KrISS feed 8.11
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Ian Phillips)
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France’s answer to Banksy: the anonymous street artist filling potholes with colourful mosaics
On the streets of European cities, colourful mosaics are popping up where once there were cracks and potholes. It’s all thanks to the enigmatic street artist Ememem…Last year, the studio of the Lyon-based artist known as Ememem received an urgent call from an architectural firm close to the city’s Place Sathonay. Someone was in the process of dismantling a mosaic he had installed on the pavement in front of their offices. By the time he arrived, the culprit had fled with half of it.That artwork
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jeanette Winterson)
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‘She has been the one and only stable female in my life’: Jeanette Winterson on mourning the Queen
‘When I realised there was going to be an announcement about her death, I changed into black and waited. She deserved that. Part of us goes with her’Britain does well under an old queen. Our greatest monarchs have been women: Elizabeth I, Victoria, Elizabeth II. Children, trying to recall hazy history, or horrible history, might remember Richard the Lionheart, or Henries V and VIII, but they all know something about the three queens whose faces are stamped on to the body of the nation.Those long
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jessica Elgot)
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‘Entirely right’ for Charles to have lobbied ministers, says David Cameron
Former PM says he never felt Charles interfered, and ‘black spider memos’ should have stayed privateMourning for the Queen – latest updatesDavid Cameron has said it was “entirely right” for King Charles to have written to ministers and politicians when he was heir to the throne, lobbying on key issues including bovine tuberculosis and herbal medicines.In an interview with the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme, Cameron said he never felt Charles – whose “black spider memos” to minister
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Sam Jones in Madrid)
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Mexican rebels donate museum money for canoes to refugee rescues
Madrid museum buys three hand-carved canoes from Zapatistas, with proceeds going to Open Arms NGOThree exquisitely decorated canoes hand-carved in the jungles of southern Mexico and borne across the Atlantic on a ship tasked with a peaceful, symbolic – and cumbia-soundtracked – invasion of Spain could soon find a permanent mooring in the heart of Madrid.More importantly, proceeds from the sale of the small boats could help save some of the tens of thousands of men, women and children who risk th
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Ben Doherty)
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Australia quietly mourns passing of an era with Queen’s death as thoughts turn to a republic
Elizabeth’s death and Charles’s ascension has Australia – at once an old and young country – questioning what sort of nation it is and wants to beGet our free news app, morning email briefing or daily news podcastAt the schools and the surf clubs, the flags hung at half-mast. On the tallest sail of the Sydney Opera House, an image of a bejewelled Queen Elizabeth II beamed across the harbour.There were speeches of great solemnity, and quiet ceremonies of memorial, bouquets of flowers left at the
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Isobel Koshiw in Kyiv and agencies)
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Last reactor at Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant shut down, says operator
Energoatom says staff able to transfer facility to safest state – ‘cold shutdown’ – after restoration of power lineThe last operating reactor at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station has been shut down and the plant “completely stopped”, Ukraine’s nuclear power operator has said.The six-reactor Zaporizhzhia plant was disconnected from the grid last week after all its power lines were disconnected as a result of fighting in the area, and was operating in “island mode” for several days, generati
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Johny Pitts)
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Odyssey of the overlooked: a journey around Black Britain
Photographer Johny Pitts and poet Roger Robinson wanted to use their art to reflect on the experiences of Black Britons outside the capital. So they rented a red Mini Cooper and set off clockwise around the UK coastGood journeys start with loose itineraries. At Roger Robinson’s home in Northampton, by a rain-dappled window one windswept Wednesday, we pored over a large, unfolded Geographers’ A-Z of Great Britain splayed out across his kitchen table. Looking at this map, with its iconic blue/red/
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (James Tapper)
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Income not enough to break British class barriers, research finds
People from a prosperous background are more likely to move, and end up in richer areas, than those with working-class parentsClass background remains a barrier to accessing opportunities in later life, even among those who are successful, new research has found.A study of 8,118 professionals and higher-level managers found that those who came from a prosperous background were much more likely to move around the UK, and ended up in richer areas when they did move, than those with working-class p
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Gabrielle Canon with photographs by Kim Raff)
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Tourism is sucking Utah dry. Now it faces a choice - growth or survival?
Booming expansion to meet the demands of thousands of visitors every year is squeezing dwindling water supplyIt was a typically hot summer day in Utah’s Zion national park, where early-afternoon heat hovered near 100F, even in the shadows of the red peaks soaring overhead. But the extreme conditions did little to dissuade the throngs of tourists who trudged into the chalky brown waters of the Virgin River.The parking lot at Zion – one of the United States’s busiest national parks – had been full
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Vanessa Thorpe Arts and Media Correspondent)
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‘Future history’: how Charles III first trod the boards of London stage
Playwright Mike Bartlett says his drama King Charles III, which premiered in 2014, included some uncanny predictionsAccession of King Charles and death of Queen Elizabeth – latest updatesStage and film dramas have fictionalised the lives of Queen Elizabeth II and Diana, Princess of Wales, but rarely has Prince Charles been placed centre stage. The few writers who have imagined him as a future king have tended to portray him as an enlightened hero, a monarch who might stand up to a malign politic