Lockdown Minecraft lesson recreates ancient tomb

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Media captionBronze Age tomb recreated on Minecraft

Take an archaeologist, a bored schoolgirl living through coronavirus lockdown, and a shared interest in exploring ancient tombs.

The result? One of Wales’ most important Bronze Age sites recreated – in the video game Minecraft.

It is the achievement of Dr Ben Edwards, from Wrexham, and his daughter Bella, 11.

Their models of Bryn Celli Ddu on Anglesey are now being shared with classrooms around the world.

The models can be loaded into the block-building universe of Minecraft, and explored to learn more about both the site, Neolithic life and art.

The burial mound dates back an estimated 5,000 years, with its so-called “passage tomb” whose entrance aligns perfectly with the sun at dawn on the summer solstice.

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The ancient and modern: Bryn Celli Ddu burial chamber for real – and in Minecraft

Image copyright
Rhys Thomas

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The passage tomb aligns with the rising sun on the longest day of the year

More recent excavations at the site, including some by the Manchester Metropolitan University archaeologist Dr Edwards himself, revealed the burial chamber was built as a “henge”.

Like Stonehenge, this was a ritual enclosure consisting of a bank around an inner ditch, enclosed in a circle of upright stones.

Dr Edwards has used those digs, alongside work with researchers from the University of Central Lancashire and Wales’ historical environment service Cadw, to painstakingly recreate Bryn Celli Ddu in the video game.

It was then incorporated in the educational edition of Minecraft, which is used across the world to deliver lessons in anything from chemistry to computer coding.

You can now add ancient Welsh history to that list.

“I knew Bella had access to the education version of Minecraft at school here, near Wrexham, and I had access to it at my university.

“So it was always at the back of my mind for a while to do something in Minecraft,” said Dr Edwards, who has worked on other more grown-up computer models of Bryn Celli Ddu in the past.

“It was never a massive priority, but then you are in lockdown, it’s the Easter holidays, and you are home schooling.

“I just said to Bella: ‘Shall we have a crack at this?'”

Image copyright
Minecraft/Cadw/MMU

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Real geographical data was used to map the virtual Minecraft site

The game is famous for players being able to build almost anything out of graphic blocks, creating massive worlds and playgrounds.

Though it may be a game, Dr Edwards took the approach to Bryn Celli Ddu seriously, and used actual geographical mapping data to recreate the landscape for the Minecraft models.

It includes the tomb itself, as it may have appeared in the Bronze Age, and alongside it other burial mounds and pits discovered in the last few years.

Rock art recovered from Bryn Celli Ddu is also represented in the game, alongside a model of what a Neolithic home may have looked like nearby.

According to Dr Edwards, the hardest thing to build was not the burial mounds or house.

“It was planting the trees,” he said.

Each one had to be individually “planted” and grown by Bella and her father as part of the Minecraft world.

“Bella had to show me how to do a lot of things, because she uses it more than me,” Dr Edwards confessed.

In the end, she approved of the final version and said it was “very realistic”.

“And she knows, because she used to come down to the excavations too,” her father added.

Image copyright
Minecraft/Cadw/MMU

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A Neolithic settlement was recreated as part of the digital game project

Dr Ffion Reynolds, from Cadw, said it was exactly children such as Bella who would benefit from playing with the Minecraft model.

“We were looking for creative ways of providing people with a digital experience of Bryn Celli Ddu,” said Dr Reynolds, who would normally be spending the summer months giving guided tours of the excavations to schools from the area.

“This was a way of continuing our relationship with those schools, and offering them a way of ‘visiting’ the site digitally.”

Coronavirus restrictions mean Cadw’s sites across Wales have been closed to the public, including Bryn Celli Ddu.

It also meant, for the first time in years, those who celebrate the summer solstice were unable to gather at the burial mound to witness the dawn phenomenon there.

“However, it did allow us get access with a special camera crew, and we have been able to capture the sunrise there with 360-degree filming,” Dr Reynolds added.

