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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Owen Jones)
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Of course Britain will pay its respects to the Queen, but why must poor people pay the price?
Monday’s shutdown is fine for the privileged, but ignores the plight of those who can’t afford to lose work and incomeGrief is the price we pay for love, the late Queen wisely said; but for many of her subjects, their actual income is the price to pay for grief. Aspects of normal life have been suspended, but no one has yet found a way to cancel or pause the cost of living crisis, a peril without recent precedent. What happens when an abrupt national event collides with an economy defined by ins
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Daniel Boffey Chief reporter)
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Ai Weiwei says mother, 90, warns him against China return
Artist and activist tells event in London he is not clear in own mind about whether struggles for freedom were ‘worth it’The Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei has said his desire to be reunited with his 90-year-old mother could lead him to return to China, but that she has implored him not to give up his British exile.The sculptor and activist, who divides his time between Cambridge and Portugal, spent 81 days in custody in Beijing in 2011 and fled his home country four years later on the retur
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Hannah J Davies)
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The Guide #52: Six ways to save on cinema
In this week’s newsletter: From making the most of memberships to free films online, there’s plenty of ways to keep up without a Hollywood budgetHello! Gwilym’s away, so I’ll be guiding you through the best new pop culture, cult classics and reader recommendations this week.Before that: going to the cinema is, for many, a beloved pastime, but – like so many other things these days – also liable to put a dent in your bank balance. Last week we told you about the streaming services worth paying fo
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Grace Dent)
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Bubala Soho, London W1: ‘Lunch doesn’t always need to have once had a face to be fabulous’ – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants
Yes, you could make these things at home, but it would take all day and 17 different bowlsThe new Bubala in Soho has a menu so deliciously worded and branding so smoothly positioned that my lunch guest was for some time quite unaware she was in a meat-free restaurant. She loves modern Middle Eastern food, and was well into the idea of fancy hummus, braised hispi cabbage and charred oyster mushrooms on skewers. It was only after the third time she attempted to add “perhaps a chicken dish” to our
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Robert Booth Social affairs correspondent)
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‘Grief can overwhelm you’: has King Charles had space to mourn?
Experts on bereavement say it is common to be busy after a loved one’s death but it is important to make time to reflectDeath of the Queen and King Charles’s accession – latest updatesAs King Charles has crisscrossed the UK leading national mourning this week, one concern has been repeated among his wellwishers: after losing his mother, has his high-tempo tour left him space to grieve properly?On Thursday his spokesperson insisted the King had been taking time to reflect and mourn, but a bereave
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Ed Aarons)
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Ice hockey’s Bill Foley heads US group pushing to buy Bournemouth
Foley, owner of Vegas Golden Knights, in talks to purchase clubHe provided €523m credit facility for Textor’s bid to buy LyonBournemouth’s owner, Maxim Demin, is in talks with a consortium led by Bill Foley, the owner of ice hockey’s Vegas Golden Knights, over a potential sale for about £150m. If successful, it would mean that more than half the Premier League’s clubs have minority or majority US shareholders.A group led by Foley, who is also chairman of the insurance company Fidelity National F
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Libby Brooks Scotland correspondent)
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Glasgow MSP rebuked for defending anti-abortion protests at clinics
SNP whips write to John Mason saying he has ‘caused great distress and trauma to many women’A Scottish National party MSP has been reprimanded for defending anti-abortion protests outside health clinics.In a written warning from party whips at Holyrood, John Mason, the Glasgow Shettleston MSP, was accused of causing “great distress and trauma to many women”. Continue reading...
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Robert Kitson)
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To bask in the reflected glow of Eddie Butler’s talents was enough for us | Robert Kitson
Modest and generous, the former Pontypool and Wales forward enjoyed a multidimensional life after he retired from playing“Greetings, Roberto.” Even when Eddie was just saying hello every word flowed more smoothly when he spoke – or wrote – them. And whether he was chatting with his colleagues in the press box, or delivering those impossibly brilliant, mellifluous television voiceovers, you wanted to hear more. Which, of course, is exactly how we all feel right now.It is scant consolation that th
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Will Pritchard)
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‘It feels harder than ever’: independent radio stations under threat from rising bills
Gilles Peterson and other station bosses explain how the passion projects that sustained music scenes and consoled listeners over lockdown now find themselves in jeopardy from rocketing costs – with little sign of government helpGilles Peterson got his first broadcast gig aged 16 at Radio Invicta, the pirate station that boasted it put “soul over London”. He got his own slot a year later, and has spent the ensuing four decades channelling his inquisitive musical spirit into shows with Kiss FM an
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Sep 16, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Clea Skopeliti)
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‘Protesters just scream abuse’: the campaigners battling to make UK abortion clinics safer
Too many women complain of being harassed on their way to abortion services. The group Back Off Scotland is fighting backUntil she was targeted, Lily Roberts thought protests outside abortion clinics only happened in the US.Roberts was in her first year at university in Glasgow when she needed an abortion. She wasn’t yet familiar with the city when she made her way to Queen Elizabeth university hospital to take the second abortion pill at the maternity ward. “When I got there, there were 15 to 2