First News Issue 429 - Loxley Primary School
Transcription
First News Issue 429 - Loxley Primary School
FirstNews the weekly newspaper for young people FirstNews Working with Issue 429 £1.50 5 – 11 September 2014 s National newspaper of the year* IW B o tt 2 million* readers no more than rojectors a for p nd be up lo a ded to s c h o o l w e b sit es Stamp out bullying JOIN OUR CAMPAIGN Today (5 September) marks the launch of our brand-new campaign, STAMP OUT BULLYING – we’re making a noise about bullying to stamp it out for good. We want all schoolchildren across the UK to make a noise with us, by standing up and stamping the ground, to show you want to stamp out bullying, once and for all. We’d like you to do this for 30 seconds at 11am on Friday 26 September, at the beginning of First News’ latest My Way! tour with children’s author Henry Winkler. By doing this, we hope to show those that run the country that children across the UK are against bullying and demand that more needs to be done to ‘stamp it out’. Bullying affects millions of children across the world. A shocking 46% of children have been bullied at school at some stage, according to the NSPCC. With the rise in social media use among children and young adults, we fear this figure will continue to rise. 38% of young people have been affected by some form of bullying online. “Bullying wrecks lives, not just at school, but in everyday life. We want this school year to be the year we make a real noise about bullying,” said editor Nicky Cox MBE. “So, on 26 September, stand up from your desks and make a noise. Join us, stamp the ground and help us show we mean business. Let’s shake the nation, together!” Tell your teachers to visit www.firstnews.co.uk/stampout to register your school to say it is against bullying. Turn to page 9 to find out more information on STAMP OUT BULLYING and to read our Special Report on what to do if you, or someone you know, is being bullied at school. * The 2012 Newspaper Awards: Best weekly national newspaper and best niche market newspaper. Also, Plain English Campaign: Best national newspaper. * First News weekly readership is 2,042,199. Source: Opinion Matters 2014. First News supports children’s charities – see page 15. FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 2. headlines News in FirstNews Issue 429 5 – 11 september 2014 Prince Harry’s Glasgow 2014:Games begin! brief Longest-running strike remembered On Sunday (7 Sept), schoolchildren at Burston School in Norfolk will commemorate the 100th anniversary of the longest-running strike in British history. Back in 1914, pupils were taken out of school to protest against the sacking of two teachers. The teachers set up their own alternative school, the Burston Strike School, which they ran for 25 years. The school closed in 1939, following the death of one of the teachers. This year marks the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the strike. @CR_UK Twitter cANCER Research UK has released some good news this week. The number of children dying from cancer in this country has dropped by 22% in the last ten years, which means that more young people diagnosed with the disease are getting better. This is due to advancements in treatments. The steepest decline has been in a type of cancer known as leukaemia. Getty Fighting cancer Getty LATEST figures suggest ALS Ice Bucket Challenge has raised over £60m in the past four weeks alone in aid of motor neurone disease, although some people are choosing to donate to other charities instead, such as Macmillan Cancer Support. However, a poll found that half of people doing the challenge didn’t donate to charity. Pistorius verdict announced Getty OSCAR Pistorius, the disabled South African athlete charged with his girlfriend’s murder, will learn his fate on Thursday 11 September. If found guilty, it is likely Pistorius will face a life sentence in prison. Pistorius claims that he shot through his bathroom door because he thought a burglar was in there. THE X Factor returned to our screens with a bang on Saturday night, with an impressive 43% of the viewing public tuning in to the first episode on ITV. 9.3 million people watched the opening episode. Getty X Factor returns It’s a sporting event with a difference – all the competitors are wounded, injured and sick servicemen and women. Teams are taking part from the armed forces of nations that have served alongside each other. All are using the power of sport to inspire recovery and support. Over four days, competitors will take part in nine sports in world-class venues in the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. They will challenge each other and push their bodies to the by editor Nicky Cox limit, all in the name of the Invictus spirit. The event, which is championed by Prince Harry, will shine a spotlight on people in the Armed Forces who have put their lives on the line for their country. Tickets are on sale now. You can buy them from www.invictusgames.org/ticket-info. Prince Harry will celebrate his 30th birthday on 15 September as the Invictus Games finish. A new TV documentary this week (now on ITV Player) takes a look at his life over the past three decades, from cheeky toddler to frontline soldier and charity worker. The programme covers how, with the Invictus Games, Prince Harry is taking on his biggest challenge yet. Peace one day Getty The Ice Bucket Challenges continue MORE than 400 competitors from 13 nations will take part in Prince Harry’s Invictus Games, which begin on Wednesday (10 September). MOST children love singing and often report that it makes them feel really happy. This is great news for One Day One Choir, a new global choral project for peace. Singing also helps us to learn, feel more confident and keep healthy by improving our circulation and breathing, which, in turn, makes us feel calmer and more peaceful. What’s more, singing together is so engaging that it unites, inspires and uplifts individuals and their communities. It was with this in mind, and with so much conflict in the world right now, that choral enthusiast and learning mentor, Jane Hanson, who has also travelled the world for BBC Radio reporting on the power of singing together, created One Day One Choir. To become part of it, all you have to do is get your schools, communities and families involved for the launch this year by ‘signing up to sing’ on or around Peace Day, 21 September. The plan is to build the project so that by 2018 it is the biggest choral event for peace in the world. The organisers want your school to dedicate a song or hymn in assembly or a lesson, or create something special and sing for peace. As Peace Day is a Sunday this year, schools are asked to sing on Friday 19 September (or earlier during the week). Register at www.onedayonechoir.org. FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 3. headlines FirstNews Issue 429 Eat less meat, say scientists S ’ R O T I D E NT E COMM ky Cox MBE Scientists have warned that we need to cut down on meat and dairy products to prevent serious problems in the future. Editor Nic THIS week, as most of you return to school, First News launches its new Stamp Out Bullying campaign. Getty The warning has come following the results of a study at Cambridge and Aberdeen universities, which has shown that eating a lot of meat could mean dangerous news for the environment. To keep up with the world’s meat consumption, particularly in western countries, more and more forests are having to be chopped down to make room for farm animals. There are fears that a rise in animal farming and deforestation could result in greenhouse gas emissions soaring (not helped by more animals burping and passing wind!) by almost 80% by the year 2050, which could mean serious problems for future generations. Experts say eating a lot of meat is unnecessary for your nutrition – and you can still have a ‘balanced diet’ if you cut down. They say eating no more than two portions of red meat a week is “essential” to make sure there is enough food for everyone in the future and to avoid “dangerous” climate change. 5 – 11 september 2014 Garbage island To be happy at school, and to be able to learn, you don’t want to be scared or worrying about someone being mean to you. This can happen face-to-face, online or on your mobile phone. Even being left out is a form of bullying. It can show its ugly face in many ways. We also want you to feel empowered to support other people that you see are being picked on or made to feel bad. Please make sure your school signs up to take part in the Stamp Out Bullying event on Friday 26 September. Show page 9 to your teacher and add your voices to the campaign! Use the free Blippar app to watch a video showing how giant garbage patches form (see below right) Threat update THE Home Secretary Theresa May has announced that the UK’s Terror Threat has been raised from ‘substantial’ to ‘severe’ in an effort to keep the country as safe as possible. This means that those who are responsible for looking after the country think that terrorists are likely to try to attack Britain, although it does not mean that one is definitely going to happen. The alert was raised to ‘severe’ because of the threat militant groups from Iraq and Syria pose to the UK. The Home Secretary has stressed that there is no evidence to suggest that an attack will definitely happen. The Government is responsible for ensuring that the country remains safe from attacks like this one, so by raising the alert to ‘severe’ they are taking extra precautions. For updates keep an eye on www.firstnews.co.uk. A REPORT from America has been released explaining how a vast rubbish dump, known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch (GPGP), is helping scientists discover how sea surfaces are connected. WEEK Techies APPLE are releasing the new iPhone 6 on 9 September. The smartphone is expected to be slightly bigger than the iPhone 5, with rounder edges. Researchers believe the GPGP to be one of at least five such areas of rubbish concentration which are located in the centre of large, circular ocean currents called gyres that suck in and trap floating debris. The report also contains a model to help determine which countries are to blame for each patch. It also stresses it is not always just the closest country to the area that is at fault! AEKD B WE FOR Get 4 issues for £1* Call 0844 8267 338 www.firstnews.co.uk/subscribe Quote: FNSH *followed by £14.99 every 3 months by Direct Debit FIRST NEWS and BLIPPAR Getty GOOD FOR @Telegraph via Twitter Great ocean garbage patches are regions in which plastics and other floating debris gather after being carried there by winds and currents. The GPGP is an environmental hazard that is growing in the ocean between Hawaii and California. The garbage is affecting sea life around it, such as fish with enlarged and discoloured livers. SUBSCRIBE FOR HOME Tian Tian OFFICIALS at Edinburgh Zoo have said it’s looking unlikely their giant panda is pregnant, even though she was showing all the signs. Whenever you see the Blippar icon on a page, you will know we have added some digital content to it, like a video, picture gallery or poll. Go to iTunes or Google Play and download the free Blippar app onto a mobile phone or tablet (it needs a rearfacing camera on it). Then hover your phone or tablet over the report. FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 4. THE WEEK AHEAD FirstNews The day that shook the world Issue 429 9/11 DAY THURSDAY 1 1 SEPTEMBER 5 – 11 September 2014 FirstNews Dates for your diary Stand up to cancer Friday 5 September A star-studded event in Hollywood to raise money for research into cancer. standup2cancer.org world ploughing championships Friday 5 – Saturday 6 September Competitive ploughing event in which more than 60 competitors take part. worldploughing.org world fireworks championships