She said Cadw hoped to make the footage available in the very near future, as well as reopening the site to visitors.

Meanwhile, those with access to Minecraft at home or in school can now visit the site digitally – in safety.

The Bryn Celli Ddu Minecraft world is free to download for the Minecraft Education version from Hwb – the Welsh Government’s teaching resource site, and also from the Manchester Centre for Public History and Heritage.

And for those looking for a more serious experience, Dr Andrews and his colleagues are behind an augmented reality app available for Apple devices, which can guide visitors around the real site – once it reopens.

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PPP expects better performance in Gilgit Baltistan polls: Sherry

ISLAMABAD          -       Pakistan People’s Party expects to perform better in the upcoming general elections in Gilgit Baltistan, senior leaders said.

PPP Vice President Senator Sherry Rehman said that the people will not vote for the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf as the PTI had failed to deliver. “Bilawal Bhutto Zardari will lead the election campaign and we hope to win the elections,” she said while speaking to The Nation.

The Senator said the PPP will move the workers for the Gilgit Baltistan polls. Criticising the federal government, she said, the first task was to unite the country but the rulers were dividing the nation.

The Federal government needs to realise that they will be held responsible if the death toll increases because it will be due to their lack of planning, she added.

“What Pakistan needs at this time is decisive leadership so, will the Prime Minister of Pakistan please step forward and take responsibility,” she said.

This week, a Parliamentary Board headed by PPP chief Bilawal Bhutto Zardari was constituted for the awarding of party ticket to candidates for General elections in GIlgit Baltistan,

The members include Faryal Talpur, Syed Nayyar Hussain Bokhari, Raja Pervaiz Ashraf, Amjad Hussain, Syed Mehdi Shah, Engr. Ismail and Muhammad Musa. Nayyar Bokhari told The Nation that the election campaign would be launched after the finalisation of the candidates. “We are determined to do better if there is no interference by the PTI government,” he maintained.

Meanwhile, Dr Nafisa Shah, Information Secretary Pakistan Peoples Party rejected govt’s plan to run PIA’s Roosevelt Hotel in New York under a joint venture with the private sector.

“Firstly the timing is totally wrong for such an exercise. Real estate prices have gone down by a third in New York. Therefore any form of disinvestment, or sale, or mixed ownership, call it joint venture or privatization when our state assets have lost their value is ill-advised,” she said in a statement.

Secondly, she said, “what is the objective of the joint venture? It is unlikely that profits will increase with Covid19 crisis in the world.”

Nafisa Shah said: “In our view this suspicious, untimely and ill-advised move will compromise PIA’s ownership of the hotel without accruing any benefits to the state. It seems it is just another example of cronyism and vested interests driving a harmful venture and must be immediately ceased.”

She said that the PPP “will consider this a daylight robbery if this property is sold in any form when the prices are down in the market.”



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Interior Minister says authorities will reach root cause of accident

ISLAMABAD             -         Interior Minister Brigadier (retd) Ijaz Ahmad Shah on Friday said that Pakistan would reach the root cause of the collision incident between a coaster and a train, and any one responsible for the horrible mishap would be held accountable.

He said that Pakistan would ensure all possible assistance to their Sikh brothers in this hard time, according to a statement issued by the Ministry of Interior.

The Minister said that instructions of the Prime Minister Imran Khan were being followed to provide every kind of help to the aggrieved families of the deceased pilgrims.

He expressed grief and condolences to all those who fell victim to unfortunate train incident that claimed 22 lives and leaving many injured.

The incident took place near Sheikhupura in Punjab where a coaster carrying around 30 pilgrims collided with a train.

Shah prayed for the departed souls and hoped for the speedy recovery of the injured. “We stand in solidarity with our Sikh brothers in this hard time and as directed by the PM Imran Khan, we will ensure that every kind of assistance is given to the ones who are affected.”

