Foreign language posters have been produced to target the problem of people causing kitchen fires while drunk during the Euro 2012 tournament.
London Fire Brigade (LFB) said it hoped to prevent the city's different nationalities leaving cooking unattended after drinking.
The posters come in seven foreign languages including Polish and Russian.
It is the first time translations have been used for an international competition, said LFB.
'Diverse city'The fire brigade's research shows drunk Londoners cause two fires a day.
It also shows a quarter of those who die in fires have alcohol in their systems and over half of alcohol-related fires happen because someone has fallen asleep.
Posters featuring the slogan "Goal" above a burger, will appear in pub lavatories across central London.
The posters have been produced in French, Polish, Ukrainian, German, Russian, Portuguese and Spanish.
They have been sent to different nationality newspapers in London, said LFB.
A spokesman for LFB said that the idea to translate posters was prompted by the BBC's story on London being considered France's sixth biggest city in terms of population.
He said: "London is a diverse city. It's not just England fans at risk.
"There was no extra cost and it will get the message out."
London Fire Brigade's commissioner, Ron Dobson, said: "During Euro 2012, many Londoners will go straight from work to the pub to watch the football.
"Our research shows cooking after having one too many plays a massive part in house fires and, sadly, one in every four fire deaths involves alcohol."
Source: www.bbc.co.uk
London 2012 Olympics: Tom Daley confirmed in Britain's Olympic diving squad - Daily Telegraph
He said: “I can’t wait to see the home crowd. There’ll be 17,500 people all behind us wanting us to do well and I can’t wait to hear the noise they’ll make.
“A home Games is a once in a lifetime opportunity and I really can’t wait to get onto those boards at the Aquatics Centre again.”
But Gladding's attempt to compete in the 10m individual in her first Olympics, just 18 months after she almost died following an accident at a diving competition in Russia, could be under threat.
Reports suggest her place is set to come under appeal from 10 metre platform rival Tonia Couch.
Couch, who will go to London in the platform synchro, and her coach Andy Banks have revealed their anger at the decision after being overlooked by a British Diving selection panel headed by controversial performance director Alexei Evangulov.
She had beaten Gladding into third place at the British Gas Diving Championships - which doubled as the Olympic qualifiers - at the weekend and was last night in tears after being informed of the decision.
But British Diving were still to receive official notification of an appeal, with Couch, who reached the 2008 Olympic final, having 48 hours to lodge any complaint.
Banks made public their dissatisfaction today, though, saying: "I feel, quite strongly, that she [Couch] has demonstrated over the course of this year that she is still the UK's premier platform diver - she has been since 2008."
Couch used her Twitter page to say: "Picked 4 syncro but not for individual. I dived my socks off with a PB and came 2nd, had the best year yet not been picked for 2012 £gutted."
Gladding's selection had loomed as an emotional choice after she almost died in February last year following the freak accident at a diving competition in Russia.
The 30 year-old had to be dragged to safety from the bottom of the diving pool after hitting her head on the concrete 10m platform and plummeting unconscious into the water.
She said: "I have had many ups and downs to get to today's announcement.
"It has taken a lot but I am now fully back, ready and excited to put on my Team GB tracksuit.
"It really is a dream come true."
Couch will also focus on her partnership with Sarah Barrow in the 10m synchro. The pair became Britain's first women's European diving champions in Eindhoven last month and are expected to push for a podium place.
Rebecca Gallantree and Nick Robinson-Baker were picked for their second Olympics, while rising star Jack Laugher heads a list of four teenagers heading to their first Games along with Chris Mears, Hannah Starling and Alicia Blagg.
The Olympic diving events begin on July 29 before finishing with Daley's platform final on August 11.
The Great Britain Olympic Diving team:
Tom Daley – 10M Individual and 10M Synchronised
Peter Waterfield – 10M Individual and 10M Synchronised
Chris Mears – 3M Individual and 3M synchronised
Nick Robinson-Baker – 3M Synchronised
Jack Laugher – 3M individual
Alicia Blagg – 3M Synchronised
Rebecca Gallantree – 3M Synchronised
Hannah Starling – 3M Individual
Tonia Couch – 10M Synchronised
Sarah Barrow – 10M Synchronised
Stacie Powell – 10M Individual
Monique Gladding – 10M Individual
Source: www.telegraph.co.uk
Kent Spitfires' clash with Northamptonshire Steelbacks in Clydesdale Bank40 abandoned - Kent Online

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Rain proved the only winner at Tunbridge Wells as Kent Spitfires' Clydesdale Bank40 game against Northamptonshire Steelbacks was abandoned.