Friday 5 – Saturday 6 September Four nations compete in Blackpool, with firework displays taking place every Friday in September. visitblackpool.com on Thursday 11 September, it will be 13 years since the biggest ever terrorist attack on America. The course of the world’s history was changed by events that happened on this date in 2001. Known as 9/11 because of the American way of writing dates (September is the 9th month of the year and it was the 11th day of the month), the attacks happened after four planes were hijacked by terrorists. Two of the planes were flown into the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York. The impact caused the skyscrapers to collapse. Another plane was crashed into the Pentagon, the US military headquarters. The fourth plane crashed into a field in Pennsylvania (it’s thought that this plane was heading towards the White House or the US Capitol Building, but passengers fought back and it didn’t reach its target). Nearly 3,000 people from different nations were killed in the attacks, including 67 British people. Around the site of the World Trade Center, thousands of people have suffered illnesses since because of the huge clouds of dust that filled the area when the towers collapsed. The hijackers belonged to a terror group called al-Qaeda, which is opposed to America and other western nations, by Keilly Swift especially the military involvement of these countries in Arab nations. Osama bin Laden, who was the group’s leader, admitted in 2004 that he’d ordered the attacks. The 9/11 attacks shocked the world. George W Bush, who was president of the USA at the time, announced that there would be a ‘war on terror’. Security was stepped up at airports and in public buildings. There followed invasions of both Afghanistan (in 2001) and Iraq (in 2003) by the USA and its allies, including the UK. The 9/11 Day organisation was formed to honour all those who lost their lives in the 9/11 terrorist attacks. People are encouraged to do something positive in memory of the victims, whether it’s donating to charity, doing a good deed for someone or holding a remembrance service. Find out more about the good deeds people are doing for 9/11 Day at 911day.org. Mother Teresa died. The nun from Macedonia (right) was known throughout the world for her tireless work helping sick and poor people. She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979. 7 September 1886 The first Sherlock Holmes story was written by author Arthur Conan Doyle (left). Saturday 6 – Thursday 11 September One of Europe’s largest science festivals takes place in Birmingham. britishscienceassociation.org bupa great north run Sunday 7 September Around 55,000 athletes and fun runners will attempt the world’s biggest halfmarathon, in Newcastle upon Tyne. greatrun.org world bellyboarding championships Sunday 7 September Celebrates the origin of surfing in Britain. bellyboarding.co.uk grandparents’ day Sunday 7 September A day to honour grandparents! grandparents-day.com This week in history 5 September 1997 british science festival 2014 It was called A Study In Scarlet. Holmes was a fictional character based on the real Dr Joseph Bell. 5 September 1698 The Russian Tsar Peter the Great put a tax on beards! All Russian men had to pay for their facial hair or cut it off. international literacy Day Monday 8 September Raises awareness of the consequences of not being able to read. unesco.org aspire channel swim Monday 8 September The country’s biggest annual sponsored swimming event, with around 7,000 due to take part. aspirechannelswim.co.uk FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. Wales Future discussions This week a group of young people met in Cardiff to debate the future of the UK. The Young People’s Constitutional Convention allows young people to share their views and opinions ahead of the Scottish Referendum next week. Scotland Ryder Cup tour The Ryder Cup golf tournament starts at Gleneagles on 26 September and this week the Ryder Cup trophy is on a tour of the country. Starting on 4 September in Edinburgh, the cup will stop in the Scottish Borders, Shetland and Aberdeenshire. FirstNews Issue 429 Home News 2. Oxford N. ireland Scotland School app Finally finished Ready to vote A school in Londonderry has become the first school in Northern Ireland to get its own app. The app from St Mary’s College was developed by senior IT students. It is free to download and keeps students, parents and teachers informed about what is happening in the school and during the school year. A dictionary of medieval Latin has been completed after more than a century! The dictionary was started in 1913 by Oxford University historian Robert Whitwell. The final word, zythum (a type of malt drink), is the last word in the 17-volume collection. The dictionary is to be printed by the British Academy, although plans for a digital version are in progress. The people of Scotland are preparing to vote on Scottish independence next week. Scotland has been part of the UK for more than 300 years, but now some Scots want independence. The Referendum will take place on 18 September and, for the first time, 16 and 17-year-olds will be allowed to vote. 5 – 11 september 2014 3. London Giant fatberg A team of workers from Thames Water have spent four days clearing a giant fatberg from water pipes underneath Shepherd’s Bush in London. The fatberg was a mix of congealed fat, wet wipes and other litter that has been washed into drains or flushed down toilets. Thames Water 5. home UK Robin tops bird poll An online poll asking people to vote for their favourite British bird has seen the robin take the early lead. People are asked to vote for one of 60 native species, in a bid to try to find out which bird we would like as our national bird. Voting closes in October and the top six will go on to a second vote, which starts in January. You can vote online at votenationalbird.com. 1. FOLKESTONE Golden beach An artist from Germany has buried 30 gold bars at Outer Harbour beach in Folkestone. The stunt, which used £10,000 worth of 24-carat gold bullion, is part of an arts festival. Members of the public have been invited to dig for gold and those who found the gold bars are allowed to keep them. As First News went to press, three people had found gold bars. 4. Guildford Armed Forces town 2 4 3 Guildford will host the National Armed Forces Day in 2015. The event on 27 June will include a service at Guildford Cathedral, followed by a formal parade along the high street. Defence Minister Lord Astor said: “The county town of Surrey is an ideal location given the many historic links to the army, stretching back hundreds of years!” 1 news in numbers 5,000 100 20 wasps have built a nest on a single bed in Winchester. A pest control expert was called to remove the nest, which took up half the bed! trophies have been stolen from the National Motorcycle Museum in Solihull. A £20,000 reward has been offered for information leading to their return. mph speed limits have been put in place around 40 of the 83 schools in Flintshire. The remaining schools will get the new speed limits by October. 12,000 £19,000 has been given to the 40 ships from around the world and 1,200 people have signed a petition supporting a campaign to fully restore the last Victorian pier in Hampshire. Surrey Wildlife Trust (SWT) to help boost its heath tiger beetle project. smaller boats took part in the Parade of Sail along the Falmouth coast at the weekend. FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 6. news in pictures FirstNews Issue 429 1 september Getty Getty 31 august 5 – 11 September 2014 PARIS, FRANCE: People throw coconuts during a parade to celebrate Ganesh, the elephant-headed Hindu deity (God). Ganesh, one of the most popular Hindu deities, is believed to grant progress, prosperity and wisdom. brussels, belgium: Belgian Queen Mathilde takes Crown Princess Elisabeth to her first day of school at Sint-Jan Berchmanscollege in Brussels. 29 august Getty 31 august TARIFA, SPAIN: A kitesurfer participates in the Guinness World Record attempt for the most kitesurfers sailing together at one time. They were successful, with 352 kitesurfers beating the previous record of 318. CHESTER, UK: A Philippine mouse deer – one of the smallest hoofed animals in the world – has arrived at Chester Zoo. The new deer, which staff describe as being “not much bigger than a rabbit” is one of just 15 to be found in zoos across the whole of Europe. 1 september Getty FirstNews AMRITSAR, INDIA: Indian Sikh priest Jagtar Singh sits behind the Sikh holy book, the Guru Granth Sahib, as it is carried through the Golden Temple in Amritsar. The procession marked the 410th anniversary of the holy book. Use Blippar to watch the latest First News TV bulletin from Claire Bridge and the team at Sky News! They have the week’s big headlines, including free hot meals being offered to primary school children in England. Watch it in full at firstnews.co.uk. For more pictures and videos, go to firstnews.co.uk FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. FirstNews 1. USA Missing moggy World News 4. Norway 3. france 5. germany IOU 17p Soap shock Rude awakening Health officials have been criticised for threatening a retired man with legal action over a debt of 22 cents (about 17p). Jean-Louis Micalet was told that he had accidentally been given the money and was told to pay it back. He has been sent two letters about the money, even though the cost of a stamp is nearly three times the amount of the debt! Several cyclists needed medical treatment after drinking a washing liquid that they thought was a sports drink. The accident happened at a race near Oslo, where the makers of the liquid gave out free samples of Omo Aktiv & Sport to every rider. A man in Cologne was woken up by the sound of a crane crashing through the roof of his home, then realised that he was trapped by the collapsed roof. Fortunately, the man wasn’t seriously hurt and was rescued by emergency workers, along with the other residents of the block of flats. 5 – 11 September 2014 8. austria Mouse house A man who opened a sealed pack of toilet roll found something unexpected – a dormouse nesting inside one of the cardboard tubes! Christoph Lechner said that two of the rolls had been chewed up so that the mouse could build a nest. He released the cheeky rodent into his back garden. Getty A school in Glen Burnie had to close early last Friday… thanks to a cat! The Richard Henry Lee Elementary School sent pupils home when attempts to locate the feral (wild) cat failed. Animal control officials set traps around the school to try to lure the cat out. The school tweeted about the incident using #catcaper. Issue 429 Getty 7. world 9. japan 2. mexico Kitty mystery 4 Officials are trying to find out what killed 50 tonnes of fish that washed up on the shores of Lake Cajititlan in the west of the country. Hundreds of thousands of popoche chub have been scooped out of the lake. A local environment official said that the deaths were due to “poor management” of the lake. It is thought that nearby water treatment plants could be to blame. 3 8 1 7 9 2 10 6 7. japan 6. kenya Getty 5 Hunting for ghosts Disaster advice Officials have started to register every government worker to save money that is being paid to ‘ghost workers’. Around £700,000 a month is still being paid to people who have left their jobs, died or are cheating the system. The government has urged people to stock up on vital supplies like loo roll in case an earthquake cuts off supplies. 1 September is Disaster Prevention Day, held on the anniversary of a 1923 earthquake that killed more than 100,000 people. 