The federal Minister said that it was extremely tragic to lose precious lives in the time while they were already struggling with pandemic crisis.



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Rolls-Royce faces a long haul back to high-flier status

Transport yourself back to another time, another, more innocent, world: January 2020. Warren East, chief executive of jet engine manufacturer Rolls-Royce, is losing a sympathetic but by this time well-lubricated audience for his keynote speech at the aerospace and defence industry’s annual shindig. The word coronavirus is still firmly confined to the foreign sections of newspapers (even if Asian markets are starting to get jittery), and the industry is readying itself for another year of growth.

Even a month later, on 28 February, Rolls-Royce is able to shrug off the threat of the virus with results “reinforcing our confidence for 2020”. East predicts that the company will reduce the number of Boeing Dreamliners grounded because of longstanding issues with Rolls-Royce’s Trent 1000 engines to “single digits” by the end of June.








Warren East was breezily confident in January. Photograph: Getty Images

How different the world looks now, as Rolls-Royce prepares for a trading update on Thursday covering the period since its last update, in April. For investors looking at Rolls-Royce since air travel stalled, the question has been: exactly how bad is it?

In a few short months, the manufacturer has lost a big chunk of its commercial aviation revenues, which represented the majority of its business in 2019. In good times, servicing the engines it makes guarantees it a steady flow of income; during the pandemic, that has dried up, as hours flown by its engines fell by half in March alone. On Thursday, investors will be keen to see whether May and June showed anything like a rebound in the number of jets in the skies.

The company’s initial response to the revenue hit was to cut 9,000 jobs in a bid to save £1.3bn a year in costs. About two-thirds of redundancies will be in the UK, which is a blow to one of the UK’s few remaining home-grown industrial leaders – and especially to Derby, where the brunt of the cuts will fall. (In May, East’s unwise “smirking” during a BBC interview about the job cuts was heavily criticised on social media.)

Yet even the ruthlessness of the third-largest job cuts programme by a UK company during the pandemic was not enough to save Rolls-Royce’s credit rating from a painful downgrade to junk status, after more than 20 years at investment grade. S&P Global Ratings judged that more financial pain could be on the way this year as the pandemic continues to disrupt air travel.

Rolls-Royce’s shares have dropped below 280p, where they stood in February 2009 in the depths of the financial crisis. What will it take to propel Rolls back to the halcyon days of late January, when shares were worth more than double that, at 683p? Or indeed the 850p mark they were at when East took over, almost five years ago this week?

The way back looks long indeed, even if the company can depend on government grant funding and cheap loans to stave off any existential threats – or indeed a return to the nationalisation of the 1970s. Its access to cash and loans remains fairly healthy, despite the junk rating.

However, Rolls-Royce’s engines are mainly bolted to planes that fly longer-haul routes. That means its recovery depends on people the world over being willing to spend 10 hours squashed up against a stranger – which is enough to make investors as well as travellers squeamish.

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Why Singapore turned to wearable virus-trace tech

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Andrew Huang

Singapore’s TraceTogether Tokens are the latest effort to tackle Covid-19 with tech. But they have also reignited a privacy debate.

The wearable devices complement the island’s existing contact-tracing app, to identify people who might have been infected by those who have tested positive for the virus.

All users have to do is carry one, and the battery lasts up to nine months without needing a recharge – something one expert said had “stunned” him.

The government agency which developed the devices acknowledges that the Tokens – and technology in general – aren’t “a silver bullet”, but should augment human contact-tracers’ efforts.

The first to receive the devices are thousands of vulnerable elderly people who don’t own smartphones.

To do so, they had to provide their national ID and phone numbers – TraceTogether app users recently had to start doing likewise.

If dongle users test positive for the disease, they have to hand their device to the Ministry of Health because – unlike the app – they cannot transmit data over the internet.

Human contact-tracers will then use the logs to identify and advise others who might have been infected.

