Element
|
Question
|
Sample text
|
Headline
|
What is the title going to be?
|
Rugby World Cup: what's in it for the residents of
Twickenham?
|
Byline
|
Who is going to write the report?
|
By Mark Tran, Monday 17 August 2015 19.35 BST
|
Placeline
|
Where did this case take place?
|
LONDON
|
Lead
Start your opening section giving
the most important information
|
WHAT?
|
inebriated sports fans vomiting or urinating on the
streets and into front gardens after a match.
|
WHERE?
|
Richmond and Twickenham, south-west London,
|
|
WHO?
|
Drunken fans
|
|
WHEN?
|
when the Rugby World Cup gets under way next month.
|
|
WHY
|
Drunken fans out of the stadium because before the
game will drink bars
|
|
HOW?
|
causing damage and leaving trash on the streets near
stadiums
|
|
Body
|
What is the most important detail?
|
LONDON - It is every resident’s nightmare:
inebriated sports fans vomiting or urinating on the streets and into front
gardens after a match. Yet this is what lies in store for the residents of
leafy Richmond and Twickenham, south-west London, when the Rugby World Cup
gets under way next month.
Richmond council had a stab at sorting out the
problem at the weekend when England beat France 19-14 in a warmup match at
Twickenham stadium. Pubs were effectively encouraged to close early, at 10pm,
but the decision pleased neither publicans or long-suffering residents, who
have to put up with road diversions and rubbish-strewn streets on match days.
|
Body
Other details?
|
Less important than the first one
|
The
council said its strategy “aims to enable visitors to have an enjoyable
experience before, during and after each match and enable business to
capitalise on the potential income of visitors during the tournament”. Its
plan comes a month before the tournament begins on 18 September, concluding
with a final at Twickenham on 31 October.
|
Less important than the second one
|
Richmond said those pubs it consulted supported an
approach allowing them to “voluntarily restrict entry after 10pm if the pub
was full”. Trialled at the weekend, the council said the pubs were quiet
during the match, but were busy later as publicans let people in.
Martyn Day, a local historian who also plays in a
rock band, said like most people he was prepared to put up with the traffic
diversions, the closed streets, the hordes of fans, the portaloos, the
crowded trains and the noise into the early hours of the morning. But he
argued that the community should get something in return.
|
|
The least important
|
“This the price of living next door to Twickenham
stadium at the time of the Rugby World Cup. I accept this,” he wrote on the
St Margaret’s community website. “What I cannot accept is the apparent lack
of any recognition, recompense or legacy for the thousands of people who will
have to put up with it.
“At every public Rugby World Cup meeting that I have
attended I have asked the same simple question: what is there in it for the
people who live here? Any sports facilities for us or our children to use in
the future? Any landscaped areas or gardens for older people to enjoy? … Any
permanent museum or gallery celebrating this important international event?
The answer has always been an embarrassed silence.”
|
|
Simple true statements
|
Add facts
|
Many residents in the area complain about the conduct
of drunken fans on match days, with complaints of people being sick or
urinating in bushes. Locals say the problem is particularly acute on Whitton
Road, which goes from Twickenham train station to the rugby ground.
Day said there should be something people will be
able to point to afterwards to say: “‘That is there because of the Rugby
World Cup in 2015 when half the world came to St Margaret’s.’ Surely that is
not too much to ask?”
|
Quotations
|
Report what someone else said (Add this in the body!)
|
Pub companies are not pleased either. “I am very
annoyed,” Jonathon Swaine, the managing director of Fuller’s Inns, told the
Times. “It seems quite Orwellian to say you will not go to the pub for a
drink. It is not happening in Cardiff or other cities that are hosting World
Cup matches. Why should it happen in Twickenham?”
An RFU spokeswoman said: “We were asked by Richmond
council and the Metropolitan police to advise spectators that because of the
late finish time of Saturday’s game, a number of pubs and restaurants in
Twickenham town centre were only accepting pre-booked customers. Others
decided not to accept new custom after 10pm.”
|
Nowadays the level of alcohol consumption in adolescents has increased rapidly due to the massification of the sale and Porla ease of buying this type of product, which is bad since the consumption of alcohol in teenagers is harmful to health because their brains are in a period of development and the presence of alcohol in the blood is difficult to optimally perform.
Many scientists have conducted studies on this controversial issue and everyone has come to the conclusion that should not be allowed (for this reason alcohol is forbidden for people under 18 years old) since this affects the nervous and cardiovascular system, what alccohol consumption at an early age can have serious consequences for the future of these consumers.
from this, most governments have banned both the consumption and marketing of any product containing alcohol to minors, mostly, sim though there are some that just is prohibited until 16 years old or not prohibit (these cases are dealt with underdeveloped countries)
if countries do not prohibit the consumption of alcohol in minors, most of these are treated in developing countries that are also attributed religions traditions involving the consumption of these products, therefore socialemente is accepted and not care of the medical consequences
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario