sports and games Madhya Pradesh Accident: नरसिंहपुर में ट्रक पलटने से 5 मजदूरों की मौत, 11 घायल By hindi.oneindia.com Published On :: Sun, 10 May 2020 07:31:56 +0530 नरसिंहपुर। एक दुखद खबर मध्य प्रदेश से है, यहां के नरसिंहपुर जिले की सीमा पर एक बड़े सड़क हादसे में पांच मजदूरों की मौत हो गई है और 11 मजदूर घायल हो गए हैं, प्राप्त जानकारी के मुताबिक शनिवार देर रात Full Article
sports and games अमेरिका में कोरोना का कहर, 24 घंटे में 1568 लोगों की मौत By hindi.oneindia.com Published On :: Sun, 10 May 2020 08:22:12 +0530 नई दिल्ली। अमेरिका में पिछले 24 घंटे में कोरोना वायरस के संक्रमण की वजह से 1568 लोगों की मौत हो गई है, जॉन्स हॉपकिन्स यूनिवर्सिटी की रिपोर्ट के मुताबिक पिछले 24 घंटों में अमेरिका में कोरोना से मरने वाले लोगों की Full Article
sports and games मुंबई के कांदिवली में घर की दीवार गिरने से पांच लोग दबे, बचाव अभियान जारी By hindi.oneindia.com Published On :: Sun, 10 May 2020 08:58:39 +0530 मुंबई। महाराष्ट्र के मुंबई में कांदिवली (पश्चिम) इलाके में एक घर की दीवार गिर गई है, बताया जा रहा है लगभग चार से पांच लोग दीवार के नीचे दब गए, राष्ट्रीय आपदा प्रतिक्रिया बल (एनडीआरएफ) ने बताया कि अब तीन लोगों Full Article
sports and games Happy Mothers Day: कंगना ने लिए कविता, कहा-'मां के कोख जैसा प्यार और गर्मजोशी मुझे कहीं नहीं मिला' By hindi.oneindia.com Published On :: Sun, 10 May 2020 13:17:05 +0530 नई दिल्ली। आज है मदर्स डे, पूरी दुनिया में लोग अपनी तरह से इस दिन को सेलिब्रेट कर रही है, बॉलीवुड क्ववीन कंगना रनौत ने भी अपनी मां के लिए एक सुंदर सी कविता लिखी है और उसे इंस्ट्रागाम पर वीडियो Full Article
sports and games It's a gas gas gas: remnants of our industrial past – in pictures By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T16:00:00Z Over the past five years, Brighton-based photographer Richard Chivers has been shooting gas holders from London to Sunderland.for his project OFF-Grid, after learning that National Grid planned to demolish the structures. “They hold a certain nostalgia to our industrial heritage,” he says. Continue reading... Full Article Photography Art and design Gas Architecture Graphic design Culture
sports and games The big picture: America's wild young women By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T06:00:17Z The myth of the American west meets the energy of riot grrrl in Justine Kurland’s photographs of free-spirited teenage girlsIn 1997, Justine Kurland, then a fine arts student at Yale University, went in search of teenage girls to photograph. At a time of increasing conformity and commercialised ideas of beauty, the girls she had in mind were free-spirited and wild-haired; making dens and hanging out in woods, messing about in rivers, smoking in parking lots, lost in languid afternoons, careless not only of the male gaze but any onlookers at all.Kurland started out on her quest in New Haven’s semi-industrial hinterland before travelling further afield over the next five years on a mazy road trip; if the girls were on the margins, then she would be too. She loosely choreographed the groups of teenagers that she found, but mostly invited the girls into a promising setting and let them do their thing. She took this photograph of four girls in an abandoned car in the millennium year, and called it Shipwrecked. The girls she chose invariably understood the idea of the pictures. “I can always spot people,” she has said. “It’s, like, really one of my superpowers. I can always tell which teenage girls would love living in the woods with their friends.” Continue reading... Full Article Photography Art and design Culture Art and design books Books
sports and games Isolating but not isolated – a photo essay of lives in lockdown By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T20:00:05Z When Rhys Graham first picked up his camera in lockdown, he assumed he would take a few portraits of friends. Now, weeks in, it has turned into a sprawling project documenting Australia’s new domesticityIn these strange, suspended times, a camera and lens can be an emotional bridge from one person to the next.As a film-maker you become reliant on the manic energy of shooting and the warmth of your community – crews, actors, colleagues or subjects – to keep you buoyant. Continue reading... Full Article Photography Art and design Coronavirus outbreak Culture World news Infectious diseases Science Australia news
sports and games Fear, judgment, hysteria: six survivors talk about life after coronavirus By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T20:00:06Z After facing the existential threat of testing positive for Covid-19, these Australians describe the reactions of their communitiesSign up for Guardian Australia’s daily coronavirus emailDownload the free Guardian app to get the most important news notificationsCoronavirus Australia maps and cases: live numbers and statisticsWhen they emerged from isolation, one felt like an escapee, another saw friends turn on their heels and some questioned if they had really recovered. Though their symptoms varied, all the accounts from these people who have recovered from coronavirus echo the same sentiment: recovery came at a price. Weeks after getting better, strangers and loved ones still scrabble to create distance, afraid of contagion.At the time of writing, 5,984 Australians had recovered from the 6,875 confirmed cases. While the emerging consensus is that recovery induces, at least, short-term immunity, the World Health Organization urges caution, and researchers and health authorities are racing to determine how long this defence lasts. Continue reading... Full Article Coronavirus outbreak Australia news Sydney Health Infectious diseases
