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Heading to Eden Festival this weekend? Here's 10 top tips to arrive safe and sound
Heading to Eden Festival this weekend? Here's 10 top tips to arrive safe and sound

Scotsman

timea day ago

  • Automotive
  • Scotsman

Heading to Eden Festival this weekend? Here's 10 top tips to arrive safe and sound

As the 2025 festival season continues, The Motor Ombudsman is encouraging Eden Festival-goers to plan ahead and take simple steps to avoid motoring mishaps on the road to Scotland's most eclectic and colourful festival. Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Tucked away in the rolling hills of Raehills Meadows, Eden Festival promises four days of music, creativity, and community – but getting there can be a journey in itself. Remote country roads, unpredictable weather, and limited mobile signal can all create challenges, especially for those driving from afar or unfamiliar with the area. Each year, festival car parks see a rise in common issues like flat batteries, fuel problems, lost keys and cars getting stuck in the mud. And when hundreds of vehicles are arriving and leaving around the same time, even small problems can turn into big delays. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad That's why The Motor Ombudsman has released the Second Edition of its #SafeandSound guide – offering practical, festival-ready advice to help motorists arrive ready for the weekend and get home again without a hitch. Festivalgoers enjoying a packed summer music event. Research from The Motor Ombudsman found that 68% of Brits don't have an emergency fund for car repairs, and over a third have faced repair bills of up to £500 in the past year – a costly surprise after a weekend of festival spending. Bill Fennell, Chief Ombudsman and Managing Director of The Motor Ombudsman, said: 'Festivals should be memorable for the music, not for motoring misery, and a little preparation goes a long way when it comes to safety. That's why we're sharing top tips to help drivers hit the road with confidence and stay safe, as everyone has a part to play in keeping the roads safe. After all, what starts as a missed oil-top up or an underinflated tyre can quickly spiral into a costly breakdown – and unexpected bills would be even more unwelcome after a weekend of festival spending.' Festivalgoers bringing larger setups – like campervans, trailers or roof boxes – should also be aware of added safety responsibilities, from weight limits to proper packing. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Jessica Williams, Head of Vocational Policy at the DVSA, added: 'Festivalgoers who are planning to tow a trailer, or caravan to a festival this summer need to make sure their vehicle and towing equipment are safe and legal. Always check that the towing weight is within the vehicle's limit, the tow bar is securely fitted, lights and brakes are working correctly, and tyres are in good condition, especially if the trailer has been sat for any length of time." The Motor Ombudsman's Top 10 Tips for Eden Festival Travel

How the Intrepid Moved a World War II Fighter Plane
How the Intrepid Moved a World War II Fighter Plane

