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QUESTION 4— Rossellini,
Italian screen star who
is the daughter of
Ingrid Bergman.
ANSWER:
.................................................
QUESTION 5The —, US
mafia drama series.
ANSWER:
.................................................
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ADMISSON Andrew Warren
ȦҦ̤· ̧ĥÌ
Ƴ³½È
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A BRIT has admitted flying
to the States to butcher a
hairstylist to death.
Andrew Warren, 58, an
ex-finance officer at Oxford
University, was due to be
tried for murder alongside
Wyndham Lathem, 44.
Lathem’s boyfriend
Trenton James Cornell-
Duranleau, 26, was found
nearly decapitated and
with 70 stab wounds at a
Chicago flat in June 2017.
But after a plea deal on
Monday Warren will testify
against Lathem in return
for a 45-year jail term.
He flew to the US three
days before the killing and
the pair allegedly chatted
online and planned to kill
themselves after the death.
Warren, of Faringdon,
Oxon, had said he was into
bondage and torture on a
dating profile.
Lathem denies murder.
BY CHRISTOPHER BUCKTIN
US Editor
Marco Petagna said: “On Thursday we’ll
see an east-west split with showers in
the western parts of England but the
eastern parts with 36C to 37C.”
He also warned “anywhere across
England could see some thundery
showers” and the coolest areas will be in
western England, although “tempera-
tures will still be in the 20Cs”.
Meanwhile, academics warned stifling
summers could become the norm.
Dr Peter Inness, of the
University of Reading, said:
“It’s still too early to say
whether July 2019 will
be the warmest July
on record.
“However, June 2019
was the warmest June
since global records
began in 1880. In fact,
nine of the 10 warmest
Junes in the global record
have happened since 2000.”
[email protected]
@DailyMirror
Age UK added: “We know extreme heat
can aggravate lung and heart conditions,
so our advice is to take care and if you
are breathless, seek medical advice.
“Just checking in on older relatives
and neighbours is a nice idea.”
While thunderstorms were
expected to batter the country
early this morning, the heat
will quickly return for the
rest of the week.
And with schools
now breaking up for
the holidays, many
families have already
hit beaches. Motoring
groups said the heat-
wave will add to a busy
week amid the exodus,
with Green Flag expecting
87,400 breakdowns.
Met Office forecaster
less nights. Those particularly at risk in
the daytimes are the elderly, the very
young and people with health issues.
But the risk is so great Public Health
England is urging all of us to seek shelter
between 11am and 3pm. A spokesman
said: “Heat can affect anyone but some
people run a greater risk of serious
harm. These include
the older people, espe-
cially those over 75.
“Babies and young
children, people with a
serious chronic condi-
tion, particularly
dementia, heart,
breathing or mobility
problems are also
vulnerable – as are
people with mental
health problems.”
Caroline Abrahams of
Red alert: Toxic dust
& 38C record breaker
BY MARK REYNOLDS
PEOPLE have been warned to put
plans for fun in the sun on hold as
blistering Britain braces for health-
risking temperatures of up to 38C.
A plume of Saharan dust mixed with
smoke from Continental wildfires is
turning our skies red this week.
The mercury hit a high of 33.6C at
Heathrow Airport yesterday and we
could get 37C tomorrow – beating the
July record of 36.7C that
was set in 2015.
And experts say there
is even a 30% chance of
the all-time UK record of
38.5C – from Faversham,
Kent, in August 2003 –
being broken.
The Met Office said
overnight temperatures
could also set records in
central and southern
areas, possibly hitting
24C and causing sleep-
Heat can
affect anyone
but some
people run a
greater risk of
serious harm
PUBLIC HEALTH ENGLAND
ON DANGERS OF HEATWAVE
Health warnings over heatwave
HOT Storm Wallace in Weymouth
BLACKPOOL
Sun-worshippers hit Lancashire beach
LYME REGIS
Dorset beach packed with visitors yesterday
TYNEMOUTH
Families flock to scorching Longsands beach
HATTA BOY Danny
Nichol, 10 months