sports and games 'You are still a soldier to me': The forgotten African hero of Britain's colonial army By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T06:15:17Z Jaston Khosa was one of 600,000 men from African countries who fought for Britain. He was quietly buried on VE Day after a life of abject povertyIn a crowded, Zambian slum on VE Day, a family gathered to bury one of the last veterans of Britain’s colonial army. Jaston Khosa of the Northern Rhodesia Regiment was laid to rest on the day the world commemorated the end of the war in which he fought.The 95-year-old great-grandfather was among 600,000 Africans who fought for the British during World War Two, on battlefields across their own continent as well as Asia and the Middle East. Although their service has largely been forgotten, the mobilisation of this huge army from Britain’s colonies triggered the largest single movement of African men overseas since the slave trade. Continue reading... Full Article Global development VE Day Zambia Africa World news Second world war
sports and games A century on, whatever happened to Labour's firebrand lost leader? By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T07:38:19Z Victor Grayson was briefly the most famous socialist in Edwardian England. But in 1920 he disappeared. His fate remains one of the most compelling mysteries in British political history“Oh mad, foolish Grayson!”Editorial in the socialist magazine The Clarion, August 1907In the aftermath of the general election of February 1974, the mood in Marsden socialist club in west Yorkshire was grim. David Clark, the young Labour MP for Colne Valley, in which the former mill town of Marsden sits, had lost his seat. Clark gamely attempted to lift his activists’ spirits with a rousing speech. But one elderly stalwart remained unmoved: “Old Harry was sitting at the bar nursing a pint,” recalls Clark, who is now 80 and a Labour peer. “He said: ‘All due respect to master Dave, but we’ve only ever had one true socialist MP around here. And that was Victor Grayson.’” Continue reading... Full Article Labour Politics Labour party leadership Socialism Focus
sports and games Darkly daring: dramatically gothic lips By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T05:30:16Z Try a dark matt lipstick, but don’t be scaryUnless you are into goth, you wouldn’t look to The Addams Family for beauty inspiration. However, there’s a modern way to go there without alarming anyone on Zoom, and the fresh take at the Max Mara SS20 show makes the case. If you find the requisite black lips intimidating, replace with a less macabre deep burgundy or aubergine. Swap matt alabaster skin for something a little less lifeless – a decent tinted moisturiser will warm things up. Finish with a pastel wash of colour across the eyes. Immediately, everything looks less intense. Morticia would be mortified.1. Jimmy Choo Seduction Lipstick in Purple Night £50, harrods.com2. Huda Beauty Pastel Obsessions £27, selfridges.com3. Laura Mercier Caviar Mascara £22, spacenk.com4. Smashbox Always On Liquid Lips in Disorderly £19, smashbox.co.uk5. Glossier Skywash Eyeshadow £15, glossier.com Continue reading... Full Article Beauty Life and style Fashion Makeup
sports and games Wine buying ideas from online specialists | David Williams By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T05:00:17Z Sales from online dealers has shot up during the lockdown. Here’s your chance to find some great deals and also to try some new bottles and grapesShaw and Smith Sauvignon Blanc, Adelaide Hills, Australia 2019 (£14.95, slurp.co.uk) With most of us living out most of our lives in the virtual world at the moment, it’s not surprising that a lot of wine buying has migrated online, too. Depending on which statistical data gatherer you believe, sales of alcohol online were up by as much as 50% in the first weeks of the crisis v “normal” times. A lot of those sales went through the virtual tills of the supermarkets, of course. But the online wine specialists have been benefiting, too. If you’re looking to dip a toe into online wine buying for the first time, many retailers are offering discounted mixed cases to get you started. Slurp.co.uk, for example, has a 10-bottle “Indulge in Isolation” case, which at £120 works out as a £50 discount. There are some nice wines in there, although, personally, I’d rather go à la carte on slurp’s extensive list, filling a case with bottles such as Shaw and Smith’s superbly zingy, pristine sauvignon.De Martino Viejas Tinajas Cinsault, Itata, Chile 2018 (£14.95, virginwines.co.uk) One mixed case that I do like the look of is Virgin Wine’s selection of contemporary German bottles, which, includes pinot blanc and pinot noir as well as a scintillating example of the country’s most famous grape variety, Gunderloch Fritz’s Riesling, Rheinhessen 2017 (a bottle of which is £14.99 on its own; The Best of Modern Germany case of 12 bottles is £140). You could also include any of those Germans in a mixed case with a wine such as the gorgeously light, rosehippy-red fruited, clay amphora-made Viejas Tinajas from Chile. Meanwhile, the UK’s oldest wine retailer, and one of the first to make a success of online, Berry Bros & Rudd, has a tempting 12 for £200 mix and match offer of 30 smart bottles, which is pretty good value for wines from the likes of De Martino, the Loire’s Vincent Carême, Beaujolais’ Julien Sunier and the Douro’s Quinta de la Rosa. Continue reading... Full Article Wine Food Life and style
sports and games Outside chance: hardening off the easy way By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T07:15:18Z A loving touch will get seedlings ready to plantAs spring turns to summer, gardeners everywhere will be itching to plant the seedlings and cuttings they’ve been raising indoors out in the garden. However, particularly for newbies, the effects of this transition from the cosseted conditions of a warm windowsill to the great outdoors can be a significant hurdle.The reason why this switch is tricky is that plants have the amazing ability to adapt their anatomy to shield themselves from environmental threats, however they are only triggered to do so when stimulated by the threat itself. Indoors, plants enjoy stable temperatures, limited air movement and much lower light levels (as window glass filters out UVB rays). This means they tend to direct most of their energies into growing, instead of investing in these defences. Continue reading... Full Article Gardening advice Life and style Gardens Vegetables Food