“It’s very boring in what it does, which is why I think it’s a good design,” says hardware developer Sean Cross.

He was one of four experts invited to inspect one of the devices before they launched. The group was shown all its components but were not allowed to turn it on.

“It can correlate who you’d been with, who you’ve infected and, crucially, who may have infected you,” Mr Cross adds.

App aid

Singapore was the first country to deploy a national coronavirus-tracing app.

The local authorities say 2.1 million people have downloaded the software, representing about 35% of the population.

It is voluntary for everyone except migrant workers living in dorms, who account for the majority of Singapore’s 44,000-plus infections.

The government says the app helped it quarantine some people more quickly than would have otherwise been possible.

But by its own admission, the tech doesn’t work as well as had been hoped.

Image copyright
AFP/Getty Images

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Some people have uninstalled the app because of its drain on battery life

On iPhones, the app has to be running in the foreground for Bluetooth “handshakes” to occur, which means users can’t use their handsets for anything else. It’s also a huge drain on the battery. Android devices don’t face the same problem.

Automated contact-tracing can in theory be hugely effective, but only if a large percentage of a population is involved.

So, owners of Apple’s devices are likely to be among others asked to use the dongles in the near future.

Privacy concerns

When the Token was first announced in early June, there was a public backlash against the government – something that is a relatively rare occurrence in Singapore.

Wilson Low started an online petition calling for it to be ditched. Almost 54,000 people have signed.

“All that is stopping the Singapore government from becoming a surveillance state is the advent and mandating the compulsory usage of such a wearable device,” the petition stated.

“What comes next would be laws that state these devices must not be turned off [and must] remain on a person at all times – thus sealing our fate as a police state.”

Ministers point out the devices don’t log GPS location data or connect to mobile networks, so can’t be used for surveillance of a person’s movements.

Mr Cross agrees that from what he was shown, the dongles cannot be used as location-trackers.

But he adds that the scheme is still less privacy-centric than a model promoted by Apple and Google, which is being widely adopted elsewhere.

“At the end of the day, the Ministry of Health can go from this cryptic, secret number that only they know, to a phone number – to an individual,” he explains.

Image copyright
Silver Generation Office (SGO)

By contrast, apps based on Apple and Google’s model alert users if they are at risk, but do not reveal their identities to the authorities. It is up to the individuals to do so when, for example, they register for a test.

Dr Michael Veale, a digital rights expert at University College London, warns of the potential for mission creep.

He gives an example in which a government struggling against Covid-19 might want to enforce quarantine control. It could do so, he says, by fitting Bluetooth sensors to public spaces to identify dongle users who are out and about when they should be self-isolating at home.

“All you have to do is install physics infrastructure in the world and the data that is collecting can be mapped back to Singapore ID numbers,” he explains.

“The buildability is the worrying part.”

But the official in charge of the agency responsible for TraceTogether plays down such concerns.

“There is a high trust relationship between the government and people, and there is data protection,” says Kok Ping Soon, chief executive of GovTech.

He adds that he hopes the public recognises that the health authorities need this data to protect them and their loved ones.

Another reason Singapore prefers its own scheme over Apple and Google’s is that it can provide epidemiologists with greater insight into an outbreak’s spread.

This was in part why the UK government initially resisted adopting the tech giants’ initiative until its own effort to work around Apple’s Bluetooth restrictions failed to pass muster.

If Singapore’s wearables work as hoped, other nations may be tempted to follow.

“[With more data], you are able to make policy decisions which very carefully tie restraints or obligations only to high-risk activities. Otherwise you’re left with much blunter tools,” comments privacy expert Roland Turner, another member of the group invited by Singapore to inspect its hardware.

“There is perhaps a paradoxical consequence that greater freedoms are possible.”

