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Appeal after man forces his way into house - Mirfield Reporter
Geometry, uniforms and 1980s inspire London catwalks
| Reuters
AIK use pensioners as mascots for Gefle game in Swedish league | Football | The Guardian
Child and 2 adults still missing in Lake Superior | INFORUM
‘A playground for paedophiles’: The screen you’re looking at now - Pontefract and Castleford Express
Breaking news: United handed yet another away tie - Hastings and St. Leonards Observer
When does FIFA 17 come out, its release date, when can I pre-order and how much does it cost? - Manchester Evening News
Yorkshire’s Adil Rashid cites ‘personal reasons’ for absence at Middlesex | Sport | The Guardian
Hotline set up for energy theft whistleblowers - Pontefract and Castleford Express
Why giving your dog a bone is actually bad for him - Pontefract and Castleford Express
Geometry, uniforms and 1980s inspire London catwalks
| Reuters
Police are appealing for witnesses after a man pushed his way into a Dewsbury house last night (Sunday).
The incident happened on Ludwell Close between 7.40pm and 7.55pm.
A man had knocked on the door and pushed his way in when the owner answered.
The man is described as white, aged between 45 and 55 years old with short sandy blonde hair in a cropped style.
He had a goatee beard and was wearing a white t-shirt.
Officers would like to hear from anyone who saw this man in the area or saw any vehicle he was using.
If you have any information please contact Kirklees CID via 101 quoting crime reference 13160404531.
LONDON Designers took inspiration from geometry, the 1980s and British uniforms for their London Fashion Week creations over the weekend, with more labels selling items hot off the catwalk as they adopt the runway to a retail business model.
High street brand Topshop became the latest to offer customers the chance to buy designs straight after its show on Sunday, where models wore zebra print designs and skirts slashed at the thigh.
Embellished dresses and voluminous jackets added to an 1980s feel.
Topshop said that for the first time key items modeled on the runway would be immediately available for purchase.
"For a high street brand like Topshop that's kind of affordable ... it's great that you can then see it on the catwalk and get it straight away," singer Foxes said at the show.
Luxury label Burberry, which presents its womenswear and menswear collections on Monday, announced in February it would begin selling runway items in-store and online immediately after its September show.
Fashionistas usually wait months for seasonal catwalk lines to hit shops.
With customers living in different climates around the world and with many shows now streamed live, several brands have been adopting the new model on different scales - selling select items or just accessories seen on the catwalk.
London Fashion Week runs over five days until Tuesday and others showing their spring/summer 2017 lines on Sunday included accessories designer Anya Hindmarch who brought a space age vision to the capital.
Models wearing white head bands walked a white circular catwalk, donning colorful coats and handbags - in aquamarine, lilac and coral - decorated with geometric shapes.
"This season I've been preoccupied by the relationship between geometry and art.
These two visual mediums are both articulated through pattern, form and color - things that have always fascinated me," Hindmarch said in a statement.
At Mulberry, creative director Johnny Coca turned to British uniforms - military, school as well as suits and country wear - showing plenty of olive 1940s-style jackets and skirts, pinstripe navy and burgundy blazers and paisley creations.
Models wore ruffled pinafore and silk dresses, asymmetric patterned skirts as well as round-collared jackets and shorts.
"There's always a reference to British heritage, but it's about how we can use tradition, to make it feel modern.
How we can break the rules, to make it new," Coca said in show notes.
(Reporting by Reuters Television; Writing by Marie-Louise Gumuchian; Editing by Alison Williams) LONDON Lord Ivar Mountbatten, a cousin of Queen Elizabeth, has become the first member of the British royal family to come out as gay.
An estimated 5,000 people, dressed in all white, showed up at a Parisian-inspired picnic in lower Manhattan's Robert F. Wagner Jr. Park on Thursday evening wearing masks and Marie Antoinette wigs.
(Corrects Sept. 16 story to remove "monks" and replace with "general public" in paragraph 13) Reuters is the news and media division of Thomson Reuters.
Learn more about Thomson Reuters products: All quotes delayed a minimum of 15 minutes.
• Former Uefa president Lennart Johansson led the way on to pitch• Idea was part of campaign to promote discounts for older people The Swedish club AIK tried a new initiative at the weekend, when the oldest living members of the club entered the pitch as mascots for their league match against Gefle IF.
The senior citizens replaced the regular mascots with the former Uefa president and honorary club president, Lennart Johansson, leading the way.