sports and games The seedling race gets under way By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T05:15:16Z And they’re off! The baby peas and beans are out on their own. But will they survive?Sleep restless, anxiety dreams, and if there wasn’t enough to be concerned about I am worrying about our baby beans and peas.It is often like this in spring. The responsibility, it comes with the shorter nights and longer light, maybe I have more time on my hands. I have saved two hours a day on travelling and I only work a few miles’ walk from home. This extra time has now become a trip to the plot, or perhaps pottering on the terrace. A more intimate gardening relationship cemented in the spring mornings. Deepened, more dependent. Continue reading... Full Article Gardening advice Life and style Gardens
sports and games ‘The solitude of quarantine enthrals me as much as wilderness’ By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T22:03:55Z Author Dan Richards, who has travelled to the ‘ends of the earth’, says he is now applying similar coping skills to being alone and indoors for weeksYou join me overlooking an empty Edinburgh crossroads, an indoorsman considering my new neck of the woods. Near-empty buses roll down Dundas Street and shush across the junction in the haar (fog). In this brave moot world – a month of Christmas mornings so far – I watch lone joggers and mothers with children, and wave at good dogs. I write to my friends. I check in by phone. “Yes,” I say, several times a week, “Edinburgh’s very nice. Quiet.”Two years ago, I spent several months travelling for a book, seeking out solitude and remote locations – strange to think now. I visited wild places on the edge – frozen Soviet ghost towns, Mars missions in the Utah desert, shrines perched high on Japanese mountains – as well as spartan structures whose wildness emanated from within, such as Simon Starling’s metamorphic installation Shedboatshed, the writing “Wendy houses” of Roald Dahl and Tove Jansson, and Roger Deakin’s Suffolk shepherd’s hut. Continue reading... Full Article Adventure travel Europe holidays Iceland holidays Travel Coronavirus outbreak
sports and games How to save in lockdown … from buying chairs and laptops to car insurance By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T07:00:18Z We may be spending less by not travelling to work, but with an uncertain future it’s time to take stock of personal financesWith gyms shut, taps turned off in pubs and the prospect of a holiday a distant dream, many people are finding their outgoings have dropped since lockdown. But the shadow of a looming recession and concern about whether jobs will even exist when offices reopen, means many are looking at their finances even more closely.So what are the best ways to improve them amid extraordinary times and an uncertain future? Continue reading... Full Article Money Consumer affairs Consumer rights Coronavirus outbreak Energy bills Mortgages Insurance Household bills UK news
sports and games TV tonight: on the journey to rap superstardom with Dave By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T05:20:16Z Dave Burd brings a lightly fictionalised tale of his comedy rap career in a new sitcom. Plus: The Fantastical Factory of Curious Craft. Here’s what to watch this evening Continue reading... Full Article Television & radio Culture
sports and games Little Richard: an ultra-sexual force of anti-nature By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T16:40:42Z He gave McCartney tips on how to scream in tune and paved the way for everyone from Otis Redding to Prince. Richard Penniman showed the world how rock’n’roll could be a manifesto for personal liberationLittle Richard’s Rip It Up entered the UK top 30, right at the bottom, in December 1956. It looked up at a chart that included Bill Haley and Elvis Presley, but was mostly filled with light opera gloop such as Malcolm Vaughan’s St Therese of the Roses, three different versions of the cod-calypso of Cindy, Oh Cindy, and toddler-friendly novelties including Dickie Valentine’s Christmas Island and Mitchell Torok’s When Mexico Gave Up the Rhumba, while the spirit of the blitz lived on with Vera Lynn’s A House With Love in It. Play any of these records either side of Rip It Up and the effects are guaranteed goosebumps, an involuntary laugh and real surprise. With the sheer volume of Richard’s raw-throated scream – ebullient, gleeful, quite filthy – the shock of the new can still be felt. Rip It Up – that title alone!Think of Bowie. Think of Prince. Little Richard was doing the same thing – with greater extravagance – decades earlier Continue reading... Full Article Little Richard Pop and rock Music Culture
sports and games This week's best culture, at home – from Barber Shop banter to Queen Victoria By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T07:30:19Z The Observer’s critics recommend the best new arts shows to enjoy on TV, on the radio and onlineBarber Shop ChroniclesA never-before-broadcast recording of Inua Ellams’s 2017 hit play splicing stories and banter with barbs and laughter. Available to stream for seven days from 7pm Thursday on the National Theatre’s YouTube channel. Clare Brennan Continue reading... Full Article Culture Film Classical music Pop and rock Comedy Dance Art Exhibitions Photography Theatre Art and design Music Stage
