Pages
This Mother of Three's ''Flabby'' Bikini Photo With Stretch Marks Goes Viral: See the Inspirational Pic!
The outbreak, which began in eastern Guinea more than a year ago and has killed over 10,000 people in the three West African countries worst hit, had appeared to be on the wane, but Guinea has seen cases rise for three consecutive weeks, according to World Health Organization data.
A government health report from the weekend showed there were 21 new cases in a single day, a spike from the recent daily average of eight.
President Alpha Conde said on Tuesday that everything must be done to end the outbreak by mid-April, ahead of a meeting with donors scheduled around that date.
Ending Ebola could reboot Guinea's mining-dependent economy that has been hammered by the outbreak which has scared investors, he said.
"With Ebola, it is easier to go from 100 cases to 10 cases than from 10 cases of to zero. To end it, we need ten times more effort than when the outbreak was at its height," he said.
NEW INFECTIONS
A big source of concern is a chain of new infections that can be linked back to a woman who died of Ebola and was not buried safely, according to Fatoumata Lejeune-Kaba, spokeswoman for the U.N.'s Ebola emergency response mission UNMEER.
"It's a major setback .... It's due to individual behaviors. That is having a devastating effect on the community. People are simply not practicing the safety rules that we have been talking about for a year," she told Reuters.
Of the other two countries worst hit, Sierra Leone has also seen a spate of new cases while Liberia has no known cases at present and is waiting to be declared free of the disease.
The new cases in Guinea are in the capital and the southwestern town of Forecariah but if the situation is not brought under control they could spread across borders, said Lejeune-Kaba.
Guinea officials said the new cases came from high risk Ebola contacts who had left Forecariah and developed symptoms elsewhere, pointing to poor surveillance.
Sakoba Keïta, Guinea's anti-Ebola task force coordinator, said on Tuesday that the government was putting in place new measures including strict rules regulating the movement of corpses and contact tracing.
"There are numerous gaps in the Ebola response in Guinea, notably in surveillance of contacts, and that explains the difficulty in making any lasting progress towards ending the epidemic," said a spokesman for medical charity MSF.
The three doctors were infected at the Ignace Deen hospital in Conakry, which is not an Ebola center. More than 50 doctors in Guinea have caught the virus during the outbreak.
Guinea Ebola cases rise, three doctors infected
The outbreak, which began in eastern Guinea more than a year ago and has killed over 10,000 people in the three West African countries worst hit, had appeared to be on the wane, but Guinea has seen cases rise for three consecutive weeks, according to World Health Organization data.
A government health report from the weekend showed there were 21 new cases in a single day, a spike from the recent daily average of eight.
President Alpha Conde said on Tuesday that everything must be done to end the outbreak by mid-April, ahead of a meeting with donors scheduled around that date.
Ending Ebola could reboot Guinea's mining-dependent economy that has been hammered by the outbreak which has scared investors, he said.
"With Ebola, it is easier to go from 100 cases to 10 cases than from 10 cases of to zero. To end it, we need ten times more effort than when the outbreak was at its height," he said.
NEW INFECTIONS
A big source of concern is a chain of new infections that can be linked back to a woman who died of Ebola and was not buried safely, according to Fatoumata Lejeune-Kaba, spokeswoman for the U.N.'s Ebola emergency response mission UNMEER.
"It's a major setback .... It's due to individual behaviors. That is having a devastating effect on the community. People are simply not practicing the safety rules that we have been talking about for a year," she told Reuters.
Of the other two countries worst hit, Sierra Leone has also seen a spate of new cases while Liberia has no known cases at present and is waiting to be declared free of the disease.
The new cases in Guinea are in the capital and the southwestern town of Forecariah but if the situation is not brought under control they could spread across borders, said Lejeune-Kaba.
Guinea officials said the new cases came from high risk Ebola contacts who had left Forecariah and developed symptoms elsewhere, pointing to poor surveillance.
Sakoba Keïta, Guinea's anti-Ebola task force coordinator, said on Tuesday that the government was putting in place new measures including strict rules regulating the movement of corpses and contact tracing.
"There are numerous gaps in the Ebola response in Guinea, notably in surveillance of contacts, and that explains the difficulty in making any lasting progress towards ending the epidemic," said a spokesman for medical charity MSF.
The three doctors were infected at the Ignace Deen hospital in Conakry, which is not an Ebola center. More than 50 doctors in Guinea have caught the virus during the outbreak.
What do you think about this make up tutorial
MADISON, Wis. — Hundreds are expected to attend the funeral for an unarmed 19-year-old who was killed last weekend by a Madison police officer.
Tony Robinson, who is biracial, died March 6 after what police say was a confrontation in which he assaulted the white officer. A preliminary autopsy showed Robinson was shot in his head, torso and right arm.
Saturday's visitation and funeral will be held in a high school field house to accommodate a large crowd.
Robinson's death sparked several large protests in Wisconsin's capital city in the past week. An open letter signed by nearly 90 clergy members on Friday said Robinson's death exposed longstanding racial inequalities in Madison.
A state agency is investigating under a Wisconsin law that requires an outside agency to look into fatal police shootings.
Hundreds Expected at Funeral for 19-Year-Old Shot by Officer
MADISON, Wis. — Hundreds are expected to attend the funeral for an unarmed 19-year-old who was killed last weekend by a Madison police officer.
Tony Robinson, who is biracial, died March 6 after what police say was a confrontation in which he assaulted the white officer. A preliminary autopsy showed Robinson was shot in his head, torso and right arm.
Saturday's visitation and funeral will be held in a high school field house to accommodate a large crowd.
Robinson's death sparked several large protests in Wisconsin's capital city in the past week. An open letter signed by nearly 90 clergy members on Friday said Robinson's death exposed longstanding racial inequalities in Madison.
A state agency is investigating under a Wisconsin law that requires an outside agency to look into fatal police shootings.
BROOKHAVEN, Miss. — When Donna Davis opened her door shortly after midnight, what she saw reminded her of a scene out of a horror movie. A mother and two children, a boy and a girl, were covered in blood after being shot in their home across the road.
Someone kept saying, "'We've been hit,'" Davis said, awakened by a pounding on the doors. There was so much blood, she said, that she thought they had been hit by a car early Friday.
"The little boy, he was half under the porch like he was trying to hide from someone. He was screaming for help," she said, pointing to wooden steps leading to the door of her trailer home.
At one point, said Davis' mother-in-law, Linda Davis, the boy reached up to his face and said, "Oh, half my ear is gone."
Police said a man living in the house owned by the woman, Victoria Sims, and her husband, Jermaine Sims, shot them both and their three children. Jermaine Sims, 31, and a 9-year-old daughter died. Victoria Sims, 29, and their 6-year-old son and 14-year-old daughter survived but were in critical condition, Capt. Clint Earls said. Police did not release the children's names.
Victoria and the two other children who survived had crossed a usually busy two-lane highway to seek help, Donna Davis said.
"It was like out of a horror movie," she said. "I still see that little girl's face in my mind."
Jimmy Lyons, 32, is accused of shooting the family, Earls said. He added that Lyons faces two counts of murder and three of aggravated assault.
Lyons was being held in a county jail. It was not known if he had an attorney.
Earls said Jermaine Sims and Lyons had argued, but he did not know what the argument was about.
Earls said there don't appear to have been any witnesses.
"The only thing we are waiting on is getting some of the victims in well-enough health to where they can shed some light on what caused the incident to erupt," Earls said.
The shootings took place in an area about a mile south of downtown Brookhaven: inside city limits but rural in nature, where large yards are studded with pine trees.
Donna and John Davis and their 10-year-old daughter, Heaven, live in a white-and-beige trailer home across the highway and about 100 yards away from the Sims' brown, wood-frame home. John Davis' mother, Linda Davis, lives next door in a small cream-colored house.
Police said a call about 12:20 a.m. Friday brought police to the Davises' homes, where they found Victoria Sims and two children outside, wounded. Inside the Sims' home they found Jermaine Sims and the 9-year-old, both shot, and Lyons, uninjured. Jermaine Sims and the daughter died later at a hospital.
The Davises said they often saw the children getting on and off the school bus or riding bicycles in the yard, but did not know their neighbors.
John Davis said the boy's wounds included cuts on his face, as if he'd been attacked with a knife.
Donna Davis said that, while they waited for an ambulance, she hugged the girl to keep her warm.
"She kept saying, 'I want my mama,'" Donna Davis said.
Police: Man Shoots Family of 5, Killing Father, Daughter
BROOKHAVEN, Miss. — When Donna Davis opened her door shortly after midnight, what she saw reminded her of a scene out of a horror movie. A mother and two children, a boy and a girl, were covered in blood after being shot in their home across the road.
Someone kept saying, "'We've been hit,'" Davis said, awakened by a pounding on the doors. There was so much blood, she said, that she thought they had been hit by a car early Friday.
"The little boy, he was half under the porch like he was trying to hide from someone. He was screaming for help," she said, pointing to wooden steps leading to the door of her trailer home.
At one point, said Davis' mother-in-law, Linda Davis, the boy reached up to his face and said, "Oh, half my ear is gone."
Police said a man living in the house owned by the woman, Victoria Sims, and her husband, Jermaine Sims, shot them both and their three children. Jermaine Sims, 31, and a 9-year-old daughter died. Victoria Sims, 29, and their 6-year-old son and 14-year-old daughter survived but were in critical condition, Capt. Clint Earls said. Police did not release the children's names.
Victoria and the two other children who survived had crossed a usually busy two-lane highway to seek help, Donna Davis said.
"It was like out of a horror movie," she said. "I still see that little girl's face in my mind."
Jimmy Lyons, 32, is accused of shooting the family, Earls said. He added that Lyons faces two counts of murder and three of aggravated assault.
Lyons was being held in a county jail. It was not known if he had an attorney.
Earls said Jermaine Sims and Lyons had argued, but he did not know what the argument was about.
Earls said there don't appear to have been any witnesses.
"The only thing we are waiting on is getting some of the victims in well-enough health to where they can shed some light on what caused the incident to erupt," Earls said.
