Scott Lyall, an associate professor of Modern and Scottish Literature at Edinburgh Napier University, described the church as a site of "genuine importance to Scotland's literary heritage".
A study - suggesting that exercise is better than drugs to keep cancer at bay - is highlighted by. They report that a structured exercise routine given to advanced cancer patients after treatment was found to reduce the risk of dying from the disease. The results of the trial have been published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The Mirror's front page celebrates the. It features 17-year-old Max Johnson - whose life was saved when he received a heart from a nine-year-old car crash victim, Kiera Ball, when he was the same age. One Heart, Two Heroes, says the headline.and get BBC News in your inbox.
For many, Saturdays are something to look forward to - relaxed times, enjoyed with family and friends. But Elizabeth Young "dreads" them. It's a weekly reminder of her daughter Jade's violent murder at Westfield Bondi Junction."On a lovely autumn afternoon, to learn your daughter is dead, stabbed in broad daylight, killed amidst fellow unsuspecting shoppers... [when she] was living, breathing, just an hour ago... it's the stuff of nightmares, of a parallel universe," Elizabeth told an inquiry into the mass killing this week.
"The moment [the attacker] casually plunged that knife into Jade, our ordinary lives were shattered."
Her pain was echoed by families of the other victims who gave emotional testimonies on the final day of a five-week coronial inquest into the fatal stabbings on 13 April last year.Centre-right political parties and lobby groups in South Africa have also opposed it, saying they will challenge the Expropriation Act – as the law is named – in court on the grounds that it threatens property rights.
Ramaphosa's government says the law provides for compensation to be paid in the vast majority of cases – and the changes are needed to increase black ownership of land.Most private farmland is still owned by white people.
When Nelson Mandela came to power more than 30 years ago, ending the racist system of apartheid, it was promised that this would be rectified through a willing-buyer, willing-seller land reform programme – but critics say this has proved too slow and too costly.In rare circumstances it would be land that was needed for the "public interest", legal experts told the BBC.