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Free Daily Horoscope and Lucky Numbers for 5 July 2020

TODAY’S MOTIVATIONAL QUOTE:

If you don’t hear opportunity knocking, find another door. — Anonymous

TODAY’S WISDOM FROM AROUND THE WORLD:

Just as tall trees are known by their shadows, so are good men known by their enemies. — Chinese Proverb

TODAY’S CHINESE PROVERB:

Those who seek harmony know how to find it.

FOR THOSE OF US BORN ON THIS DAY:

Happy Birthday! The months ahead are likely to start with a need for some involved heart to hearts with someone close to you, but the misunderstanding is likely to be yours! You’ll tend to be in a fretful mood as Mercury moves back and forth, but when Venus strengthens her influence you’ll find that your spirits and your expectations soar, which will ensure a lively, busy summer. By the fall you’ll be pleasantly surprised with some positive developments at work or school, and delighted with the way romance starts panning out, but the winter looks set to offer some very busy moments. Plan your vacation carefully because you won’t have a great deal of spare time!

Want to know what the future holds? Get a FREE tarot card reading.

CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY:

Famous people born on your birthday include: Warren Oates, Shane Filan, Shirley Knight, Jamie Elman, Edie Falco, Huey Lewis, Marc Cohn, P.T. Barnum, Katherine Helmond, Julie Nixon Eisenhower

CELEBRITY GOSSIP:

Ariel Winter has shown that she has a sense of humor off screen as well as when she is front of the camera by her reaction to a photo-shopped image of her that has since gone viral. The planets also tell us that her humor will stand her in good stead for a new exciting role!

ARIES DAILY HOROSCOPE | Mar 21 – Apr 19

You may need to accept that it is just one of those days where communications will be rather hit and miss, thanks to the slightly terse vibe. While you’re likely to go into overdrive when it comes to support, assistance and advice, it is a day to plod through slowly but surely.

Today’s Numbers:  5, 14, 29, 32, 41, 46

TAURUS DAILY HOROSCOPE | Apr 20 – May 20

You’ll either feel obliged to make up for lost time or you’ll feel that you can’t possibly put anything on hold. By the same token; rushing through a particular matter is inadvisable. Remove some of the pressure by rethinking your immediate targets. Avoid unrelated distractions and take your time!

Today’s Numbers:  7, 13, 28, 33, 35, 43

GEMINI DAILY HOROSCOPE | May 21 – Jun 20

A clash of plans might make you feel as though someone else is being a little inconsiderate. While the rather fraught undercurrent suggests that you may end up feeling a little pressured, you will have a certain amount of immunity from it. Do avoid decisions related to cash matters though!

Today’s Numbers: 9, 14, 22, 27, 38, 44

CANCER DAILY HOROSCOPE | Jun 21 – Jul 22

Heavy Pluto/sun mix could misrepresent what will be a minor issue, or a tendency to overly worry will make things seem worse than they are. If someone appears to overstep the mark, count to ten before you react. In a similar vein; involved dialogue may not help much if you can’t meet someone halfway!

Today’s Numbers:   1, 3, 12, 20, 36, 43

LEO DAILY HOROSCOPE | Jul 23 – Aug 22

This is a day where any previous lapses in material and/or work-related responsibilities are likely to catch up with you. Your best strategy will be to meet iffy news head on, with a view to correcting whatever has gone off-course. That said; a separate head-versus-heart choice may require a little more time!

Today’s Numbers: 8, 15, 19, 22, 37, 40

VIRGO DAILY HOROSCOPE | Aug 23 – Sep 22

The planets suggest that you may be looking to avoid or delay a work/career issue that may come to your attention. Don’t give up on it, because the incisive vibe will be fairly diagnostic. If you can calibrate a problem into a constructive course of action, you could make some useful improvements!

Today’s Numbers: 9, 16, 21, 28, 33, 46

LIBRA DAILY HOROSCOPE | Sep 23 – Oct 22

Despite the highly insightful undercurrent, it may be more difficult than usual to finding comfortable middle ground with a possibly distant or unapproachable figure. Do bear in mind that you may not be able to secure a perfect result according to this other person’s rather high standards!