The shootings took place in an area about a mile south of downtown Brookhaven: inside city limits but rural in nature, where large yards are studded with pine trees.
Donna and John Davis and their 10-year-old daughter, Heaven, live in a white-and-beige trailer home across the highway and about 100 yards away from the Sims' brown, wood-frame home. John Davis' mother, Linda Davis, lives next door in a small cream-colored house.
Police said a call about 12:20 a.m. Friday brought police to the Davises' homes, where they found Victoria Sims and two children outside, wounded. Inside the Sims' home they found Jermaine Sims and the 9-year-old, both shot, and Lyons, uninjured. Jermaine Sims and the daughter died later at a hospital.
The Davises said they often saw the children getting on and off the school bus or riding bicycles in the yard, but did not know their neighbors.
John Davis said the boy's wounds included cuts on his face, as if he'd been attacked with a knife.
Donna Davis said that, while they waited for an ambulance, she hugged the girl to keep her warm.
"She kept saying, 'I want my mama,'" Donna Davis said.
Listeria bacteria was found in samples of Chocolate Chip Country Cookies, Great Divide Bars, Sour Pop Green Apple Bars, Cotton Candy Bars, Scoops, Vanilla Stick Slices, Almond Bars and No Sugar Added Moo Bars, the FDA said.
3 Kansas hospital patients die from ice cream contamination
Listeria bacteria was found in samples of Chocolate Chip Country Cookies, Great Divide Bars, Sour Pop Green Apple Bars, Cotton Candy Bars, Scoops, Vanilla Stick Slices, Almond Bars and No Sugar Added Moo Bars, the FDA said.
Cyclone Pam has slammed into the south Pacific archipelago of Vanuatu leaving "complete devastation" in its wake, aid agencies say.
Houses in the capital, Port Vila, were destroyed and "people are wandering the streets looking for help", said Tom Skirrow of Save the Children.
He said eight people were confirmed dead, but UN agencies say dozens may have been killed.
Vanuatu's president said he had a "heavy heart" and appealed for aid.
Pam has brought winds of up to 270km/h (170mph) and torrential rain.
'Entire villages destroyed'
Chloe Morrison, an emergency communications officer with World Vision who is in Port Vila, said on Saturday that streets were littered with roofing, uprooted trees and toppled power lines.
Phil Mercer reports on Cyclone Pam which has ravaged the pacific nation of Vanuatu. Video courtesy of YouTube/Isso Nihmei at 350.org
She said there were reports of entire villages in remote areas being destroyed.
"It's still really quite dangerous outside. Most people are still hunkering down,'' she said.
"The damage is quite extensive in Port Vila but there are so many more vulnerable islands. I can't even imagine what it's like in those vulnerable communities.''
Mr Skirrow said: "The scene here this morning is complete devastation - houses are destroyed, trees are down, roads are blocked and people are wandering the streets looking for help.
"Communications are down across much of the country with the total extent of the devastation unlikely to be known for several days."
Unicef spokeswoman Alice Clements described the cyclone as "15-30 minutes of absolute terror" as it passed over Port Vila.
"I saw the sliding doors from my three-storey-hotel room completely blow away - it was terrifying," she said.
The cyclone whipped up huge waves to batter the coasts of the archipelago
Many houses were destroyed around the capital Port Vila
Unicef in New Zealand warned that Cyclone Pam could be one of the worst ever weather disasters for the region.
"While it is too early to say for certain, early reports are indicating that this weather disaster could potentially be one of the worst in Pacific history," New Zealand executive director Vivien Maidaborn said in a statement.
Vanuatu's President Baldwin Londsdale was attending the World Conference on Disaster Risk and Reduction in Japan, where he appealed for international support.
"I am speaking with you today with a heart that is so heavy," he said.
"I stand to appeal on behalf of the government and people of Vanuatu to the global community to give a lending hand."
Unconfirmed reports said that 44 people had died in Penama province in the north-east of Vanuatu, the UN's Office for the Co-ordination for Humanitarian Assistance (UNOCHA) said earlier in a statement.
Many boats moored in Port Vila bore the brunt of the storm
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said the country was preparing to send a crisis response team to Vanuatu if needed.
"There are destructive winds, rain, flooding, landslides, sea surges and very rough seas and the storm is exceedingly destructive there,'' she said. "We are still assessing the situation, but we stand ready to assist."
Although thousands of people spent the night in emergency shelters, many more were forced to ride out the storm in their own homes.
All six provinces of Vanuatu have been under red alert, meaning people are advised to immediately seek shelter.
Located about a quarter of the way from Australia to Hawaii, Vanuatu has a population of 267,000 spread over 65 islands. About 47,000 people live in the capital, Port Vila.
Pam, a category five tropical storm, had already caused major damage on other Pacific islands, including Kiribati and the Solomon Islands.
Tuvalu, a group of nine tiny islands north-east of Vanuatu, has also declared a state of emergency after the cyclone caused flash floods there.
Cyclone 'devastates' South Pacific islands of Vanuatu
Cyclone Pam has slammed into the south Pacific archipelago of Vanuatu leaving "complete devastation" in its wake, aid agencies say.
Houses in the capital, Port Vila, were destroyed and "people are wandering the streets looking for help", said Tom Skirrow of Save the Children.
He said eight people were confirmed dead, but UN agencies say dozens may have been killed.
Vanuatu's president said he had a "heavy heart" and appealed for aid.
Pam has brought winds of up to 270km/h (170mph) and torrential rain.
'Entire villages destroyed'
Chloe Morrison, an emergency communications officer with World Vision who is in Port Vila, said on Saturday that streets were littered with roofing, uprooted trees and toppled power lines.
Phil Mercer reports on Cyclone Pam which has ravaged the pacific nation of Vanuatu. Video courtesy of YouTube/Isso Nihmei at 350.org
She said there were reports of entire villages in remote areas being destroyed.
"It's still really quite dangerous outside. Most people are still hunkering down,'' she said.
"The damage is quite extensive in Port Vila but there are so many more vulnerable islands. I can't even imagine what it's like in those vulnerable communities.''
Mr Skirrow said: "The scene here this morning is complete devastation - houses are destroyed, trees are down, roads are blocked and people are wandering the streets looking for help.
"Communications are down across much of the country with the total extent of the devastation unlikely to be known for several days."
Unicef spokeswoman Alice Clements described the cyclone as "15-30 minutes of absolute terror" as it passed over Port Vila.
"I saw the sliding doors from my three-storey-hotel room completely blow away - it was terrifying," she said.
The cyclone whipped up huge waves to batter the coasts of the archipelago
Many houses were destroyed around the capital Port Vila
Unicef in New Zealand warned that Cyclone Pam could be one of the worst ever weather disasters for the region.
"While it is too early to say for certain, early reports are indicating that this weather disaster could potentially be one of the worst in Pacific history," New Zealand executive director Vivien Maidaborn said in a statement.
Vanuatu's President Baldwin Londsdale was attending the World Conference on Disaster Risk and Reduction in Japan, where he appealed for international support.
"I am speaking with you today with a heart that is so heavy," he said.
"I stand to appeal on behalf of the government and people of Vanuatu to the global community to give a lending hand."
Unconfirmed reports said that 44 people had died in Penama province in the north-east of Vanuatu, the UN's Office for the Co-ordination for Humanitarian Assistance (UNOCHA) said earlier in a statement.
Many boats moored in Port Vila bore the brunt of the storm
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said the country was preparing to send a crisis response team to Vanuatu if needed.
"There are destructive winds, rain, flooding, landslides, sea surges and very rough seas and the storm is exceedingly destructive there,'' she said. "We are still assessing the situation, but we stand ready to assist."
Although thousands of people spent the night in emergency shelters, many more were forced to ride out the storm in their own homes.
All six provinces of Vanuatu have been under red alert, meaning people are advised to immediately seek shelter.
Located about a quarter of the way from Australia to Hawaii, Vanuatu has a population of 267,000 spread over 65 islands. About 47,000 people live in the capital, Port Vila.
Pam, a category five tropical storm, had already caused major damage on other Pacific islands, including Kiribati and the Solomon Islands.
Tuvalu, a group of nine tiny islands north-east of Vanuatu, has also declared a state of emergency after the cyclone caused flash floods there.
Fantasy author Sir Terry Pratchett has died aged 66 after a long battle with Alzheimer's disease. Sir Terry, best known for the Discworld series, wrote more than 70 books over his lengthy career.
Many have picked up on the fact that Pratchett's Twitter account actually tweeted a link to a press release announcing his death. In fact, shortly after the author's death, four messages appeared, one after the other, creating a short-short story. The last tweet said, appropriately, "The End."
So how did these tweets appear after the novelist had died? They weren't scheduled - as some have suggested - but rather were posted by Pratchett's assistant Rob Wilkins shortly after his death.
How did Terry Pratchett tweet after his death?
Fantasy author Sir Terry Pratchett has died aged 66 after a long battle with Alzheimer's disease. Sir Terry, best known for the Discworld series, wrote more than 70 books over his lengthy career.
Many have picked up on the fact that Pratchett's Twitter account actually tweeted a link to a press release announcing his death. In fact, shortly after the author's death, four messages appeared, one after the other, creating a short-short story. The last tweet said, appropriately, "The End."
So how did these tweets appear after the novelist had died? They weren't scheduled - as some have suggested - but rather were posted by Pratchett's assistant Rob Wilkins shortly after his death.
Cyclone Pam has slammed into the south Pacific archipelago of Vanuatu leaving "complete devastation" in its wake, aid agencies say.
Houses in the capital, Port Vila, were destroyed and "people are wandering the streets looking for help", said Tom Skirrow of Save the Children.
He said eight people were confirmed dead, but UN agencies say dozens may have been killed.
Vanuatu's president said he had a "heavy heart" and appealed for aid.
Pam has brought winds of up to 270km/h (170mph) and torrential rain.
'Entire villages destroyed'
Chloe Morrison, an emergency communications officer with World Vision who is in Port Vila, said on Saturday that streets were littered with roofing, uprooted trees and toppled power lines.
