runner
JAILBIRD PARIS HILTON wolfed down her last supper at an exclusive restaurant — then left without paying the £200 bill.
The socialite feasted on lobster, beef and vegetable fried rice at Beverly Hills eaterie Mr Chow just 24 hours before she went to prison — where she cried herself to sleep.
When the bill arrived, Paris and her family — heirs to the billion-dollar Hilton Hotels chain — said they had ALL forgotten to bring credit cards.
They promised to call with payment details when they got home.
The socialite feasted on lobster, beef and vegetable fried rice at Beverly Hills eaterie Mr Chow just 24 hours before she went to prison — where she cried herself to sleep.
When the bill arrived, Paris and her family — heirs to the billion-dollar Hilton Hotels chain — said they had ALL forgotten to bring credit cards.
They promised to call with payment details when they got home.
BBC's badgers draw in more viewers than Big Brother reports the Mail
TV voyeurism knows no bounds when it comes to watching the habits of strange creatures filmed by dozens of cameras on live television.
But, surprisingly, it is not the Big Brother house which is grabbing viewers' attention so much as members of the real animal kingdom.
BBC Two's Springwatch, showing the nocturnal habits of badgers and birds, has proved such a hit it has overtaken E4's live Big Brother coverage.
But, surprisingly, it is not the Big Brother house which is grabbing viewers' attention so much as members of the real animal kingdom.
BBC Two's Springwatch, showing the nocturnal habits of badgers and birds, has proved such a hit it has overtaken E4's live Big Brother coverage.
Though it's still in the headlines
Big Brother: Sex and the Ziggy says the Sun
BIG Brother stud Ziggy inched his way closer to having a bonk with Posh Spice lookalike Chanelle after the pair spent HOURS kissing and cuddling under the sheets.
Randy model Ziggy STROKED and KISSED Chanelle as they lay in each other’s arms.
The fledgling lovebirds — who had admitted fancying each other — ramped up their saucy session in the early hours of yesterday.
Things got so steamy that at one point Chanelle said she might have to leave the room to cool herself down.
Randy model Ziggy STROKED and KISSED Chanelle as they lay in each other’s arms.
The fledgling lovebirds — who had admitted fancying each other — ramped up their saucy session in the early hours of yesterday.
Things got so steamy that at one point Chanelle said she might have to leave the room to cool herself down.
Perhaps Aliens are listening in Telegraph asks
Are aliens tuned into the Light Programme?
Aliens are alive and well in the rest of the cosmos - and they could already be tuning into vintage human radio broadcasts, according to leading scientists.
For the first time in history, the dream of searching for signs of life in other solar systems is on the list of achievable and planned human endeavours, mostly because around 280 planets have been discovered orbiting alien stars.
Experts involved in the study of these alien worlds, and in the quest to find more, told the Government yesterday they were convinced that life exists elsewhere in the universe.
For the first time in history, the dream of searching for signs of life in other solar systems is on the list of achievable and planned human endeavours, mostly because around 280 planets have been discovered orbiting alien stars.
Experts involved in the study of these alien worlds, and in the quest to find more, told the Government yesterday they were convinced that life exists elsewhere in the universe.
The same paper reports on the
Flooded town re-emerges after 50 years
Adaminaby, a small farming town nestled in the Snowy Mountains between New South Wales and Victoria, was evacuated and flooded in 1957 to make way for a massive hydro-electricity project.
But the longest "big dry" in a century - widely blamed on climate change - has reduced man-made Lake Eucumbene to a tenth of its normal size, exposing the town's muddy outline to the elements.
The blackened skeletons of trees poke out of the water, still marking the route of a road they once lined in the old town.
But the longest "big dry" in a century - widely blamed on climate change - has reduced man-made Lake Eucumbene to a tenth of its normal size, exposing the town's muddy outline to the elements.
The blackened skeletons of trees poke out of the water, still marking the route of a road they once lined in the old town.
NOISY ZOO PEACOCKS ARE KILLED reports the Mirror
A ZOO slaughtered seven peacocks after neighbours complained they made too much noise.
The male birds roosted in trees near the boundary wall and flew into people's gardens.
Simon Tonge, boss of Paignton Zoo, Devon, said: "I hate it. I was forced into it as a result of one person's efforts. There was nothing I could do.
"In May and June, the peacocks grow their tails, become territorial and shout to high heaven.
"It's just for six weeks of the year. For the rest of the time they are silent."
The male birds roosted in trees near the boundary wall and flew into people's gardens.
Simon Tonge, boss of Paignton Zoo, Devon, said: "I hate it. I was forced into it as a result of one person's efforts. There was nothing I could do.
"In May and June, the peacocks grow their tails, become territorial and shout to high heaven.
"It's just for six weeks of the year. For the rest of the time they are silent."
Finally a number of the papers report on a new phenonoma
I see a bad moon rising, I see trouble on the way says the Times
Extra police officers are to be deployed on the streets this summer after research established a direct link between the full moon and violence.
Analysts at Sussex Police found a rise in unruly incidents at full moon while investigating external factors that influence people’s behaviour.
Together with the most common paydays, the full moon was identified as a particular time when aggressive behaviour rose among drinkers in pubs and nightclubs in Brighton and Hove, East Sussex.
Analysts at Sussex Police found a rise in unruly incidents at full moon while investigating external factors that influence people’s behaviour.
Together with the most common paydays, the full moon was identified as a particular time when aggressive behaviour rose among drinkers in pubs and nightclubs in Brighton and Hove, East Sussex.
No comments:
Post a Comment