10. THE WORLD’S CHILDREN Name: Arumugam Age: 13 Lives: Salem district, Tamil Nadu, India When Arumugam worked in the building industry, his typical working day involved lifting heavy bricks and mixing cement in his bare feet. “I had dropped out of school because our family had no food to eat,” he says. “My father has a disability, so my family depended a lot on the money I used to earn. When I was a child labourer, my work began at six in the morning and went on until sunset. I used to get blisters on my hands and feet.” UNICEF teams are visiting families door-to-door in poor areas of the district to find out which children might be missing from school. The team found out about Arumugam and managed to persuade his parents that having him in school was better in the long run. They also secured payments which were due from the government to support Arumugam’s father. After three years, he is now back at school. “I like coming to school, I am happy to be here,” he says. “I don’t know what career I will take up, but I want to do well in whatever job I do.” UNICEF supports communities to help change their cultural views of child labour, helps provide alternative income to families and access to education and protective services. For more information, visit www.UNICEF.org.uk. People around the world were shocked last week when stories appeared saying that Hello Kitty isn’t a cat, but is a human girl. The story started when someone organising a Hello Kitty exhibition was told by the Sanrio company that their creation was not a cat. However, after hundreds of stories appeared, the company tried to clear up the situation. They said that Hello Kitty is a ‘gijinka’ or personification of a cat. That means that she isn’t totally human or cat, in the same way that Mickey Mouse is part mouse, part person. Getty A bit fishy FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 8. subscriptions FirstNews Issue 429 5 – 11 september 2014 Try FirstNews on your iPad today... for FREE! Check out the digital version of First News for iPad and see the newspaper come to life. Videos, image galleries and interactive puzzles are just a few of the cool features. Download the free First News app from the App Store today and get a FREE 30-day trial. Parents: Already a print subscriber? Why not upgrade your subscription from just £2 per quarter? Call 0844 8267 338 New movie Advertisement feature Teachers: To add a school site licence to your subscription, please call 0844 8560 634 FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 9. stamp out bullying by Ben Pulsford FirstNews Issue 429 5 – 11 September 2014 It’s time to THE reality is that bullying in schools exists. It might not affect you, or even your friends, but it happens and it’s not always obvious. Alternatively, you may be reading this and feeling sad because it does affect you. If that’s the case, just remember that bullying is NEVER acceptable and there are people around you who can help put a stop to this behaviour once and for all. What is bullying? A common myth is that bullying is just part of growing up; this is utterly false. But the sad news is, bullying can be found in lots of different places in lots of different forms, rearing its ugly head in all walks of life, not just in school. People are often picked on by bullies because the bully sees something that they think is different. What’s important to remember is that, whatever the form, whatever the reason, any bullying is unacceptable and no-one should ever be made to feel like a victim. What to do if you’re being bullied Don’t live this new school year in fear – that’s our first piece of advice. Being bullied can make you feel very lonely, but the truth is that you’re not alone; you have more help around you than you think. Bullying is taken very seriously by schools. The law says that every school has to have an anti-bullying policy in place, so they are ready to deal with this and help you. So, start by opening up to someone you trust about what is happening, whether that be a friend, a teacher or a parent/guardian. After all, no-one can help you unless you let them know what’s going on. Help others help you by telling them exactly what is happening. If you’re being bullied at school, speak to your class teacher/tutor, or another teacher that makes you feel comfortable and that you trust. Help Here at First News we want this school year to be the year we make a real noise about bullying and we plan to make quite a noise with our anti-bullying campaign, STAMP OUT BULLYING. If you’re not quite ready to talk to someone face-to-face about it, start by initially ignoring the bully. Bullies crave a reaction; if you don’t give it to them, they are likely to get bored, but talk to someone about it as soon as you can. Write everything down, what happened and when, so that can be used to deal with the issue. Online bullying is a big problem today. With the rise in smartphones, internet use and social media, online bullying is all too easy. However, online bullying is traceable (it’s in text/recorded form, not vocal) – this is key to stamping it out. If someone has done something that has upset you online, print off and/or email the evidence and show it to a parent or guardian. Finally, there are experts out there who can help and they’re just a phone call or a click away. We’d recommend giving our friends at ChildLine a call on 0800 1111 if you need to talk to someone. They can offer you advice any time, day or night. The counsellors are friendly, understanding and, most importantly, are there for you. These are all just suggestions, but we would recommend always reporting bullying to a teacher/parent immediately, as this is the best way of dealing with it before it gets worse. What to do if you know someone who is being bullied First of all, we’d encourage you to help the person who is being bullied to seek help, as a starting point. This is a very mature thing to do and can really help someone who may not be able to help themselves. Explain to them that the quickest solution is reporting the problem to a parent and/ or guardian, or a teacher at your school. Perhaps you could suggest going with him/her to speak to a teacher to report the problem? The chances are, if you’ve noticed him/her being bullied and he/she hasn’t reported the problem yet, it’s because of fear. This is your opportunity to lend a helping hand and be a true friend to someone, so help him/her make those first steps, but be sensitive. You could also try introducing him/her to your friends. Those who are bullied can often feel very lonely and shy, so being surrounded by friendly people who respect them for who they are can really help build their confidence and even put off the bully. Make sure you don’t take on the problem alone, though! Speak to a teacher or even your parents/guardians about the issue, for extra help. STAMP OUT BULLYING! We want every pupil in every class in the country to stand up from their desks at 11am on 26 September 2014 and all stamp the ground as quickly as possible for 30 seconds. We’re hoping this will show that there are thousands of pupils across the country who are against bullying and will help us demand that more needs to be done to ‘stamp it out’ once and for all. While you and your friends are doing this, we’d like your teacher to take a photograph or video of your stamping and send these to us that very day at newsdesk@firstnews.co.uk (subject: STAMP OUT). All photographs sent to us will appear in the 3 October edition of the newspaper or on our website. All you need to do is get your teacher to let us know by Friday 12 September that your school supports our Stamp Out Bullying campaign and how many pupils there are in your school, by going to www.firstnews.co.uk/stampout. This will take less than a minute. Then we’ll be able to know exactly how many UK schoolchildren are against bullying and will present this number (which we hope will be in the thousands upon thousands!) to those that run the country, in the hope that we can get them to do more in the fight against bullying. FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 10. YOUR MONEY FirstNews Issue 429 5 – 11 september 2014 You can account on this WE write a lot about how to earn and save in Your Money. Forgive us if we bang on a bit each week about finding ways to raise cash, but today we’re going to talk about something a bit different. Say that you’ve saved a little bit of money. You might want to save a bit more, too. Where are you going to put it all? Bank accounts and building societies are safe and secure places to keep money. Most accounts can be set up with just £1! A bank looks after your money and offers different loans to grown-ups. Having an account can help you to save and spend. A building society is like a bank, but it is owned by the people that keep their money inside it. Over the next few weeks, we’ll be looking at all the stuff that people with accounts can do! What have you been spen ding your cash on th is summer? Or maybe you’ ve been busy saving up for something? U se newsdesk@firs tnews.co.uk to let us know what you’ve been doing w ith your money. Search for Finance Ready on NationwideEducation.co.uk to learn more about money! Let’s Grow Advertisement feature supported by FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 11. SCIENCE FirstNews Rocket to Mars bosses at NASA have said that work can start on building the new generation of space rockets, which will take humans to Mars and beyond. Issue 429 5 – 11 september 2014 Secrets of the stones The Space Launch System (SLS) will be NASA’s first exploration vehicle since the space shuttles to move from the drawing board to production. Two versions will be made, the most powerful one being capable of taking 130 tonnes into space. This means that astronauts will be able to reach distant asteroids and planets like Mars. The smaller version, which will be able to lift 70 tonnes, is scheduled for a first flight before November 2018. However, NASA astronauts will have to wait until at least 2030 before they get the chance to go to Mars. Mike Hartmann Getty One of the rocks used in the experiment Fighting global garbage fires around 40% of the world’s rubbish is burned in open fires, which contributes to health problems and climate change. The figures were revealed in a new study led by scientists at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in the US. They say that most countries don’t include these fires in their official records. Huge rubbish fires are most common in developing countries with large populations, such as China, India, Brazil and Pakistan. Because these fires often contain plastics and electronic waste, harmful substances like mercury are pumped into the air. Other pollutants linked to lung, heart and brain problems can be given off. The scientists now want to investigate where in the atmosphere these substances go and which populations will be most affected. Getty A worker at a rubbish dump in Lahore, Pakistan The valley is in California’s Mojave Desert and is one of the hottest and driest places on Earth. Although it is mostly empty, the valley floor is littered with rocks, some of which can weigh up to a third of a tonne. Weirdly, these massive stones have been known to move across the desert floor, in a part of the valley known as Racetrack Playa (a playa is a dry lake). The evidence can be seen on the ground, as the rocks leave long drag trails in the desert floor. Up until now, no-one had ever seen the rocks in motion, so how they moved was still a mystery. Hurricanes and slimy sheets of algae are some of the things that have been blamed for moving the rocks. Two cousins, Richard Norris and Jim Norris, set up an experiment in the valley by fitting rocks with mini weather stations and GPS sensors. Since officials wouldn’t allow them to mess with the park’s rocks, they had to find similar rocks elsewhere and bring them to the valley instead. They got lucky in December 2013 when they arrived in the valley in time to see the rocks moving. They found that on