Hints and tips:
...She spoke with a soft west country lilt and informed the police that Arthur was in the hospital with Covid-19....
...A nearby lake reminded him of his native Canada, and allowed him to indulge his boyhood love of fishing and canoeing....
...Here’s a look inside dramatic recent stand-offs at universities, where protesters escaped a 12-day police siege via sewer pipes, and a meditation on omnipresent dissent art....
...“The police used to stop the traffic on London Wall for me to walk the pram across,” Carole remembers. “They’d never seen prams in the city.”...
...The Uzbek poet and novelist Abdulla Qodiriy is sitting down to a New Year supper when the NKVD, Joseph Stalin’s secret police, invade his home and throw him into a Tashkent prison....
...Last Thursday the police raided ActionAid Uganda and the Great Lakes Institute for Strategic Studies, two civil society groups that have been campaigning to retain the presidential age limit....
...After Swiss police swept through the hotel, investigators from the public prosecutor’s office arrived at Fifa headquarters to begin their own probe....
...(I love the way Loach dwells on police aggression and doesn’t spare a frame for the concrete block dropped by NUM protesters from a motorway bridge.)...
...But, although the details here are familiar – such as the desperate police search to find the missing victim – Lemaitre has something surprising up his sleeve....
...A dazzling oasis in a desert of dull police procedurals....
...Take holidays in the Lake District…” Claire Perry “Close women’s prisons....
...Pendragon castle near the river’s source is named for Arthur’s father. The henge by Eamont bridge is called Arthur’s Round Table....
...Don Dixon, the Lake Charles police chief, warned his officers would clamp down on looting....
...Among other “recommended authors” were Edgar Allan Poe, Agatha Christie, Arthur Conan Doyle and Mexican detective fiction writer Paco Ignacio Taibo II....
...I WANT TO LIVE: The Diary of a Young Girl in Stalin’s Russia by Nina Lugovskaya Doubleday ₤16.99, 267 pages Found in the KGB archives, this wonderful diary, complete with police underlinings, has inevitably...
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