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we weren't told, we turned up for pre-season to find the new manager didn't want us, but we got the message.' Bradford City (1999) 'I'd like to stay here for a while, it's about time I stayed somewhere for longer than just a season. I never meant to move about so much, but I actually feel sorry now for players who stay at the same club. They miss out on so much. Not just on the field, where getting used to a new set of players forces you to concentrate on your own game, but everywhere. I feel there's no situation I can't handle now, there aren't too many things chairmen or managers can throw at me I haven't seen before. And of course it's nice to always be in demand. I'm rather proud that 12 clubs have wanted to sign me.'Steve Rose The Guardian,Wednesday 9 June 2004 10.01 BSTSafety first: Tony Fretton's design for the British embassy in WarsawAs architectural statements go, the Foreign Office on Whitehall must be one of the most brazenly self-confident buildings ever constructed. Its 19th-century bulk is festooned inside and out with symbols of imperial superiority: marble shipped in from far-flung dominions; sculptures, carvings and murals representing Britain's possessions, heroes and virtues; allegorical paintings with titles such as The East Offering Its Riches to Britannia. This sumptuous palace, designed by George Gilbert Scott, was once the throbbing heart of empire, from which British power spread to outposts in virtually every country on the map. Today, though, the flow has been reversed. Where
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y University NHS Trust, Glasgow, for services to medical oncology Dr Margaret Flora Spittle consultant clinical oncologist, the Middlesex Hospital and St John's Centre for Diseases of the Skin, St Thomas' Hospital, for services to medicine Professor Margaret Anne Stanley, professor of epithelial biology, University of Cambridge, for services to virology Dr Sarah Walters, senior lecturer in public health and epidemiology, University of Birmingham, for services to medicine Professor Jonquil Fiona Williams, professor of social policy, University of Leeds, for services to social policy.Emma John The Observer,Sunday 14 November 2010Miranda Hart at home in west London. 'Writing comedy is the equivalent of doing homework that��s going to end up on national television.' Photograph: Karen RobinsonShe is 6ft 1in, but when Miranda Hart opens the door of her west London home she doesn't seem that tall. Perhaps it's her self-deprecating air. The 37-year-old comedian enjoyed a huge hit with the BBC2 sitcom Miranda last year, written in a skylighted room at the back of the terraced house where she now leads us for our interview, her shih-tzu Peggy barking excitedly alongside. Hart is embarrassed by the noise the dog is making, by the awesome size of her plasma screen TV in the lounge, and by an electric piano that she confesses she hasn't yet got around to playing. Like the eponymous but fictional character she plays in her sitcom, she is immediately very endearing.The second series of Miranda is out this week; how long
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rs There's still hope for arts graduates! As reported in Slate (http://www.slate/): `The job market for academic philosophers is as desperate as ever, but deep thinkers now have a range of alternative careers. A French outfit, Philocit, offers pricey `philosophical consulting' to companies looking to add Heideggerian heft to their marketing strategies.' This is an edited extract from Next: A Vision Of Our Lives In The Future by Ira Matathia and Marian Salzman, published by HarperCollins, price pounds 14.99. The book can be ordered though the Guardian by ringing freephone 0500 600 102 or sending a cheque for pounds 15.98, inc UK p&p, payable to Guardian CultureShop, to 250 Western Avenue, London W3 6EE. Sign up for the Guardian TodayOur editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning.Sign up for the daily emailGet the Guardian's daily US emailOur editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning. Enter your email address to subscribe.Sign up for the daily emailSign up nowGet the Guardian's daily Australia emailOur editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox every weekday.Sign up for the daily emailNicole Mowbray The Observer,Sunday 22 January 2006Chi for two ... Reethi Rah spa in the Maldives.Best urban retreatsSt. David's Hotel, Cardiff1 Thalassotherapy, a water-based treatment, is the speciality here. The Marine Spa can also devise spa packages to help you detox or lose weight. It's the onl
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he people to whom it had been given. Christians may glory in that if they choose, but such had never been Jesus's intention.There is no point in crying theft. Every religion is an act of expropriation of some sort. And monotheistic faiths in particular exist as refutations of one another. There's the drawback of Only One God - ours knocks out yours. So it is vain to ask for Jesus back. But the purloining of him has had deadly consequences. Jew-hating didn't occur by mischance in the history of Christianity - it is inscribed in it. Because Jews attested negatively to the power of Christ they were worth keeping alive in their spiritual poverty; but because they killed Christ they were expendable too. Ours is not a peaceable world, but it would go a way to restoring harmony in some parts of it were Christianity to acknowledge responsibility for the anti-Jewish crimes committed in its name. Admitting the consequences of its falsification of the Jew Jesus would be a place to start. ? Howard Jacobson presents Jesus The Jew, episode one of Christianity, A History, on Channel 4 on Sunday at 7pm. Sign up for the Guardian TodayOur editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning.Sign up for the daily emailGet the Guardian's daily US emailOur editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning. Enter your email address to subscribe.Sign up for the daily emailSign up nowGet the Guardian's daily Australia emailOur editors' picks for the da
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