New York Times

time13-03-2025

  • General
  • New York Times

How the Intrepid Moved a World War II Fighter Plane

Good morning. It's Thursday. Today we'll find out how a World War II fighter-bomber was squeezed into an exhibition space on the former aircraft carrier Intrepid. We'll also get details on new census data that show that the population of New York City is growing again. 'It was like moving a couch into your New York City apartment,' Jessica Williams said, except that the item in question had no pillows or cushions and no pull-out bed to sleep on. And there was no super insisting it would never fit. Williams, the head curator of the Intrepid Museum, was explaining how dicey it had been to transport a 33-foot fighter-bomber from World War II. The aircraft was not going far, just from the Intrepid's restoration hangar, on the former aircraft carrier's flight deck, to the hangar deck two levels below. New York is a city where impossibly large objects squeeze through impossibly small spaces when moving day comes — somehow, grand pianos are shoehorned into elevators. But size is relative. On a ship like the Intrepid, which is roughly 890 feet long, a few feet shorter than the height of the office tower at 425 Park Avenue, so many spaces seem extra-extra-large. The Intrepid's elevator originally had a wide-mouthed opening. The fighter-bomber being moved, a Corsair on loan from the National Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Fla., would have gone in and out easily, as aircraft did during World War II. 'The whole design of this ship was to facilitate the movement of aircraft,' Williams said, 'but now it's a museum, so of course we've changed things.' The elevator now has a vertical support that was not there during World War II — a mullion, according to Williams, who was trained in historic preservation. That reduced the clearance for the Corsair to inches. Before it could go anywhere, it had to be 'rigged up on skates' for the trip, and an airplane already on the hangar deck had to be moved out of its path. A huge propeller on display, one of four that originally drove the Intrepid, was also lifted out of the way. The movers, a team from the Intrepid's restoration center, rehearsed with a scale model of the plane, the elevator and the hangar deck. 'Initially the assumption was that it would go in tail first,' Williams said, 'but then upon testing with the model, it made more sense to have it go nose first.' Then the serious wiggling began. 'Jockeying,' Richard Skolnick, an aircraft restoration specialist on the Intrepid, called it, looking as if he was doing a little dance move. Williams held her breath, but the plane squeezed through. Skolnick and his colleagues reattached the wings and raised them until they looked like a pair of praying hands that almost touched the ceiling. Movable flaps on the wings had to be reinstalled. Along the way, the plane had to be jacked up a bit to make room for axle stands. It can't just sit there on its tires — the tires are old. The Intrepid's restoration center gave the plane a new paint job to honor Alfred Lerch, a Navy pilot who flew from the Intrepid during the 82-day Battle of Okinawa in 1945. On one of his first combat missions, Lerch shot down seven Japanese aircraft, making him an ace in a day. Later that same day, a kamikaze dived into the Intrepid, and the ship went to a shipyard in California for repairs. When it went back in service several months later, Lerch flew one last strike mission. And then the war ended. At the Intrepid museum, the Corsair will be the first thing visitors see when they reach the hangar deck. 'It cements the idea about the purpose of this sort of ship, its role as a military airfield and how the whole ship was built to manage and service these aircraft,' she said. 'Coming face to face upon entering reminds everyone what the ship is and what was at stake for the people who served on it.' Expect mostly cloudy skies with mild winds and a high near 48 degrees. In the evening, it will be mostly cloudy with temperatures in the low 40s. In effect until Friday (Purim). The latest New York news 'People clearly want to be here' Five years after the pandemic — and the disturbing drop in population that it set off — New York is growing again. New census data put the population at 8.48 million in July 2024, up from 8.39 million in July 2023 but still well below the peak of 8.8 million in early 2020. The census figures indicate that fewer people are leaving the city, countering losses that deepened in the early months of the pandemic, when thousands of New Yorkers packed up and fled. Many have moved back. But the growth between 2023 and 2024 — about 87,184 people — largely reflected a steady increase in newcomers from other countries. New York has long relied on immigrant newcomers to replace residents who left. 'That's the secret to New York City's demographic success,' said John Mollenkopf, a professor of political science at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. But during the first Trump administration, beginning in 2017, there was a decline in immigrants moving to the city, Professor Mollenkopf said. 'It remains to be seen how Trump 2 crimps international migration, and that may temper that force in increasing the city's population.' The new census numbers notably revised last year's estimate to show that the city grew between 2022 and 2023 for the first time since the pandemic. Between 2023 and 2024, Manhattan grew by about 1.7 percent — the most of any borough. Its total population increased for a third straight year, to 1.66 million. The other boroughs also grew — Brooklyn and Queens by nearly 1 percent each, the Bronx and Staten Island by less than 1 percent. Staten Island has fully erased its pandemic slide, the only borough to do so. 'Despite everything the city has had to overcome in recent years, people clearly want to be here,' said Jonathan Bowles, the executive director of the Center for an Urban Future, a Manhattan think tank that researches policy issues facing cities. Good seat Dear Diary: My husband and I got tickets for 'Take Me Out' when it first played in New York in the early 2000s. We had seats close to the stage, and I started a conversation with a woman sitting to my right who had a thick Texas accent. She and a male colleague were on a business trip and had gotten last-minute tickets that were unfortunately not next to each other. She and I discussed the play. With a twinkle in her eye, she said her colleague had given her the seat closest to the stage so she would have a better view during the nude scenes. They planned to switch at intermission. At the start of the first nude shower scene, I felt a poke in my ribs. I turned to look at my new friend, who was nodding at me with a big grin. She did not switch seats at intermission. — Elka Grisham Illustrated by Agnes Lee. Send submissions here and read more Metropolitan Diary here. Glad we could get together here. See you tomorrow. — J.B. P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. You can find all our puzzles here. Natasha Cornelissen and Ed Shanahan contributed to New York Today. You can reach the team at nytoday@ Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox.