the very rare occasions when the valley floor is filled with a thin layer of water, it can freeze during the night. The next day, the sun causes the ice to break up into huge sheets. These sheets are then blown across the top of the water by wind, pushing the stones across the valley floor and creating the drag marks. It took surprisingly little to move the rocks. Winds of just 3-5m/s (10mph) and ice 3mm thick was enough to move some stones dozens of metres. “Science sometimes has an element of luck,” says Richard Norris. “We expected to wait five or ten years without anything moving but, only two years into the Getty An artist’s impression of the SLS scientists think they may have solved a puzzle that has baffled experts since the 1940s: the mysterious sliding stones of Death Valley! project, we just happened to be there at the right time to see it happen in person.” Because the rocks move so slowly, the researchers say that other people may have seen the stones when they were moving, but just not noticed it. It can be many years in between tracks being formed, which the researchers say is simply because rain or snow in Death Valley is very rare, so the conditions usually aren’t right for the rocks to move. Did you know? Getty NASA/MSFC Just a few of the sliding stones on the valley floor the researchers also saw some drag marks created by ice on its own, without a rock anywhere near. Park officials had previously blamed these mysterious trails on tourists stealing stones! For more pictures and videos, go to firstnews.co.uk FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 12. ANIMALs Biggest bat found A Bat survey in Gloucestershire has discovered the biggest greater horseshoe bat in the area since studies began. The young bat had a forearm 60.4mm long, when the average length of a bat arm from this colony is 56.2mm. The Woodchester Mansion bat survey is conducted by Roger Ransome and is the longest continuous study of a mammal by one person. He has been recording data about the bats at the mansion since the 1950s. Five species of bat can be found living at the Grade II listed Victorian mansion. Experts say it has been an excellent year for bats in the area. FirstNews Issue 429 5 – 11 September 2014 LITTER Studies show that more litter than ever is being left on British beaches. It doesn’t make our shoreline look very nice, but how does rubbish affect the wildlife that lives in the sea? Plastic not so fantastic? Plastic shopping bags are some of the biggest threats to coastal birds and animals and can take up to 1,000 years to decompose naturally! When plastic bags float in the sea they look like jellyfish to turtles, who try to eat them, which can be life-threatening. Latest badger culls announced It has been announced that a maximum of 1,876 badgers can be culled in two areas this year. The number has been set by Natural England. The start date for the culls has not been announced but the controversial fouryear pilot (now in its second year) will continue in Somerset and Gloucestershire. The aim of the cull is to stop the spread of a disease called TB in cattle. Government ministers and the National Farmer’s Union think a cull is the best way to tackle the spread of the disease. Many other people feel that shooting the badgers is cruel and unnecessary, and believe the badgers should be vaccinated against TB instead so that they can’t spread the disease. SeaWorld Orlando has rescued more than 1,740 turtles and returned 1,170 back to the wild since 1980. Many of these were suffering from preventable injuries caused by rubbish left by humans. If you’re going to Orlando you can learn about the dangers faced by wild turtles and meet some we’ve rescued at TurtleTrek, our marine habitat and 3D movie experience. To read more about SeaWorld and our work, visit seaworldparks.co.uk. Are you a wildlife warrior? We want to hear from you! Tell us about the amazing things you’ve done to help the environment and send some pictures and we’ll choose some of the best to include in our special October pullout. Our two favourite stories will WIN an amazing SeaWorld Goody Bag including plush animals, stationery and other surprises. Send your stories to newsdesk@firstnews.co.uk. If you need inspiration, why not organise a beach clean-up with your friends and family to coincide with Coastal Clean-Up Day on 20 September? For more pictures and videos, go to firstnews.co.uk Advertisement feature FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. The inspirational story of one extraordinary girl. #iammalala www.orionbooks.co.uk/malala Turn the page for our Malala interview and details of how schools can apply for a free copy. Malala First News Ad.indd 1 20/08/2014 15:27 FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 14. BIG INTERVIEW FirstNews Issue 429 5 – 11 SEPTEMBER 2014 “Every person is great!” e h t “In this one year t been a docum m on me. The fil e g g is Davis Gu ia rn from Califo a person and h ri ta documen Inconvenient Oscar. The d be out in s SCHOOLGIRL Malala Yousafzai is one of the most famous campaigners in the world. She spoke to Callum Jones about the problems facing the world’s schools, her new book, and dreams that, one day, she might become Prime Minister Malala. SCHOOL h O “I think we can help all our brothers and sisters – I call them brothers and sisters because I think that we are all just one community, we are one family, we are living in this world. We can help in different ways. Instead of using Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for just posting pictures and writing funny things, why not use it for campaigning? And why not use it in a good way and speak up for education and tell responsible people that they should stand up and they should make education their top priority?” fi g ok o b “We thought that it was very we mak important that backg e th simple: explain in a w t u b and the history derst n u ill the children w ll the te to as easily, as well rtan o p im education is ” e. lif r thei L “We don’t realise the importance of anything until it is snatched from us. This is how I realised the importance of education. I was in Swat, a beautiful place, and I was going to school every day. I was not really understanding what it meant and what impact it has on my life, or how it was going to change my life. These people came called the Taliban – terrorists – and they blasted more than 400 schools. They stopped us from going to schools and education was totally abandoned. These people are really afraid of the power of education, and this is what strengthens a woman and this is what encourages her to know what her skills are and it gives her an identity as well.” o r S C HO f t ne w On 9 October 2012, Malala Yousafzai was on her school bus. She had been raising her voice for the rights of boys and girls to go to school. A group called the Taliban had been closing schools in Malala’s home – the Pakistani province of Swat – and she had been criticising them. Malala cannot remember the moment that a gunman stopped her bus and asked where she was. He fired a single shot into her head, which left her fighting for her life. The teenager was flown to a hospital in Birmingham for emergency treatment and made an amazing recovery. Today, she uses her fame to call for education for all. the taliban have “These people e ed by someon been misguid ed id isgu or they have m n is not only a o ti ca u themselves. Ed ulsory. but it is comp person’s right d ce ion of pea an Islam is a relig .” m la Is lowed in education is al lif FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. e big ritai b n in e “School time is a bit longer than in Pakistan. Here it is like seven hours, eight hours, but in Pakistan there’s only five hours. Here the education system is really nice, which I like because here you have amazing teachers who help you but they also tell you to be independent and do your own research. Here you have computer labs, science labs; you have libraries. We never used to have that. We were just limited to books and teachers and that was it.” ee n cr t “I’m hopeful that I’ll get a good education in a good university and I’ll empower myself and then go back to Pakistan so I can help my country and I can fulfil the dream which I always used to think of. I usually say that I want to do politics and go to Pakistan and become the Prime Minister. But then I just think, you know, what job would I do? Because politics is something that you do, it’s not like your job that you can earn from, and I want to be an independent girl, not depending on my family but rather helping my family. That’s why I haven’t thought about a job yet!” of s c ho o s d u i “It’s a big number: 57million children o ut of scho ol. It’s quit disappoin e ting that still there that man are y children w school an d the reas ho are out of o n s are man that, but if y for we comp a re it to the past it ha s improve d a lot. Th has been ere good pro gress.” ol k ke it ground way that tand it em how nt for “Every person is great. You are great. There is something good in every person, something special and I always try to learn the good things from other people. There will always be weaknesses in every person but just try to ignore the weaknesses and look for what good things they have. Benazir Bhutto [ex-Pakistan PM] – she was one of the great role models for all of us. She gives me hope that, yes, I can also be the Prime Minister of my country. She’s one of the inspirational leaders. There are many others, like Martin Luther King Jr and Nelson Mandela – may God bless him.” .15 Catch the latest news at www.firstnews.co.uk! Headlines THE FUTURE s whole there has e mentary mad e am n r’s o m direct is e h d an enheim nice a. He is a very ing az am e as mad An as w e ies. Ther an n o w it t Truth – ill w ry ta documen as em n the cin soon.” H HEROE R E S her family “They are incredibly happy and they are very nice parents. I usually talk about my father. He’s a very nice man. He is brave. He has the courage to talk against discrimination and to highlight the issues that women are facing. He talks about human rights and he loves education. He had his own school, as I mention. He really loves education and he wants to campaign for it. Then there’s my mother, she’s the most brave woman I’ve ever seen.” Charities supported by First News Sport news Entertainment the First News team the world “When I was in Swat [province in Pakistan], I just thought th at this is the who le world and noth ing is outside of this world. I did not know that ther e are so many countrie s, there are peop le, there are women walking in the streets no t afraid of anyone. They ha ve their own id entity, they can be politicia ns, they can be leaders, they can do an y job, they can be engineers, jo urnalists…” her proudest moments “I was thinking that I always speak for education. We set up the Malala Fund and through the Malala Fund, in one year, we did a lot of good things. We started a project in Swat in Pakistan for those girls who are suffering. Then we went to Kenya; we worked with Free the Children and we built a school there. We went to Nigeria to speak up for the girls who were abducted by Boko Haram – who are still held by Boko Haram.” Editor: Nicky Cox MBE Head of content: Keilly Swift Entertainment Editor: Serena Lacey Sport/Science Editor: Ian Eddy Reporter: Callum Jones Editorial Assistant/Comps Manager: Kirsty Macdonald Creative DIRECTOR: Richard Robson junior designer: Charlotte Headdey writerS: Ben Pulsford & Alex Davis Production CO-Ordinator: Hannah Greenfield Marketing executive: Jessica Howley Marketing and Admin Executive: Meg Stephenson digital manager: Simon Ward Head of Finance: Tony Finn Finance manager: Kelane Henderson accounts assistant: Matthew Hutton STRATEGIC DEVELOPMENT: Charlotte le Butt Head of Education: Nicolette Smallshaw Publishing Consultant: