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Sep 03, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Claire Thomson)
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Claire Thomson’s recipes for back-to-school packed lunches
Black bean burritos, mini pizzas and couscous salad to brighten any school lunchboxMake the bean filling in advance, then assemble the burritos as you go for packed lunches each day; my 15- and 12-year-old daughters take a small bottle of hot sauce to splash on when they’re ready to eat. These are also good served hot and freshly made.Claire Thomson’s latest book, Tomato: 80 Recipes Celebrating the Extraordinary Tomato, is published by Quadrille at £22. To order a copy for £19.14, go to guardian
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Sep 03, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Sali Hughes)
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Humidity sent your hair into a frizz? Time for drastic action | Sali Hughes
Heatwave-hit New York turned my hair into an unruly shambles – but these three products offered me some hopeOn a trip to New York, lunch with an expat beauty industry executive began with “so you got the candy floss hair too?” She then offered a fist bump of solidarity over the unruly, somehow simultaneously flat and inflated arrangements of frizz on both our heads.I’m so used to the slightest humidity expanding my hair to a kinky, wispy shambles that I had long since given up on trying to corre
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Sep 03, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Zoe Williams)
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You give me diva: Meghan Markle shies away from a word worth reclaiming
‘Diva’ has good, neutral and bad connotations – but as singers from Maria Callas to Beyoncé have shown, it is a trait of sheer excellenceIt was on the second episode of Meghan Markle’s podcast Archetype, in which she interviewed her girl crush or queen or whatevs, Mariah Carey, that the moment happened: Markle used the word “diva” of Carey, and Mariah replied that Meghan had her own diva moments. The two women moved past the awkwardness such that a regular listener might not even have logged it,
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Sep 03, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Steven Morris)
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‘It’s a sad day’: Bristol zoo welcomes last visitors before closing
After 186 years, Bristol zoo will close, with some animals to be moved to out-of-town site and others to zoos abroadFor 186 years, visitors have flocked to Bristol Zoo Gardens and marvelled at the sights and sounds of the animals that have lived there, including Alfred the gorilla, Roger the rhino and Zebi the Asian elephant – the latter renowned for removing and eating straw hats in Victorian times.On Saturday afternoon, the final guests will be ushered out of the 12-acre site in Clifton for th
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Sep 03, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Robert Kitson)
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Storm clouds hang over Premiership with clubs facing uncertain future
The domestic season launch has been overshadowed by the impending financial peril highlighted by the plight of Worcester The first-floor concourse in the west stand at Twickenham has clearly not been swept for a while. The local pigeons have spent the summer roosting overhead and, outside the shuttered Thirst bar, significant heaps of grey-white droppings are piling up. Sadly, it is not even close to being the biggest mess in English rugby, with a steady torrent of toxic news still pounding down
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Sep 03, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Tom Gauld)
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Tom Gauld on the snooty bookshop recommendations– cartoon
Continue reading...
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Sep 03, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Pippa Crerar political editor)
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Jacob Rees-Mogg blocking major UK tourism campaign
Exclusive: Despite ‘Global Britain’ rhetoric, Brexit opportunities minister refused to sign off budget to revive pandemic-hit industryJacob Rees-Mogg is blocking a major government-backed tourism campaign – despite being a vocal advocate of “Global Britain”.The planned advertising blitz is aimed at bringing back tourists from key international markets including India, China, Australia, Japan and Canada to boost visitor numbers in the wake of the pandemic. Continue reading...
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Sep 03, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Alison Flood)
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Fairy Tale by Stephen King review – a terrifying treat
Teenager Charlie must journey to another world in this transporting tale with echoes of HP Lovecraft and The Wizard of OzOnce upon a time there was a boy called Charlie. His mother died in a terrible accident when he was young, and his father turned to drink, but Charlie grew up to be a good, strong, clever young man. The sort who helps strangers in need – such as the misanthropic Mr Bowditch, who has an equally elderly dog and a crumbling property. Which, as this is a Stephen King novel, sits o
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Sep 03, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Adrian Horton)
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‘It’s a completely new day’: the rise of Indigenous films and TV shows
Successes such as Prey and Reservation Dogs highlight an important shift for a community who have been demonised and under-represented on screenThis summer on TV, you could have caught a ragtag group of Indigenous teens in rural Oklahoma get up to “kid shit” – beefing, making up, running away, hanging around. You could have laughed when a couple, played by Lakota actor Jana Schmieding and Bdewakantunwan Dakota and Dińe actor Dallas Goldtooth, work out insecurities while wearing ketchup and hot d
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Sep 03, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Thomas Eaton)
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What links Ingrid Bergman, Shakespeare and James Lovelock? The Saturday quiz
From June Spencer to wild monkeys, test your knowledge with the Saturday quiz1 Where are 1, 3, 26 and 16 memorialised together?2 Which national flag features a cactus, an eagle and a snake?3 June Spencer was the last original cast member in which drama?4 What is written on the letterbox of 10 Downing Street?5 Which mathematician and occultist coined the term “British empire”?6 Where is Europe’s only population of wild monkeys?7 Which organisation has won the Nobel peace prize three times?8 Which