<h3>[United Kingdom] Couples treat their daughters and live in distress and accidentally win the lottery jackpot to solve the difficulties</h3>

According to the British "Daily Mail", a couple in Maidstone, Kent, England, Adam and Amy have to take care of their seriously ill daughter. To that end, Amy had to give up his job, while Adam worked around the clock to subsidize his family, accumulating 60 hours of overtime in August. The daughter needed to go to a hospital in London for treatment, which cost a lot of money, and the unexpected £1 million lottery prize was a relief for the couple.
When Adam received the email notification, thinking he had only won the £1,000 prize, he was stunned for a moment when he saw that there were three more "0s" behind him. Now, they plan to spend most of the prize money on their daughter's treatment, while the rest of the prize money is used to buy a new car and a wireless vacuum cleaner and take her to Disneyland.
<h3>[Russia] Couples 62 million yuan beach wedding was cancelled due to the impact of turtle nesting</h3>
According to the British Daily Mail, a Russian newlywed couple wants to host a luxurious beach wedding with a budget of 7.3 million pounds (about 62 million yuan) on the island of Cyprus in the Mediterranean Sea. However, because the wedding would affect the nesting of local sea turtles, it was protested by environmentalists and eventually forced to cancel and change to an indoor party.
It is reported that the original lavish wedding was approved by the local government. But environmentalists found out that on the beach in front of the wedding hotel, a tractor was flattening the sand and preparing to set the stage, so they quickly reported the situation to the relevant authorities. After the intervention of the local government, the couple's wedding was finally held in the Anassa Luxury Hotel in Lats City.
<h3>[Uk] Cambridge students' handwriting is unbearable The school considers answering questions on tablets</h3>
According to the British "Daily Telegraph" report, the University of Cambridge is considering whether to allow students to answer the paper on tablets or laptops in the future, because more and more students' handwritten answers are illegible, causing teachers headaches. As part of its digital education strategy, the University of Cambridge is seeking students' input on reforming the way it answers questions. But earlier this year, Cambridge began experimenting with computer-generated answers in the History and Classical Literature exams.
A Cambridge university spokesperson said the university was considering reforming the way it answered questions because students complained that they had barely written while studying. Buckingham University Vice-Chancellor Anthony Selden also believes that the use of computers to enter answers is an "inevitable" trend that will become widespread in universities within a few years. There are also opponents of answering questions on computers, fearing that doing so will reduce handwriting to something that can only be remembered when nostalgic, and that handwriting can deepen memory. At the same time, if universities open a precedent of computer typing and answering questions, primary and secondary schools may follow suit.
<h3>[USA] Men keep 10 sharks in their basements to frighten neighbors</h3>
According to CBS, the U.S. State Department's Environmental Protection Agency said investigators found 10 captive sharks in the basement of a house in La Grange, Dutches, late last month, including 7 live sharks, which are high-fin sharks, as well as the carcasses of 2 half-banded wrinkled-lip sharks and 1 hammerhead shark. Investigators say it is likely that the man who keeps the shark will sell the shark to a private collector when it matures.
The sharks ranged in length from 0.6 meters to 1.2 meters, and the seven surviving sharks have been sent to the Long Island Aquarium for observation and treatment, and the whole case is still under investigation. Local people were horrified by the discovery, "I can't believe this is happening here, it's just a small town with no sharks nearby and no ocean." Experts say the baby sharks can grow to about 2.74 meters long when mature and cannot be considered legal pets.
<h3>【Russia】 "The world's first long-legged lady" has a leg length of 132 cm</h3>
According to the British "Daily Mail" report, recently, Guinness World Records officially announced the list of newly added record creators in 2018, among which Ekaterina Licina, a former Russian professional basketball player with a height of 205 cm, won the title of "The World's First Long-legged Lady" with an impressive long leg of 132 cm. Like Ekaterina's long legs, her shoes are size 47 and are recognized as the largest woman in Russian foot.
According to reports, she has played for many teams in the Russian Super Basketball League, and also represented the Russian women's basketball team in the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games and won the bronze medal. At the age of 16, she did not hesitate to choose her talented basketball between basketball and modeling. It is reported that Ekatrina's father is 198 centimeters tall and her mother is 188 centimeters tall, so it is not surprising that she has such a height.