Susan Downey Advertising Manager: Samuel Eads Advertising executives: Nina Chaudhry, Sophie Austin Subscription and Newstrade Manager: Rachel Henderson Head of Subscriptions: Natasha Littleton Head of Subscriptions (maternity cover): Lina Tabares JoinT Publishers: Emma Robson, Kelly Matcham Executive Director: Amanda Hills Founders: Nicky Cox, Sarah and Steve Thomson Email: firstname.surname@firstnews.co.uk Tel: (020) 3195 2000 Subscriptions: 0844 8267 338 WEB: www.firstnews.co.uk All material in this newspaper is © 2014 First News and Newsbridge Limited and cannot be used without written permission. First News is published by Newsbridge Limited, Third Floor, Colechurch House, 1 London Bridge Walk, London, SE1 2SX. Printed by Trinity Mirror Printing, St Albans Road, Watford, Hertfordshire, WD24 7RG. Distributed by Advantage, Associated Newspapers, Northcliffe House, 2 Derry Street, Northcliffe House, Kensington, W8 5TT. Tel. (020) 7938 6000. FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 16. MALALA Advertisement feature FirstNews Issue 429 5 – 11 SEPTEMBER 2014 “Malala is an inspiration to girls and women all over the world” — JK ROWLING Meet Malala Malala Yousafzai, the young campaigner for education from Swat Valley, Pakistan, came to public attention writing about life under the rule of the Taliban. She often spoke about her family’s fight for girls’ education in her community. Raised in a changing Pakistan by enlightened parents, Malala was encouraged to speak up for herself and for what she believed in. In October 2012, Malala was targeted by the Taliban and shot in the head as she was returning home from school on a bus. Amazingly, Malala survived the attack and continues her campaign for education for all. In recognition of her courage, Malala was honoured with the National Peace Prize in Pakistan in 2011 and nominated for the International Children’s Peace Prize in the same year. She is the youngest ever person to have been nominated for the world-famous Nobel Peace Prize. Malala now lives in Birmingham, England, and continues to campaign for universal access to education. © Antonio Olmos “Let us pick up our books and pens – they are our most powerful weapons” — MALALA YOUSAFZAI “One child, one teacher, one book and one pen can change the world” — MALALA YOUSAFZAI About the book Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up For Education And Changed The World is the inspirational real-life story of the remarkable teenager, newly told by Malala for fellow young people. Malala’s story is not only the story of her life, but it is also about the value of speaking out against intolerance and hate. It’s a message of hope from one girl who dreams of education for every girl in every country. “They shot my friends too. They thought that the bullets would silence us – but they failed” — MALALA YOUSAFZAI School giveaway First News and Orion Publishing team up to donate copies of Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up For Education And Changed The World to UK schools Inspired by Malala’s campaign for access to education, Orion Publishing and First News are offering school libraries across the UK and Eire the opportunity to apply for a free copy of this important book. We have 3,000 copies to give away, ensuring that as many young people as possible have access to Malala’s inspirational story. For details of how to apply for a free copy for your school, and for full terms and conditions, visit orionbooks.co.uk/malala. The closing date for applications is 30 September 2014. To find out more, visit orionbooks.co.uk/malala. #IAmMalala FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 17. what did you do in the war? FirstNews A wartime treat Issue 429 5 – 11 september 2014 What Did You Do In The War? is a regular feature in First News to mark 75 years since the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939. Journalist and presenter Jeremy Vine’s daughter Martha Vine (aged ten) interviewed family friend Barbara Burgess, 90, about her memories of World War Two… which include a very unusual meal! She tipped the saucepan, and the contents I told Barbara I thudded onto the plate like a wet tennis ball. couldn’t imagine “I don’t like onions,” I thought to myself, as what it would be Barbara Burgess touched the boiled vegetable like to look out of with a knob of butter and dropped two pieces of my own window brown bread next to it. and see bombs Barbara is 90, and the onion is helping her falling in the back garden. explain to me what it was like during World “We couldn’t see them because of the blackout curtains,” she explained. “But when War Two. we were under the kitchen floor we heard the noise of the incendiary bombs. They She now lives in Devon with her husband would whistle down, a horrible noise. They whistled – ssssssshhhhheeuuw – like Roy, but she was born in Manchester in a firework. We were very December 1923. When war broke out, frightened because we Barbara was three months away from thought the house might fall her 16th birthday. on top of us or an incendiary The onion was a treat in wartime. could go through the roof and Barbara aged 24 in 1948 “My friend, who was also called Barbara, set everything on fire.” used to ring up and say: ‘What would you I thought Barbara had an like for your supper?’ because they had a special oven next to their fire. I’d often amazing memory for events say a baked potato. But her father was very fond of boiled onions, so sometimes I 75 years ago. would ask for that instead,” she told me when I went to see her at her home. “Luckily our house wasn’t hit,” I had brought Barbara an onion from my grandpa’s garden. To show me how she said, “but it was horrible they used to cook it, she boiled it for half an hour. Then she tipped it from the walking around Manchester saucepan, covered it in salt and pepper, and spread butter on it. afterwards. Everywhere was Normally I don’t like onions. But this one was different. It wasn’t very tasty but bricks and broken glass.” Use Blippar to see Martha the butter made it quite easy to eat. It made me realise that, even though you After hearing her story, the trying this wartime treat! think people ate quite disgusting things in the war, actually they had a way of onion tasted very good indeed. making them nice to eat. I had never eaten a boiled onion before! The war was hard for Barbara and her family. She was evacuated with two close friends just before the fighting started, as the Government wanted to move all the children out of Manchester because of bombing. “Nobody would take three girls, but I was the eldest by one month, so I had to be brave and say I would go to a family on my own,” she said. She wore a yellow evacuee Do you know anyone who lived through World War Two? Maybe a tag to show which train she should be on. grandparent, great-grandparent, elderly relative or family friend? We’d love Sadly her father’s printing business went bust so she had to return home after only a you to interview them for First News! They may be able to tell you about life few weeks. in wartime Britain or about what it was like to actually fight in the war. See “He couldn’t get another job because printing tinyurl.com/FNInterviewTips for advice! was his profession. He had broken his leg when Even if you don’t know someone to interview, your family or someone he was young and it didn’t set right, so it was you know may have stories that have been passed down through the crooked, meaning he was disabled. So I had to generations that capture what it was like to live during the war. For example, go back and get a job to bring money in.” they may have a medal that a great-grandparent won for bravery or a letter It meant she was in the house when German that was written home from a relative who was fighting in the war (Barbara bombers struck the city. showed Martha her national identity card – see below). We’d love to know “We had a dugout under the kitchen floor. You their stories! couldn’t sleep with all the noise.” Interviews and stories you send may feature in a weekly column in First Now it’s YOUR turn! News and many will be published in a commemorative book. The book is a joint project between First News, Walker Books and The Silver Line, a helpline for older people that was set up by ChildLine founder Esther Rantzen. Send your interviews, stories (please try to keep to a limit of around 500 words) and photos to newsdesk@firstnews.co.uk with ‘What did you do in the war?’ as the subject, or post them to: What Did You Do In The War?, First News, Third Floor, Colechurch House, 1 London Bridge Walk, London, SE1 2SX. Barbara shows Martha her evacuee tags Please note that by sending anything in, you are agreeing that these can be published in First News and in the What Did You Do In The War? book. Make sure that you have permission from the relevant person. Every man, woman and child in the UK had to carry a national identity card during World War Two FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 18. ENTERTAINMENT TV, Film, Music and Theatre! 50 years of Charlie ONE of the world’s most-loved books, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, turns 50 this year (12 October) and in the run-up to Roald Dahl Day (13 September), we found out some amazing facts about the delicious story, its amazing characters and the man who created them! The first film version of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was made in 1971 but its name was changed to Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. Roald Dahl himself wrote the screenplay, although some screenwriters were brought in to add final tweaks. In the book, Veruca Salt meets her fate in the Nut Room, where a team of squirrels shell walnuts. In the 1971 film this was changed to the Egg Room where giant geese lay golden eggs ready for Easter. Tim Burton’s film in 2005 kept in the squirrels using 40 real, trained squirrels! Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was written in 1964. It was the third story written by Roald Dahl, who decided to have a go at writing children’s books after getting fed up with the “crummy” children’s books that were around. Roald Dahl LOVED chocolate – he had a little red box full of small chocolate bars, which he would bring out every day after dinner. Even his dog Chopper didn’t miss out, getting four Smarties after lunch and dinner every day. (PLEASE NOTE that chocolate is toxic to dogs, so they aren’t supposed to eat it.) The chocolate river and waterfall in the 1971 film was made of 150,000 gallons of chocolate ice-cream powder, salt conditioner to stop it smelling too bad and a special chemical to stop the waterfall creating too much foam! The actor playing Augustus Gloop had to jump into it repeatedly over a whole day. Peter Ostrum, who played the first Charlie Bucket on screen, gave up acting after and is now a vet! One actor played all the Oompa-Loompas in Tim Burton’s film. Hundreds of copies of actor Deep Roy It took two years to write Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and the first version of it was called Charlie’s Chocolate Boy. All in all there were five drafts of the story, which eventually became the one we all know and love. A missing chapter of the story called The Vanilla Fudge Room was recently discovered that was cut from the final edit. were added using CGI. Finding the right children to star in the West End musical version of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory took nine months. Three or four young actors are used for each character and they share the roles, each starring in different performances. