Wednesday 30 May 2007

It's Wednesday but no spelling test day at school for my 8 year old daughter as no school - half term holiday strikes. So no spelling to learn and instead homework of reading, reading and more reading. Fortunately my children enjoy books. Must be the example that I set, as you can see from the following sample of my current reading:

Reading 1

Tapioca flour
Prawns (20%)
Vegetable oil
Sugar
Condensed milk
Salt
Whole egg
Flavour enhancer (E621)
Can contain traces of peanuts

Reading 2

Twentieth Century Fox
Presents
A ROBERT WISE Production
Starring JULIE ANDREWS CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER
Co-Starring RICHARD HAYDN PEGGY WOOD ELEANOR PARKER as "The Baroness"
Music By RICHARD RODGERS Lyrics by OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN II
Additional Words and Music BY RICHARD RODGERS
Screenplay by ERNEST LEHMAN
From the Stage Musical With Music and Lyrics by RICHARD RODGERS and OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN II Book By HOWARD LINDSAY and RUSSEL CROUSE
Associate Producer SAUL CHAPLIN
Directed By ROBERT WISE
Produced By Argyle Enterprises, Inc.
Color By Deluxe

Reading 3

Church Street
Wey Lane
Germain Street
King Street
Amy Lane
A416 Amersham, Rickmansworth
A416 Amersham Old Town
A355
A416 Beaconsfield
A40 London, Slough
A355 Slough
M40 Wycombe, Oxford
M42 The North
M6 Toll The North West
Norton Canes Services
£4
M6 North
M62 Liverpool
A5080 Liverpool, Knotty Ash
A5058 Ring Road, Widnes, Airport
A5058 Widnes, Liverpool Airport
A562 Widnes, Liverpool Airport
Beechfield Road

Happy Half Term!

Monday 28 May 2007

The brand new week starts in the UK with a bank holiday - a public holiday that gives people time off to buy bargain leather sofas, sit in traffic jams, and have barbecues in the rain. What could be making Really Huge News by the time Friday comes and us Brits have once again realised that the banks being on holiday has evolved into a multitude of cash burning opportunities? Possibly the following:

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The World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) lambasts Finland and Venezuela for introducing public area smoking bans. The WMO executive council's annual review of the state of the earth's atmosphere controversially recommends the scrapping of such bans to increase secondary smoking and, therefore, reduce the amount of CO2 being released into the atmosphere.

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The International Whaling Commission stirs up more controversy by joining the smoking debate and coming out against the "No Tobacco Day" and in favour of smoking. The Japanese spokesperson makes a point of recommending the smoked whale blubber sushi.

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Second Life
welcomes Sweden's virtual embassy and, almost immediately, the virtual manufacturing plant for Ferrero Rocher.

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The anti-evolution Creation Museum in Kentucky, USA closes its doors days after opening as a result of multiple law suits triggered by its people mingling with dinosaurs exhibit. The intellectual property infringement claims are valid claims lead spokesperson Barney who goes on to deny that this is payback time for his show being banned from the Philippines for witchcraft and necromancy.

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Radio Caracas TV is back on the air having agreed to drop its criticism of the Hugo Chavez regime, work to boost the image of Venezuela, and, most importantly, stop broadcasting Barney.

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The Bhutan authorities are re-evaluating their approach to educating people about democracy when the mock election results in Gordon Brown taking power.

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Airbus shares plummet when the latest Airbus 380 airport compatability tests in Charles De Gaulle airport result in "Non, Non, Non".

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The International Conference on Nuclear Criticality Safety in St Petersburg, Russia ended in disarray and disaster. The fallout is still being assessed.

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Nearby in Moscow, the International Federation of Journalists annual congress, "Making News for Democracy: Building Trust in Quality Journalism" is a huge success despite dangerous overcrowding at the break-out session "The Use of Irony in Choosing Congress Locations".

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David Beckham's return to the England football side is frustrated after he pulls out of England's first international at the new Wembley Stadium. Beckham refused to face Brazil after he realised that his latest hairstyle, developed specially for the occasion, cannot be seen from the stadium's top tier.

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Friday 25 May 2007

As the weekend has already started at my daughter's school due to a teacher training day, I thought I’d share some really huge news from the last few days as reported in the UK. For those of you reading this overseas somewhere, the UK is situated in northern Europe, just below Iceland (fill in your own jokes related to maternal confusion about this geographic reference) and, thanks to global warming, has a sub-tropical climate, this week actually featuring sunshine... and some rain.

The REALLY HUGE NEWS this week is:

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Trafalgar Square has gone all green, having been covered with turf. Meanwhile a beach has been constructed in Kew Gardens. It's amazing what a few days of sunshine does to London. The dudes are already gathered by the Thames Barrier waiting for surf up.

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A swarm of bees terrorised local residents on Bournemouth Pier after the traditional 1960s hairstyle competition was opened by surprise guest Amy Winehouse.

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Happy Birthday to Star Wars which is 30 years old today. If you can remember it clearly first time round, you can also remember days before Princess Leia, The Force and movie merchandising. Yes, a galaxy far, far away.

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Rod Baber made a mobile phone call from the top of Everest. Living in the countryside, I can appreciate the challenge getting a good signal but think of the roaming charges.

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Fireman were bravely pointing their hoses at the Cutty Sark at the same time as a news item came out reporting that tea is better than water. Not when you're trying to douse the flames on the last remaining tea clipper but most acceptable with some biscuits and a nice sit down after a hard day fire fighting.

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Children's author Ted Dewan offered his head by way of replacement if Oxford University's Pitt Rivers Museum repatriates its Amazon shrunken heads collection. Noting Mr Dewan's success as an author, Jeff Bezos's spokesperson declined any further comment.

