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Art exhibition highlights problem of knife crime

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Columnists   来源:International  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:He told factory workers the government would "have your back" amid a "rising tide of insecurity", pledging further announcements in the "coming days and weeks" to "use industrial policy to shelter British business from the storm".

He told factory workers the government would "have your back" amid a "rising tide of insecurity", pledging further announcements in the "coming days and weeks" to "use industrial policy to shelter British business from the storm".

Birmingham Airport said it had been complying with the restriction already, due to an "outstanding regulatory approval on its new screening machines".But despite having this 100ml rule in place, the airport claimed it was continually seeing daily non-compliant bags.

Art exhibition highlights problem of  knife crime

Mr Barton said: "Since opening our new security area, and despite being one of the first UK airports to comply, we have been limited on the use of our multi-million-pound equipment due to an outstanding regulatory restriction meaning we had to limit liquids to 100ml."Despite the 100ml rule still being in place, we continually have non-compliant bags with liquids over the allowance which have led to inefficiencies of our equipment and resulted in extended queuing time for customers."It is now imperative that all customers comply with the nationwide rule to ensure a smoother and simpler transition through the airport."

Art exhibition highlights problem of  knife crime

All travelling customers have been advised to check their hand luggage to ensure it complies with the new restrictions.The first Scottish Gaelic translation of JRR Tolkien's fantasy adventure The Hobbit has been completed by a professor at the University of Aberdeen.

Art exhibition highlights problem of  knife crime

Moray Watson, a professor of Gaelic and translation - and a lifelong Tolkien fan - started work on A' Hobat before the start of the Covid pandemic.

The translation was supported by the Gaelic Books Council.A museum featuring more than five million Lego pieces has been opened by a collector.

Jason Joiner, 55, who has been collecting the plastic bricks since he was seven, is the curator of Brickz in Milton Keynes.In recent years he has travelled around the world to find rare sets to display in his museum.

He said: "There's nowhere in Britain you can actually see all the Lego kits we had as kids.""I'm regaining my childhood and I wanted to share it."

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