We have got the Grey Lady in Worthing; in Brighton we’ve got the Victorian theatre manager who has never left; and in Southsea, we’ve got the tragic drowned boy who still likes to sit in the theatre building decades after his demise. And in Eastbourne, we’ve got a violinist who went down on the Titantic… or maybe.
Do You Believe In Ghosts? Haunting night of theatre set to send shivers through Grimsby grimsbytelegraph.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from grimsbytelegraph.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
32 million died in the AIDS pandemic but our remembrance is pitiful
This is just another example of how the UK chooses to remember its history
2 months ago
Did you know that 32.7 million people have died from AIDS-related illnesses since the start of the epidemic? That’s more fatalities than World War One. Did you also know that 690,000 people died from AIDS-related illnesses in 2019? As in… two years ago. Yes, that’s right. People are still dying of AIDS. As well as the millions who died years before, because they couldn’t access the support, because we didn’t have the medical knowledge, because it was demonised as a “gay disease”.
New £5 million project to save woodlands
Natural England’s LIFE in the Ravines project is launched today with £5 million of funding.
From: Image credit: National Trust
The project will tackle ash dieback in the ravines
The future of the beautiful ravine woodlands in the Peak District is looking brighter thanks to £5 million in funding.
The LIFE in the Ravines partnership project, led by Natural England, will tackle the threat that ash dieback poses to the forested river valleys of the Peak District. The project has received £3.6m in funding from the EU LIFE programme, with the remainder coming from project partners.