Phil Mercer reports on Cyclone Pam which has ravaged the pacific nation of Vanuatu. Video courtesy of YouTube/Isso Nihmei at 350.org
She said there were reports of entire villages in remote areas being destroyed.
"It's still really quite dangerous outside. Most people are still hunkering down,'' she said.
"The damage is quite extensive in Port Vila but there are so many more vulnerable islands. I can't even imagine what it's like in those vulnerable communities.''
Mr Skirrow said: "The scene here this morning is complete devastation - houses are destroyed, trees are down, roads are blocked and people are wandering the streets looking for help.
"Communications are down across much of the country with the total extent of the devastation unlikely to be known for several days."
Unicef spokeswoman Alice Clements described the cyclone as "15-30 minutes of absolute terror" as it passed over Port Vila.
"I saw the sliding doors from my three-storey-hotel room completely blow away - it was terrifying," she said.
The cyclone whipped up huge waves to batter the coasts of the archipelago
Many houses were destroyed around the capital Port Vila
Unicef in New Zealand warned that Cyclone Pam could be one of the worst ever weather disasters for the region.
"While it is too early to say for certain, early reports are indicating that this weather disaster could potentially be one of the worst in Pacific history," New Zealand executive director Vivien Maidaborn said in a statement.
Vanuatu's President Baldwin Londsdale was attending the World Conference on Disaster Risk and Reduction in Japan, where he appealed for international support.
"I am speaking with you today with a heart that is so heavy," he said.
"I stand to appeal on behalf of the government and people of Vanuatu to the global community to give a lending hand."
Unconfirmed reports said that 44 people had died in Penama province in the north-east of Vanuatu, the UN's Office for the Co-ordination for Humanitarian Assistance (UNOCHA) said earlier in a statement.
Many boats moored in Port Vila bore the brunt of the storm
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said the country was preparing to send a crisis response team to Vanuatu if needed.
"There are destructive winds, rain, flooding, landslides, sea surges and very rough seas and the storm is exceedingly destructive there,'' she said. "We are still assessing the situation, but we stand ready to assist."
Although thousands of people spent the night in emergency shelters, many more were forced to ride out the storm in their own homes.
All six provinces of Vanuatu have been under red alert, meaning people are advised to immediately seek shelter.
Located about a quarter of the way from Australia to Hawaii, Vanuatu has a population of 267,000 spread over 65 islands. About 47,000 people live in the capital, Port Vila.
Pam, a category five tropical storm, had already caused major damage on other Pacific islands, including Kiribati and the Solomon Islands.
Tuvalu, a group of nine tiny islands north-east of Vanuatu, has also declared a state of emergency after the cyclone caused flash floods there.
Cyclone 'devastates' South Pacific islands of Vanuatu
Cyclone Pam has slammed into the south Pacific archipelago of Vanuatu leaving "complete devastation" in its wake, aid agencies say.
Houses in the capital, Port Vila, were destroyed and "people are wandering the streets looking for help", said Tom Skirrow of Save the Children.
He said eight people were confirmed dead, but UN agencies say dozens may have been killed.
Vanuatu's president said he had a "heavy heart" and appealed for aid.
Pam has brought winds of up to 270km/h (170mph) and torrential rain.
'Entire villages destroyed'
Chloe Morrison, an emergency communications officer with World Vision who is in Port Vila, said on Saturday that streets were littered with roofing, uprooted trees and toppled power lines.
Phil Mercer reports on Cyclone Pam which has ravaged the pacific nation of Vanuatu. Video courtesy of YouTube/Isso Nihmei at 350.org
She said there were reports of entire villages in remote areas being destroyed.
"It's still really quite dangerous outside. Most people are still hunkering down,'' she said.
"The damage is quite extensive in Port Vila but there are so many more vulnerable islands. I can't even imagine what it's like in those vulnerable communities.''
Mr Skirrow said: "The scene here this morning is complete devastation - houses are destroyed, trees are down, roads are blocked and people are wandering the streets looking for help.
"Communications are down across much of the country with the total extent of the devastation unlikely to be known for several days."
Unicef spokeswoman Alice Clements described the cyclone as "15-30 minutes of absolute terror" as it passed over Port Vila.
"I saw the sliding doors from my three-storey-hotel room completely blow away - it was terrifying," she said.
The cyclone whipped up huge waves to batter the coasts of the archipelago
Many houses were destroyed around the capital Port Vila
Unicef in New Zealand warned that Cyclone Pam could be one of the worst ever weather disasters for the region.
"While it is too early to say for certain, early reports are indicating that this weather disaster could potentially be one of the worst in Pacific history," New Zealand executive director Vivien Maidaborn said in a statement.
Vanuatu's President Baldwin Londsdale was attending the World Conference on Disaster Risk and Reduction in Japan, where he appealed for international support.
"I am speaking with you today with a heart that is so heavy," he said.
"I stand to appeal on behalf of the government and people of Vanuatu to the global community to give a lending hand."
Unconfirmed reports said that 44 people had died in Penama province in the north-east of Vanuatu, the UN's Office for the Co-ordination for Humanitarian Assistance (UNOCHA) said earlier in a statement.
Many boats moored in Port Vila bore the brunt of the storm
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said the country was preparing to send a crisis response team to Vanuatu if needed.
"There are destructive winds, rain, flooding, landslides, sea surges and very rough seas and the storm is exceedingly destructive there,'' she said. "We are still assessing the situation, but we stand ready to assist."
Although thousands of people spent the night in emergency shelters, many more were forced to ride out the storm in their own homes.
All six provinces of Vanuatu have been under red alert, meaning people are advised to immediately seek shelter.
Located about a quarter of the way from Australia to Hawaii, Vanuatu has a population of 267,000 spread over 65 islands. About 47,000 people live in the capital, Port Vila.
Pam, a category five tropical storm, had already caused major damage on other Pacific islands, including Kiribati and the Solomon Islands.
Tuvalu, a group of nine tiny islands north-east of Vanuatu, has also declared a state of emergency after the cyclone caused flash floods there.
By Phil Harris / Daily Mirror
Jeremy Clarkson speaks of Top Gear exit
Jeremy Clarkson has hinted that his time as Top Gear presenter may be over and compared his departure from the BBC motoring show to a dinosaur being made extinct.
The Top Gear host is currently suspended over allegations he punched a producer in a row over a hot meal.
Writing his column for the Sun newspaper, he says that the day must come when you "wave goodbye to the big monsters".
He continues: "I don't intend to dwell here on what happened then or what will happen in the future. I'm sure you're as fed up with the story as I am."
Clarkson's column expands on the comparisons with the animal kingdom saying that big imposing creatures on the brink of extinction, like the polar bears or tigers, had no place in a world which has moved on.
He adds: "We lose one animal and we get another. The world turns."
Jeremy Clarkson says that he has regrets as he leaves his home amidst the 'fracas' story
Clarkson goes on to apparently make light of the BBC suspending him "following a fracas", saying that one news report had been "wildly inaccurate" in saying that he had been seen using a bus.
"I can assure you that things are bad. But they are not that bloody bad," he writes.
More than 800,000 people have now signed a petition calling for him to be reinstated on the show.
Clarkson recently thanked the hundreds of thousands of fans who have signed.
Talking to BBC News, he said: "I am very grateful to everybody."
It has been reported that Clarkson is to face a disciplinary panel.
It has been said that Clarkson will appear before a panel led by the head of BBC Scotland Ken MacQuarrie.
MacQuarrie will be assisted by barrister Orla Tierney, according to the Radio Times.
Tierney joined the BBC earlier this year as 'human resources director employee relations and reward'.
MacQuarrie conducted the investigation into Newsnight's false expose of Lord McAlpine, is to chair the panel with witnesses expected to be called by the end of the week.
A lawyer for Mr Tymon said his client "intends to await the outcome of the BBC investigation and will make no comment until that investigation is complete".
Former Top Gear Stig claims that Top Gear would be 'damaged goods' without Jeremy Clarkson
The Top Gear star has attracted high profile support with David Cameron calling him a "huge talent" and saying he hoped the situation could be resolved so his children would not be left "heartbroken".
Mr Cameron, who is a friend of Clarkson and his constituency MP, told BBC Midlands Today: "I don't know exactly what happened. He is a constituent of mine, he is a friend of mine, he is a huge talent.
"I see that he said he regrets some of what happened. All I would say - because he is a talent and he does amuse and entertain so many people, including my children who'll be heartbroken if Top Gear is taken off air - I hope this can be sorted out because it is a great programme and he is a great talent."
Asked if the BBC was wrong to suspend him, Mr Cameron said: "I don't know what happened. Every organisation has to be able to be free to manage its talent and to say to people, 'you can do this', or 'you can't do that', so I don't want to interfere in the running of the BBC."
He added: "The Prime Minister has many responsibilities, sadly securing the future of Top Gear isn't one of them."
Clarkson's N-Word Shame - Jeremy Clarkson uses N-Word during filming of Top Gear
This is the latest in a long line of controversies which has seen the presenter offend foreign diplomats, viewers, MPs and his own bosses at the BBC.
Clarkson was put on what was called his final warning last year following a racism row after claims he used the N-word while reciting the nursery rhyme Eeny, Meeny, Miny, Moe during filming of the BBC2 programme.
Jeremy Clarkson hints at Top Gear exit and compares departure to 'dinosaur being made extinct'
By Phil Harris / Daily Mirror
Jeremy Clarkson speaks of Top Gear exit
Jeremy Clarkson has hinted that his time as Top Gear presenter may be over and compared his departure from the BBC motoring show to a dinosaur being made extinct.
The Top Gear host is currently suspended over allegations he punched a producer in a row over a hot meal.
Writing his column for the Sun newspaper, he says that the day must come when you "wave goodbye to the big monsters".
He continues: "I don't intend to dwell here on what happened then or what will happen in the future. I'm sure you're as fed up with the story as I am."
Clarkson's column expands on the comparisons with the animal kingdom saying that big imposing creatures on the brink of extinction, like the polar bears or tigers, had no place in a world which has moved on.
He adds: "We lose one animal and we get another. The world turns."