The idea was part of a campaign to promote ticket discounts and free shuttle buses to and from retirement homes.
Johansson, who came on to the field to a rapturous reception with his fellow mascots, said: “There are a lot of us who have lived with AIK all of our lives but who can’t, for various reasons, get to the stadium these days.
That doesn’t mean that we care less about the club.
Maybe just that we have a little bit more difficulty travelling and moving around.” The AIK chairman, Mikael Ahlerup, commented: “Our family section has for a long time been the biggest in Sweden and it is very important for us to get children and teenagers to the club but we can never forget about the generation that made this club to what it is.
That’s why this initiative felt like an obvious thing to do.
“A family should consist of both young and old and today we completed our family by inviting and celebrating the elders.
I’m proud to be a part of such an inclusive club,” he added.
AIK came out on top in the match, their 1-0 win taking them to third place in the table.
The U.S. Coast Guard continues to search for two adults and one child who went missing while boating on Lake Superior Saturday night.
Rescue crews searched for 20 hours over an area of approximately 1,500 miles, focusing on the area near the Keweenaw Peninsula in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, the Coast Guard reported in a news release.
The group was in a 14-foot recreational boat, owned by Keith Karvonen, one of the missing individuals.
The Coast Guard did not name the other two people missing.
The Michigan Department of Natural Resources, Coast Guard Air Station Traverse City, Coast Guard Air Station Detroit, Coast Guard Station Marquette, Coast Guard Air Station Elizabeth City, North Carolina and the Canadian Coast Guard have assisted in the search.
A crew from Air Station Cape Cod, Massachusetts was scheduled to search throughout Sunday night and into Monday morning.
Anyone with any information about this case is urged to contact the Coast Guard Sector Sault Sainte Marie command center at (906) 635-3233.
The internet can be a “playground for paedophiles”, the NSPCC has warned after new figures suggested increasing numbers of children are raising concerns about online abuse and grooming.
Statistics from Childline, a service provided by the charity, show counselling sessions for youngsters worried about online sexual abuse jumped by 24% to 3,716 in 2015/16.
Most of those contacting the facility were aged between 12 and 15, and more than half were girls.
The online abuse category covers issues including grooming, sexual harassment and communications, pressure to engage in or view explicit material online and sexual extortion.
One in eight of the counselling sessions in 2015/16 were related specifically to grooming - an increase of 21%, the NSPCC said.
The charity’s chief executive Peter Wanless said: “Most of us talk to people online and it’s a great way to stay connected and make new friends.
“But it can be a playground for paedophiles, exposing young people to groomers who trawl social networks and online game forums exploiting any vulnerabilities they may find.” Childline founder Esther Rantzen said the internet has brought many positive changes.
“But it has also brought dangers and online grooming is a real risk,” she said.
Childine is launching a new campaign titled Listen To Your Selfie which is aimed at helping young people recognise the signs of grooming and unhealthy relationships, both online and offline.
Mr Wanless said: “We hope that by putting this in the spotlight we can help young people to feel able to speak up if they feel worried or scared about a situation or relationship.”
Hastings United's footballers have been handed a fourth consecutive away tie in the FA Cup.
The draw for third round qualifying, made this lunchtime (Monday), has given United a trip to Margate in third round qualifying on Saturday October 1.
The U's have come three rounds to get to this stage, all of them away from home and all of them with clean sheets.
Their latest victory was a 1-0 win at Barton Rovers in second round qualifying on Saturday.
But the next game will represent a big step up in difficulty for Ryman Football League Division One South side United, who will be up against a Margate team which plays two levels above them in National League South.
The U's and Walton Casuals are the only Ryman Division One South clubs definitely through to FA Cup third round qualifying as things stand, although Faversham Town and Herne Bay could join them if they win their replays.
United's away cup draws haven't just been confined to the FA Cup.
They have also been drawn away in the first two rounds of the Ryman League Alan Turvey Trophy, sponsored by Robert Dyas, and in FA Trophy first round qualifying.
As previously reported, tomorrow night's scheduled league game at home to Faversham has been postponed because the Kent club has an FA Cup replay against Hitchin Town tonight.
See our comprehensive sports coverage in the Observer every Friday.
Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.
Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be amongst the first to know what’s going on.
1 Make this website your homepage 2 Like our Facebook page at facebook.com/pages/Sport-Sussex 3 Follow us on Twitter @SportSussex 4 Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner).
You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.
