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'I've been patient': Park ready to show her best for England
Manchester City midfielder has been superbin the WSL and hopes to get her chance onthe international stage
'Irreplaceable' Stewart could inspire Surrey to hat-trick of titles
Director of cricket is stepping downat the end of the season will his final act bea feat not achieved in over 50 years?
'Lots of us talk about LIV so I wanted to see what it was like'
Fleetwood explains decision to visit breakaway tour in Las Vegas which heightened speculation over his future
More Horner drama: what to look out for as F1 hits Japan
Red Bull's ongoing saga appears to be unsettling the paddock witha driver reshuffle likely tocome
Against the tide Cambridge's rowing success is reward for a team culture focused on caring
While most of the Boat Race coverage discussed polluted water and the heroics of a collapsing student, another beautiful story unfolded on the murky waters of the Thames - a narrative that commentators are not used to describing and cameras cannot zoom in on.
Network Rail budgets 2.8bn to cope with climate crisis
Network Rail is to spend nearly £3bn to protect against the effects of the climate crisis, as it warned that the country's railways were having to contend with hotter summers and more winter floods.
Suspect, 12, in Finnish shooting motivated by bullying’
A 12-year-old boy suspected of shooting and killing a classmate and wounding two girls of the same age at a school in Finland claimed he was motivated by bullying, police have said, as flags flew at half-mast across the country.
RussianAmerican under FBI scrutiny rescued Trump Media
Donald Trump's social media company, Trump Media, managed to go public last week only after it had been kept afloat in 2022 by emergency loans provided in part by a Russian American businessman under scrutiny in a federal insider-trading and money-laundering investigation.
Counting the cost "This is the most serious damage we have seen'
In the first moments after the earthquake hit, Lanni Hsu grabbed her family and her dog and fled. Running down five flights of stairs, she headed outdoors to seek safety from falling objects.
Ethiopia rises: surge in cultural interest is boosting the case for return of looted artefacts, says Sissay
An Ethiopian cultural surge - including a first national pavilion at the Venice Biennale and the rise of stars such as Ruth Negga and The Weeknd - is making the country's calls for restitution of looted colonial-era artefacts harder to ignore, according to the author Lemn Sissay.
Membership Numbers fall as Labour goes beyond being party of protest’
Labour has fewer members than it did under Jeremy Corbyn in part because it is willing to make compromises to prepare for government rather than being \"a party of protest\", a senior shadow minister has argued.
Tea and a tour of Balmoral Castle to cost a princely 150
Parts of Balmoral Castle used by the royal family will open to the public this summer for the first time - for those who have deep pockets.
Just 57 firms linked to 80% of fossil fuel emissions since 2016
A mere 57 oil, gas, coal and cement producers are directly linked to 80% of the world's greenhouse gas emissions since the 2016 Paris climate agreement, a study has shown.
Pregnant woman stereotyped as emotional’ wins tribunal claims
Describing a pregnant woman as \"very emotional and tearful\" in the workplace amounted to discrimination, a tribunal has ruled.
Deadline for airports to upgrade scanners extended by a year
Holidaymakers will continue to face limits on the amount of liquid they can carry on flights this summer after the government extended the deadline for airports to install new security scanners by a year.
'Deconfliction' Aid groups demand action to keep workers safe
Aid organisations working in Gaza say they are demanding that the Israeli military improve and adhere to deconfliction systems intended to keep their workers safe, after Israeli air strikes that killed all seven members of a convoy of humanitarian workers from World Central Kitchen (WCK).
Analysis The IDF's rules of engagement seem looser than ever - if followed at all
The killing of seven foreign aid workers by the Israel Defense Forces in Gaza has once again raised serious questions about the IDF's opaque and highly permissive rules of engagement, whether those rules are enforced, and what is its willingness to investigate breaches.
Aid workers Tributes and anger from families of the dead
A British aid worker who was killed in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza was \"subject to an inhumane act\", his family said yesterday.
Britain's taste for food delivery has continued post-pandemic
Delivery app riders pedalling through cities, and tailbacks at fast-food drive-throughs, were familiar signs of Britain's hunger for takeaway food at the peak of the Covid pandemic.
'You just don't come': Doran infuriated by warnings for gore-fests like Titus Andronicus
It is a play renowned for its extreme violence, with scenes featuring execution, rape and mutilation. Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus even culminates with its eponymous Roman general feeding Tamora, the queen of the Goths, her sons “baked in a pie” before slaughtering her.
Royal Mail wants second-class letter delivery cut to every other weekday
The owner of Royal Mail has asked the industry regulator to let it reduce deliveries of second-class letters to just two or three days a week, cutting nearly 1,000 jobs and saving £300m a year in the process.
Netanyahu faces global outcry over killing ofaid workers
Israel is facing mounting international pressure to justify its conduct in Gaza as the bodies of six foreign aid workers killed in a drone attack were repatriated to their families.
Former supreme court judges add voices to calls for Israeli arms ban
Three former supreme court justices, including the former president Brenda Hale, are among more than 600 lawyers, academics and retired senior judges warning that the government is breaching international law by continuing to arm Israel.
Musicians From Different Eras And Genres Unite To Oppose Predatory' Al
A group of more than 200 high-profile musicians including Billie Eilish, Stevie Wonder and Nicki Minaj have signed an open letter calling for protections against the predatory use of artificial intelligence that mimics human artists' likenesses, voices and sound.
JK Rowling's Tweets Were Not Criminal, Police Scotland Says
Comments made by JK Rowling challenging police to arrest her for online misgendering do not amount to a crime, according to Police Scotland.
Blow To Reproductive Rights As Florida Set To Ban Abortion After Six Weeks
Florida, the last bastion of abortion access in the south-eastern United States, will ban abortion past six weeks of pregnancy starting next month, leaving abortion providers and their supporters in the state and across the country scrambling to deal with the fallout for patients.
Spurs pegged back by Zouma's unusual finish
The fact that Tottenham saw most of the ball came as little surprise.
Kluivert comes off bench to snatch victory over Palace
Football is all about being in the right place at the right time and Justin Kluivert certainly made the most of his rare opportunity. It had seemed that Bournemouth would be frustrated in their attempts to seal a third straight home win by Oliver Glasner's obdurate Crystal Palace side thanks to an excellent performance from the goalkeeper Dean Henderson.
‘Aggressive’ Clinton targets central role in Lionesses’ pack
England's latest breakout star Grace Clinton has said she relishes the freedom that comes with playing in the middle as the Lionesses prepare to face Sweden in their opening Euro 2025 qualification game on Friday.
Bath's Van Graan calls for simplification of game after sin-bin error
Bath's director of rugby, Johann van Graan, has called for the game's authorities to simplify and protect the sport following the controversial officiating error which saw the Harlequins' prop Irné Herbst return from the sin-bin three minutes early at a crucial stage of last weekend's Premiership game at the Twickenham Stoop.