Today’s Numbers: 2, 17, 23, 34, 42, 47

SCORPIO DAILY HOROSCOPE | Oct 23 – Nov 21

There is a rather persistent vibe about when it comes to career matters. You’ll certainly have the capacity to say the right thing at the right time on the work front. However, this skill may desert you somewhat when it comes to emotional matters. To avoid this, be the one to take the first step!

Today’s Numbers: 9, 15, 21, 30, 38, 44

SAGITTARIUS DAILY HOROSCOPE | Nov 22 – Dec 21

There’s a slightly fretful vibe about. There’s also an element of misguidance too, since you could over-invest your energies into a redundant situation, whilst neglecting something that does need your attention. If you can focus in on the positive you’ll have a much stronger voice with regard to an ongoing matter!

Today’s Numbers:  6, 13, 17, 26, 32, 46

CAPRICORN DAILY HOROSCOPE | Dec 22 – Jan 19

An impression of a static vibe is likely to be a false one. Being more proactive is the way to go. There may be something lingering from yesterday that needs addressing. Alternatively, it could be that you’ll let an opportunity slip by. Either way, this could be related to a recent development!

Today’s Numbers: 9, 14, 22, 26, 35, 41

AQUARIUS DAILY HOROSCOPE | Jan 20 – Feb 18

There’s a slight tendency to overdo it, especially when it comes to material and/or financial matters. An inclination to attach too much importance to appearances and image may have you overlooking more important factors. It’s not a day to be fooled by outward appearances!

Today’s Numbers: 1, 12, 28, 33, 42, 49

PISCES DAILY HOROSCOPE | Feb 19 – Mar 20

You may well find the general vibes, whilst being quite insightful, aren’t actually helpful for an emotional issue or matter. Let things slow down a little so you can hear what is being said. A reversed decision may not be good news, but there will still be something you can work with!

Today’s Numbers:  8, 15, 19, 27, 33, 46

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Weather forecast, alerts and UVB index for all South African provinces, 5 July 2020

Weather data provided by the South African Weather Service. For a detailed forecast of your province, click here.

Weather Warnings

Nil.

Weather Watches

Nil.

Special Weather Advisories

Nil.

Gauteng:

Temperature: Fine and cool.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: High.

Mpumalanga:

Temperature: Fine and cool, but warm in the Lowveld.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: –

Limpopo:

Temperature: Fine and cool, but warm in the Lowveld.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: –

North-West Province:

Temperature: Fine and cool to warm.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: –

Free State:

Temperature: Fine and cool.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: –

Northern Cape:

Temperature: Morning fog patches along the coast, otherwise fine and cool.

Wind: The wind along the coast will be moderate to fresh southerly to south-easterly.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: –

Western Cape:

Temperature: Fine and cool becoming cloudy in the west and south coast from the afternoon with isolated showers and rain along the west coast.

Wind: The wind along the coast will be fresh to strong westerly to northwesterly in the south, otherwise light to moderate northerly to northeasterly.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: Low.

Eastern Cape:

The Western half – Temperature: Fine and cool becoming partly cloudy along the coast from the afternoon.

The Western Half – Wind: The wind along the coast will be fresh to strong westerly, becoming south-westerly from the afternoon.

The Eastern half – Temperature: Fine and cool.

The Eastern half – Wind: The wind along the coast will be moderate to fresh south-westerly.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: –

Kwazulu-Natal:

Temperature: Fine and cool but warm over the eastern interior.

Wind: The wind along the coast will be Light to moderate westerly to southwesterly.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: Moderate.




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Queen Elizabeth’s Windsor Castle shines with blue light to thank pandemic healthcare workers

Windsor Castle, the residence of Queen Elizabeth, was bathed in a brilliant blue light on Saturday for the 72nd anniversary of the U.K.’s National Health Service.