Jeremy Clarkson says that he has regrets as he leaves his home amidst the 'fracas' story
Clarkson goes on to apparently make light of the BBC suspending him "following a fracas", saying that one news report had been "wildly inaccurate" in saying that he had been seen using a bus.
"I can assure you that things are bad. But they are not that bloody bad," he writes.
More than 800,000 people have now signed a petition calling for him to be reinstated on the show.
Clarkson recently thanked the hundreds of thousands of fans who have signed.
Talking to BBC News, he said: "I am very grateful to everybody."
It has been reported that Clarkson is to face a disciplinary panel.
It has been said that Clarkson will appear before a panel led by the head of BBC Scotland Ken MacQuarrie.
MacQuarrie will be assisted by barrister Orla Tierney, according to the Radio Times.
Tierney joined the BBC earlier this year as 'human resources director employee relations and reward'.
MacQuarrie conducted the investigation into Newsnight's false expose of Lord McAlpine, is to chair the panel with witnesses expected to be called by the end of the week.
A lawyer for Mr Tymon said his client "intends to await the outcome of the BBC investigation and will make no comment until that investigation is complete".
Former Top Gear Stig claims that Top Gear would be 'damaged goods' without Jeremy Clarkson
The Top Gear star has attracted high profile support with David Cameron calling him a "huge talent" and saying he hoped the situation could be resolved so his children would not be left "heartbroken".
Mr Cameron, who is a friend of Clarkson and his constituency MP, told BBC Midlands Today: "I don't know exactly what happened. He is a constituent of mine, he is a friend of mine, he is a huge talent.
"I see that he said he regrets some of what happened. All I would say - because he is a talent and he does amuse and entertain so many people, including my children who'll be heartbroken if Top Gear is taken off air - I hope this can be sorted out because it is a great programme and he is a great talent."
Asked if the BBC was wrong to suspend him, Mr Cameron said: "I don't know what happened. Every organisation has to be able to be free to manage its talent and to say to people, 'you can do this', or 'you can't do that', so I don't want to interfere in the running of the BBC."
He added: "The Prime Minister has many responsibilities, sadly securing the future of Top Gear isn't one of them."
Clarkson's N-Word Shame - Jeremy Clarkson uses N-Word during filming of Top Gear
This is the latest in a long line of controversies which has seen the presenter offend foreign diplomats, viewers, MPs and his own bosses at the BBC.
Clarkson was put on what was called his final warning last year following a racism row after claims he used the N-word while reciting the nursery rhyme Eeny, Meeny, Miny, Moe during filming of the BBC2 programme.
Do you have to be biologically male to be allowed in the men's room, or biologically female for the ladies loos?
In several US states, as well as in Canada, the law governing public toilets is now a divisive issue. On one side are transgender people, who assert their right to use whichever restrooms they chose - no matter what their biological gender. On the other, conservatives who say a relaxation of the rules could leave members of the public vulnerable to traumatic or inappropriate situations, or even sexual harassment.
The latest twist online is an eye-catching protest tactic: the public toilet selfie.
Michael Hughes, a transgender man living in Rochester, Minnesota, is one of those using the tactic. On Twitter, he posts selfies with female friends stood behind him in women's public toilets. Hashtags like #weneedtopee and #occupotty (shared around 4,000 and 2,000 times each) have been created for the campaign.
"So I come in, go right to the mirror with a female friend behind me, and we quickly get the selfie, and get back out before anybody comes in and gets startled by my presence in the women's restroom," he told American television network KTTC. "I'm hoping that even the most conservative lawmakers and voters will be able to look at them, take a step back".
In Minnesota, as well as in Kentucky, the current proposals law would not affect all public restrooms but rather high schools, where restrictions have been proposed for toilets to be used according to a student's birth sex. In Florida and Texas, bills have been proposed to restrict all public facilities by biological gender.
The "we just need to pee" selfies have also started appearing in Canada, with transgender woman Brae Carnes as one of the main protestors. The legal situation there is slightly different: gender identity has been enshrined as a human right there, but an amendment was introduced by Canadian Conservative Senator Donald Plett that excludes 'sex-specific' places such as public toilets. According to reports, his aim was to protect vulnerable people such as women who have experienced abuse from the trauma of sharing a space with anyone who is "biologically male".
Miss Carnes, 23, from Victoria, British Columbia has posted selfies on Facebook of herself in men's toilets showing urinals in the background and uses the hashtag #PlettPutMeHere. In one of her photos she commented: "As a trans woman I'm not even safe from discrimination at the pub or public transit. What's going to happen if I'm forced into a men's changing room?"
Blog by Anisa Subedar
We just need to pee” transgender protest
Do you have to be biologically male to be allowed in the men's room, or biologically female for the ladies loos?
In several US states, as well as in Canada, the law governing public toilets is now a divisive issue. On one side are transgender people, who assert their right to use whichever restrooms they chose - no matter what their biological gender. On the other, conservatives who say a relaxation of the rules could leave members of the public vulnerable to traumatic or inappropriate situations, or even sexual harassment.
The latest twist online is an eye-catching protest tactic: the public toilet selfie.
Michael Hughes, a transgender man living in Rochester, Minnesota, is one of those using the tactic. On Twitter, he posts selfies with female friends stood behind him in women's public toilets. Hashtags like #weneedtopee and #occupotty (shared around 4,000 and 2,000 times each) have been created for the campaign.
"So I come in, go right to the mirror with a female friend behind me, and we quickly get the selfie, and get back out before anybody comes in and gets startled by my presence in the women's restroom," he told American television network KTTC. "I'm hoping that even the most conservative lawmakers and voters will be able to look at them, take a step back".
In Minnesota, as well as in Kentucky, the current proposals law would not affect all public restrooms but rather high schools, where restrictions have been proposed for toilets to be used according to a student's birth sex. In Florida and Texas, bills have been proposed to restrict all public facilities by biological gender.
The "we just need to pee" selfies have also started appearing in Canada, with transgender woman Brae Carnes as one of the main protestors. The legal situation there is slightly different: gender identity has been enshrined as a human right there, but an amendment was introduced by Canadian Conservative Senator Donald Plett that excludes 'sex-specific' places such as public toilets. According to reports, his aim was to protect vulnerable people such as women who have experienced abuse from the trauma of sharing a space with anyone who is "biologically male".
Miss Carnes, 23, from Victoria, British Columbia has posted selfies on Facebook of herself in men's toilets showing urinals in the background and uses the hashtag #PlettPutMeHere. In one of her photos she commented: "As a trans woman I'm not even safe from discrimination at the pub or public transit. What's going to happen if I'm forced into a men's changing room?"
Blog by Anisa Subedar
ABC News By JAMES GORDON MEEK, BRIAN ROSS, RYM MOMTAZ and ALEX HOSENBALL
America’s top military official, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin Dempsey, repeatedly warned Iraqi leaders about the conduct of both the Iraqi military and the militias that fight alongside them, a senior U.S. official told ABC News.
The Iraqi government says it has launched an investigation into alleged atrocities committed by Iraqi troops and Shia militias, some captured in a trove of images and footage found online, as revealed in an ABC News investigation Wednesday. Today State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki said the images amounted to “disturbing and serious allegations.”
“This behavior is clearly – you know – their behavior must be above reproach or they risk being painted with the same brush as ISIL [ISIS] fighters and certainly that’s a message that we are making clear,” Psaki told reporters today.
ABC NEWS INVESTIGATION: US-Trained Iraqi Forces Investigated for War Crimes
[A bound and blindfolded detainee appears to be dropped – or possibly hung from the neck according to one analyst -- from what looks like an Iraqi military base guard tower. The image was posted on Instagram.]
A senior military official with the Joint Staff disclosed to ABC News last week that "certain Iraqi units" had been denied military aid and assistance on the basis of "credible information in the past” –- the result of what’s known as the Leahy Law, named for Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont, and designed to keep the U.S. from directly funding units who commit human rights abuses.
The U.S. has blocked aid to the un-named Iraqi units under the Leahy Law since American troops returned to Iraq in August and began supporting government forces and Kurdish Peshmerga fighters with airstrikes against ISIS jihadists, the senior official said.
ABC News first showed administration officials, as well as Leahy, dozens of examples of social media images posted by members of Iraqi Security Forces and their supporters last fall. Some administration officials downplayed it as not widespread or involving Baghdad's military, but Leahy was incensed.
“The Leahy Law is clear and sets a minimum standard. If there is credible information that foreign security forces have committed the worst crimes – such as torture, killings of civilians, rape, or executions of prisoners – then they are not eligible for U.S. aid unless the individuals involved are being appropriately punished," Sen. Leahy said this week.
Iraqi Army spokesperson, Gen. Saad Maan, told ABC News after viewing some of the images that were posted online that “of course” Iraq will investigate.
“We don’t have anything to hide,” the general said. “We don’t have anything to be in, let’s say, in a black corner.”
[A black uniformed individual holds the severed head of a purported Saudi ISIS fighter while standing on top of a black-painted Humvee. In the background, a man wears two patches signifying the Iraqi Interior Ministry’s Emergency Response Brigade.]
Top US Military Official Repeatedly Warned Iraq About Troops’ Conduct
ABC News By JAMES GORDON MEEK, BRIAN ROSS, RYM MOMTAZ and ALEX HOSENBALL
America’s top military official, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin Dempsey, repeatedly warned Iraqi leaders about the conduct of both the Iraqi military and the militias that fight alongside them, a senior U.S. official told ABC News.
The Iraqi government says it has launched an investigation into alleged atrocities committed by Iraqi troops and Shia militias, some captured in a trove of images and footage found online, as revealed in an ABC News investigation Wednesday. Today State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki said the images amounted to “disturbing and serious allegations.”
“This behavior is clearly – you know – their behavior must be above reproach or they risk being painted with the same brush as ISIL [ISIS] fighters and certainly that’s a message that we are making clear,” Psaki told reporters today.
ABC NEWS INVESTIGATION: US-Trained Iraqi Forces Investigated for War Crimes
[A bound and blindfolded detainee appears to be dropped – or possibly hung from the neck according to one analyst -- from what looks like an Iraqi military base guard tower. The image was posted on Instagram.]
