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Page 108 - நார்விச் பல்கலைக்கழகம் மருத்துவமனை News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

8 feel-good stories of the week in January 2021 | Eastern Daily Press

Karen Hurst, the school s business manager, said: We ve managed to help 13 of them so far, and we want to be able to sort the other 15 out too. We ve almost been reduced to tears here, and humbled by people s generosity. Almost 70,000 people in Norfolk had first Covid jab On Thursday, more than half of over 80s in Norfolk and Waveney received their first Covid jab. - Credit: Copyright: Archant 2021 The remaining half are expected to receive their dose by the end of the month. Priority groups are care home residents, healthcare staff and anyone aged over 70.  Also, 30,588 first jabs have been given out to under 80s. 

Military begin Covid support at N&N | Eastern Daily Press

Famous blue plaque locations in Norfolk | Norwich Evening News

Published: 12:30 PM January 23, 2021    Updated: 1:22 PM January 23, 2021 A delighted Sir Michael Caine with the blue plaque he unveiled outside the school he attended as a wartime evacuee in North Runcton. - Credit: John Hocknell Pablo Fanque s blue plaque - Credit: Antony Kelly The Beatles, Norwich On May 17, 1963 Beatlemania came to Norwich when the Fab Four played their one and only concert in the city. The venue was the Grosvenor Rooms in Prince of Wales Road and the queue of eager fans stretched back to the ABC Cinema. To mark the show, the EDP and Norwich School of Art and Design (now Norwich University of the Arts) put up a blue plaque on Grosvenor House as part of a series highlighting surprising aspects of the county s cultural heritage. Another of the city s blue plaques has a Beatles link too. At John Lewis on All Saints Green there s a Discover Norwich blue plaque dedicated to Pablo Fanque. Real name William Darby, he was the first black British circus prop

Death of Great Yarmouth woman Jade Ransome was accidental

The Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital. - Credit: Nick Butcher An inquest into the death of a 26-year-old woman who suffered a brain injury caused by an insulin overdose has ruled her death as accidental. Jade Ransome, of School Close, Ludham, died at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital on July 29 last year. Miss Ransome was a university student and had lived with Type 1 diabetes since she was four. An inquest into her death opened on January 5, which heard the 26-year-old had been in hospital at the end of June with ketoacidosis having been found unconscious after her insulin pump became blocked.

Six people still in custody after daylight Norwich stabbing

Published: 2:07 PM January 22, 2021    Updated: 2:29 PM January 22, 2021 A police car at the scene of a stabbing in Hobart Lane, Norwich. - Credit: Peter Walsh, Archant Norfolk A man remains in hospital and police are still at the scene after he was stabbed in the arms and legs in Norwich. Officers were called at about 2.45pm on Thursday, January 21 and it was subsequently discovered the victim was stabbed at about 2.20pm in Hobart Lane. A police car at the scene of a stabbing in Hobart Lane, Norwich - Credit: Peter Walsh, Archant Norfolk The man, who is in his 50s, was taken to the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital (NNUH).

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