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory has been illustrated by four different illustrators over the years. The current book uses illustrations by Roald Dahl’s long-time collaborator Quentin Blake. Roald Dahl loved chocolate so much that he started keeping the foil wrappers from all the bars he ate, turning them into a ball (right). He continued to add to the ball, which stayed on his desk in his writing hut until he died! Around half a million copies of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory are still sold every year. Find out more about Roald Dahl and Roald Dahl Day on 13 September at roalddahl.com A brand-new book about the story, Inside Charlie’s Chocolate Factory by Lucy Mangan, is out now. The magical owner of the chocolate factory was originally called Mr Ritchie! In early drafts of the book there were ten golden tickets on offer and ten lucky children made their way into the chocolate factory. The finished story had five children: Charlie Bucket, Augustus Gloop, Veruca Salt, Violet Beauregarde and Mike Teavee. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory has been printed in more than 50 countries and in 55 languages. It has been made into a West End musical, an opera, a play and two films (1971 and 2005). There’s even a theme park attraction based on the book at Alton Towers in Staffordshire. TOP TV STRICTLY COME DANCING Roald Dahl and his dog Chopper Nick Nicolson, courtesy of the Roald Dahl Museum and Story Centre The launch show is here. Tune in to see which celebrities will be paired with which dancing professionals. Strictly Come Dancing, BBC1, Sunday @ 8pm. SEMI-FINAL TIME The final celebrities perform on their own for the first time in the semi-finals. Tumble, BBC1, Saturday @ 6.00pm. MAGIC MAN Dynamo continues his travels around the world, astounding people with his unbelievable magic skills. Dynamo: Magician Impossible, Watch, Thursday @ 9.00pm. FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 19. ENTERTAINMENT FirstNews Issue 429 5 – 11 September 2014 The boss is back! THE new series of The X Factor burst back onto our screens this week and TV’s original Mr Nasty, Simon Cowell, is back on the judging panel. We found out more… So Simon, how does it feel to be back in the UK for this series? It actually feels really good to be back in the UK. I think in a weird way it’s good I’ve had a break from the show. I’ve watched the show from a distance and now I feel like I’m back in control again. I like it. What are you most excited about? The one thing that always excites me about doing the show here is the fact that we have discovered stars from it in the past. And there’s always that feeling when you’re on the panel that you’re going to find a new star. I don’t know who they’re going to be or where they’re going to come from, but it’s that that excites me the most. What’s going to be different this year? I think you’re going to hear a different kind of singer this year. The show is going to look different in terms of the line-up. I’ve done the small room auditions already, and then we’re going back to arenas, which is the real test. I’ve already seen five or six people that have got massive potential. Some of these people, when you put them in front of the big crowds, they fall apart. And on the show this year there are a lot of hurdles to overcome. You’ve got to go from the small room to the arena to the six chair challenge, which I think is a great addition. Then you’ve got to do the judges’ houses visit, then you make it on to the live shows. So anyone who gets to the live shows, they’ve earned their spot. How competitive are you and the other judges feeling this year? You don’t get competitive until you get your category. At that point, for whatever reason, you almost forget about the artists at that point – it’s so much about you winning. Or so much about someone else not winning – it’s about your competitive nature, which is why you put competitive people on the show, because if you don’t want to win, it’s kind of a boring show. How does it feel to be reunited with Cheryl? It feels good to be reunited with Cheryl, I’ll be honest with you. She’s been on good form. It’s almost like the last four years disappeared. We just picked it up straight away. She’s been fun and annoying, but good to be with. We’ve seen you winding Cheryl up during auditions. Has she tried to get her own back on you? I’ve wound her up a lot in the auditions. I mean, she’s so easy to wind up, like a fish taking the bait. But, like I said, she’s been on good form, and she’s got a good sense of humour. I’ve always said I find the audition process hard. And she’s found it hard. But for whatever reason she’s enjoyed it and we’ve had a good time. Is there a particular type of contestant you’re looking for this year; a specific genre or category? I’m not interested in a sob story. I mean, seriously, I’m just so over them. I always say the same thing. I want someone who can become a star in this country but, just as importantly, can become a star in other countries. You want somebody who’s different, you don’t want a second-rate version of someone who’s already out there, but you want somebody who’s different from anyone else in the charts at the moment. What’s it like working with Mel B? What kind of judge is she? I wasn’t sure whether Mel was going to fit in or not but, within five minutes, I got her. She brings an incredible energy to the show. She isn’t a judge for hire, which a lot of people are nowadays. She loves the show and is really interested in the mentoring aspect of the show, because she did the show in Australia where she did a good job. Plus she’s really fun to be around, although I get why she’s called Scary! Mel B is known for her straight-talking approach, as are you – who do you think contestants have found more intimidating ? I don’t know if it’s a question of whether contestants find me or Mel more intimidating, I think more about who they would like to please – and that’s normally me! Benedict Cumberbatch Caroline Flack Caroline Flack, Pixie Lott and Gregg Wallace are among the final celebs added to the Strictly Come Dancing line-up. Caroline said: “Ever since I was a presenter on CBBC and used to see the Strictly judges walking around Television Centre I have wanted to be on the show. I am so excited to get started and I just want to get through the first dance with no mistakes, plus I really want to master my ‘dance face’!” The Sherlock star has met a clay version of himself! The life-like head will be used to create the mould for his Madame Tussauds waxwork model. The waxwork will launch later this year at the Baker Street attraction. Benedict said: “My agents will be thrilled; they’ve wanted a clone of me for some time!” This year you’re back in the audition room. What do you prefer – the room or the arenas? I found the first day a nightmare going back to the small room, because you’re so close to the contestant, only 2.5m away. I had a real problem about laughing when I shouldn’t laugh. I think it’s really intimidating, for the contestant and for us. I think the good thing about the small room is you definitely get to know more about them because they’re not playing to a crowd. You get to know more about their personality, you can probably make a better judgement call. But I like the fact they have to go through the next stage, from the small room into the arena, because you see both sides of them. Some people will shine and some people will fall to pieces! Don’t miss The X Factor on ITV1, Saturday and Sunday at 8pm. FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 21. crazy but true FirstNews Issue 429 5 – 11 september 2014 Lost teddies THE hunt is on to find the owners of the missing teddies at LEGOLAND Windsor Resort. The popular attraction has collected 17 cute cuddly toys which have been left behind over the summer holidays. They are keen to reunite them with their true owners via their Toy Reunion Service. Among those missing a home are five small traditional brown teddy bears, a white bear, a panda, an elephant and a dog! Owners can reclaim their lost teddies via Facebook, but remember you must be over 13 to use the site. Maddest auction CHRISTIE’S auction house in London held a truly ‘Out of the Ordinary’ auction last week. Among the strange items up for grabs was a suit of armour, jellyfish models in tubes, Sir Paul McCartney’s old front door, a pair of ‘zebracorns’ and a hippo table! A Viking broadsword was the most expensive item on sale, with it being valued at a whopping £120,000! A selection of works were also available in an online-only auction, which meant people from all over the world could take part. Surprise swoop A RARE golden eagle stunned a driver in Kent recently. Ricky Shaw was driving along a country road when the huge bird swooped in front of him! The amazing moment was all caught on Mr Shaw’s dash-cam. “It’s not something I normally come across on my way to work,” he said. Golden eagles are the second-largest eagle species in the UK, with a 1.8m (6ft) wingspan! They are usually found in the wild in Scotland, preferring to be out in large open areas rather than towns or cities. Written and illustrated by Paul Palmer Record-breaking dog MEET Jiff – he’s the fastest dog on two paws, and the first of many record-breakers that are being revealed in Guinness World Records’ 60th Anniversary Edition! The super-talented dog has not just broken one record though, he’s actually gone the whole hog and broken two! He completed the fastest 10m on hind legs in an impressive 6.56 seconds, and also the fastest 5m on front paws, with a time of 7.76 seconds. Jiff is from Los Angeles, California, and practises running on QUICK CHUCKLES RECORD OF THE WEEK Q: What did the nut say HA! when it sneezed? A: Cashew! HA! his front and hind legs daily. Besides these tricks, he is also a pro at shaking hands, riding a skateboard and stamping his own autograph. He even appeared in a Katy Perry music video! Read more about Jiff and other record-breaking stars in the 2015 Guinness World Records annual out on 10 September. Shortest woman ! A H Q: Why did Superman cross the road? The shortest woman living is Jyoti Amge (India, born 16 Dec 1993), who measured 62.8 cm (24.7 in) in Nagpur, India. A: To get to the supermarket! Share your jokes with us. Email them to: newsdesk@firstnews.co.uk For info on this record and hundreds more, go to guinnessworldrecords.com FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 22. puzzles FirstNews SuperHuman ! WIN planner dk.co.uk Can you complete the usual grid and fill in the numbers one to nine? Send in your answers and five lucky winners will win a copy of the Superhuman Encyclopedia. Ever wanted to know how the human body works? From the brain to muscles and bones, Professor Robert Winston explains all the amazing things the human body can do. Find out how we keep cool, how the human body fights infection and how many muscles we use to smile in this colourful, fact-filled guide to the mechanics of the human body. 5 9 5 9 9 8 5 7 4 5 4 9 1 8 1 6 7 2 7 2 8 3 9 7 6 8 9 4 2 8 7 9 1 Word Wheel SEE how many words of three or more letters you can make using the middle letter in each one. And can you find the word that uses all the letters? E C R H Across 1 A large earthquake recently hit this US state (10) 5 Happen again (5) 7 Many people listened to this at Reading Festival (5) 9 ___ Ricciardo: He won the recent Belgian Grand Prix (6) 10 This is often put on chips alongside vinegar (4) 12 Smile broadly (4) 13 ___ Who: the new series of this hit TV show has begun (6) 16 ___ Backshall: a contestant on this year’s Strictly Come Dancing (5) 17 A type of short poem (5) 18 Mentions a source of information; free screen (anag) (10) 1 Down 1 Healed or made better (5) 2 A person who grows crops or raises livestock (6) 3 A sloping surface (4) 4 Immediately (9) 6 A bug with many legs (9) 8 A common pet (3) 11 Main ___ : this follows a starter at a restaurant (6) 12 A state of matter (3) 14 Tall, slender-leaved plants of the grass family (5) 15 In this place or position (4) 2 5 3 6 4 7 