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Insulting Wimbledon tradition to be scrapped

<p>The All England Lawn Tennis Club will reportedly replace its Wimbledon honour boards ahead of the 2022 grand slam tournament.</p> <p>Titles before the names of its female champions will be withdrawn.</p> <p>Honorifics in front of female winners will be removed next month to “move with the times”, while the process of married women taking the initials and surnames of their husbands will also be updated.</p> <p>Since the tournament began in 1884, female champions had titles “Miss” and “Mrs” in front of their names, while the men didn’t. For example, former world No. 1 Ash Barty is currently immortalised as “Miss A Barty”, while 20-time grand slam champion Novak Djokovic reads “N Djokovic”.</p> <p>Meanwhile, the name of Australian tennis legend Evonne Goolagong Cawley, who won Wimbledon in 1980, is written “Mrs R Cawley” because her husband’s name is Roger.</p> <p>As sports reporter Paul Dennett wrote last year: “Surely Wimbledon must do away with such outdated and insulting styling".</p> <p>“It is time to rewrite the honours board. Remove all the anachronistic instances of ‘Miss’ and ‘Mrs’ and get rid of the initials of female players’ husbands. ‘Miss. R. Cawley’ should be ‘Evonne Goolagong-Cawley’ and ‘Miss. J.M. Lloyd’ should be ‘Chris Evert’.”</p> <p>In 2019, Wimbledon stopped using terms “Miss” and “Mrs” when announcing the names of players during matches, a move that “surprised” Djokovic.</p> <p>“I thought that tradition was very unique and very special; I thought it was nice,” the Serbian said at the time.</p> <p>“It’s definitely not easy to alter or change any traditions here that have been present for many years. It’s quite surprising that they’ve done that.”</p> <p>The move comes after Wimbledon, widely regarded as the world’s most prestigious tennis event, was stripped of ranking points by the sport’s main tours in response to the decision to ban Russian and Belarusian players from the tournament, following the invasion of Ukraine. This essentially reduced Wimbledon to the status of a high-profile exhibition event.</p> <p><em>Image: Getty</em></p>

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Alan Jones labels Prince Harry and Duchess Meghan doc "borderline insulting"

<p>Broadcaster Alan Jones has slammed the Duchess of Sussex after she and husband Prince Harry took part in a candid documentary they filmed during their trip to Africa.</p> <p>The documentary, which highlighted the couple’s charity work, alongside incredibly raw details about their struggles with the media and mental health, was ripped apart by Jones on 2GB this morning, calling it “self-indulgent rubbish” and close to “insulting”.</p> <p>The outspoken radio star said the Duke and Duchess filmed the documentary as they travelled “in Africa around the poorest of the poor” and accused Meghan of “carrying on”.</p> <p>The documentary, which aired over a week ago, included a one-on-one interview with Meghan, where she revealed that she was “not OK”. The emotional confession came amidst the scrutiny she was receiving from the British tabloid press, which dug into her relationship with her father and speculations over conflict within the palace walls.</p> <p>Prince Harry also addressed his rumoured rift with brother Prince William.</p> <p>But while many praised the couple for doing something the royals have never done, Jones was less than impressed, saying their behaviour was tone deaf.</p> <p>“In the documentary, we’re told Meghan gives a rare glimpse of her new life and struggles as a royal and a new mother,” he said.</p> <p>“It borders on the insulting. Imagine spending time in Africa where you’re around the poorest of the poor – people who have no possessions – and you’re carrying on about how tough life is.</p> <p>“Have these two people got no awareness at all?</p> <p>“Has she ever wondered whether the poor people in Africa are OK? I’ve seen them, these poor kids with flies on their face and emaciated, with nothing, and the 38-year-old is complaining that people haven’t asked if she was OK.</p> <p>“She said she’s struggles with duties – what duties? She’s having six weeks off before Christmas for a holiday to LA!”</p> <p>Jones’ comments come after a difficult year for the royal couple, who recently launched a number of lawsuits against the media.</p>

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Final insult after gastro cruise