A senior military official with the Joint Staff disclosed to ABC News last week that "certain Iraqi units" had been denied military aid and assistance on the basis of "credible information in the past” –- the result of what’s known as the Leahy Law, named for Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont, and designed to keep the U.S. from directly funding units who commit human rights abuses.
The U.S. has blocked aid to the un-named Iraqi units under the Leahy Law since American troops returned to Iraq in August and began supporting government forces and Kurdish Peshmerga fighters with airstrikes against ISIS jihadists, the senior official said.
ABC News first showed administration officials, as well as Leahy, dozens of examples of social media images posted by members of Iraqi Security Forces and their supporters last fall. Some administration officials downplayed it as not widespread or involving Baghdad's military, but Leahy was incensed.
“The Leahy Law is clear and sets a minimum standard. If there is credible information that foreign security forces have committed the worst crimes – such as torture, killings of civilians, rape, or executions of prisoners – then they are not eligible for U.S. aid unless the individuals involved are being appropriately punished," Sen. Leahy said this week.
Iraqi Army spokesperson, Gen. Saad Maan, told ABC News after viewing some of the images that were posted online that “of course” Iraq will investigate.
“We don’t have anything to hide,” the general said. “We don’t have anything to be in, let’s say, in a black corner.”
[A black uniformed individual holds the severed head of a purported Saudi ISIS fighter while standing on top of a black-painted Humvee. In the background, a man wears two patches signifying the Iraqi Interior Ministry’s Emergency Response Brigade.]
When Kate and David Ogg were told that one of their new-born twins had stopped breathing they thought that was the end.
In desperation, and thinking it would be the last time they would be able to hold their son, the couple hugged him close.
But incredibly their body warmth seemed to revive him and the little boy started moving and his breathing grew stronger.
Hospital staff rushed to help the newborn and managed to bring him back to life.
And five year's later the lively youngster has been told about his rocky start in life.
Heartbroken: Kate and David Ogg were told their baby son was dead
The couple, from Queensland in Australia, had been trying to get pregnant for some time and were overjoyed when they found out Kate was expecting twins.
But, although the pregnancy started out well, after six months Kate was rushed to the delivery room.
Jamie was born first on March 25, 2010 and his sister Emily followed two minutes later.
Both babies were born in the amniotic sac and while Emily started wailing when it was torn over Jamie didn't make a sound.
But the couple quickly realised something was wrong when about 20 medical staff crowded around Jamie.
The baby had stopped breathing and his heartbeat was nearly gone.
And after a frantic 20 minutes they stopped trying to save him.
The doctor sat on the end of Kate's hospital bed and asked if they had a name picked out.
The couple were told there was nothing more they could do to save Jamie.
Kate said she saw her baby gasp but the doctor told her it was no use so the despairing mum took the boy in her arms and asked everyone to leave.
The baby's body was cold so she tried to keep him as warm as possible.
Kate told David to take his shirt off and climb into the bed.
Although she knew it was probably pointless she had to do everything she could to try and save her tiny son.
The desperate couple enveloped their tiny baby with their body warmth as they cradled him in the hospital bed.
Kate told Daily Mail Australia: "We were trying to entice him to stay. We explained his name and that he had a twin that he had to look out for and how hard we tried to have him.
"He suddenly gasped... then he opened his eyes. He was breathing and grabbing Dave's finger.
"If we had let the doctor walk out of the room with him, Jamie would have been dead."
Jamie and Emily are about to turn five years old and their parents have only recently decided to tell them about their amazing story.
When Emily found out her twin brother had almost died she burst into tears and kept hugging Jamie.
Kate said her children love to talk about when they were babies and their younger brother Charlie tells everyone about Jamie's incredible birth.
Amazingly Jamie has not encountered a single medical problem in his five years despite serious concerns the lack of oxygen when he was born could have led to cerebral palsy.
But instead the family feel extremely lucky all of their children are happy and healthy.
They have set up an online community called Jamie's Gift which fundraises for the Miracle Babies foundation which supports sick and premature babies.
Dave has signed up to take part in a gruelling Iron man triathalon in May in Port Macquarie when he will swim 3.8km swim, bike 180km and run a marathon.
Incredible photos of moment 'dead' baby was hugged back to life by distraught mum and dad
When Kate and David Ogg were told that one of their new-born twins had stopped breathing they thought that was the end.
In desperation, and thinking it would be the last time they would be able to hold their son, the couple hugged him close.
But incredibly their body warmth seemed to revive him and the little boy started moving and his breathing grew stronger.
Hospital staff rushed to help the newborn and managed to bring him back to life.
And five year's later the lively youngster has been told about his rocky start in life.
Heartbroken: Kate and David Ogg were told their baby son was dead
The couple, from Queensland in Australia, had been trying to get pregnant for some time and were overjoyed when they found out Kate was expecting twins.
But, although the pregnancy started out well, after six months Kate was rushed to the delivery room.
Jamie was born first on March 25, 2010 and his sister Emily followed two minutes later.
Both babies were born in the amniotic sac and while Emily started wailing when it was torn over Jamie didn't make a sound.
But the couple quickly realised something was wrong when about 20 medical staff crowded around Jamie.
The baby had stopped breathing and his heartbeat was nearly gone.
And after a frantic 20 minutes they stopped trying to save him.
The doctor sat on the end of Kate's hospital bed and asked if they had a name picked out.
The couple were told there was nothing more they could do to save Jamie.
Kate said she saw her baby gasp but the doctor told her it was no use so the despairing mum took the boy in her arms and asked everyone to leave.
The baby's body was cold so she tried to keep him as warm as possible.
Kate told David to take his shirt off and climb into the bed.
Although she knew it was probably pointless she had to do everything she could to try and save her tiny son.
The desperate couple enveloped their tiny baby with their body warmth as they cradled him in the hospital bed.
Kate told Daily Mail Australia: "We were trying to entice him to stay. We explained his name and that he had a twin that he had to look out for and how hard we tried to have him.
"He suddenly gasped... then he opened his eyes. He was breathing and grabbing Dave's finger.
"If we had let the doctor walk out of the room with him, Jamie would have been dead."
Jamie and Emily are about to turn five years old and their parents have only recently decided to tell them about their amazing story.
When Emily found out her twin brother had almost died she burst into tears and kept hugging Jamie.
Kate said her children love to talk about when they were babies and their younger brother Charlie tells everyone about Jamie's incredible birth.
Amazingly Jamie has not encountered a single medical problem in his five years despite serious concerns the lack of oxygen when he was born could have led to cerebral palsy.
But instead the family feel extremely lucky all of their children are happy and healthy.
They have set up an online community called Jamie's Gift which fundraises for the Miracle Babies foundation which supports sick and premature babies.
Dave has signed up to take part in a gruelling Iron man triathalon in May in Port Macquarie when he will swim 3.8km swim, bike 180km and run a marathon.
Skales and Wizkid are fighting over her
A plane skidded off a runway at New York’s LaGuardia Airport while landing during a winter storm today, shutting down the airport's runways, officials said.
Initially, there were no reports of injuries.
Delta Flight 1086, an MD-88 arriving from Atlanta, skidded off runway 13 at 11:10 a.m., the Federal Aviation Administration said.
Officials said they were checking for a fuel leak.
"Customers deplaned via aircraft slides and have moved to the terminal on buses," Delta said in a statement. "Our priority is ensuring our customers and crew members are safe. Delta will work with all authorities and stakeholders to look into what happened in this incident."
Images of the plane showed that it apparently crashed through a fence after skidding off the runway.
The FAA said LaGuardia Airport's runways are closed and expected to reopen at approximately 7 p.m. ET.
U.S.
A plane skidded off a runway at New York’s LaGuardia Airport while landing during a winter storm today
A plane skidded off a runway at New York’s LaGuardia Airport while landing during a winter storm today, shutting down the airport's runways, officials said.
Initially, there were no reports of injuries.
Delta Flight 1086, an MD-88 arriving from Atlanta, skidded off runway 13 at 11:10 a.m., the Federal Aviation Administration said.
Officials said they were checking for a fuel leak.
"Customers deplaned via aircraft slides and have moved to the terminal on buses," Delta said in a statement. "Our priority is ensuring our customers and crew members are safe. Delta will work with all authorities and stakeholders to look into what happened in this incident."
Images of the plane showed that it apparently crashed through a fence after skidding off the runway.
The FAA said LaGuardia Airport's runways are closed and expected to reopen at approximately 7 p.m. ET.
U.S.
An unnamed source told The Associated Press the White House counsel's office only found out about her heavy personal email use as part of the congressional investigation into the Benghazi attack.
White House counsel reportedly kept in dark on Clinton’s personal email use
An unnamed source told The Associated Press the White House counsel's office only found out about her heavy personal email use as part of the congressional investigation into the Benghazi attack.
The 34-year-old has revealed her new hair after keeping it hidden
Wow! Kim Kardashian has gone blonde - and when we say blonde we mean REALLY blonde.
The mother-of-one, who gave a sneak peak of her hair earlier, revealed her lighter locks in all their glory as she stepped out with Kanye in Paris.
And boy does she look different! The blonde looked particularly dramatic against her all- black outift, creating a rather high fashion feel overall.
We bet Kanye loves
Kim Kardashian reveals startlingly blonde hair in all its glory and looks like a completely different woman!
The 34-year-old has revealed her new hair after keeping it hidden
Wow! Kim Kardashian has gone blonde - and when we say blonde we mean REALLY blonde.
The mother-of-one, who gave a sneak peak of her hair earlier, revealed her lighter locks in all their glory as she stepped out with Kanye in Paris.
And boy does she look different! The blonde looked particularly dramatic against her all- black outift, creating a rather high fashion feel overall.
We bet Kanye loves
By Sean Coughlan
The gap is so great that the UK's university admissions authority has warned that being male could soon be seen as a new form of social disadvantage.
In the UK, the gender gap in university entry has never been wider - and in a remarkable statistic from Ucas, the gap is more than 50% in a quarter of parliamentary constituencies. And no doubt this disparity will play out over future generations.
