William and his awesome friend Jason bring their bicycles on the attic, shrink themselves, and go on an adventure. They meet Sir Simon as they is getting ready to leave for any tournament, and so they remain at his castle. They spend time with a boy along with a girl with the castle and together. The girl tells them associated with an omen her grandmother, Calendar, kept repeating before she died. Sir Simon sent Calendar away towards the convent while he thought she was crazy and that he doesn't believe the omen. Few accept is as true but Calendar's granddaughter does. Jason and William believe it too. Shampoo, lotion, toner, face cream and fluoride toothpaste - just a few of the many products which we use daily, and which may have been tested on animals. Thousands of services flood the cosmetics aisle every year. For most of these products, animal testing was used at some point in its research and development. Though animal testing in research and drug development still remains common practice, even scientists now agree that alternatives to animal testing can and may help the non-public care and cosmetics industry. Wondering the other ways exist to test products as opposed to animal testing? Alternative methods have been cheaper, safer and supply faster results. The British Glass entry features its three-year programme to facilitate collaboration between glass manufacturers and government to create a decarbonisation action plan – setting out the sectors’ priorities for energy efficiency and decarbonisation in areas such as research and development, technology implementation, energy infrastructure, recycling, skills and funding. In April of this year all ten of the UK’s large-scale glass manufacturers signed up to the voluntary action plan.