Numbers

Deadly church attack raises security fears for Syrians, minorities

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Style   来源:News  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:In a MoD survey last year nearly six in ten military personnel rated morale as low. Just four in 10 said they were satisfied with service life – the lowest since records began.

In a MoD survey last year nearly six in ten military personnel rated morale as low. Just four in 10 said they were satisfied with service life – the lowest since records began.

Yentob leaves a "colossal" legacy, he said. "He's one of the giants of British media in the last generation, and I think he will be remembered as a maker of great programmes, as an enabler of great programmes."The pair's personal and professional relationship extended to Yentob famously enlisting Sir Salman to take part in a spoof arm wrestle for a scene in BBC mockumentary W1A.

Deadly church attack raises security fears for Syrians, minorities

"People keep asking me who won," Sir Salman said. "And of course nobody won because it was complete fraud."In November, the author will publish a short story collection, The Eleventh Hour, his first work of fiction to be written since the stabbing.The attack came 35 years after Sir Salman's controversial novel The Satanic Verses, which had long made him the target of death threats for its portrayal of the Prophet Muhammad.

Deadly church attack raises security fears for Syrians, minorities

Celebrity authors and TV personalities have backed a local BBC radio campaign to boost childhood literacy.According to the Office for National Statistics, one in four children in Norfolk do not meet the expected standard in reading by the time they leave primary school.

Deadly church attack raises security fears for Syrians, minorities

Page Turners launched on BBC Radio Norfolk on Monday, coinciding with the official opening of a new library in Great Yarmouth.

Author and TV presenter Ben Garrod said reading "should be inspiring" and actor Stephen Fry said "reading is just the most exciting thing in the world"."It was so empathetic, it gave a response that you'd think was from a human that you've known for years […] And it did make me feel valued."

https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/1024/branded_news/1b0d/live/a7c9bf00-3b29-11f0-9410-57c2dd2768aa.jpgAfter four weeks, bot users showed significant reductions in their symptoms – including a 51% reduction in depressive symptoms - and reported a level of trust and collaboration akin to a human therapist.

Despite this, the study's senior author commented there is no replacement for in-person care.Aside from the debate around the value of their advice, there are also wider concerns about security and privacy, and whether the technology could be monetised.

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