sports and games Not now, Bernard ... I'm on my iPhone: classic children's text reissued for digital era By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T06:28:17Z Author David McKee reveals why, 40 years on, his cautionary tale of the perils of ignoring children is still relevantFor the past 40 years it has been a warning to parents about the monstrous consequences of ignoring their children. Now new illustrations of the classic picture book Not Now, Bernard have been created to better reflect the daily life of families in the age of smartphones and tablets. Continue reading... Full Article Children and teenagers Fiction Society Books Culture
sports and games Never Rarely Sometimes Always review - profoundly moving abortion drama By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T07:00:19Z Eliza Hittman’s coming-of-age story about a US teenager seeking a termination is heartbreaking and painfully authenticFrom Eliza Hittman, the remarkable writer-director of It Felt Like Love and Beach Rats, comes another drama that manages to blend the gritty authenticity of a documentary with the poetic sensibility of pure cinema. In her impressively measured and beautifully understated third feature, Hittman tells an oft-hidden story of reproductive rights – an age-old issue that has urgent contemporary relevance. Yet Never Rarely Sometimes Always never feels polemical. On the contrary, it is perhaps best described as a perfectly observed portrait of female friendship; a coming-of-age story with road-movie inflections, piercingly honest and deeply affecting.Feature first-timer (and accomplished musician) Sidney Flanigan is superb as Autumn, a 17-year-old from Pennsylvania who discovers that she cannot get an abortion in her home town without parental consent. Quietly desperate, Autumn reluctantly confides in her more outgoing cousin Skylar (rising star Talia Ryder, soon to be seen in Spielberg’s West Side Story), who agrees to accompany her across state lines to New York. The pair imagine that the trip will be brief but find themselves spending days and nights on the streets, waiting for the procedure that Autumn was denied in Pennsylvania. Continue reading... Full Article Drama films Film Culture Abortion
sports and games Himesh Patel: ‘It felt odd making a show about a pandemic’ By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T07:00:19Z The former EastEnders actor talks about shooting a pilot on a deadly virus, telling British stories with a difference – and how playing a bit part as a pigeon changed his careerThe so-called “curse of EastEnders” – the struggle for soap actors to transition into more prestigious dramatic roles after leaving the show – always weighed heavily on the mind of Himesh Patel.So when he decided to leave the soap in 2016, after nine years playing Tamwar Masood, he knew whichever role he chose next would be critical in breaking typecast, perhaps even defining the rest of his career. He went to a friend whose theatre company, withWings, took inventive musical adaptations to the Edinburgh fringe. That year they were doing Le Bossu, a retelling of The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Patel mentioned that he wanted to get out of his comfort zone and do some theatre. “He came back to me and said, ‘Cool, well, I can offer you the role of a pigeon.’” Continue reading... Full Article Film EastEnders Television Culture Drama Soap opera Television & radio
sports and games Australian government tells ICC it should not investigate alleged war crimes in Palestine By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T20:00:06Z Prosecutor rejects Australia’s argument International Criminal Court has no jurisdiction because Palestine is ‘not a state’The Australian government has told the International Criminal Court it should not investigate alleged war crimes in Palestine because Palestine is “not a state”, arguing the court prosecutor’s investigation into alleged attacks on civilians, torture, attacks on hospitals, and the use of human shields, should be halted on jurisdictional grounds.Australia was lobbied to make the submission to the court by Israel, which is not a party to the court. But the office of the prosecutor has rejected Australia’s argument, saying it had not formally challenged Palestine’s right to be a party to the court before. Continue reading... Full Article Australian foreign policy Israel Palestinian territories International criminal court Australia news Middle East and North Africa International criminal justice
sports and games Can Iraq's new PM, and the region, escape Suleimani's long shadow? By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T16:05:00Z Rise of spy chief to premier comes as Iran struggles to maintain momentum months after killing of powerful generalIn late February, six weeks after the Iranian general Qassem Suleimani was killed by a US drone, a candidate for Iraq’s vacant premiership was nervously preparing for an interview that would secure him the role.Mustafa al-Kadhimi’s rise from intelligence chief to the seat of national power had been unorthodox, as was the journey he had just made – from Baghdad, where high-stakes appointments like his had mostly been made over the past decade. Continue reading... Full Article Iran Iraq Lebanon Hezbollah World news Middle East and North Africa
sports and games Back to work: 'capacity of transport network will be down by 90%' By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T17:47:12Z Transport secretary announces £2bn package to get UK walking and cycling insteadCoronavirus – latest updatesSee all our coronavirus coverageThe enormity of the challenge of getting the UK back to work was laid bare on Saturday, as the government acknowledged that the capacity of Britain’s transport network will be reduced by 90%.The transport minister, Grant Shapps, said at the daily Downing Street press briefing that even if a full public transport service is restored, the government’s two-metre physical distancing rule will mean 10% of the usual number of passengers will be able to travel. Continue reading... Full Article Coronavirus outbreak Grant Shapps Politics UK news Transport TfL Cycling
