Norwich Market pictured on February 8, 2021.
- Credit: Chris Goreham
It has also stopped all its school services, along with Sanders Coaches.
Buses will only travel along main roads on First s 23/23A services, and towards Heartsease the service will not be stopping at the Heartsease estate.
⚠️ SERVICE UPDATE - 40/40A/41/X41⚠️
Our Charcoal Line services have been suspended until further notice due to the adverse weather conditions.
We apologise for the inconvenience. FirstNorwich (@FirstNorwich) February 8, 2021
The 13 service will be starting and ending at Queens Road and will not serve any estates, while the 38A service will begin at end at Long Stratton.
Emma Wilson-Downes, headteacher of Felixstowe School, said: “Gaynor was our much-respected head of science before retiring last year. She was very popular with staff and students alike, well respected and cared deeply about the school, the students and the staff.”
Mrs Jacobs was born in the Manchester area and later moved to Hull, because her father was in the RAF, which meant the family moved around. She studied at the University of East Anglia in Norwich before moving to Suffolk, where she started her teaching career.
Mr Jacobs said: Mum had a real passion for teaching. Her greatest talent was trying to get someone to learn if they didn t want to learn. She was so inspirational.
The Bob Champion Cancer Trust has raised £15million since it was founded in 1983. The trust raises funds for the Bob Champion Cancer Research Laboratory – part of the largest male-dedicated research facility in Europe, situated at the Institute of Cancer Research in Sutton – as well as for the Bob Champion Research and Education Building at the University of East Anglia in Norwich. Mr Champion, who hails from Guisborough, admits he was totally taken aback when he was told he was to receive the honour. “I’m absolutely chuffed to death. It was a big surprise to me,” he said. “I got an MBE quite a long time ago, when I won the National, but this is for my cancer trust.
10:51 EDT, 14 December 2020
18 shares
Police investigated reports of an argument at the home of a retired Swedish academic seven hours before she was found dead in a suspected arson attack, it emerged today.
Vera Croghan, 89, was found dead just before 7am on Friday by firefighters called to a blaze at her £750,000 semi-detached home in Unthank Road, Norwich, Norfolk.
A male teenager who was known to her was later arrested and taken to the Police Investigation Centre at Wymondham near Norwich.
He has now been detained under the Mental Health Act and remains under investigation while police carry out further inquiries into Mrs Croghan s death.