Set a revised target of 203 from 32 overs, Kent reached six for no wicket when the rain returned for a second time. Hopes of a resumption at 6.30pm proved impossible and both teams had to settle for one point.
Spitfires made a good start after Rob Key won the toss and put the Steelbacks in by reducing the visitors to 36-3 following the dismissals of David Willey and James Middlebrook to Darren Stevens, while Kyle Coetzer was picked up by Matt Coles.
A fourth wicket stand between skipper Alex Wakely (42) and former Kent wicketkeeper Niall O'Brien (46) put on 74 in 17 overs, before James Tredwell made the breakthrough by trapping Wakely lbw to end his 47-ball knock which included three sixes and two fours.
O'Brien became Coles' second victim, first ball back after rain, before Rob Keogh (23 not out) and David Murphy (18 not out) claimed 31 off the final three overs with Adam Ball conceding 16, as Northants finished on 168-5 from 32 overs.
Sam Billings hit former Sri Lankan test star Chaminda Vaas for four before the weather intervened again as the Spitfires suffered their second successive wash-out in the competition and left Kent officials counting the cost financially.
Picture: Barry Goodwin
Monday, June 11 2012
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Source: www.kentonline.co.uk
London Hit by Flooding Following Heavy Rain - lbc.co.uk
Monday 11th June 2012
London Fire Brigade had already dealt with more than thirty cases of flooding by early afternoon after some areas saw the average rainfall for the whole of June fall in just 12 hours.
The number is more than double the usual daily calll outs for flood related reasons.
The brigade says it has 15 tonnes of sand ready to be sent out from its distribution centre in Croydon in the event of serious flooding.
The Environment Agency has issued 11 flood alerts for London while the Met Office has issued an Amber warning - the second highest possible - with surface water flooding, localised river flooding and very difficult driving conditions likely.
The flooding caused difficulties for drivers and trains in and around the capital this morning.
Head of road policy at the AA - Paul Watters - has been telling LBC 97.3 it is unpredictable.
"The trouble is with flooding is it can be clear in one place and very deep water in the next, which causes major gridlock," he explained.
"Also drivers braking down, of course, which adds to the problem. We certainly did know about it, we certainly did have the authorities ready for but the system can't cope. It's just like snow in a way."
Source: www.lbc.co.uk
Kent State Vs. Oregon, 2012 College World Series: Flashes Drop Game 2 By 1 Run - SB Nation
Kent State's incredible 21-game winning streak came to an end late Sunday night in Eugene, as the Flashes dropped the second game of the Super Regional against Oregon. The Golden Flashes led for most of the game until a costly two-error seventh inning led to the three runs for the Ducks, who closed it out for the 3-2 win.
George Roberts opened the scoring for Kent with a massive blast to left field in the second inning. In his next at-bat, Roberts added to the lead with a ripped double to centerfield that scored catcher David Lyon. KSU would squander an opportunity to plate additional insurance in the fourth but they would hold the 2-0 lead until the Ducks' rally in the seventh. Ryan Bores had a strong start for Kent, but the hiccups on defense were his undoing in the three-run Oregon rally.
Kent had a chance to tie it in the bottom of the ninth but could not even it up after T.J. Sutton led off with a double. A sacrifice bunt try failed, stranding Sutton at second with one out. Oregon then brought on closer Jimmie Sherfy, who quickly struck out the final two batters to preserve the win. It was a frustrating loss but Kent will still have an opportunity to become the first MAC team to reach Omaha since 1976 with a win on Monday night.
For more 2012 NCAA Baseball Tournament coverage, be sure to stay right here with SB Nation Cleveland's StoryStream. For more coverage of Kent State and the Mid-American Conference, check out Hustle Belt.
Source: cleveland.sbnation.com
London 2012: Zara Phillips Picked To Represent Great Britain At Olympics - huffingtonpost.co.uk
Zara Phillips has been picked to represent Great Britain at this summer's Olympic Games in London.
The Queen's granddaughter described her selection to the eventing team as "awesome".
Phillips, the 2006 world champion, is following in the footsteps of her parents, who both rode in the Olympic Games for the country.
Her mother, the Princess Royal, competed at the 1976 Montreal Games, while her father Captain Mark Phillips was a team gold medallist at Munich in 1972 and then won silver in Seoul 16 years later.
Phillips, who is married to former England rugby captain Mike Tindall, said: "It's awesome to be given this opportunity.
"I am really excited and can't wait to kick on and get him there. Hopefully, we will make it this time."
The eventing star will ride High Kingdom at Greenwich Park next month. Her hopes of an Olympic place in 2004 and 2008 were dashed by injuries to her world title-winning horse Toytown.