sports and games Foxtons becomes a self-preservation society as house sales drop off a cliff By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T23:04:50Z At the go-getting estate agency’s AGM this week, all minds will be focused on getting out of a tricky situationWhen a Foxtons employee looks in the mirror, the estate agent can discern a reflection that others cannot.To them, the figure smiling back is a dashingly attired young tycoon – confident that their sharp wits are about to land them another tasty commission. But many of those attempting to buy a home in London might interpret that same image as – how shall we put this? – slightly less heroic. Continue reading... Full Article Foxtons Business Property Money Coronavirus outbreak Infectious diseases World news London UK news
sports and games Plan to ease England lockdown 'likely to be in line with Wales' By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T10:50:51Z Modest changes expected to include relaxing exercise rules and reopening garden centresCoronavirus – latest updatesSee all our coronavirus coverageBoris Johnson’s plans to ease the UK lockdown are likely to be in line with Wales, which would result in only modest changes such as the reopening of garden centres and libraries, and a relaxation of exercise rules, the Welsh first minister, Mark Drakeford, said on Saturday.Drakeford said the prime minister’s announcement for England would be in line with the very smallest easing granted in Wales. Continue reading... Full Article Coronavirus outbreak Politics Wales Retail industry Business UK news Boris Johnson
sports and games Close your eyes and imagine seeing the art world's treasures as if for the first time | Laura Cumming By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T18:00:03Z The museums of Europe have begun reopening their doors to art lovers desperate to see old favourites and new worksI am cursing my bad luck not to be stuck in lockdown in the Prado. A friend wishes she had stowed away in a closet before they bolted the doors of the National Gallery. Others would give anything for a week in the Rijksmuseum, a day in the Uffizi, an hour with Rembrandt or Vermeer, even just a few minutes with a Samuel Palmer moonscape in the Ashmolean or a Turner sunrise at Tate Britain. Museums are places of the heart.We see art in time and place; we cannot see it otherwise. Of course there are other whereabouts of the works we most long to set eyes on again, during this evil pandemic: the cave paintings at Chaumet in France, Fra Angelico’s Annunciation in a Florentine monastery, Robert Smithson’s Spiral Jetty coiled in the glistening waters of the Great Salt Lake in Utah. These were all chosen in an unofficial and entirely self-selecting Twitter survey (mine), along with Leonardo’s The Last Supper and James Turrell’s Deer Shelter Skyspace, framing the blue heavens above Yorkshire Sculpture Park. Continue reading... Full Article Museums Coronavirus outbreak Culture Art UK news Art and design Europe Germany World news
sports and games The right cannot resist a culture war against the 'liberal elite', even now | Nick Cohen By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T17:30:02Z The highest rates of Covid-19 casualties are in countries run by know-nothing populists Coronavirus – latest global updatesSee all our coronavirus coverageAll of a sudden, and after years of bluffing, conservatives are warning of the dangers of jumping to hasty conclusions. Before I go any further, I must therefore say our newly scrupulous masters have a point. The league tables of national Covid-19 death figures are not the last word on the crisis, and may look different in a few weeks. That’s that done, then. Everybody happy? Good. Let’s get on with it.In the world as it is, rather than as it may be, a shameful fact is undeniable. The highest Covid-19 casualties are in the US and the UK, where the mendacities of the populist right have deformed society. It turns out that being governed by Anglo-Saxon conservatives is a threat to the health of nations. Their rule kills the old and blights the futures of the young. To understand their ineptitude, think of how conservatism turned into a know-nothing culture in the past decade, and ask what Donald Trump and Boris Johnson would be doing in an alternative universe where they never came close to power. Continue reading... Full Article Coronavirus outbreak Boris Johnson Donald Trump UK news Trump administration US news US politics World news Society Conservatives Republicans Politics
sports and games Soaring government debt is now inevitable. It’s nothing to fear By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T16:00:00Z Thatcher’s simplistic aversion to borrowing still haunts fiscal policy, but interest rates have been falling for many yearsIt is clear Boris Johnson has favoured his health advisers as he looks to ease the lockdown. Worries about a second coronavirus outbreak have clinched victory over concerns about keeping much of industry and commerce in a state of suspended animation.After weeks of pleading by the Treasury to get the nation back to work, No 10 has opted to play it safe with people’s health, and particularly older people. And no wonder, after a hapless first few months in which the UK leapt to fourth place in probably the most ignominious league table in modern history – that of Covid-19 deaths per 100,000 population – behind Belgium, Spain and Italy. Continue reading... Full Article Government borrowing Bonds Economics Coronavirus outbreak Business