“We join together in a moment of remembrance and reflection for those who have lost their lives during the pandemic and pay tribute to the healthcare professionals, keyworkers and volunteers working for and in support of the NHS,” read the royal family’s Instagram post under a photo of the lit castle. In March, the queen, 94, and her husband Prince Philip, 99, moved from Buckingham Palace to Windsor Castle to ride out the coronavirus pandemic.

“2020 has been the most challenging year in NHS history…” the NHS wrote on its website. “Over the last few months staff have worked around the clock to tackle coronavirus – caring for the 100,000 patients with COVID-19 who needed specialist hospital treatment and treating countless others besides, redesigning services and creating backup Nightingale hospitals.” The organization asked people to place a light in their windows for “this collective act of remembrance.”

The royal family’s public health initiatives have not slowed down for the pandemic. In an Easter speech, the queen encouraged social distancing because “by keeping apart, we keep others safe” and in a televised broadcast, she thanked people for sheltering in place “thereby helping to protect the vulnerable and sparing many families the pain already felt by those who have lost loved ones.” And her annual birthday parade in June, also known as Trooping the Colour, was downsized for safety.

And the Queen’s grandson Prince William and his wife Kate Middleton have been executing mental health initiatives — William is working at a crisis text line called Shout, of which he is a co-founder in addition to Middleton, his brother Prince Harry and wife Meghan Markle. While Middleton met with families of children in a hospice facility to plant a garden.

Harry and Markle are miles away in Los Angeles, Calif., where they settled after dropping their royal duties. But in April, they were photographed delivering free meals to families, as coronavirus cases rose in the United States. “Yes, there is isolation and physical distancing, but there doesn’t have to be loneliness,” the couple reminded fans on their former Instagram account in March.

The last time Windsor Castle bathed in blue was April, when the Queen acknowledged medical workers for treating COVID-19 patients. On Saturday, other U.K. institutions such as the Palace of Westminster and a Royal Air Force plane also lit up blue

For the latest coronavirus news and updates, follow along at https://news.yahoo.com/coronavirus. According to experts, people over 60 and those who are immunocompromised continue to be the most at risk. If you have questions, please reference the CDC’s and WHO’s resource guides. 

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Finance Minister Mathias Cormann to quit

Finance Minister Mathias Cormann has notified Prime Minister Scott Morrison of his intention to leave politics in December.

Senator Cormann has confirmed he will not recontest the next election and believes the end of the year will be an appropriate time to transition his portfolio.

He will spend the next six months helping to finalise the July Economic Statement, the October Budget and the half yearly budget update in December.

Image: News Corp Australia

Finance Minister Mathias Cormann will quit the cabinet at the end of the year. (Picture: AAP
Finance Minister Mathias Cormann will quit the cabinet at the end of the year. (Picture: AAP

Federal Finance Minister Mathias Cormann will quit politics at the end of the year after telling the Prime Minister it’s the right time to transition.

The West Australian Senator announced on Sunday morning his intention to retire and said he had advised Prime Minister Scott Morrison the end of 2020 would be the appropriate time for an “orderly transition” in his portfolio.

Senator Cormann had decided not to recontest the next election and there had been speculation recently he was considering his future.

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He was elected in June 2007 and has served as Australia’s Finance Minister for seven years under three prime ministers. His resignation will spark a Cabinet reshuffle for the Federal Government.

“I can honestly say that I have left nothing on the field,” Senator Cormann said in a statement.

“By the end of this year we will be halfway through this current term of government.

“Before handing over the baton, there is another six months or so of hard work to be done in this job, to help manage a responsible transition out of this coronavirus induced crisis and to help finalise and set in train our five-year plan to maximise the strength of our economic and jobs recovery.”

Senator Cormann said he was not going anywhere just yet and between now and the end of the year he would be working with the Prime Minister, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg and all of his other colleagues on finalising the July Economic Statement, the Budget in October and the half-yearly Budget update in December.

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