She added: "High Kingdom is a pretty cool, very relaxed kind of guy.
"I was really happy with him at Bramham as he had obviously grown up and is improving all the time.
"He's pretty pony-like, a nippy little jumper and easy to manoeuvre, so hopefully it will suit him well in Greenwich.
"High Kingdom is owned by Trevor Hemmings, who has been one of my earliest supporters. He has owned a lot of my horses and has been so supportive, I couldn't do it without him."
Phillips been chosen alongside William Fox-Pitt, Mary King, Piggy French and Tina Cook for London 2012.
She clinched her spot with a third-placed finish in yesterday's Bramham International CIC three-star class after posting a personal best dressage score, and then jumping clear in the showjumping and cross-country phases.

Source: www.huffingtonpost.co.uk
Kent County Cricket Club move Freinds Life t20 game from Nevill Ground to St Lawrence - Kent Online

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Heavy rain has disrupted much of the Tunbridge Wells Festival Picture: Barry Goodwin
Kent have moved Tuesday evening's Friends Life t20 match against Sussex Sharks to the St Lawrence Ground after flash flooding in Tunbridge Wells.
The match, which was due to take place at The Nevill Ground, will now be played under floodlights in Canterbury with a start time of 7pm.
Kent's chief executive, Jamie Clifford, said heavy rain on Sunday night had forced the club into action, leaving a return to Canterbury the only decision possible for the start of the T20 competition.
He said: "There is no way we could have got anything on at Tunbridge Wells at all. I would have been surprised if you could get any play on that wicket for 10 days.
"What a sorry way to celebrate your 100th festival but in the end you have to just accept it, there is nothing you can do. It's been horrific and pretty costly too and I feel sorry for the supporters who have had their plans disrupted.
"It's the opening game of the competition and it's against Sussex so hopefully there will still be a good crowd."
With the majority of the Tunbridge Wells Festival wiped out by rain, the county are looking at losses of about £50,000 for what is usually a profitable week. It could have been worse had a wicket not been prepared for today's scheduled Varsity matches between University of Kent and Canterbury Christ Church - now postponed due to the weather.
Mr Clifford explained: "Given that we had no games at Canterbury until the end of June, we could have been high and dry with no wicket prepared here and struggling, so we were very lucky there was a Varsity game originally planned."
- Anyone with tickets for the match and are unable to travel to Canterbury tomorrow, can send their tickets with name and address to Kent County Cricket Club, St Lawrence Ground, Canterbury, Kent CT1 3NZ. Kent are also offering full refunds for those that can't attend, while advance ticket prices of £20 for adults and £5 juniors will be available on the gate.
Monday, June 11 2012
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Essex: Accidents leave two in hospital - East Anglian Daily Times
An 18-year-old man was seriously hurt in a collision in Harwich High Street
By Tom Potter
Monday, June 11, 2012
6:00 AM
TWO people spent the weekend in hospital receiving treatment for serious head injuries following collisions in Essex on Saturday.
A man in his late teens was airlifted to hospital from Harwich little more than an hour after another man was involved in a collision in Chelmsford.
Paramedics were first called at 12.20pm to Parkway, where a man was left unconscious following a collision with a car.
The pedestrian, whose age could not be confirmed, was treated and stabilised at the scene before being taken by ambulance to Broomfield Hospital.
Just before 1.45pm, crews were called to Harwich High Street, from where an unconscious man in his late teens was taken by air ambulance to Queen’s Hospital.
Again, medics treated and stabilised the injured man at the scene before he was taken for further treatment.
A bicycle was also found near the scene of the crash but it is not yet clear if the man had been riding it or was on foot at the time, but it is understood he was crossing the road near the post office.
Police cordoned off the town centre street while they carried out investigations into the crash.
Both men were reported to have suffered serious head injuries in the collisions and spent the night in hospital. A Harwich shop worker described witnessing the aftermath of the crash in High Street, saying: “I heard a loud bang and went outside to see what had happened.
“I saw a boy lying in the road. He’d obviously been knocked off his bike. Lots of people started to crowd round.”
Source: www.eadt.co.uk
Kent Police backs drive to protect vulnerable adults - Kent News
Monday, June 11, 2012
11:59 AM
Public awareness events being held in Medway as part of Safeguarding Vulnerable Adults week
The county’s force is backing an awareness campaign aiming to protect vulnerable adults.
The drive forms part of Safeguarding Vulnerable Adults week, which runs from today until June 15, with a number of drop-in events being held.
Kent Police said the campaign shines a spotlight on the abuse that elderly or those with a disability can be subjected to.
