A 28-year-old health worker from Stourport-on-Severn raised more than £2,000 for Help for Heroes as she attempted to run around the Isle of Wight in less than 24 hours.
The UK celebrates Thank You Day every June 5 to show gratitude to unsung heroes who made a positive impact in communities during the COVID-19 pandemic. The holiday honours NHS staff, volunteers, council workers, charities, and faith leaders, and aims to strengthen community spirit.
Bruce Forsyth s ten-year-old great grandson was bombarded with racist slurs and sexual content while playing on the gaming platform Roblox at his home in Surrey.
Perthshire glamping pod prize offered in bid to raise funds for stroke charity dailyrecord.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailyrecord.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
1976 novel by Fredy Perlman, written as fictional letters between two Eastern European workers, Yarostan Vochek and Sophie Nachalo, who are separated after a failed revolution. Yarostan spends twelve years in statist jails, while Sophie escapes to the West. After twenty years without contact, they begin to write each other about their experiences, their lives, their hopes, and their memories of the past.
Date Time UK Government marks national Thank You Day National Thank You Day, backed by Lorraine Kelly, Dame Katherine Grainger and Tom Kitchin, will give thanks to those who have gone above and beyond during the pandemic Tartan Tea Parties, BBQs and picnics are set to take place across Scotland to celebrate local heroes UK Government Communities Secretary thanks community heroes and encourages all to fill the airwaves with tributes to everyone who played their part The UK Government is celebrating Thank You Day to shine a light on Scotland’s unsung heroes who have served local communities during the pandemic.
A pioneering initiative to tackle mental illness and social isolation through the magical powers of horses has come to the North-East for the first time. Peter Barron reports AS the kind-eyed, dapple-grey mare stands perfectly still, Debbie Matthews nuzzles up close, shuts her eyes, and breathes in the tranquility. “Horses saved my life,” she says, quietly, giving Stream Song’s sleek neck a final stroke and walking back across the field. Debbie is a woman on a nationwide mission: to harness the power of horses to help humans overcome mental health problems and tackle social isolation. And her latest visit is to Elwick Stud, an equine oasis, just outside Hartlepool, where blue-blooded thoroughbreds graze contentedly, and wide-eyed foals, destined to one day go racing, get used to their idyllic surroundings.