Qetu Japan court rules mandatory sterilisation of people officially changing gender unconstitutional Captain Sir Tom Moore made it his missi stanley cup usa on to raise money for the NHS by doing 100 laps of his garden before his 100th birthday.Now, one year and nearly 拢39m later, his family are asking people to follow in his footsteps and come up with their own challenge based around the number 100 that they can complete over what would have been his 101st birthday weekend. This is to ensure that that message of hope is his lasting legacy, said his daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore. He gave us hope, so wev stanley taza e got to keep hope going. He said to us: This is yours. I started it, now do it your way. Moores laps gained the attention of a nation as it entered the first Covid lockdown. He planned to raise 拢1,000, a figure he had met several times over by the time he was featured on BBC Breakfast shortly after he started. Including Gift Aid, that figure now stands at 拢38.9m.He died in February aged 100 and, on Tuesday, Ingram- stanley cup Moore said: My father was insisting right until the very end. He was insisting he was going to come back out and keep walking and raise money. So how can we not do it He gave us hope as a nation. He represented us around the world as a beacon of hope. Hes passed the mantle on to us. She is encouraging people to run 100 metres, score 100 goals or bake 100 cakes 鈥?whatever they choose. The latter, she said, would have been one of her fathers favourites because he loved Victoria sponge.She suggested people could build 100 sandcastles, write a 100-word poem or tell 100 people: Tomor Lpgs Killed here plaques unveiled in campaign for tougher sentences for domestic homicides Sir Thomas Legg spent his civil service stanley cup career in backroom offices only stanley flasche to emerge into the glaring media spotlight heading one of Westminsters most politically contentious public inquiries 鈥?the 2009 investigation into MPs expenses.The doorstepping and requests for interviews 鈥?both consistently rebuffed 鈥?were unwelcome but he was well-equipped to examine the misuse of public funds and not surprised by what he viewed as a decline in public standards.Legg, who has died aged 88 of kidney failure, had been permanent secretary in the Lord Chancellors Department, which administered the courts in England stanley quencher and Wales, and a member of both the Audit Commission and the House of Commons audit committee.Leggs review had to assess 147,000 separate expense claims submitted by 752 serving and former MPs over a five-year period, deciding whether each was improper or not 鈥?including the notorious 拢1,645 paid out to the Tory MP Sir Peter Viggers for an ornamental duck island.The challenge for Legg was establishing uniform criteria that would be accepted and on which he could base value judgments about individual claims. An additional problem was the relationship between Commons fees officials and MPs, which he found involved vague rules and decisions often lacking legitimacy.His report recommended MPs return a total of 拢1.3m. Appeals against repayments, made to a former judge, Sir Paul Kennedy, who had been appointed by parliament, further reduced the total and prompted accusations from some