sports and games How did we end up turning our care homes into jails of enforced loneliness? By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T07:30:19Z The rights of the most vulnerable, including those with dementia, should not be violatedCoronavirus - latest updatesCoronavirus - see all our coverageLast week, driving to the shops, I passed a care home and saw a figure standing at an upstairs window: an old woman looking out at a world she could not enter. She looked like a prisoner. And in a way, that’s probably what she was.Let’s talk about old people. Let’s talk about people in care homes, about people living with dementia and dying with dementia, out of sight and out of mind, and what the lockdown means for them. Let’s talk about what we are not talking about enough, not thinking about enough, not caring about enough. Continue reading... Full Article Dementia Coronavirus outbreak Social care NHS Care workers Hospitals Health Mental health UK news Society World news Older people
sports and games The VE Day speeches that moved beyond words | Vanessa Thorpe By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T06:30:17Z Sincerity is an increasingly rare commodity among our leaders, but sombre addresses by the Queen and Germany’s president had it in spadesPublic suspicion is often aroused by the neat use of rhetoric, or by hearing a clever trick of speech. It is understandable that a stylish phrase or a persuasive analogy from the mouth of an authority figure should be met with caution.Many are now also wary of the comparisons with the Second World War that are lobbed at the population each week by politicians, for the globe is not waging a military campaign or fighting a battle, there is no violent human enemy to defeat. Instead, we are all engaged in a unique and sustained mass experiment in protection and survival. Continue reading... Full Article VE Day UK news The Queen Germany Second world war Europe Monarchy World news Language
sports and games Working with women makes the world a better place | Torsten Bell By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T05:30:16Z Research finds that both male and female judges are more likely to employ female clerks if they have worked with womenDiscrimination over jobs is bad. Bad for those discriminated against, and bad for society, as talent is wasted and divisions sown. Women reaching senior leadership positions in organisations is generally a sign of success for gender equality – but it can also lead to increased equality elsewhere. That is the important finding from new research on the (not famously diverse) world of judges. The study looks at the hiring of law clerks by senior judges in the US. Continue reading... Full Article Women Law US news Women in the boardroom Gender Business Life and style World news Inequality
sports and games Formiga forever: Brazil's stalwart still shining for women's football at 42 By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T18:00:02Z Marta was right when saying Formiga will retire eventually but PSG’s record-breaking midfielder is preparing for a seventh Olympic Games next summerWhen England stepped out at Meadow Lane in October 2018, having qualified unbeaten for the Women’s World Cup, all eyes were on one opponent: Brazil’s six-times Ballon d’Or winner, Marta. Necks prepared to strain for a glimpse of the ageing giant of women’s football. It may have been a friendly but at 34 the Brazilian’s career clock was ticking. For most, it would be the only time to see her in the flesh.When Marta limped off after 22 minutes the disappointment of the crowd was palpable. The Brazil performance matched Marta’s lacklustre mood but in the then 40-year-old Formiga they had a player who would not subscribe to her teammates’ indifference – with the young winger Ludmila the exception alongside her. Continue reading... Full Article Brazil women's football team Women's football Football Sport
sports and games Itoje and Mako Vunipola will stay at Saracens, believes England coach Mitchell By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T21:00:06Z Sarries players urged to focus on international future‘I’m quite confident that they will make good decisions’Maro Itoje and Mako Vunipola have been urged to make “good decisions” for their international careers by the England defence coach, John Mitchell, with both players yet to commit to Saracens next season.Itoje had hoped to receive dispensation to continue his England career while spending next season on loan in France at Racing 92 rather than in the Championship with relegated Saracens. However, that move was blocked by the other Premiership clubs since it did not meet “exceptional circumstances”, the loophole that allows England’s head coach, Eddie Jones, to select overseas-based players in the event of an injury crisis. Continue reading... Full Article Saracens England rugby union team Maro Itoje Rugby union Sport
sports and games 'There was a lot of swearing': the night West Ham played behind closed doors | Jacob Steinberg By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T07:00:18Z Two players and a photographer remember what it was like to face Castilla at an empty Upton Park in 1980 At half-time West Ham’s former chairman Len Cearns was sent on a futile mission by his fellow directors. They wanted him to go down to the home dressing room to ask John Lyall if there was any way his team could possibly remember that the foul language being used in the heat of battle was floating away from the pitch, rattling around the empty terraces and causing some discomfort for the people sitting in the posh seats.“There was a lot of swearing going on in the game,” Alvin Martin says as he recalls West Ham hosting a European tie behind closed doors in the autumn of 1980. “You don’t realise it. You’re communicating in a factory way.” Continue reading... Full Article West Ham United European club football Football Sport
