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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Selected by Natasha Rees-Bloor)
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Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin procession – in pictures
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II, draped in the royal standard with the Imperial State Crown placed on top, left Buckingham Palace carried on a horse-drawn gun carriage for Westminster Hall where she will lay in state until the early morning of her funeral Continue reading...
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Charles Bramesco in Toronto)
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The Greatest Beer Run Ever review – Zac Efron’s charm can’t save Vietnam misfire
Toronto film festival: Green Book director Peter Farrelly makes an equally cliche-ridden follow-up, the true story of a man bringing beers to his army buddiesAs the good book – by which I mean Cheers – teaches us, beer is the currency of compassion. A can of suds won’t put you back more than a few bucks, and yet when given from one person to another, a drink represents the ultimate token of goodwill. When someone’s having a terrible day, you buy them a consolation beer. Someone does you a kindne
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Thomas Carr)
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Total lightweight: Australians quick to pick up new flat pack wine bottles
Backpack friendly, energy efficient wine bottles are proving a hit with Australian consumers, but premium producers aren’t fully sold on PET packagingThere’s something innately sexy about the look and feel of a glass wine bottle. In fact, if I was to imagine Nigella Lawson describing a bottle in-hand she would emphasise its gentle curves, slender neck, and cute little punt in which to nestle your thumb when pouring. Glass bottles have always conveyed a premium image for the wine they carry, thei
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Tory Shepherd)
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A year on from Aukus, doubts grow about its future as China muscles up
While some progress has been made, analysts fear China is leaping ahead in capabilities and the defence department doesn’t sense the urgencyGet our free news app, morning email briefing or daily news podcastWhen the Aukus deal was announced a year ago, the planning had been so stealthy that no one knew how to pronounce it.What it pronoucned ow-kus or or-cas? Eventually everyone settled on aw-kus (although the Global Times said that in Chinese it’s pronounced “Australia cries to death”). Continue
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jamie Grierson and Martin Pengelly)
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Prince Andrew joins Queen procession amid concern over stand-in role
Position as counsellor of state under scrutiny as fresh reports about Jeffrey Epstein scandal emergeDeath of the Queen and King Charles’s accession - latest updatesThe Duke of York sported an array of military medals on a civilian morning suit as he joined a procession behind the Queen’s coffin amid claims British authorities protected him from US prosecutors investigating his ties to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.Prince Andrew has been told he cannot wear his military uniform for the events mark
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Hannah Devlin Science correspondent)
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Microneedle tattoo technique could make tattooing painless and fast
Scientists at Georgia Tech say press-on innovation opens opportunities for medical and cosmetic usePainless, bloodless tattoos have been created by scientists, who say the technique could have medical and cosmetic applications.The technique, which can be self-administered, uses microneedles to imprint a design into the skin without causing pain or bleeding. Initial applications are likely to be medical – but the team behind the innovation hope that it could also be used in tattoo parlours to pro
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Rowena Mason Deputy political editor)
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Kwasi Kwarteng sacking Tom Scholar marks ‘shift away from impartial advice’
Exclusive: Former head of civil service says move is ‘disgraceful’ and will have a ‘chilling effect’Kwasi Kwarteng’s sacking of his most senior Treasury official will having a “chilling effect” on civil servants and marks a “problematic” shift towards ministers wanting advice that aligns with their own views, a former head of the civil service has warned.Lord Kerslake, a crossbench peer and former civil service chief, said the move by the new chancellor to remove Tom Scholar as permanent secreta
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Shaad D'Souza)
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Melanie C alleges she was sexually assaulted before debut Spice Girls performance
Melanie Chisholm, AKA Sporty Spice, spoke about the incident, which made her feel ‘violated’, on an episode of the How to Fail podcastMelanie C – the former Spice Girl born Melanie Chisholm and nicknamed Sporty Spice – has alleged that she was sexually assaulted by a masseur the night before the Spice Girls’ debut performance. Appearing on the How To Fail podcast to promote her new memoir Who I Am, Chisholm discussed the incident, which she says took place at a hotel in Istanbul. She told host E
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Martin Kettle)
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In mourning, we may appear to be one United Kingdom – but don’t fall for the tale of togetherness | Martin Kettle
Collective grief for the Queen has shown us what the nation could look like. If only Westminster politicians caredAs the Queen’s coffin proceeded solemnly up the Royal Mile to St Giles’s Cathedral from Holyroodhouse on Monday amid packed crowds, I texted a colleague out on the sunlit streets of Edinburgh. These were extraordinary scenes, we both agreed, but would they have lasting consequences in and for Scotland? My friend’s reply was quick and emphatic. “I’ve got no doubt about it. All this un
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Letters)
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The power of collective grief in this time of change | Letters
The rituals we are witnessing are designed to contain the potential disruption that the death of a monarch makes possible, writes Prof Brian Moeran. Plus letters from Harold Mozley, Robert Beavis and Alan WhitehouseMarina Hyde highlights the unpredictability of mass grief and how those at the centre of power can be unnerved by spontaneous public emotions (Britain could plan for the Queen’s death – but not for the risky tides of public feeling, 9 September). This observation is fair enough in so