To what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. With me are sebastian payne, the whitehall correspondent for the ft and kate proctor, many of tomorrows front pages are already in, and one man dominates. The Financial Times reports on borisjohnsons do or die pledge to leave the eu with or without a deal on october 31st and shows him at a Campaign Rally in richmond. The telegraph leads with Boris Holding lucky the dog on a campaign visit to the surrey hills yesterday and says hundreds of villages have lost their local gp surgery amid a deepening crisis across the country the mirror also has that Campaign Picture of boris and says he has stayed doggedly silent on the personal photographs taken of him and his the guardian follows suit with that same picture of boris, and reports on how he has hardened his position on leaving the eu. And knifed 18 times for blocking the aisle the metro leads with a picture of it consultant lee pomeroy who was murdered in front of his teenage sun by a f
Weekend. The humidity will pick up as well so it will feel quite uncomfortable for the start of the weekend. This is the picture for friday. Venti of sunshine around, this weather front trying to move in but most will be dry. Turning hats are across Western Areas but still quite cool along some eastern coastal areas. We do lose that easterly breeze across eastern areas. This weather front trying to encroach into britain dropping the temperature and some chances of thunderstorms as we head into saturday mainly across the north of the uk. We still have this hot southerly with high humidity across much of england and wales and this is where we will see most of the high temperatures, low 30s, that will make it the hottest day of the year so far. Those temperatures will start coming down across the west as we had to saturday night and into sunday. A risk of heavy showers and by the storms and perhaps if you further cells, some uncertainty on that. The warmest weather will be across the far
One of the most familiar faces of Childrens Television in the 1980s, has died after a long illness. He was 60. Good evening and welcome to bbc news. Snow, ice and plunging temperatures have caused major disruption across swathes of the country today. More than 1,000 schools have been closed in wales, the midlands, the south west and other areas. Rail travel across england and wales has been disrupted and hundreds of flights cancelled. Tonight, conditions on many roads are treacherous. Forecasters are warning that temperatures could hit minus 13 degrees overnight. That would make it the coldest night of the winter so far. 0ur correspondent steve knibbs has been in the forest of deane. A little earlier he told me how the community has reacted to the heavy weather. Well, over the weekend, well, overthe weekend, it well, over the weekend, it was a case of will it all wanted snow in many parts of gloucestershire but here in the forest of dean, it definitely did, along with the north cotswol
Died of a lung condition at the age of 60. He played a part in pioneering new programme formats, such as multi coloured swap shop and cheggers plays pop in a varied career that would span five decades, as our correspondent lizo mzimba reports. His energy, his sheer enthusiasm, made Keith Chegwin into a household name. Welcome to our very special christmas edition of cheggers plays pop. A career on tv seemed somewhat inevitable, even in his early teens. He was a natural in front of the camera, in productions like this road safety video. Gosh, thanks do you want to swap this . Just a few years later, cheggers, as the public now called him, was sharing the screen with some of entertainments most famous faces. How long did it take you to record the album . Figures who worked with Keith Chegwin have been paying tribute. I knew he was very unwell. I spoke to him about four weeks ago, and he said he was recovering, so i didnt expect this. Very, very sad news. His one time presenting partner a
Very icy roads and i expect you will have School Closures as well for another day. I know, i know. I know i sound like an old soul and so when i say this but she was brought up in cumbria, i was brought up in bolton, at the top of the pennines, i dont remembera single at the top of the pennines, i dont remember a single day when our school was closed. Our Old Grammar School in oldham. I know times have changed, health and safety rules the world, kids are understandably scared of slipping. In our day, you slipped and fell, tough bananas. And we all got by. I was slightly snowbound at the weekend, a Wonderful Party in oxfordshire and i couldnt help thinking, we have had two or three days of this and still motorways closed, trains dont run. I know its not the easiestjob in the world, and im sure many did their level best to keep the country running but you do think, why does this not happen in poland, in norway, in scandinavia . They spend a lot more on gritters and are a bit more in cont