<p>A cruise passenger has spoken out about the final insult that made her join a class action against a cruise ship that she got gastro on.</p> <p>Lorraine Thomas is just one of the 16,000 passengers who were impacted by consecutive norovirus outbreaks on eight Sun Princess trips from December 2016 to February 2017, and who may be eligible for compensation according to Shine Lawyers.</p> <p>Lorraine, from Queensland, had saved $2,200 for a 14-day cruise to New Zealand with a friend but spent most of her holiday in quarantine in her cabin.</p> <p>The cruise started well but halfway into the trip, the two friends began to experience the symptoms of the norovirus.</p> <p>When the vomiting began, Lorraine was diagnosed over the phone by the ship’s doctor and told to remain in her cabin with the promise someone would come to check on her. After 11 hours of waiting, someone finally arrived.</p> <p>“To be quite honest, it was horrendous,” Mrs Thomas told <a href="http://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-updates/incidents/law-firm-preparing-class-action-after-gastro-outbreaks-on-sun-princess-cruises/news-story/45731f62f733c4c99a58183c2a6a4342" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>news.com.au</strong></span></a>.</p> <p>“It was a small cabin and — I can’t put this any more politely — there was only the ice bucket to be sick in. The basin was blocked, and we had problems with the loo anyway and it kept overflowing.</p> <p>“I kept ringing down to ask if someone could come up ... They kept saying they were busy and would get to us as soon as they could.”</p> <p>Eventually cleaners arrived in Hazmat suits arrived to “deep clean” her cabin, but Lorraine said their job was far from a thorough clean.</p> <p>“They sprayed the back of the bathroom door and the other side of the bathroom door and that was it,” she said.</p> <p>“They did not change my bed linen, they did not change the towels. There was no proper deep clean. I was still vomiting and laying on the bed.</p> <p>“Because of the length of time I was left feeling so ill, I did think that was wrong.”</p> <p>Lorraine is one of an estimated 140 people who got norovirus on the New Zealand cruise in February 2017.</p> <p>“It was just a nightmare,” she said. “There were parts of the ship that smelled of sewerage so bad, it was awful.”</p> <p>While Lorraine said staff did take some measures to stop the spread of the virus, such as wiping down surfaces and suspending self-service of food, she believes the virus was already on the ship when they boarded.</p> <p>The Sun Princess had already been struck by a norovirus outbreak on a voyage to Papua New Guinea.</p> <p>When Lorraine was back on land, her nightmare continued as she struggled to get a response from the cruise line.</p> <p>After repeatedly trying to contact Princess Cruises to report her experience, Lorraine finally received a $250 goodwill voucher months later to spend on a future cruise.</p> <p>“I said, you have to be joking — after half a holiday that we couldn’t enjoy, to sail with them again?” she said.</p> <p>“I won’t risk going back on another Princess cruise.”</p> <p>Lorraine was then told that she could only use the credit with Princess Cruises even though she was planning another trip with P&amp;O, which is also owned by Carnival.</p> <p>Lorraine was shocked by this treatment and finally joined the class action against the company.</p> <p>“I didn’t want to in the beginning because I thought I needed to give them the chance to come to the party and acknowledge that there were mistakes, there were problems,” she said.</p> <p>“And then when they gave the gesture of goodwill and didn’t honour it, I thought, 'Well, no. You really, really don’t care about your customers.'</p> <p>“If they really, genuinely, wanted to, they could have honoured the $250 against the P&amp;O cruise and they chose not to.</p> <p>“I know I’m only one voice, and only one person who won’t affect them in the least, but it’s wrong they continue to do this. It’s not something you’d want to go through.”</p> <p>Shine Lawyers said more than 16,000 Australian passengers could be eligible for compensation for being impacted by the consecutive norovirus outbreaks.</p> <p>Shine’s transport law manager Thomas Janson said compensation could be the equivalent of a full refund, plus damages for failure of a duty of care by Carnival.</p> <p>A spokesman for Carnival Australia said in a statement to news.com.au, “Princess Cruises leaves nothing to chance in maintaining a healthy on-board environment with policies and procedures that are in line with the highest international public health standards.</p> <p>“The incidence of gastrointestinal illness is much higher in the general community than on a cruise ship. Even in the comparatively rare case of gastrointestinal illness on board, the risk of actually becoming ill is one in 5,500 as a result of the focus on the wellbeing of guests as a priority.”</p> <p>Have you ever experienced a nightmare cruise? If so, tell us about your experience in the comments below. </p>

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