Police officers will be taking part in local events with other Kent-based agencies such as NHS, Trading Standards, Kent Fire and Rescue Service and Medway and Kent County Councils.
In Medway, there will be a public awareness stand offering advice and information on:
June 11 at Gillingham Market, 9am to 4.30pm
June 12 at Strood Market, 9am to 3pm
June 13 at Pentagon Shopping Centre, Chatham, 9am to 5pm
June 14 at Rochester Hub, 9am to 3pm
June 15 at Rainham Shopping Centre, 9am to 4pm
Detective Superintendent Tim Smith of Kent Police said: “Abuse can take many forms and it can be difficult to identify abuse is taking place unless there are obvious outward physical signs.
“For example, the elderly and those who have mental disabilities can often be subject to financial abuse if others gain access to their bank details or exploit a loss of memory.
“Abuse may also take the form of neglect and not providing for a vulnerable person’s basic living needs.
“Safeguarding Vulnerable Adults Week intends to combat and prevent such abuse by giving carers and those who are themselves at risk the tools to spot signs of abuse and how to act on them once identified.
“This is an invaluable opportunity to work with local partners to highlight an important section of the community who depend on our joint services to protect them. Together, we hope to reduce the threat of abuse towards all vulnerable adults in Kent.”
Source: www.kentnews.co.uk
London to be no-go zone for drivers during Olympic Games - The Guardian
Motorists will be warned to avoid central London and areas around all Olympic venues from mid-July onwards, with transport chiefs predicting large scale congestion in the fortnight before the opening ceremony as a deluge of athletes, officials and media arrive.
The crowds that have turned out around the country to greet the Olympic torch have increased the concerns of Olympic transport chiefs about the scale of the challenge in the runup to the Games.
Drivers will also be told to avoid the area around the 109-mile Olympic Route Network (ORN), making large areas of London an effective no-go area for six weeks from mid-July.
Since London won the right to host the Games in 2005 its crowded transport infrastructure has been an issue for organisers and critics.
Independent traffic management experts have warned of the danger of a perfect storm of problems around the opening weekend, but the London mayor, Boris Johnson, points to £6.5bn of investment in the transport system and has linked the unfounded "paranoia" to that surrounding the millennium bug in 1999.
A series of specific changes to the road system in and around London are being unveiledon Tuesday, including the reopening of the much criticised M4 bus lane as a Games lane from the weekend of 14 July.
"In a normal July you'd see traffic levels drifting off slightly as you ease into summer and things get easier on the roads, said Garrett Emmerson, chief operating officer, surface transport at Transport for London.
"This July is going to feel more like the runup to Christmas.
"Traffic is going to get heavier as more and more Games activity takes place. We've got to change London's network to cope with that."
When 20,000 members of the media beginning to arrive in the second week of July, traffic flow in the busy Kingsway tunnel will be reversed to "assist movements" at the media hotel hub in Bloomsbury and a series of signal changes will be made.
"It's very clear that London is going to be very crowded," said Emmerson. "That is going to start from the beginning of the week before the Games."
From 21 July, when the Olympic torch is due to arrive in the capital, the Olympic Route Network – including 30 miles of dedicated lanes – will be introduced, simplifying junctions, removing pedestrian crossings, banning right hand turns and removing parking bays. The full network will come into effect on 25 July, when the torch enters central London.
Recent serious problems with the Jubilee and Central underground lines and complaints about overcrowding during the jubilee weekend have renewed concern over transport during the Games.
Transport for London officials insisted the extended bank holiday was encouraging and proved that motorists would heed messages to stay out of central London, with traffic down 40%.
"People now get there is something coming down the tracks and they need to prepare for it," said Emmerson. "We now need to move into what they need to do about it and when."
He said TfL's Get Ahead of the Games website had had over a million hits.
Emmerson said TfL was "now very confident" about major employers and businesses that needed to change their delivery plans. "We now need to move them into operational phase."
According to TfL's predictions, there will be around 1 million extra people in London over the course of the Games making 3m extra trips.
But the effect will be mitigated by a reduction in the number of non-ticket holding tourists visiting London. The biggest concerns are over "hotspots" on particular days.
TfL has warned that rail and tube users face delays of more than half an hour at key stations, with London Bridge among the worst affected.
London 2012 organisers and local authorities will start to introduce parking restrictions in mid-July. The handful of tow trucks that usually operate in the capital will swell to about 70 at Games time to remove cars that block the ORN and restricted parking zones.
TfL plans to employ 3,000 back office staff on the street in magenta tabards to provide travel advice. Each will be given an iPad to allow them to deliver up to the minute advice.
Source: www.guardian.co.uk