9 8 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Word Ladder 1 - A large earthquake recently hit this US state (10) 5 - Happen again (5) A T Can you complete our prize crossword? Send in your answers and two lucky winners will each win a Dodo Acad Pad mid-year planner and a mug. The quirky Acad Pad is a mid-year planner, full of witty anecdotes and facts. Ideal for the busy student with space available for appointments, activities, homework, exams and, of course, doodling! Across S S 5 – 11 September 2014 Dodo acad pad ! WIN Encyclopedia 1 Issue 429 C 7 - Many people listened to this at Reading Festival (5) 9 - ___ Ricciardo: He won the recent Belgian Grand Prix (6) 10 - This is often put on chips along with vinegar (4) 12 - Smile broadly (4) 13 - ___ Who: the new series of this hit TV show has begun (6) 16 - ___ Backshall: a contestant on this year's Strictly Come Dancing (5) from the top of the SEE if you can get ladder the bottom by(5)changing one 17 - Ato type of short poem letter at a time to make a new word. 18 - Mentions a source of information; free screen (anag) (10) Down 1 - Healed or made bett POND 2 - A person who grows 3 - A sloping surface (4) 4 - Immediately (9) 6 - A bug with many leg 8 - A common pet (3) 11 - Main ___ : this follo 12 - A state of matter (3 14 - Tall, slender-leaved 15 - In this place or pos LIFE FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 23. puzzles HOW TO ENTER: Send your finished puzzles to Puzzles 429, First News, Third Floor, Colechurch House, 1 London Bridge Walk, London, SE1 2SX. The closing date for puzzle entries is Thursday 11 September 2014. ! the amazing spider-man 2 DVDs N I W The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is out on Blu-ray and DVD now. Can you spot the five changes to this picture from The Amazing Spider-Man 2? Send in your answers and three lucky winners will each win a copy of The Amazing Spider-Man 2 on DVD. It’s great to be Spider-Man; for Peter Parker, there’s no feeling quite like swinging between skyscrapers, embracing being the hero. But being Spider-Man comes at a price: only Spider-Man can protect his fellow New Yorkers from the formidable villains that threaten the city. A B First News challenge ? Q1 How much of the world’s rubbish is burned in open fires? Q2 Who conducted the Woodchester Mansion bat survey? Q3 What is the name of What on Earth? ALL of these are associated with sports. Can you guess which sports they relate to? A B C D E F Malala Yousafzai’s new book? Q4 Who was the first woman to be Olympic, world and European champion at the same time in the women’s pair rowing event? Q5 How many teddies are waiting to be reunited with their owners at LEGOLAND Windsor Resort? Q6 What show is Caroline Flack taking part in? ? Q7 When does the Ryder ? Cup golf tournament start? Q8 When was the first Sherlock Holmes story written? Q9 What sporting event has Prince Harry helped to organise? Q10 Which Roald Dahl book turns 50 this year? COMPETITIONS: You can enter First News competitions in one of two ways. 1. Go to firstnews.co.uk/competitions and follow the instructions. 2. Write to us at ‘competition name’ (e.g. Holiday), First News, Third floor, Colechurch House, 1 London Bridge Walk, London, SE1 2SX. Please note: First News will not share your personal details with third parties. First News will only use your details to contact the competition winners. First News competitions are open to those aged 16-andunder residents of the UK & Republic of Ireland, except employees of First News, Newsbridge Ltd, Trinity Mirror and any associated companies and their families. Winners will be the first correct entries drawn after the closing dates. No purchase necessary. No responsibility can be accepted for entries that have been lost or damaged in transit. First News will not enter into any correspondence. All winners will be notified accordingly and their names and addresses will be available on request. No cash alternative for any prizes will be offered. The winner may be required to partake in media activity relating to the competition. E U R O P E A N LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS: First News challenge 1) Mel B 2) Charlie Higson 3) Bedford 4) Pineapple 5) Sarah Barrow 6) Madagascar 7) 7 May 2015 8) Ice Bucket Challenge 9) Shiny objects 10) Paperboy. Spot the Difference: lady has turned purple, three lines have appeared on the orange object on the right, a flying object has appeared in the sky, lines have appeared on the metal grate, the lines on the front of the spaceship are facing a different way. X I A I D H U G E U N D E R S T H E I E N G H L L N D Y I G P W A Y N E R P D E C A D E E D I G R A P E S A R A P H I E D B Y O L O N A S C R E E T 8 1 9 7 6 3 4 5 2 6 5 4 2 8 1 7 3 9 3 2 7 5 9 4 6 1 8 2 3 5 8 4 6 9 7 1 7 6 8 9 1 5 2 4 3 4 9 1 3 7 2 8 6 5 1 4 3 6 2 9 5 8 7 5 7 2 4 3 8 1 9 6 9 8 6 1 5 7 3 2 4 FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 24. book corner Words for life FirstNews Issue 429 5 – 11 September 2014 Harriet Whitehorn grew up in London, where she still lives with her husband and three daughters. She has studied at Reading University, the Architectural Association and the Victoria and Albert Museum, and has always worked in building conservation. She currently works for English Heritage. Violet and the Pearl of the Orient is her first novel. What books did you read as a child? Anything I could get my hands on! My particular favourites were, and still are, My Naughty Little Sister by Dorothy Edwards, The Family From One End Street by Eve Garnett and The Wolves of Willoughby Chase by Joan Aiken. I also loved fantasy by CS Lewis, Tolkien and Ursula Le Guin. If you could be a storybook character, who would you be? I think it would have to be Tintin. Aside from managing to look cool in woolly knickerbockers, he has exciting escapades in exotic locations, amusing, eccentric friends and a dog who actually does what he’s told. ... ........ ......... ..... .. .... ........ ......... ...... ........ ......... For book recommendations, activities and games, go to wordsforlife.org.uk Book reviews Heidi by Johanna Spyri reviewed by Caroline-Alice Westwood Heidi is the story of the gutsy, thoughtful and kind orphan who is sent to live with her father in the Swiss mountains. This book is a particularly nice edition and I enjoyed it enormously. Heidi thrives in her mountain home in the Alps and becomes good friends with Peter, a goat herder. But then her aunt decides she should leave the home she loves to go and live in Frankfurt, which worries Heidi. But it does not take long for her to make friends in Frankfurt, especially with Klara, a lonely girl confined to a wheelchair. I loved this book very much because there is much to admire in Heidi: she is strong and funny, generous and kind. This is a book everyone should read at least once! reviewed by Daniel Pate This book definitely is as good as all of the other books in the series! After Beck Granger’s adventures in Australia, he becomes an international celebrity. Although lucrative, being famous is not all that it is cracked up to be! So, when one of Beck’s uncle’s friends asks him to go with him to the Bermuda Triangle, Beck breathes a sigh of relief! However, the relaxing part of the trip is short-lived when somebody sabotages the cruise ship. I liked this book because it never bored you at any point, and it was very hard to put down. Bear’s writing was detailed and captivating and, when combined with an exciting and twisting plot, it became a great read! I liked the ‘island survival’ theme and I was very impressed by the amazing writing throughout the book. Good job, Bear! ....... . .... ........ . ......... ......... ... ......... ......... .. ......... . . . . . . . . . . . ...... NAME: . . . ......... . . . . . . .. . . . . ..... ......... AGE: . . . . . . ......... . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . ESS: ......... EMAIL ADDR ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... ......... ......... L NO: . . . . . SHOPKINS TROLLEY DASH, CONTACT TE : TO , ........ Mission Survival 6: Strike of the Shark by Bear Grylls .. .... .... ..... ......... ........ ......... .... ......... ......... . . ........ ..... ......... ......... . . ........ ........ ......... ......... ......... ........ ......... ......... ......... ........ ......... ........ ......... What’s your all-time favourite book? Tough question! But I think I would have to choose Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkien. Visit www.redhouse.co.uk today. Every book is half price or less! ........ ......... ....... What’s the best thing about reading? Being allowed into someone else’s world, shown around and hopefully taken on an adventure. It’s also very relaxing. THE BOOK BIT ......... HE RK ENTRIES ESBROOKE PA 11 8LY SEND YOUR LTD, 18 COTT E, NN EVOLUTION PR RY, NORTHAMPTONSHIR NT DAVE ARTLANDS, LINE AT LY, ENTER ON ALTERNATIVE h.co.uk as yd le instrol www.shopk The Prizes: Star in th e one off Shopkins Trolley Dash programme plus WIN Smyths Toys Superstores Vo uchers and Shopkins Toys! For full terms and conditions visit www.shopkinstrolleydash.co.uk what’s in the shops? Page Turner Lamp Findmeagift.co.uk £7.49 THIS funky lamp is powered by a USB. Looking like a spiral-bound notepad, it features six designs and six plain pages so that you can get creative too! Flick to your favourites to suit your mood and finish off the design with one of the two included shades. USB Light bulb Firebox.com £10.99 This USB light bulb is a real bright idea! Just plug it into your Mac or PC and let the glow shine on your keyboard and desk while you’re hard at work. It even glows in the dark when you turn off your computer. Light Projector Lamp With Colourful Sky Star Scene Amazon.co.uk £7.50 CHECK out this amazing cosmos star projector lamp, which will bring the universe right to your room. Just plug in the USB and watch your very own star display as the brilliant light show projects onto the walls and ceiling. FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 25. game zone with Barney Game tester FirstNews Issue 429 5 – 11 september 2014 Named by Nintendo 9 Weird world hohokum (ps4) nintendo have confirmed which characters make up the first wave of their new amiibo gadgets. The first 12 characters to be released will be Mario, Peach, Link, Samus, Yoshi, Donkey Kong, Pikachu, Kirby, Fox, Marth, Villager and Wii Fit Trainer. The characters will work in a similar way to the Skylanders and Disney Infinity figures, and will be able to swap data with a Wii U GamePad and a 3DS, although the 3DS will need a separate plugin accessory. The first game to use the amiibos will be the new version of Super Smash Bros, which will be out for Wii U and 3DS later this year. The figures will be on sale at the same time as the game. There are also plans to make the amiibos work with Mario Kart 8, Yoshi’s Woolly World and more games in the future. this latest PlayStation exclusive has a similar art style to LocoRoco, but is much, much weirder. Hohokum is about exploring and experimenting with the world, and just saying: “I wonder what happens if I do this…” You control an odd creature that looks like a flying snake. Touching certain objects as you fly past reveals things, and it’s pretty much up to you to figure out what to do. Some people might find it a bit frustrating not being told where to go or what’s going on, but the chilled-out music is soothing enough that you don’t feel pressured with time limits or completing a level like in other games. The game’s available on PS4, PS3 and Vita, and buying one means you can download it for all three, and crosssave too. Barney says: “Hohokum is a beautiful art game about discovery. It never explains anything to you, so you are left to find out everything for yourself. Every time you discover something new it is immensely