sports and games PSG's record £198m splurge on Neymar will stand for years as symbol of crisis | Jonathan Wilson By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T19:00:04Z Elite clubs will prey on desperate ones in the hunt for bargains as the game reels from its biggest financial hit since the 1930sEven at the time – in 2017 – the fee Paris Saint-Germain paid Barcelona for Neymar was extraordinary: £198m was 125% more than the previous record, set a year earlier when Manchester United had signed Paul Pogba from Juventus. Transfer records simply aren’t broken by that amount in the usual run of things. It was a statement signing, a deal designed not only to land the player, but to emphasise PSG’s financial power, to highlight their status as a super-club while inflating the market to a level at which only the mega-rich could compete.Three years on, with football suspended across the globe and major leagues desperately seeking ways to get games on to stave off financial apocalypse, the world looks very different. A model predicated on constant growth has received an abrupt shock. Continue reading... Full Article Neymar Football Sport Transfer window Paris Saint-Germain
sports and games Silverstone marshals wary of extra risks to F1 going behind closed doors By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T07:00:18Z Volunteers who help the British Grand Prix run smoothly want to get back trackside but questions remain on safety and testing“We are like one big family,” says Carolyn Doyle of the bond between the marshals of the British Grand Prix. “We are there because we love it and we want to achieve the same thing – that’s what makes it really special.”Much as it does bring great pleasure to this selfless collective, the sport knows their presence is invaluable. As Silverstone considers hosting two consecutive races behind closed doors in July, the volunteer marshals are having to consider the new realities imposed on Formula One by the coronavirus crisis. Continue reading... Full Article British Grand Prix Silverstone Formula One Motor sport Sport
sports and games 'They lynched him': Ahmaud Arbery's father on the killing of his son By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T06:00:17Z Marcus Arbery Sr says Ahmaud’s death at the hands of two white men, while he was out for a run, was an act of racismMarcus Arbery Sr says his son was just like him, fit and athletic. Related: ‘Every stone will be uncovered’: how Georgia officials failed the Ahmaud Arbery case Continue reading... Full Article Ahmaud Arbery Georgia Gun crime US crime Race US news
sports and games Who is Kayleigh McEnany – and why is she saying nice things about Donald Trump? By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T05:00:16Z The White House press secretary has made a confident start in a notoriously difficult role. Those who know her say the media and opponents underestimate her at their perilIt was a mic drop designed to thrill conservatives and infuriate liberals and the media. Related: 'You can't ask the virus for a truce': reopening America is Trump's biggest gamble Continue reading... Full Article Donald Trump Trump administration US politics US news Republicans Christianity Religion Fox News CNN US press and publishing US television industry Media World news
sports and games Sunday with La Roux: ‘I miss my family, but daily walks help’ By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T05:45:17Z The singer and songwriter on dealing with solitude, her favourite cafe and why she’s hooked on FrasierHow does Sunday start? With disappointment – Frasier isn’t on TV at the weekend. The show is perfection. I watch it every morning. Whatever time I go to bed I sleep for eight hours. Once I’m up I call a friend and put them on loudspeaker while I have breakfast in the garden and take a bath.Recovering from a big night? Not since I stopped partying 10 years ago. Back then I’d still be going on Sunday morning, inviting people round. Drugs make you into a dickhead. The happier I’ve become, the less I’ve wanted to be destructive, transported somewhere else. But it took a few years to no longer feel I was missing out. Continue reading... Full Article Sunday with… Life and style La Roux Music Culture
sports and games Through my lockdown lens: 11 leading photographers capture their confinement By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T06:00:17Z Acclaimed photographers from around the world share a single image reflecting on their experience of the coronavirus outbreakMinneapolis, Minnesota Continue reading... Full Article Photography Art and design Coronavirus outbreak Culture
sports and games Hebridean island divided after memoir explores darker fringe of Highland life By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T06:23:17Z Neighbours of Tamsin Calidas, who moved to Scotland from London, are keen to put their side as her book I am an Island looks set for successTamsin Calidas’s memoir about swapping Notting Hill for a croft on a small Hebridean island luxuriates in its landscape. The heather and the Munros, the raw skies and the wild tides of the Atlantic are lavishly described. The islanders, by contrast, are largely anonymous, thoughtless and cruel. Continue reading... Full Article Scotland Rural affairs Autobiography and memoir Books Culture UK news
sports and games What does it take to get really great service in restaurants? By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T05:00:16Z The first rule is, don’t be a complete schmuck...In the opening chapter of Wine Girl, the hugely entertaining memoir by Victoria James, once America’s youngest sommelier, the author describes a blood-boiling encounter with the kind of customer for whom involuntary euthanasia should be devised. It is a Monday lunch at the glossy Aureole in New York and the host of a testicle-heavy table of four has ordered a $650 bottle of a serious white burgundy (a 2009 Chevalier-Montrachet from Domaine Ramonet).Having checked at her serving station that the wine isn’t tainted, James returns to the table and pours a small measure for the customer to taste. He declares it corked. “I think she has too much perfume in her nose, this girl…” he says, as if competing for a gold in the misogyny Olympics. There are only two bottles of the wine in the restaurant’s cellar. James does not want to waste a big-bucks bottle when she knows it is perfectly fine. Instead, she presents the unopened second bottle, takes it away, then returns and gets him to taste the original bottle again. And between racist epithets, he declares it perfect, with a fat top note of triumph in his voice. Witness: small penis energy. Continue reading... Full Article Food Restaurants Restaurants Life and style Travel
