"Some schools, like St Anthony's, have branded PE kits which contain the pupils initials," Mrs English explained.
A cat found in a hotel bin where he was believed to have been trapped for days was rescued by tip workers.The black and white male was found at the Barrow waste plant inside a large commercial bin that had been used at The Swan Hotel in Newby Bridge, Cumbria.
They called Animal Welfare Furness who took the cat to a vet and are now looking after him.Helen Kelly, from the charity, said: "It was really dark in there [and] it was really hot because the weather at the moment is so nice, it was really distressing to see."The cat, which the rescue team have named Phantom because of his markings, is not microchipped and the charity is appealing for his owners to come forward.
They said they did not know how the cat came to be trapped in the bin, but they believed he could have been in there for about three days when he was found on Friday.Ms Kelly said Phantom spent the weekend at the veterinary surgery and he was doing well, although the impact of what happened was affecting him.
"He's a really nice cat but he's quite shy, he's obviously been through a really tough time," she said.
If no owner was found, the charity said it would look at rehoming Phantom.On 14 May 1945, almost a week after Britain and its allies celebrated victory in Europe, Hitler's defeated Atlantic U-boats berthed for the final time.
The German submarines – the "U-boat peril" as Churchill had called them - had been the Allies' principal threat at sea during the Battle of the Atlantic, a campaign that raged throughout the war.On that day, the first of the U-boats made their way up the River Foyle to Lisahally in County Londonderry to formally surrender.
Eighty years on, Bert Whoriskey, then just 14, and who watched the surrender, told BBC News NI it is a day he can "never ever forget"."The war had ended, excitement was second to none, " he said.