But hold that bandwagon there.
Because a global study from the OECD, based on more than 60 countries, has thrown up some very interesting challenges to generalisations about girls always doing better than boys.
Teacher bias
First of all, it suggests that school systems give greater rewards to girls rather than boys, even when pupils are of similar ability.
Teachers are more likely to "mark up" girls' work, says the study. It suggests that this leniency in marking is an unacknowledged reward for girls being more school-friendly.
Women are much more likely to go to university than men
Girls are more likely to be better behaved, more likely to get homework finished, less negative about going to school. And even when boys' work is just as good, the higher grade is more likely to go to a girl.
Where coursework is important to grades, could this have an influence on results?
The study also shows that in science and maths, boys are likely to be at either extreme on the ability spectrum.
Among the lowest achievers, boys predominate. It's an international pattern, with boys much more likely to be among those who get the worst results, drop out and leave education unskilled and poorly qualified.
But boys are also right at the top of the scale too, occupying more of the places among the very highest achievers.
Computer games 1 Homework 0
The biggest gender gap in school is usually associated with literacy, with girls runaway leaders in exams and international reading tests.
But the OECD has come up with the unexpected finding that this advantage in school does not last into adulthood. When young men and women get to the end of their twenties, their reading skills are not that much different.
The study also has some nuggets about the influences that shape how well pupils do at school. Girls do much more homework than boys and this has a direct impact on results.
Boys are much more likely to spend long hours playing on computer games and this can have a direct impact on the likelihood of doing homework.
But there are a couple of big conclusions delivered by the OECD's education guru, Andreas Schleicher.
There is no "maths gene", there is nothing inherent about boys or girls doing particularly well or badly in different subjects.
If boys can do better than girls in maths tests in some western countries - and then girls in Shanghai can do better at maths than those western boys, it shows the variable factor is not gender, but those education systems.
Mr Schleicher says the study shows there is nothing innate, immutable or inevitable about gender differences in education.
There might be a blizzard of overlapping influences - self-confidence, parental expectations, society's stereotypes, gender bias, school support - which can affect how young people behave.
But it's nothing that is hardwired by gender.
Clever girls, stupid boys?
By Sean Coughlan
The gap is so great that the UK's university admissions authority has warned that being male could soon be seen as a new form of social disadvantage.
In the UK, the gender gap in university entry has never been wider - and in a remarkable statistic from Ucas, the gap is more than 50% in a quarter of parliamentary constituencies. And no doubt this disparity will play out over future generations.
But hold that bandwagon there.
Because a global study from the OECD, based on more than 60 countries, has thrown up some very interesting challenges to generalisations about girls always doing better than boys.
Teacher bias
First of all, it suggests that school systems give greater rewards to girls rather than boys, even when pupils are of similar ability.
Teachers are more likely to "mark up" girls' work, says the study. It suggests that this leniency in marking is an unacknowledged reward for girls being more school-friendly.
Women are much more likely to go to university than men
Girls are more likely to be better behaved, more likely to get homework finished, less negative about going to school. And even when boys' work is just as good, the higher grade is more likely to go to a girl.
Where coursework is important to grades, could this have an influence on results?
The study also shows that in science and maths, boys are likely to be at either extreme on the ability spectrum.
Among the lowest achievers, boys predominate. It's an international pattern, with boys much more likely to be among those who get the worst results, drop out and leave education unskilled and poorly qualified.
But boys are also right at the top of the scale too, occupying more of the places among the very highest achievers.
Computer games 1 Homework 0
The biggest gender gap in school is usually associated with literacy, with girls runaway leaders in exams and international reading tests.
But the OECD has come up with the unexpected finding that this advantage in school does not last into adulthood. When young men and women get to the end of their twenties, their reading skills are not that much different.
The study also has some nuggets about the influences that shape how well pupils do at school. Girls do much more homework than boys and this has a direct impact on results.
Boys are much more likely to spend long hours playing on computer games and this can have a direct impact on the likelihood of doing homework.
But there are a couple of big conclusions delivered by the OECD's education guru, Andreas Schleicher.
There is no "maths gene", there is nothing inherent about boys or girls doing particularly well or badly in different subjects.
If boys can do better than girls in maths tests in some western countries - and then girls in Shanghai can do better at maths than those western boys, it shows the variable factor is not gender, but those education systems.
Mr Schleicher says the study shows there is nothing innate, immutable or inevitable about gender differences in education.
There might be a blizzard of overlapping influences - self-confidence, parental expectations, society's stereotypes, gender bias, school support - which can affect how young people behave.
But it's nothing that is hardwired by gender.
Her contractions were six minutes apart and she was about to leave for hospital when five masked thugs used crowbars to smash their way into her house in Beambridge, Pitsea, Essex.
They beat her with a baseball bat and slashed her face with a knife in the attack on Monday night.
The unnamed 22-year-old woman was rushed to Basildon Hospital and suffered a haemorrhage.
Fortunately despite her injuries and the trauma, she gave birth to a healthy baby on Tuesday.
The horrific attack happened while the woman’s partner was upstairs collecting her hospital bag and her two-year-old child was asleep in bed.
Detectives from Basildon CID are hunting the masked gang which smashed its way in to the house, in Beambridge, Pitsea, with crowbars on Monday night.
The woman’s partner, who does not want to be named, said: “My partner’s contractions were about six minutes apart, so I went upstairs to get her hospital bag and to phone the babysitter to come and look after our two-year-old.
“The next thing I heard a loud smash – like a fish tank shattering.
“My partner started screaming my name and I just heard these men shouting something like ‘where’s the money?’, ‘give us the money!’.”
The five-strong gang beat the mother with baseball bats and crowbars before slashing her across the face.
Her 32-year-old partner, said: “I came down running down the stairs and they were attacking her. I just threw my arms round her to protect her.
“They carried on beating us. I was just shouting back at them, ‘you are wrong man, she is in labour.
“Me and my girlfriend just started screaming and shouting for help.”
Police Hunt: Detectives are trying find the five thugs who carried out the twisted attack
The yobs grabbed the couple’s iPad, a Sony Experia mobile phone and £60 in cash they had taken out for cabs to the hospital and food. They then ran off.
Her partner said: “I can’t even describe to you how angry I am. My partner is too traumatised to even go back to our home.
"She is going to need counselling to help her get through this. To do this to a woman who is in labour – it’s sick.”
The gang included five men – three of them wore balaclavas and dark clothes. The fourth gang member was white and the fifth was mixed race.
They were all in their 20s and spoke with local accents. Anyone with information can call Basildon CID on 101.
Det Insp Joel Henderson, from Basildon CID, said: “This was a shocking attack on a young woman who was in labour.
"It is vital we get those people responsible off the streets of Basildon.”
Pregnant woman beaten with baseball bat by gang of intruders as she gave birth
Her contractions were six minutes apart and she was about to leave for hospital when five masked thugs used crowbars to smash their way into her house in Beambridge, Pitsea, Essex.
They beat her with a baseball bat and slashed her face with a knife in the attack on Monday night.
The unnamed 22-year-old woman was rushed to Basildon Hospital and suffered a haemorrhage.
Fortunately despite her injuries and the trauma, she gave birth to a healthy baby on Tuesday.
The horrific attack happened while the woman’s partner was upstairs collecting her hospital bag and her two-year-old child was asleep in bed.
Detectives from Basildon CID are hunting the masked gang which smashed its way in to the house, in Beambridge, Pitsea, with crowbars on Monday night.
The woman’s partner, who does not want to be named, said: “My partner’s contractions were about six minutes apart, so I went upstairs to get her hospital bag and to phone the babysitter to come and look after our two-year-old.
“The next thing I heard a loud smash – like a fish tank shattering.
“My partner started screaming my name and I just heard these men shouting something like ‘where’s the money?’, ‘give us the money!’.”
The five-strong gang beat the mother with baseball bats and crowbars before slashing her across the face.
Her 32-year-old partner, said: “I came down running down the stairs and they were attacking her. I just threw my arms round her to protect her.
“They carried on beating us. I was just shouting back at them, ‘you are wrong man, she is in labour.
“Me and my girlfriend just started screaming and shouting for help.”
Police Hunt: Detectives are trying find the five thugs who carried out the twisted attack
The yobs grabbed the couple’s iPad, a Sony Experia mobile phone and £60 in cash they had taken out for cabs to the hospital and food. They then ran off.
Her partner said: “I can’t even describe to you how angry I am. My partner is too traumatised to even go back to our home.
"She is going to need counselling to help her get through this. To do this to a woman who is in labour – it’s sick.”
The gang included five men – three of them wore balaclavas and dark clothes. The fourth gang member was white and the fifth was mixed race.
They were all in their 20s and spoke with local accents. Anyone with information can call Basildon CID on 101.
Det Insp Joel Henderson, from Basildon CID, said: “This was a shocking attack on a young woman who was in labour.
"It is vital we get those people responsible off the streets of Basildon.”
Harrowing images have emerged of the young man being hurled off the building as large crowds gather to watch the brutal execution
This is the sick moment Islamic State butchers pushed a man off the top of a building - because they believed he was gay.
The blind-folded man was held at the top of the tall block in Raqqa, Syria, while his captors took pictures of his final moments on mobile phones.
Below, hundreds of people gathered to watch the barbarous killing of the man, believed to be in his 20s.
One depraved IS member had a camera set up on a tripod on top of a car to photograph the man as he hurtled to his death.
Incredibly, the victim survived the fall, however that only marked the opening to the sick execution.
The man was thrown off the building but survived the fall
As he lay lifeless on the ground, men with AK47s across their backs pelted the body with rocks taken from plastic baskets.
Justice IS-style has also seen two men beheaded for blasphemy and dishonesty and a man stoned to death for adultery in the same week.
The men all faced Medieval-style public executions in the captured Syrian city of Aleppo.
Three men were also shot dead in the IS stronghold after being accused of being spies.
A man named Muhammad Aladdin was pictured having his head chopped off for being a 'swindler' in front of a crowd of locals.
More disturbing images showed a Jihadist with a giant Scimitar-style sword execute a man called Abdul Latif Ajjur.