exciting and fulfilling. This game does what it aims to achieve wonderfully.” focus on you ASK ESTHER I’m Esther Rantzen, President of ChildLine, which helps 2,500 children every week. If there’s something worrying you, please write to me at the address on page 23. Problems with sleeping Sometimes I find it really hard to sleep at night. I just can’t stop thinking or worrying about stuff. What can I do? So, I guess what I’m wondering at the outset is what are you thinking and worrying about? I know almost everyone has times when they are worried and this can often get in the way of us falling asleep. It sounds so easy to say, but if you can deal with the things that are worrying you then you should find your sleep pattern getting back to normal. Obviously, things are maybe not that simple and perhaps the thing that is worrying you is too big or complicated to sort out easily. That’s when you need help, so I’m very glad you have asked for advice. Sometimes, it can get to the stage where we just almost stop expecting to be able to get to sleep and worry about that too, so it becomes a vicious cycle. Anyway, you’ve asked what you can do about it, so here are some suggestions: firstly, telling another adult you trust about not sleeping and the things you are worried about might be the support you need to break that cycle. If that doesn’t work then I think that this is something you should see your doctor about – they should be able to give you some ideas about things to try to get to sleep and also support for your other worries. These are just some thoughts I’ve had. You can always talk about this with a friendly counsellor at ChildLine too. Just call 0800 11 11 or visit www.childline.org.uk. Stranger danger IMAGINE you are walking along the street and someone you don’t know starts talking to you. They ask if you want to come with them in their car. What do you say? You might remember your parents or carers telling you about ‘stranger danger’. This is the advice that you should never accept gifts or sweets from a stranger and never go anywhere with a stranger. Just because someone looks nice, it doesn’t make them any less of a stranger. Not every stranger is dangerous but, as you don’t know them, it’s not worth the risk, when you can just follow a few simple tips to keep yourself safe. Think back to the situation at the beginning. It might seem tempting to say yes to the stranger, especially if it’s raining or it’s a long walk home. But you don’t know this person. You don’t know where they’ll take you and what they’ll do. Always say no firmly and walk away. Even if it is an adult that you know, if you don’t feel comfortable going somewhere with them or taking something from them, then it is okay to say no. If you are ever approached by a stranger, make sure you tell your parents, carers or a trusted adult such as a policeman or teacher. You also need to be aware of stranger danger online. Never give out your personal details, such as your address or phone number, and never arrange to meet with anyone you talk to online, as you don’t know who you are actually talking to. If you’d like to talk about anything worrying you, you can ring ChildLine on 0800 11 11 or visit www.childline.org.uk. FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. Wherever we went, we’d go together Also available: An extract fr o m Captain: Aboard th e Victoria 17th Aug ust 1915 I dressed carefully a little as that nigh Ih t, followin I wondere ung my identity dis g every in d what he c round m struction y neck. Ca would do about suc they’d giv when we p h things th ta in en us, my had no su landed; w en) if Abe told you h fingers sh ch thing, h e re he wou l Rudge k ow to pac aking it occurred new how ld go. I wo k your so the botto to me the m n c a d k m of it. ny rules th ered, too s: one pair n, and (because ere were in the poc I still car in the Ar Gallipoli. ket of you ed my, that th r g reat co ey even at and on We’d land e in your in the dar back into kitbag, at k of the p the hills. re-dawn a nd surpris I was blac e the Tur king the b the throb k and driv rass butt in the bell e him at p o n s of my tu y of the V nauseous oint of ba nic to sto ictoria, h with fear. yonet p the glin eard the t of them rumble o Gallipoli. drawing fi f her eng ine and r re when I oll of her felt chain, an d g rew www.panmacmillan.com/captain FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 27. sport FirstNews Issue 429 5 – 11 september 2014 It’s a dream come true How much are you enjoying being a world champion? It’s just been unbelievable. And now we’ve had so much media coverage and so much exposure for the game as well, it’s really put women’s rugby on the map, which is amazing. Your try came from an amazing team move. Did that make it more satisfying than a scrappy try? Just to be able to cross the try line in a final is an unbelievable feeling. I didn’t realise until I watched the highlights just how much of a team try it was. I knew that it had passed through four forwards’ hands, including a dummy and a show-and-go through the space, but I didn’t realise it had started from our own 22. It shows where we are, that all of our performances came from a team effort rather than from individuals. How’s your cheek after getting Emily Scarratt’s boot in your face? Ha ha! Yes, it’s okay. It’s healed up really well. I might have a little scar for a while, but luckily I’ve got freckles, so it kind of hides it! Tell us more about the team’s ‘sneaky weasels’! Every tour we have a sneaky weasel, which is something that everyone on tour has to have on them at all times, and at the World Cup it was a cuddly toy. If you don’t have your sneaky weasel, you have to do a forfeit, where you have to roll the dice and each of the numbers mean different things. You can also have your sneaky weasel stolen from you and then you have to pay a little ransom, whether it’s dancing in front of the team or singing from the bus! You and the rest of the England women’s sevens team have just been given professional contracts for the first time. What does that mean for the women’s game? I think it’s huge. Obviously it’s a dream come true as an individual to become a professional rugby player but, for the sport, it really shows that you can become a professional athlete if you do make it to the top. That gives the young girls coming into the sport a realistic dream of becoming a professional rugby player, which has never been possible in women’s rugby. This year England’s women cricketers turned pro as well – do you feel like 2014 has been a big turning point for women’s sport? I think London 2012 really put female sport on the map. The media really got Danielle celebrates her try in the World Cup final with team-mate Kat Merchant behind the likes of Jessica Ennis and Rebecca Adlington, who are fantastic athletes but also good role models. Winning the World Cup and being able to promote it as much as we have has been unbelievable, and it’s all come at such a great time. I think that young girls growing up now have got aspirations to become elite sportswomen and it’s not seen as a butch thing to do; it’s something that’s seen as being fantastic to be part of. England were fourth in the last Sevens World Series. How much improvement is needed to catch up with New Zealand and Australia? We had some great results over the World Series with a relatively young squad. The difference that the contracts will make will be huge to our performance and we’ll definitely be hoping to get top three or top two – even number one – this year. Getty Danielle bursts through the Irish defence during England’s 40-7 victory in the semi-final Sevens will feature in the Olympics for the first time in Rio in 2016. What effect on rugby do you think that Getty by sports editor Ian Eddy Getty danielle ‘Nolli’ Waterman was a crucial member of the England team that came home from Paris with the Women’s World Cup last month. Days later, it was announced that the England sevens team would become professional for the first time. Nolli told us what the win and new contracts mean for women’s rugby, as well as explaining what a sneaky weasel is… will have? I never even thought that rugby would be part of the Olympics during my career. But it will really showcase our game. It’s exciting, it’s fast, maybe not as difficult to understand as the 15-a-side game. It’s such a brilliant form of the game that it’s only going to introduce more people to the sport that I love. Do you think more young girls will want to take the game up after seeing your World Cup win? Oh, definitely. It’s already shown. I’ve heard that the clubs have had a stream of young girls who’ve been watching the World Cup and turning up and saying: “Have you got a girls’ team?” I bumped into someone in the street and he said: “I’ve got a sevenyear-old girl and she just absolutely loved watching you girls.” That’s not happened to me before, so that hit home to me how great it was. Lastly, tell us a fact about you that people won’t know. My favourite food is tomatoes. I eat them like apples! FOR INTERNAL SCHOOL USE ONLY. For use on projectors and IWBs. Not to be uploaded to school websites. 28. sport FirstNews sport in numbers 24 5 – 11 august 2014 Rowing record 2 Getty gold medals went to Dame Sarah Storey (below) at the Para-Cycling Road World Championships, in the time trial and C5 road race. She has won 17 cycling world titles in total, but also has six swimming world titles! 3 hundredths of a second were knocked off the British women’s 4x100m record by Asha Philip (below), Ashleigh Nelson, Anyika Onuora and Desirèe Henry, as they won their event at the Diamond League meeting in Zurich. The old record was only set at the European Championships less than two weeks earlier! Getty Getty medals were won by British athletes at the Youth Olympic Games in Nanjing, China. There were seven golds, six silvers and eleven bronze medals. There were 28 Olympic sports in the Games, including two (golf and rugby) that were making their first appearance in any Olympics. The closing ceremony (below) was a colourful end to the competition. Issue 429 Helen Glover (left) and Heather Stanning celebrate their gold medal and new world record helen Glover and Heather Stanning broke a 12-year-old world record as they won one of Britain’s four gold medals at the World Rowing Championships. Glover and Stanning dominated the women’s pair final, beating the US team by more than two seconds and knocking three seconds off the previous world record. “It is something I am really proud of today,” said Glover. Team GB won three more golds, in the men’s eight, men’s four and para-rowing coxed four. They finished second in the medal table, with Australia, Germany and Ukraine all behind with two golds each. New Zealand were the overall winners, with six golds. “That’s what I train for every day; I train to win and not to come second,” said Mat Tarrant, one of the members of the GB men’s eight crew. Did you know? helen Glover, a former PE teacher, was the first woman to ever be Olympic, world and European champion at the same time in the women’s pair event. Getty Picture of the week 2 Getty Getty penalties were saved by defender Cosmin Moti (below) as Ludogorets knocked Steaua Bucharest out of the Champions League. Ludogorets keeper Vladislav Stoyanov was sent off at the end of extra time but, with no substitutes left, Moti had to go in goal for the shoot-out. As well as saving two penalties, he scored one as well! Russian athlete Irina Annenkova competes in the rhythmic gymnastics all-around event at the Youth Olympic Games
Similar documents
First News Issue 433 - Loxley Primary School
behaviour in the classroom is affecting more pupils now than it used to. The news follows over 3,000 inspections and surveys of both parents and teachers. Behaviour like swinging on chairs, using s...
More information