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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Rebecca Ratcliffe)
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Queen lying in state: mourning continues in London before princes’ evening vigil – live updates
King Charles and siblings will stand watch over coffin of Queen Elizabeth II in poignant moment ahead of state funeral on Monday• Queen’s funeral to be followed by Windsor service and burial next to PhilipA veteran Hong Kong opera star apologised and declared his patriotism on Thursday after his praise for Britain’s late Queen Elizabeth II sparked a backlash among nationalists in China, reports AFP.Here are some further details from AFP:Thousands of Hong Kong residents have queued up outside the
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Hollie Richardson, Jack Seale, Ellen E Jones and Simon Wardell)
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TV tonight: Jo Brand and Tom Allen serve an extra slice of Bake Off
Will, who was the first to leave the tent earlier this week, reveals all about his Bake Off experience. Plus: jaunty crime drama Professor T returns. Here’s everything to watch this evening Continue reading...
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Stefanie Bolzen, Rafael de Miguel, Antonello Guerrera and Tessa Szyszkowitz)
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‘When mourning ends, reality will hit hard’: European journalists on Britain’s mood
UK-based correspondents assess how Britons will deal with political turmoil, Brexit, recession and the loss of the Queen“The days we are living through mark a new beginning. Only time will tell what the post-Elizabethan era will bring. For the moment, what it does feel like is a juggernaut of one too many challenges coming at the same time, a surreal wave. The aftermath of the pandemic, which has left the UK with a lot of scars; Brexit finally being felt in real life, whether on the M2 towards D
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Paul Brown)
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Why future sea levels matter to Suffolk’s Sizewell nuclear plant
Global coastal inundation is now expected to be far worse than previously predictedThe caution of scientists, reinforced by accusations scaremongering from the well-funded fossil fuel lobby, has meant computer estimates of sea level rise in official forecasts have been low. Scientists mostly only counted the rise of the oceans because of expansion of warmer water then added on melting glaciers in the Alps and other temperate regions.Originally ice caps in Greenland and Antarctica were excluded,
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Heather Stewart)
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Britain’s lowest-paid workers say finances have never been worse
Living Wage Foundation finds 78% of those polled say they are shorter of money than ever Almost 80% of the UK’s lowest-paid workers say they are now facing the toughest financial squeeze of their lifetimes, according to new research by the Living Wage Foundation.Liz Truss has averted a further increase in utility bills with her “energy price guarantee” – a radical measure that could cost taxpayers more than £100bn – but many poorer households are already struggling to make ends meet. Continue re
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jess Cartner-Morley)
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the dos and don’ts of holiday shopping
Always tempted to stuff your suitcase with holiday knick-knacks? Resist the tat and seek out stylish souvenirs you’ll still love when the sangria has worn offYou wake to sun streaming through the window, not to your phone vibrating on the bedside table. Breakfast alfresco doesn’t mean a latte and muffin on the platform worrying if your train is late. You are on holiday and life is good. Why can’t real life be more like this, you wonder. Maybe if I buy a tablecloth like the one in the local taver
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (David Williams)
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Three high-quality wines from less-acclaimed areas in Europe
Don’t judge a bottle by its illustrious label. Good wines don’t always come from the most famous regionsCastello ColleMassari Montecucco Riserva, Italy 2017 (£11.99, Waitrose) Having vineyards in a famous appellation can be an enormous advantage for a wine producer. Before anyone has tried so much as a sip of your product, the name on the label gives you a head start over lesser-known regions in prestige, attracting buyers and, of course, the prices you can conceivably charge. But no matter how
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Melanie Wilkinson)
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A shopping guide to the best … women’s cardigans
A staple in the changing weather, the humble cardigan is perfect for late summer/early autumn. Here are the best to buy, rent or thrift*** Continue reading...
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Gaby Hinsliff)
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It’s foolish to expect King Charles to save us from a government gone rogue | Gaby Hinsliff
The King is no woolly liberal. He’s the head of a hereditary monarchy that is ultimately focused on its own survivalThe tone was sombre, emotional even. Prince Charles could not, he said, describe the “depths of his personal sorrow”.But he wasn’t speaking of his recent bereavement. This was a speech back in June to Commonwealth heads of government in Rwanda, expressing regret for the suffering wrought by slavery. The Commonwealth could not move forward without acknowledging the “wrongs of the pa
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jill Mead, Antonio Olmos, Sarah Lee, David Levene, Linda Nylind, Andy Hall, Murdo MacLeod and Alicia Canter)
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Capturing the first days of mourning for the Queen – a photo essay
Memories and reflections from the Guardian’s team of photographers on recording a historic weekThe public have turned out in their thousands to pay their respects to the Queen, some perhaps motivated by wanting to be part of the historic moment, and many by a personal sense of loss and grief. Here, Guardian photographers discuss how they have found shooting the ceremonial and informal aspects of mourning for the Queen over the last week.Crowds gathered all night outside Buckingham Palace after t