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Legions of Xbox, Playstation and PC gamers will be eagerly awaiting the release of this season's installment of the GREATEST FOOTBALL GAME EVER.
The new FIFA 17 game will be launched in September, with a steady stream of information set to be revealed in the coming months, including the first look at Manchester United and Manchester City players in all their glory.
One of the cover stars on this year's EA Sports game will be Manchester United forward Anthony Martial.
In the UK, FIFA 17 will be on sale in shops and online from 29 September 2016.
You can pre-order the game's Super Deluxe Edition at Origin for £69.99 HERE .
The price also includes custom FUT kits created by designers or FIFA soundtrack artists.
The FIFA 17 Deluxe Edition costs £64.99 and comes with the similar bonuses but only 20 FIFA Ultimate Team Jumbo Premium Gold Packs.
The FIFA 17 Standard Edition for PC costs £49.99 to pre-order HERE and comes with the full game, custom kits, loan items and five FUT Draft Tokens.
This time around, EA has shifted the game engine from Ignite to Frostbite - which powers games like Battlefield, Mirror's Edge, Need for Speed, Dragon Age and Star Wars Battlefront.
The former Manchester City player has suffered since he left the Etihad - and his outspoken agent now admits it was a mistake to let him move.
Man Utd and Manchester City will find out who they will face in the third round of the EFL Cup Is there something happening in your area you would like us to report on?
Online, manchestereveningnews.co.uk welcomes 2.4million unique users who experience12.4million page views every month.
Our newspapers include the flagship Manchester Evening News - Britain's largest circulating regional daily with up to 130,485 copies - as well as 20 local weekly titles across Greater Manchester, Cheshire and Lancashire.
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To benefit from this unique, unrivalled audience, call M.E.N Media on 0161 832 7200 or click here to fill in our contact form.
Editor, Manchester Evening News editor-in-chief MEN Media and Trinity Mirror Huddersfield Rob Irvine was appointed editor-in-chief of MEN Media and Trinity Mirror Huddersfield in April 2012.
Rob joined Trinity Mirror in 2001 and was editor of the Daily Post North Wales for seven years.
He was also publishing director for Trinity Mirror North Wales and Cheshire.
He grew up in Stockport, Greater Manchester and has worked in the local newspaper industry for 27 years.
Adil Rashid has defended his request to be left out of Yorkshire’s final County Championship match of the season, with the England spinner citing “personal reasons” for his absence.
The 28-year-old will not feature in the potential title decider against Middlesex, which begins at Lord’s on Tuesday, after asking the coach Jason Gillespie if he could be excused because he needed to rest ahead of England’s tour to Bangladesh.
Gillespie, who is taking charge of his final match, admitted on Sunday that he was “frustrated” by Rashid’s decision.
But in a statement posted on his Twitter account on Monday, Rashid insisted the main reason was that a family member had also been admitted to hospital.
“Unfortunately I have not travelled down with the Yorkshire lads this week as one of my closest family members has been very ill and was recently admitted to hospital,” read the statement.
“I didn’t feel that I am in a strong enough mental frame of mind to be at my best, although I did make myself available if I was required to play [if] I felt I could be letting the lads down.
But coupled with my personal reasons I have also had a heavy period of cricket recently for Yorkshire and England which has been both physically and mentally draining and it is very unfortunate timing.
“Family comes first for me and I will be away on England duty this winter with a busy playing schedule.
I have been in touch with the Yorkshire players and coaches and I will be wishing the lads all the best this game and I am desperately hoping we can lift the trophy for a 3rd year in a row.” On Sunday, Andrew Gale, the Yorkshire captain, posted on Twitter: “Training all done, head down to Lords [sic] tomorrow, can’t wait.
This squad is ready to run through a brick wall for the county.
Yes, he wants to rest.
That’s his decision.
I’ll take 11 lads on the field who will give everything to win.”
A hotline has been launched to encourage landlords and tenants to report energy theft.
The anonymous service targets crime such as such as tampering with meters, which is estimated to cost the UK more than £400million a year.
Anyone with suspicions will be able to report these either by calling the dedicated phone number, 0800 023 2777, or by doing so online at www.stayenergysafe.co.uk.
Dermot Nolan, of Ofgem, said: “Energy theft costs the UK hundreds of millions of pounds each year and puts people’s lives at risk.
“This is why we’re working with the energy industry to clamp down on this crime.” Crimestoppers’ Mark Hallas said: “It’s no exaggeration to say that this is a groundbreaking agreement that we have forged with the energy industry to ensure that crimes such as meter tampering are clamped down on.
