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Tributes to William Howard School music teacher Tony Tears newsandstar.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newsandstar.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Heritage sites across England receive emergency arts funding bbc.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bbc.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Tributes have been paid to a popular teacher who inspired hundreds of students during three decades. Tony Tears had been feeling unwell but he and his wife Sally had blamed it on a trapped nerve. “He got up and said I feel so much better. He had eaten and he took some painkillers and went to lie down,” explained Mrs Tears, who lives in Rockcliffe. “I came back in and I heard a bang and there he was.” The cause of death was an aortic aneurysm, which the NHS describes as a bulge or swelling in the aorta, the main blood vessel that runs from the heart down through the chest and tummy. He was 75 and had no other health complications, leaving his family in complete shock. ....
Dick Reid with his OBE and, right, as a young man at work on a carving Internationally-renowned York sculptor and stone carver Dick Reid, whose work can be seen at York Minster, Windsor Castle and Highgrove, has died following a short illness. He was 86. Mr Reid, who had a workshop in York, also worked on memorials in Westminster Abbey to John Betjeman and the Countess of Pembroke - and on numerous churches in York and further afield. Dick Reid was born in 1934 in Newcastle upon Tyne. He excelled at arts and crafts at school and was spotted by Ralph Hedley, who offered him an apprenticeship as a carver in stone and wood. ....
Feilden Fowles has refurbished the medieval dining hall at Carlisle Cathedral in north-west England and extended it with a red sandstone entrance pavilion. Befittingly called The Fratry, the name for a priory refectory, the overhaul makes the 16th-century listed building publicly accessible for the first time. Top image: Feilden Fowles has extended the fratry at Carlisle Cathedral. Above: it is clad in red sandstone Feilden Fowles converted the hall and its vaulted undercroft into an event and teaching space, while the extension introduces a cafe and new entrance area. The goal for The Fratry was to transform the building into an asset for the cathedral, open to the local community and schools. ....