The family of a man who went into cardiac arrest at a football match have thanked the off-duty firefighter who helped to save his life.
A university has unveiled plans for a new development which it has said will bring a "significant economic boost" to a city centre.Coventry University wants to build a hotel, shops and new homes on the site of the former Civic Centre.
The site, opposite the Council House, was most recently used for the Assembly Festival Garden in summer 2022."This is a prime site in Coventry city centre," said the university's vice-chancellor, Prof John Latham CBE, adding: "We want to see it used for something that will benefit the university and the city as a whole."Coventry University made the announcement just weeks after concerns were raised
Describing the development as a "multimillion-pound transformation", the university said it would include community-related projects, "high-quality" residential property, hotels and retail use.These would be linked together by "exceptional" public spaces, it added.
The university said it had identified two preferred bidders for the scheme.
VINCI UK Developments has worked on the regeneration of London's New Covent Garden Market and the linking of Cardiff Bay to the city centre.Dignity in Dying said the campaign used "positive imagery" and was fully compliant with the Committee of Advertising Practice code. Transport for London said the adverts were compliant with its advertising policy.
for England and Wales on Friday.Some of the posters on the network have been covered by posters for the Samaritans. The organisation said it had not sanctioned this.
A spokesperson for Dignity in Dying said its advertising campaign, Let Us Choose, featured real people who wanted a change in the law on assisted dying, either because they were terminally ill and wanted the choice, or because their loved one wanted the choice but had been denied it."The campaign uses positive imagery of these people living life on their own terms, alongside messages about why they are campaigning for greater choice," the spokesperson said.