“This isn’t just about supporting the industry, though, it’s about our duty to the communities we work with.
“Explosions and fires as a result of energy theft can be devastating, which is why we are running this service on behalf of the industry, to ensure our streets are safe.”
Despite that satisfied look on their faces when they are busy gnawing away on them, dogs should not be given bones, vets are increasingly warning.
The UK’s leading veterinary charity the PDSA has taken to instructing owners not to give their dogs either cooked or raw bones, which it says can become lodged in their throats or splinter, damaging their stomach or intestines and sometimes killing them.
Its spokesman said: “We don’t recommend bones as treats because we often see dogs with digestive tract damage and blockages caused by splinters or larger pieces of bone becoming stuck.
“Surgery is usually needed to remove any blockage and, in some cases, the damage is so serious that it can be fatal.
“Similarly, if they swallow a large piece of rawhide chew this can become stuck and cause serious problems.” The warning runs contrary to widely-held beliefs about the benefits to the animals’ dental health and digestion of chewing on a bone.
A lobby group called the Raw Meaty Bones Action Group claims vets are biased in favour of prepared commercial food.
Meanwhile, The Dog’s Trust states in a factsheet about feeding that while cooked bones are “very dangerous”, large meaty bones have benefits and can even reduce some dogs’ anxiety by causing particular chemicals to be released in their brains.
The British Veterinary Association has said there is no scientific evidence to demonstrate any benefits of feeding dogs raw meat and bones, however, and has highlighted further risks including salmonella.
Three years ago Tesco withdrew a type of ham bone dog treat from sale after a miniature schnauzer died when it splintered, rupturing his stomach.
The PDSA earlier this year said stones, babies’ dummies, socks and kebab sticks were among hundreds of items its vets had surgically removed the stomachs of dogs over 12 months.
LONDON Designers took inspiration from geometry, the 1980s and British uniforms for their London Fashion Week creations over the weekend, with more labels selling items hot off the catwalk as they adopt the runway to a retail business model.
High street brand Topshop became the latest to offer customers the chance to buy designs straight after its show on Sunday, where models wore zebra print designs and skirts slashed at the thigh.
Embellished dresses and voluminous jackets added to an 1980s feel.
Topshop said that for the first time key items modeled on the runway would be immediately available for purchase.
"For a high street brand like Topshop that's kind of affordable ... it's great that you can then see it on the catwalk and get it straight away," singer Foxes said at the show.
Luxury label Burberry, which presents its womenswear and menswear collections on Monday, announced in February it would begin selling runway items in-store and online immediately after its September show.
Fashionistas usually wait months for seasonal catwalk lines to hit shops.
With customers living in different climates around the world and with many shows now streamed live, several brands have been adopting the new model on different scales - selling select items or just accessories seen on the catwalk.
London Fashion Week runs over five days until Tuesday and others showing their spring/summer 2017 lines on Sunday included accessories designer Anya Hindmarch who brought a space age vision to the capital.
Models wearing white head bands walked a white circular catwalk, donning colorful coats and handbags - in aquamarine, lilac and coral - decorated with geometric shapes.
"This season I've been preoccupied by the relationship between geometry and art.
These two visual mediums are both articulated through pattern, form and color - things that have always fascinated me," Hindmarch said in a statement.
At Mulberry, creative director Johnny Coca turned to British uniforms - military, school as well as suits and country wear - showing plenty of olive 1940s-style jackets and skirts, pinstripe navy and burgundy blazers and paisley creations.
Models wore ruffled pinafore and silk dresses, asymmetric patterned skirts as well as round-collared jackets and shorts.
"There's always a reference to British heritage, but it's about how we can use tradition, to make it feel modern.
How we can break the rules, to make it new," Coca said in show notes.
(Reporting by Reuters Television; Writing by Marie-Louise Gumuchian; Editing by Alison Williams) LONDON Lord Ivar Mountbatten, a cousin of Queen Elizabeth, has become the first member of the British royal family to come out as gay.
An estimated 5,000 people, dressed in all white, showed up at a Parisian-inspired picnic in lower Manhattan's Robert F. Wagner Jr. Park on Thursday evening wearing masks and Marie Antoinette wigs.
(Corrects Sept. 16 story to remove "monks" and replace with "general public" in paragraph 13) Reuters is the news and media division of Thomson Reuters.
Learn more about Thomson Reuters products: All quotes delayed a minimum of 15 minutes.