sports and games Rosena Allin-Khan: 'If Matt Hancock found my tone difficult, that's on him' By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T06:33:17Z The Labour MP and A&E doctor on her run-in with the health secretary and her shifts on the hospital frontline Coronavirus – latest updatesSee all our coronavirus coverageWhen Rosena Allin-Khan stood up in the House of Commons last Tuesday to address the health secretary, Matt Hancock, she anticipated being stonewalled. She didn’t expect to become the story.In her other life, the MP for Tooting is an A&E doctor and intensive care specialist and has been working 12-hour hospital shifts throughout the pandemic. Allin-Khan reported that the government’s failures were contributing to a greater loss of life and she wanted answers on its testing strategy. The health secretary awkwardly responded by suggesting that Allin-Khan’s testimony was untrue and moreover, that she “might do well to take a leaf out of the shadow secretary of state’s book in terms of tone”. Continue reading... Full Article Labour Coronavirus outbreak Health policy Politics Doctors Hospitals Matt Hancock UK news Medical research Health Society
sports and games I’ve craved a slower pace of life – and want to make it permanent | Dear Mariella By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T05:00:16Z When lockdown has ended, we must continue to live simpler lives to benefit both us and the planet, says Mariella FrostrupThe dilemma I know we’re in the middle of a global pandemic with the economy knackered and the free world led by a man like Trump. I know our freedom has been temporarily taken away from us. But I’m dreading the end of lockdown.For years I’ve craved a slower pace of life. Lockdown has allowed me to spend time with my family – and not on the relentless promise of success in my career. It has allowed me to play and learn with my child, rather than rush to drop-off or pick-up at wraparound care. It has allowed me to walk in woodland rather than standing on a crowded commuter train. In many ways it has been idyllic. Continue reading... Full Article Coronavirus outbreak Life and style Parents and parenting Family
sports and games Israel threatens to pull evangelical Christian TV station aimed at Jews By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T06:02:17Z State forbids preaching to under-18s without parents’ permissionThe Israeli government is threatening to take off air a Christian television channel that launched in the country to preach to Jews, warning that it will be barred if it breaks strict rules around proselytising.GOD TV, an evangelical media network that broadcasts across the world, signed a seven-year deal with a major Israeli cable television provider, HOT, to host its new Hebrew-language channel that began airing last month. Continue reading... Full Article Israel Evangelical Christianity Middle East and North Africa World news Religion Christianity
sports and games The 'United States of Europe' speech that Winston Churchill so nearly made By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T06:12:17Z A recently discovered document sheds new light on the wartime leader’s ‘iron curtain’ addressIt was a speech that electrified the world, one that coined a phrase that was to characterise the political era that followed the second world war. But its content could have been very different, reveals a document freshly unearthed by a historian researching the life of Winston Churchill.On 5 March 1946 in Fulton, Missouri, before a huge crowd which included the US president, Harry Truman, Britain’s wartime leader issued a famous description of the political division that was opening across Europe between the Soviet-dominated Communist east and the western democracies. “From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic,” Churchill declared, “an iron curtain has descended across the continent.” Continue reading... Full Article Winston Churchill Second world war European Union US news Communism Europe UK news
sports and games Conservation society clashes with Disney over missing historic letters By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-10T06:39:18Z Campaigners call for return of 1930s wording to Twentieth Century Fox Film Co former officesDisney, titan of the media and entertainment world, has enraged a group of Londoners attempting to preserve one of Soho’s best-known squares. And the battle is over one word: “Fox”.In the south-west corner of Soho Square stands Twentieth Century House, a grand emblem of the American film industry’s key role in this part of the city since 1937. It is now in the hands of Disney. Continue reading... Full Article Film Heritage Culture Disney Channel Television industry Media UK news London
sports and games Harry Dunn's family call for parliamentary inquiry into death By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T19:35:56Z Charlotte Charles and Tim Dunn ‘uplifted’ after meeting with shadow foreign secretary, Lisa NandyThe family of Harry Dunn have urged the shadow foreign secretary to call for a parliamentary inquiry into the handling of their son’s death.Charlotte Charles and Tim Dunn said they felt “uplifted” and believed Lisa Nandy would “take things forward on our and the nation’s behalf” after a virtual meeting with her on Friday. Continue reading... Full Article UK news Yvette Cooper Lisa Nandy Charles Falconer Lord Falconer of Thoroton Home Office Politics US news