
Is my selfie ruining your holiday?
We've tried to contact you several times as we haven't been able to take payment. You must update your payment details via My Account or by clicking update payment details to keep your subscription.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
11 minutes ago
- Times
Bosses ‘reluctant to hire because AI may soon replace workers'
Act now to keep your subscription We've tried to contact you several times as we haven't been able to take payment. You must update your payment details via My Account or by clicking update payment details to keep your subscription.


BBC News
11 minutes ago
- BBC News
Interim injunction blocks Sky Building student flats from opening
An investigation has been launched into a suspected breach of building regulations at a block of student flats which was due to open in time for the new BBC understands that up to 230 students could be displaced as a result of the delayed launch at Deakin's Yard, formerly known as the Sky Building, in Newcastle-under-Lyme, Heath and Safety Executive (HSE) said it had secured an interim injunction to prevent "unlawful occupation" of the building while the matter was being investigated, adding students' welfare was the building's owner, Integritas Property Group Ltd, said it was working to address the situation and resolve things as quickly as possible. Keele University said it was supporting students affected by the issue and had a range of on-campus accommodation students were urged to contact the university directly for support.A spokesperson for the University of Staffordshire said they were aware of the issue but checks so far indicated none of its students were said: "We can confirm that the launch of Deakin's Yard has been temporarily delayed, pending the receipt of a final certificate."We are working closely with the Health and Safety Executive and the Building Inspectorate to address the matter and ensure all requirements are met."Our priority is to resolve this as quickly as possible and to ensure the building meets the highest standards of safety and compliance before launching." A spokesperson for the HSE said: "The welfare of those due to occupy the building is our primary priority."They added the HSE was working with relevant organisations to resolve the matter. Construction delays Last year, it was revealed that delays in construction meant the developer was unable to complete the building in time for the start of the 2024/25 academic had been left half-built after its previous owners went into site, formerly home to the Jubilee Baths, was sold by Newcastle-under-Lyme Borough Council in should have opened as a student housing complex in 2017, but work stalled due to long drawn-out disputes with owner Integritas Property Group Ltd, took the building on in November Borough Council said it was aware of the situation and was liaising with the relevant organisations to support those affected. Follow BBC Stoke & Staffordshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.


The Guardian
11 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Alice Zeitlyn obituary
My mother, Alice Zeitlyn, who has died aged 100, was a charity volunteer for a huge range of causes in Cambridge, and the founder of the BB Zeitlyn Trust and Psychotherapy Training Fund, which continues to support trainee psychotherapists. Depicted in an embroidered panel displayed in Cambridge Library celebrating 'Cambridge Women 1918-2018', Alice was made MBE in 2009 in recognition of her many volunteering activities. Born in London to Josie (nee Davis), who had been a volunteer nurse during the first world war, and Frank Myers, who ran a building company, Alice went to South Hampstead high school in north London. After nursing training at University College hospital (1943-45), she worked at UCH, and also for a year in Quebec, in 1946. In 1949 she married her childhood sweetheart, Bernard Zeitlyn, a psychiatrist and psychotherapist. They had a daughter, Judith, and two sons, Jonathan and me. In 1957 the family moved to Cambridge for Bernard's work, and Alice spent the next 20 years running the family home. After Bernard died in a cycling accident in 1979, Alice created the BB Zeitlyn Trust and Psychotherapy Training Fund. She also became a stalwart volunteer for and supporter of an enormous range of charities and arts institutions, including the Museum of Cambridge (formerly the Folk Museum), Kettle's Yard, and Scope. Having completed her first degree as an adult, in English and history at Cambridgeshire College of Arts and Technology (CCAT, now Anglia Ruskin University), in 1982, Alice continued her studies in how the experiences of mature students differed from those of 18-year-old undergraduates, gaining an MPhil in 1988. Following this research she helped to set up a creche at CCAT, which later awarded her an honorary fellowship (1993). One of Alice's fellow students was blind and had problems getting the braille texts he needed for the course so, in order to help him, Alice learned to read and write braille. This was long before automatic braille conversion or speaking computers. She continued to transcribe texts for the RNIB into the 1990s. Later, she taught braille to adults through Camsight, and also worked with Camtad (Campaign for Tackling Acquired Deafness). Her volunteering included changing hearing aid batteries: hard for people with visual disabilities, but easy for Alice whose fingers were kept nimble by her lifelong love of knitting. She was involved with several knitting groups and was until recently a member of the 'Knits of the Round Table', who support the Arthur Rank hospice. Both reading and music were important in her life. She played the cello and piano, and delivered library books to those unable to visit a library. She, in turn, greatly appreciated this service during her final years. Jonathan died in 1995. Alice is survived by Judith and me, two grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.