Nearly 1 in 3 experiencing poverty in New Hampshire are disabled, NHFPI study finds
Nearly 1 in 3 experiencing poverty in New Hampshire are disabled, NHFPI study finds

Yahoo

time04-03-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Nearly 1 in 3 experiencing poverty in New Hampshire are disabled, NHFPI study finds

(New Hampshire Fiscal Policy Institute screenshot) People with disabilities make up nearly a third of New Hampshire's impoverished, according to a new study from the New Hampshire Fiscal Policy Institute. The study, by researcher Jessica Williams, also examined other demographic groups more affected by poverty. In total, around 7.2% of people in New Hampshire were impoverished in 2023, according to the study. That's 98,000 people — more than the populations of Claremont, Concord, Laconia, and Portsmouth combined. Almost 20,000 of those were children. Among people identifying as Hispanic and Latino in the state, the poverty rate is nearly double: 13.8%, or about 8,250, the study found, using a five-year average ending 2023. Black people had a poverty rate of 11.2 percent (2,170 people) while Asian and non-Hispanic white people had rates of 6.1% (2,110) and 6.7% (79,780), respectively. People identifying as two or more races had a poverty rate of 10% (7,400 people). White people, because they're the majority, comprised 82.7% of New Hampshire's impoverished. Families with more children, who likely have more expenses and higher poverty thresholds, were more likely to be living in poverty. Based on five-year averages ending in 2023, New Hampshire families without any related children experienced a poverty rate of about 2.6%, according to the study. Those with one or two children experienced almost double that: 6.5%. Meanwhile, families with three or four related children had a poverty rate of 9.7 percent, almost four times the rate of families with no related children. Families with single mothers were 18 times more likely to experience poverty than families with married parents. More than 1 in 4 such families experienced poverty, while about 13% of single-father families experienced poverty, according to the study. Coos and Sullivan counties, rural parts of New Hampshire, experienced the highest poverty rates from 2019 to 2023 in the state: 12.9% and 10.8%, respectively, per the study. Hillsborough and Rockingham counties had the largest total number of impoverished people due to their larger population sizes, but they experienced the state's lowest poverty rates during that five-year period, at 6.9% and 4.8%, respectively. The study used the federal government's Official Poverty Measure as the threshold to define poverty. For the contiguous U.S., that was $15,852 for a single person under 65 years old, $24,526 for a family of three with one child, and $30,900 for a family of four with two children in 2023. Those interested in reading more, can visit online.

Harrison Ford Will Not Present At The Oscars Following Shingles Diagnosis
Harrison Ford Will Not Present At The Oscars Following Shingles Diagnosis

Yahoo

time01-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Harrison Ford Will Not Present At The Oscars Following Shingles Diagnosis

Harrison Ford has dropped out of his presenting role at the Oscars — to be held tomorrow in Los Angeles' Dolby Theatre — following a diagnosis of shingles, his representatives have confirmed to outlets. The Shrinking star stepped out last weekend at the SAG Awards, where he was part of a lighthearted viral moment with fellow co-star Jessica Williams, whose 'I Am An Actor' introduction speech he inadvertently interrupted by trying to sneak some food in the background of the shot. More from Deadline Jessica Williams Playfully Calls Out 'Shrinking' Co-Star Harrison Ford During SAG Award "I Am An Actor" Introductions Everything We Know About '1923' Season 2: Release Date, Cast & More Anthony Mackie & 'Captain America: Brave New World' Director Julius Onah Address Urge To Politicize Marvel Pic Entertainment Weekly first reported the news. MORE… Best of Deadline All The Songs In 'Severance' Season 2: From The Who To Ella Fitzgerald 2025 Awards Season Calendar: Dates For Oscars, Tonys, Guilds & More 2024 Hollywood & Media Deaths: Photo Gallery & Obituaries

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