The execution drew a significant audience
This time, onlookers were told he was guilty of cursing God.
Also in Aleppo, a dad had his had chopped off for allegedly stealing chocolate.
Campaign group Raqqa is being Slaughtered Silently said the pronouncement was that the man 'had taken goods'.
He told his executors it was chocolate for his children because they were hungry. But it was not enough to spare his life.
"People cheered but I believe only because they did not want to betray that they do not support Islamic State," said the site.
"This is the grim reality of life every day in Islamic State. It is like never-ending night-time in our country."
Their reports are difficult to independently verify due to the difficulty reporting from what is effectively an occupied territory.
But the Wall Street Journal recently interviewed the founder of the site, who gave a detailed account of his courageous filming under cover, in fear of his life.
ISIS:Twisted militants throw 'gay' man off building then stone him to death after he survives fall
Harrowing images have emerged of the young man being hurled off the building as large crowds gather to watch the brutal execution
This is the sick moment Islamic State butchers pushed a man off the top of a building - because they believed he was gay.
The blind-folded man was held at the top of the tall block in Raqqa, Syria, while his captors took pictures of his final moments on mobile phones.
Below, hundreds of people gathered to watch the barbarous killing of the man, believed to be in his 20s.
One depraved IS member had a camera set up on a tripod on top of a car to photograph the man as he hurtled to his death.
Incredibly, the victim survived the fall, however that only marked the opening to the sick execution.
The man was thrown off the building but survived the fall
As he lay lifeless on the ground, men with AK47s across their backs pelted the body with rocks taken from plastic baskets.
Justice IS-style has also seen two men beheaded for blasphemy and dishonesty and a man stoned to death for adultery in the same week.
The men all faced Medieval-style public executions in the captured Syrian city of Aleppo.
Three men were also shot dead in the IS stronghold after being accused of being spies.
A man named Muhammad Aladdin was pictured having his head chopped off for being a 'swindler' in front of a crowd of locals.
More disturbing images showed a Jihadist with a giant Scimitar-style sword execute a man called Abdul Latif Ajjur.
The execution drew a significant audience
This time, onlookers were told he was guilty of cursing God.
Also in Aleppo, a dad had his had chopped off for allegedly stealing chocolate.
Campaign group Raqqa is being Slaughtered Silently said the pronouncement was that the man 'had taken goods'.
He told his executors it was chocolate for his children because they were hungry. But it was not enough to spare his life.
"People cheered but I believe only because they did not want to betray that they do not support Islamic State," said the site.
"This is the grim reality of life every day in Islamic State. It is like never-ending night-time in our country."
Their reports are difficult to independently verify due to the difficulty reporting from what is effectively an occupied territory.
But the Wall Street Journal recently interviewed the founder of the site, who gave a detailed account of his courageous filming under cover, in fear of his life.
The stepbrother of 16-year-old Becky Watts showed no emotion today as he appeared in court charged with her murder.
Nathan Matthews, 28, walked into the dock wearing a short sleeve black tee-shirt for a brief hearing in packed Court Two at Bristol Magistrates' Court.
During the one-minute hearing, unshaven Matthews spoke only to confirm his name, address date of birth.
The court clerk told him: "You are charged that between February 18 and March 1 in Bristol that you murdered Rebecca Watts."
Becky Watts accused seen leaving court
Inside, the public gallery was filled with about 40 people - mostly journalists - with no members of Becky's immediate family present.
Three uniformed police officers sat in front of the glass dock. Matthews had arrived in a marked police van shielded by four uniformed officers.
District Judge Lynne Matthews told the court: "As we all know, this case will have to go to the Crown Court.
"I cannot entertain any application for bail this morning and thus I will remand you in custody until tomorrow."
No details of the case against him were revealed to the court and he did not enter a plea to the single murder charge.
Court artist sketch of Nathan Matthews appearing at Bristol Magistrate's Court, Bristol, where he was charged with the murder of his stepsister Becky Watts.
According to the charge sheet, Matthews is charged with the "murder of a person aged one year or older, namely between February 19 and March 3, murdered Rebecca Watts".
Matthews was handcuffed to a female dock officer and led to the cells. He was remanded in custody until a video link hearing at Bristol crown court tomorrow.
A few minutes later Matthews' girlfriend Shauna Hoare, 21, walked into the dock in the same court for a separate hearing.
The court clerk then read out the charge she faces during a hearing which lasted just over a minute.
The clerk told Hoare: "Between February 18 and March 1 you did a series of acts which had a tendency to pervert the course of justice in that you hindered the police investigation and assisted Nathan Matthews intended to help him evade detection."
Family of Rebecca Watts pay tribute to her beautiful life
Judge Matthews said: "This case also has to go to the Crown Court and is connected to the previous case.
"I understand that there is no application for bail. I send your case to the Crown Court at Bristol."
Hoare, dressed in a short-sleeved charcoal coloured tee-shirt, was remanded in custody to appear at Bristol crown court on April 2.
Four men and one woman, arrested on suspicion of assisting an offender, remain in police custody.
Matthews and Hoare, who uses the surname Phillips on social media, were arrested on suspicion of Becky's kidnap on Saturday.
They were later rearrested on suspicion of her murder after body parts were found at an address in Bristol.
They were charged yesterday.
Hoare was previously taken to hospital by officers after "feeling unwell" in custody but returned after being seen by a doctor.
Becky, described as "wonderful" by her family, vanished from her home in Crown Hill, Bristol, at 11.15am on February 19.
Avon and Somerset Police launched a huge search operation - involving six police teams each day - after she was reported missing the following afternoon.
On Monday night, detectives received information that Becky's body had been "cut up" and they attended a house in Barton Court, Barton Hill, Bristol.
Body parts were discovered at the address, which continues to be combed by forensics teams. A private ambulance was seen leaving the property on Tuesday afternoon.
Bouquets, teddies and cards have been left at the family home and at the site where body parts were found.
Becky Watts' stepbrother shows no emotion as he appears in court charged with teenager's murder
The stepbrother of 16-year-old Becky Watts showed no emotion today as he appeared in court charged with her murder.
Nathan Matthews, 28, walked into the dock wearing a short sleeve black tee-shirt for a brief hearing in packed Court Two at Bristol Magistrates' Court.
During the one-minute hearing, unshaven Matthews spoke only to confirm his name, address date of birth.
The court clerk told him: "You are charged that between February 18 and March 1 in Bristol that you murdered Rebecca Watts."
Becky Watts accused seen leaving court
Inside, the public gallery was filled with about 40 people - mostly journalists - with no members of Becky's immediate family present.
Three uniformed police officers sat in front of the glass dock. Matthews had arrived in a marked police van shielded by four uniformed officers.
District Judge Lynne Matthews told the court: "As we all know, this case will have to go to the Crown Court.
"I cannot entertain any application for bail this morning and thus I will remand you in custody until tomorrow."
No details of the case against him were revealed to the court and he did not enter a plea to the single murder charge.
Court artist sketch of Nathan Matthews appearing at Bristol Magistrate's Court, Bristol, where he was charged with the murder of his stepsister Becky Watts.
According to the charge sheet, Matthews is charged with the "murder of a person aged one year or older, namely between February 19 and March 3, murdered Rebecca Watts".
Matthews was handcuffed to a female dock officer and led to the cells. He was remanded in custody until a video link hearing at Bristol crown court tomorrow.
A few minutes later Matthews' girlfriend Shauna Hoare, 21, walked into the dock in the same court for a separate hearing.
The court clerk then read out the charge she faces during a hearing which lasted just over a minute.
The clerk told Hoare: "Between February 18 and March 1 you did a series of acts which had a tendency to pervert the course of justice in that you hindered the police investigation and assisted Nathan Matthews intended to help him evade detection."
Family of Rebecca Watts pay tribute to her beautiful life
Judge Matthews said: "This case also has to go to the Crown Court and is connected to the previous case.
"I understand that there is no application for bail. I send your case to the Crown Court at Bristol."
Hoare, dressed in a short-sleeved charcoal coloured tee-shirt, was remanded in custody to appear at Bristol crown court on April 2.
Four men and one woman, arrested on suspicion of assisting an offender, remain in police custody.
Matthews and Hoare, who uses the surname Phillips on social media, were arrested on suspicion of Becky's kidnap on Saturday.
They were later rearrested on suspicion of her murder after body parts were found at an address in Bristol.
They were charged yesterday.
Hoare was previously taken to hospital by officers after "feeling unwell" in custody but returned after being seen by a doctor.
Becky, described as "wonderful" by her family, vanished from her home in Crown Hill, Bristol, at 11.15am on February 19.
Avon and Somerset Police launched a huge search operation - involving six police teams each day - after she was reported missing the following afternoon.
On Monday night, detectives received information that Becky's body had been "cut up" and they attended a house in Barton Court, Barton Hill, Bristol.
Body parts were discovered at the address, which continues to be combed by forensics teams. A private ambulance was seen leaving the property on Tuesday afternoon.
Bouquets, teddies and cards have been left at the family home and at the site where body parts were found.
Jack Fox, 14, fell on the last run of the last day of a skiing trip in the Alps - he wants to encourage others to wear helmets, as he says his saved his life
A teenager survived a terrifying 2,500ft skiing plunge - and was surprised to find his iPhone had also miraculously withstood the fall.
Jack Fox, from Crossens, near Southport, Merseyside, is recovering at home after his Austrian ordeal.
He also wants to encourage others to wear helmets, as he says his saved his life.
The 14-year-old, who attends Tarleton Academy and wants to be a nuclear power engineer, fell on the last run of the last day of a school skiing trip in the Alps.
He suffered ice burns to his arms but miraculously survived the ordeal relatively unhurt, reports the Liverpool Echo.
Jack said his iPhone 4s, containing the last picture he took, also survived the fall.
He said: “The battery goes quite quickly now, but there is not a crack on it.
"After I had stopped falling I just saw it there and tried to turn it on but it wouldn’t, then when I got to the hospital and it had dried out, it turned on.”
