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Killers set for muddy Glastonbury Killers set for muddy Glastonbury
(about 1 hour later)
US band The Killers are preparing to headline Glastonbury Festival's second full day as festival-goers shrug off muddy conditions on the site.US band The Killers are preparing to headline Glastonbury Festival's second full day as festival-goers shrug off muddy conditions on the site.
Further showers have hit an already-muddy festival site at Worthy Farm near Pilton, Somerset.Further showers have hit an already-muddy festival site at Worthy Farm near Pilton, Somerset.
But the conditions have not deterred most of the 177,500 festival-goers, who can expect to see acts including The Kooks, Paul Weller and Babyshambles.But the conditions have not deterred most of the 177,500 festival-goers, who can expect to see acts including The Kooks, Paul Weller and Babyshambles.
Iggy and the Stooges, Editors and Paolo Nutini are also on the bill.Iggy and the Stooges, Editors and Paolo Nutini are also on the bill.
The weather has been less severe than 2005's festival, when flash floods hit the Somerset site. The weather has been less severe than at 2005's festival, when flash floods hit the Somerset site.
But several dozen tents were still waterlogged after showers. It's not as dry as I'd like it, but the bands and atmosphere have made up for it Festival-goer Henry Dalton But while festival-goers got occasional glimpses of the sun during Saturday, there appeared to be little prospect of the showery conditions going away.
GLASTONBURY SNAPSHOT 165,000 people on site1,268 seen by medics32 taken to hospital163 offences121 arrests28 tent thefts As at 0900 BST on Saturday Showers continued during Saturday, but forecasters said the sun may break through later in the day. Most were determined to enjoy themselves, though.
Outdoor retail chain Millets carried out an "emergency tent drop", taking 4,500 tents and 8,000 tent pegs to the festival site to help people whose own tents could not withstand the rain. Amy Steele, from Bristol, was there with husband Simon to celebrate her first wedding anniversary by going to the ballroom at the festival's anarchic Lost Vagueness area.
"Tonight's the big night for us, he's got a 1970s dinner jacket and I've got a beautiful 1950s ballgown to wear," she told BBC News.
Ms Steele added that the rain had prompted her to explore different areas of the festival - if only to escape the conditions.
"We've gone into tents because of the rain and seen a lot of things we wouldn't have seen otherwise," she said.
"It's been a bit of a shame because it has rained a lot during the day - even though there was massive rain in 2005, it was overnight."
Dirty Pretty Things were among the bands playing on SaturdayFirst-time festival-goer Henry Dalton, 22, of Bournemouth, said: "It's my first time here and it's not as dry as I'd like it, but the bands and atmosphere have made up for it. Bjork was fantastic and I'm really looking forward to The Who on Sunday."
Police said crime was on a par with 2005's festival, with 163 offences recorded by Saturday morning.Police said crime was on a par with 2005's festival, with 163 offences recorded by Saturday morning.
In addition, a 26-year-old man from the Midlands is in a critical condition in Yeovil District Hospital after being found unconscious in the early hours of Saturday morning after a suspected drugs overdose.In addition, a 26-year-old man from the Midlands is in a critical condition in Yeovil District Hospital after being found unconscious in the early hours of Saturday morning after a suspected drugs overdose.
Friday's bill was topped by the Arctic Monkeys, with the Sheffield band headlining the event's main Pyramid Stage.
Dirty Pretty Things were among the bands playing on SaturdayTheir triumphant set came just 18 months after the release of their debut album, Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not, and saw them perform tracks from both that and its follow-up Favourite Worst Nightmare.
"I heard rumours that we didn't have enough songs to headline Glastonbury," frontman Alex Turner joked during the set, which saw them joined by rapper Dizzee Rascal.
The event, held on Michael Eavis' Worthy Farm, near Pilton, since 1970, draws to a close on Sunday.The event, held on Michael Eavis' Worthy Farm, near Pilton, since 1970, draws to a close on Sunday.
The Who, Kaiser Chiefs and the Manic Street Preachers are among the other big names appearing on the Pyramid Stage during the weekend. Friday's bill was topped by the Arctic Monkeys, while The Who, Kaiser Chiefs and the Manic Street Preachers are among the other big names appearing on the Pyramid Stage during the weekend.