Thursday, November 22, 2018
A little bit more idiocy from around the global village. — For Queen Mob’s Tea House
Filed in Journalism, NEWS AT A GLANCE
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Also tagged baseball, beauty, birds, books, Caucasians, Central Park, Communism, death, Fernando Po, fire, grandmothers, Joseph Conrad, knives, MAGA, manufacturing, men, MILFs, Nelson Evening Mail, New Zealand, parenthood, petroleum, politics, PornHub, potatoes, Queen Mob's Tea House, Roxy Jacenko, satire, saxophones, science, teenagers, the internet, the ocean, trivia, University of Iowa, widows, women, Yiddish
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Thursday, November 8, 2018
A lad named Rogers, and other true-ish stories. — For Queen Mob’s Tea House
Filed in Journalism, NEWS AT A GLANCE
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Also tagged Alcoholics Anonymous, animals, assassins, babies, Beethoven, books, Caractacus, cricket, crime, Dhingra, Epping, Evelyn Waugh, fireworks, geography, health, heroes, horses, music, Nelson Evening Mail, news, Plutarch, pumpkins, Queen Mob's Tea House, race, Rain Men, Regulus, sailors, satire, shit, Sweden, taxes, the Bible, the Congo, theatre, Tom McIlwaine, travel, TV
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Wednesday, August 15, 2018
‘For centuries before the Second World War, educated British people knew far more about intelligence operations recorded in the Bible than they did about the role of intelligence at any moment in their own history.’ Nowadays, one might think, few would even know that. But that’s where Christopher Andrew – Emeritus Professor of Modern and […]
Filed in Journalism, review
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Also tagged Afghanistan, Allen Lane, America, Ancient Egypt, army, Bletchley Park, Cardinal Richelieu, Christianity, Christopher Andrew, Christopher Marlowe, CIA, Clausewitz, Elizabeth I, Francis Walsingham, history, Holland, India, Islam, Israel, Ivan the Terrible, Julius Caesar, MI5, MI6, Napoleon, non-fiction, Pearl Harbour, Russia, spies, Stalin, Sun Tzu, the Bible, the Cold War, the KGB, the Medway, The Oldie, the Spanish Armada, University of Cambridge, Vasili Mitrokhin, Venice, war, Waterloo, WWII, Xenophon
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. Electricity is now used to improve the complexion. — The Nelson Evening Mail, July 4 1908 . The Chinese Christian warlord Feng Yu-xiang (1882–1948) baptised his troops en masse, using a firehose. Vincent Kompany has suffered more than 40 injuries. Time passes very slowly when you’re in a hippo’s mouth. Poetry must be entered into by a personal encounter, or […]
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Also tagged Baby Bunting, Cadbury, children, chocolate, electricity, Feng Yu-xiang, football, German, hair, health, hippopotami, insults, Japan, Johnny Cash, men, Milan, Nelson Evening Mail, onions, Poetry, Queen Victoria, religion, song, sport, Sri Lanka, suicide, tennis, the Irish, time, Vincent Kompany, water, writers
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. The German army has the healthiest troops in the world. — The Nelson Evening Mail, July 13 1908 . In January 2001 a BBC documentary crew filmed the everyday goings on in a typical workplace. The skin of fantas melons smells of BO. There’s 25% off Rovic floors. Philip Hensher will read any old crap. […]
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Also tagged army, BBC, bees, Britain, chips, computers, construction, criticism, Devon, eyes, fruit, Germany, health, Journalism, London, Mesopotamia, Nelson Evening Mail, North Devon Journal, Philip Hensher, pronunciation, rivers, Russians, sand, smells, Tibet, work
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Monday, February 19, 2018
. In China the dials of a clock turn round instead of the hands. — The Nelson Evening Mail, September 8 1908 . Benedict Cumberbatch reads Oryx magazine. A piece of pasta (dry) weighs essentially one gram. A man can only care about so many things. Labels are for clothes. In Bosnian there are no words for […]
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Also tagged Benedict Cumberbatch, Bosnian, brothers, clothing, cows, Darryl Gerrity, death, Dmitri Kabalevsky, Englishmen, fiction, film, friends, grapes, Hawaii, health, horology, Islam, love, magazines, measurements, men, music, Nelson Evening Mail, non-fiction, pasta, pornography, Qatar Airways, Reading, religion, Russians, Virginia, white goods
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. One-fiftieth of the inhabitants of Spain are nobles. — The Nelson Evening Mail, October 4 1906 . The beheading of the sperm whale is a scientific anatomical feat, upon which experienced whale surgeons very much pride themselves. Great lips take hydration and balls. Pease pudding has been flagged up by airport security on more than one […]
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Also tagged airports, anatomy, asbestos, Bognor Regis, cetology, Christmas, class, cricket, Diane Abbott, dogs, Donald Trump, Dr Gregory House, gorillas, Nelson Evening Mail, Nigel Farage, pease pudding, politics, Richard II, sea-faring, security, sex, Spain, Spanish, surgery, Swedish, Theresa May, Torbay, translation, TV, Twitter, water
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. The average salary of professors at Dublin University is £530. — The Nelson Evening Mail, March 14 1907 . The persecution of Christians is now worse than at any time in history. Toto’s ‘Africa’ is one of Myleene Klass’s all-time favourites. The Hillsborough disaster is still in the news. Simon Bolivar, a Venezuelan military and […]
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Also tagged Africa, betting, Ceylon, Christmas, Colombia, culture, Dublin, education, employment, fear, finance, football, grindstones, Hillsborough, homosexuality, jerk-jobs, Kevin Spacey, Legoland, Leonard Woolf, music, Myleene Klass, Nelson Evening Mail, newspapers, novels, persecution, politics, radio, religion, revolution, sex, Simon Bolivar, Toto, trees, Venezuela, Virginia Woolf, war, Windsor
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. All over China temples have been turned into schools with surprising alacrity. — The Nelson Evening Mail, July 26 1906 . The owl of Minerva flies only at dusk. Though rare, there have been exactly 201 documented cases of spontaneous combustion. J Sainbury plc is cutting 2000 Human Resources employees. The collective noun for brown […]
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Also tagged actors, anatomy, birds, Crete, criticism, death, Donald Trump, education, Everton, fire, fish, French, George W Bush, Journalism, men, music, Nelson Evening Mail, nouns, October, Paul Celan, poets, religion, Renault, Sainsbury's, sea-faring, translation, vans, work, writing
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Saturday, October 21, 2017
. Ancient Chinese proverb The most capable woman cannot make a meal without food. Chinese Communist Party saying A capable woman can make a meal without food. .