Mum Amanda, 41, said Jack had been hoping for a new iPhone 6 if his current 4s model had been broken.
She said: “Jack has been after an iPhone 6 for ages and when he thought it wouldn’t turn on – he thought he was going to get a new one.
"But we are glad it came on because that was when he first spoke to me.
"My husband had been told that he had been airlifted off, but we didn’t know about any injuries. His phone coming back on was like it was meant to be really.”
Jack said: “I was facing forwards taking pictures of the scenery and I was about to put my phone away and started to slip and lose my footing.
"I was shouting for help as I was falling – but then I couldn’t because I had snow in my mouth.”
Amanda said: “Jack said when he got to the bottom of the mountain he knew he hadn’t broken anything as everything moved.”
At the top of the mountain, Jack said, a lot of people had taken their helmets off to take photos.
His mum Amanda said: “Luckily he hadn’t, because his helmet was all smashed.
"Kids think helmets are not cool but Jack has now realised that they are.”
“It was cracked and bits had fallen off it,” said Jack, “As I was going down I was trying to stop myself by digging my boots in, but it flipped me over and hit my head – it was a scary experience and was the first time I’ve ever thought I was going to die.”
The award-winning showjumper added: “Whether you ride horses or whatever you do, you do need a helmet. It has saved my life.”
After being airlifted off the mountain near Salzburg, Austria, Jack was treated at Alder Hey for severe ice burns.
He said: “As I fell, my jacket pushed up to my elbows and I got to one point when I started to slow down and I moved over on to one arm because the other one was hurting.
"That is when the left arm went bad.”
Amanda said his right arm shouldn’t be too bad, but his left arm was “quite a mess”.
She added: “He is lucky to be here, it could have been a totally different story.
"He is here and can tell the tale, which is the important thing.”
Jack has another skiing trip planned for next year – and said it was his photography – not his skiing – that was the problem.
He said: “It will be strange going back on the mountain, but I think the skiing won’t be a problem.”
Boy lives after plunging 2,500ft down mountain - and his iPhone withstands fall too
Jack Fox, 14, fell on the last run of the last day of a skiing trip in the Alps - he wants to encourage others to wear helmets, as he says his saved his life
A teenager survived a terrifying 2,500ft skiing plunge - and was surprised to find his iPhone had also miraculously withstood the fall.
Jack Fox, from Crossens, near Southport, Merseyside, is recovering at home after his Austrian ordeal.
He also wants to encourage others to wear helmets, as he says his saved his life.
The 14-year-old, who attends Tarleton Academy and wants to be a nuclear power engineer, fell on the last run of the last day of a school skiing trip in the Alps.
He suffered ice burns to his arms but miraculously survived the ordeal relatively unhurt, reports the Liverpool Echo.
Jack said his iPhone 4s, containing the last picture he took, also survived the fall.
He said: “The battery goes quite quickly now, but there is not a crack on it.
"After I had stopped falling I just saw it there and tried to turn it on but it wouldn’t, then when I got to the hospital and it had dried out, it turned on.”
Mum Amanda, 41, said Jack had been hoping for a new iPhone 6 if his current 4s model had been broken.
She said: “Jack has been after an iPhone 6 for ages and when he thought it wouldn’t turn on – he thought he was going to get a new one.
"But we are glad it came on because that was when he first spoke to me.
"My husband had been told that he had been airlifted off, but we didn’t know about any injuries. His phone coming back on was like it was meant to be really.”
Jack said: “I was facing forwards taking pictures of the scenery and I was about to put my phone away and started to slip and lose my footing.
"I was shouting for help as I was falling – but then I couldn’t because I had snow in my mouth.”
Amanda said: “Jack said when he got to the bottom of the mountain he knew he hadn’t broken anything as everything moved.”
At the top of the mountain, Jack said, a lot of people had taken their helmets off to take photos.
His mum Amanda said: “Luckily he hadn’t, because his helmet was all smashed.
"Kids think helmets are not cool but Jack has now realised that they are.”
“It was cracked and bits had fallen off it,” said Jack, “As I was going down I was trying to stop myself by digging my boots in, but it flipped me over and hit my head – it was a scary experience and was the first time I’ve ever thought I was going to die.”
The award-winning showjumper added: “Whether you ride horses or whatever you do, you do need a helmet. It has saved my life.”
After being airlifted off the mountain near Salzburg, Austria, Jack was treated at Alder Hey for severe ice burns.
He said: “As I fell, my jacket pushed up to my elbows and I got to one point when I started to slow down and I moved over on to one arm because the other one was hurting.
"That is when the left arm went bad.”
Amanda said his right arm shouldn’t be too bad, but his left arm was “quite a mess”.
She added: “He is lucky to be here, it could have been a totally different story.
"He is here and can tell the tale, which is the important thing.”
Jack has another skiing trip planned for next year – and said it was his photography – not his skiing – that was the problem.
He said: “It will be strange going back on the mountain, but I think the skiing won’t be a problem.”
Tragic newlywed loses cancer battle two days after dream wedding to 'best friend'
04 March 2015 04:47 PM John Shammas
Hundreds of friends and family attended the wedding of Brittney Ross Brewer, which the 28-year-old described as her dream day,
A bride died two days after marrying her "best friend" as she lost her battle with cancer.
Brittney Ross Brewer was originally due to marry on February 27, but fears prompted her to move the wedding forward to Valentine's Day.
The 28-year-old, from Maine in the US, married Jared at the chapel in the Maine Medical Centre, where she had been fighting her cervical cancer after being diagnosed nine months ago.
However Brittney did live to her original wedding date, and had a reception with hundreds of family and friends celebrating her marriage.
Two days later however, she died with her loved ones by her bedside
Jared told People: "She still wanted to have a big party to celebrate life and see everybody for probably the last time, unfortunately."
After her death, Jared's sister Janessa Brewer shared the news on Facebook.
She posted: "While Brittney may not have won her battle with cancer, she will live on forever within our hearts.
"Jared was able to give her the wedding of her dreams and she enjoyed every minute of it!
"Brittney was a living, breathing angel... who now has her wings."
The couple were overwhelmed with generous donations that friends, family and well wishers had given upon hearing her story online.
It allowed them to get medical treatment they would not have been able to otherwise afford, with $7,000 being given on her GoFundMe page.
Writing in her blog during her final days, Brittney wrote: "It’s been such a true blessing these past few days to see my friends and family coming together this past week for me.
"Making sure I got to marry my best friend and spend time with everyone I can
"Makes a girl appreciate how truly loved she is."
Tragic newlywed loses cancer battle two days after dream wedding to 'best friend'
Tragic newlywed loses cancer battle two days after dream wedding to 'best friend'
04 March 2015 04:47 PM John Shammas
Hundreds of friends and family attended the wedding of Brittney Ross Brewer, which the 28-year-old described as her dream day,
A bride died two days after marrying her "best friend" as she lost her battle with cancer.
Brittney Ross Brewer was originally due to marry on February 27, but fears prompted her to move the wedding forward to Valentine's Day.
The 28-year-old, from Maine in the US, married Jared at the chapel in the Maine Medical Centre, where she had been fighting her cervical cancer after being diagnosed nine months ago.
However Brittney did live to her original wedding date, and had a reception with hundreds of family and friends celebrating her marriage.
Two days later however, she died with her loved ones by her bedside
Jared told People: "She still wanted to have a big party to celebrate life and see everybody for probably the last time, unfortunately."
After her death, Jared's sister Janessa Brewer shared the news on Facebook.
She posted: "While Brittney may not have won her battle with cancer, she will live on forever within our hearts.
"Jared was able to give her the wedding of her dreams and she enjoyed every minute of it!
"Brittney was a living, breathing angel... who now has her wings."
The couple were overwhelmed with generous donations that friends, family and well wishers had given upon hearing her story online.
It allowed them to get medical treatment they would not have been able to otherwise afford, with $7,000 being given on her GoFundMe page.
Writing in her blog during her final days, Brittney wrote: "It’s been such a true blessing these past few days to see my friends and family coming together this past week for me.
"Making sure I got to marry my best friend and spend time with everyone I can
"Makes a girl appreciate how truly loved she is."
Popular Posts
-
Egypt ancient city unearthed by archaeologists
-
Diamond Bank CEO stars in new TV commercial
-
L'Oreal agrees to change 'bad at maths' boast advert
-
Ebonyi Assembly serves impeachment notice on Gov Elechi
-
Hundreds Expected at Funeral for 19-Year-Old Shot by Officer
-
'Don't mention Donald Trump!': Americans tread Thanksgiving minefield after US election
-
Teens among 33 dead in Oakland warehouse fire, officials say
-
kedall jenner runway dresses
-
Kylie Jenner Looking So Calm in latest picture
-
Outrage after judge brands sex attack victim kidnapped on street as 'foolish' for drinking too much
Contributors
Like on Facebook
Comments
Recent Articles
Blog Archive
-
▼
2015
-
▼
March
-
►
Mar 14
- Hundreds Expected at Funeral for 19-Year-Old Shot ...
- Police: Man Shoots Family of 5, Killing Father, Da...
- 3 Kansas hospital patients die from ice cream cont...
- Cyclone 'devastates' South Pacific islands of Vanuatu
- How did Terry Pratchett tweet after his death?
- Cyclone 'devastates' South Pacific islands of Vanuatu
- Jeremy Clarkson hints at Top Gear exit and compare...
- We just need to pee” transgender protest
- Top US Military Official Repeatedly Warned Iraq Ab...
- Incredible photos of moment 'dead' baby was hugged...
-
►
Mar 05
- A plane skidded off a runway at New York’s LaGuard...
- White House counsel reportedly kept in dark on Cli...
- Kim Kardashian reveals startlingly blonde hair in ...
- Clever girls, stupid boys?
- Pregnant woman beaten with baseball bat by gang of...
- ISIS:Twisted militants throw 'gay' man off buildin...
- Becky Watts' stepbrother shows no emotion as he ap...
- Boy lives after plunging 2,500ft down mountain - a...
-
►
Mar 14
-
▼
March

0 comments:
Thanks for commenting, Join thousands of our subscribers to get our latest posts