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The British civil service is issuing iPods as a developmental tool for top civil servants. In a related development, the BBC announced the return of "Yes Minister", now retitled "Sorry Minister, didn't catch a word of of what you were saying".

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McDonalds has launched a petition against the Oxford English Dictionary's definition of the word McJob saying that it should clearly be replaced with "The by-product of a low-nutrition, low-prestige, low-dignity, low benefit, no-future food". Meanwhile National Vegetarian Week started a campaign against the use of the phrase "vegetative state".

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Brazil footballing legend Romario celebrated scoring his 1000th goal. All Sheffield United need to do is score at the same rate as they did in the 2006-7 season for the next 31 years and they'd be only 8 goals short of matching Romario's incredible feet.

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An obese tourist had to be airlifted from a cruise ship when he fell ill. How else do you get up if you weigh 450 pounds? Apparently he was suffering from gastric problems (go figure) and is doing fine now.

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Viagra can be used to help recovery from jetlag. Yet to be discovered is whether this is due to the drug successfully resetting the body clock or the trial participants not caring which time zone they were in or a simple typo.

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Tony Wright has established a new world record by not sleeping for over 11 days. Curiously he couldn't get to sleep when he finally went to bed. He shouldn't have watched all those episodes of Doctor Who to keep awake.

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Wednesday 23 May 2007

It's Wednesday, so it's spelling test day at school for my 8 year old daughter. This week the words are:

not
knot
read
reed
fair
fare
tail
tale
their
there
where
wear

Yes. The second week of homonyms, those wonderful words that sound the same, might even have the same spelling, but mean different things. My second alternative homonymical spelling list is:

new
Wembley
FA
cup
final
exciting
right
result
blue
is
the
colour

The usual competition rules and prizes. This week, can you get the spellings right? Answers on an e-postcard please.

Monday 21 May 2007

The week ahead beckons with the bouncing excitement of a young puppy. What could be making Really Huge News by the time Friday comes in and we're all dog-tired and eager for the weekend? Possibly the following:


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Channel Five will offer Tony Blair a pilot for a TV series entitled "Britain Is The Best Country In The World". The pilot will be on "Making a Cup of Tea". If successful, this will be followed by "Our Policeman Do Not Carry Guns", "We Do Everything To Protect Civil Liberties" and "We're Not Superficial - How I Got To The Top With Imperfect Teeth".


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Demonstrating once again that history does repeat itself, following the excitement of the penalty shoot out deciding the European Champions League Final between Liverpool and AC Milan, Chelsea spend £30 million on a once great footballer just past his prime.

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Chaos in the British Labour Party as Gordon Brown abandons his campaign for leadership of the party following revelations that his attempts to smile have adversely affected the weather by creating what meteorologists call an occlusion and normal people call a bit wet for this time of year.

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The International Atomic Energy Agency reports that Iran has not complied with the UN Security Council deadline to halt uranium enrichment. Tony Blair immediately orders a military strike on Tehran saying "What the hell. I'm going anyway. Let Gordon sort this one out".

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The Russian authorities change their mind and decide not to ban the Moscow Gay Pride Parade. Instead they've relocated it to a little camp in Siberia.

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The Irish general election results surprise many when the Eurovision Party comes from nowhere to sweep to power. Dana, the new Taoiseach explained that Irish musicians had switched to politics as they can never win the Eurovision Song Contest again because of Eastern bloc voting. "This was an election we could win", she said. Dana added that she stood by her party's campaign to bring Ireland "All Kinds Of Everything".


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The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh's visit to a Hindu Temple in Bradford is cut short when members of the temple asked "What does a Prince Philip do?"


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Following hot on the heels of the Mars Bar Non-Veg/Veg fiasco, Cadbury's comes clean about the ingredients in their Fruit and Nut bars.

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Tintin marks Hergé's centennial in controversial style by filing copy to his newspaper for only the second time ever revealing his time with Joseph Ratzinger in the Hitler Youth.


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America's record on human rights is under the spotlight after the United Nations identifies serious breaches, most notably the continued worldwide syndication of Baywatch.

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Friday 18 May 2007

As the weekend in the Middle East is half-way through, I thought I’d share some really huge news from the last few days as reported in the UK. For those of you reading this overseas somewhere, the UK is situated in northern Europe, just to the right of Ireland (fill in your own jokes related to Anglo-Irish political differences) and, thanks to global warming, has a sub-tropical climate, this week featuring rain.

The REALLY HUGE NEWS this week is:

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The UK Government has decided, after all, that it will license scientists to create human animal hybrid embryos for research. Critics say that consideration of the deep ethical issues has been side-stepped as, once again, the Goverment is playing the populist card by trying to ride on the back of the success of the Spider-Man movies.


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Mars Bars, Twix and Snickers are now no longer suitable for Muslims with the introduction of animal product rennet. There is absolutely no truth that this is the latest George W. Bush inspired move for the War On Terror - "Now those terrorismists can't Work, Rest and Play".

The manufacturers appear to be unconcerned about any impact on their Muslim or vegetarian customer base. No-one, however, seems to have mentioned any objections that any-one might have of having ones daily confectionary treat laced with a substance produced in the fourth stomach of young cows bred for veal production. Pleasure You Can't Measure.

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Bubba Ludwig has been issued with a gun permit in Illinois. 10 months old Bubba has been wondering why he was not issued one the moment his father's sperm fertilised his mother's egg - "don't my parents know the Bill of Rights?" or as Bubba put it "Goo, goo, goo, Charlton Heston?"

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Prince Harry will not be spending a tour of duty in Iraq after all. The UK military have assessed the risk to Harry and those around him is too great. Now all they need to do is sort through the long line of soldiers wearing "I'm Harry" T-shirts to find the real one.

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Jerry Falwell died this week. Much has been said about Mr. Falwell. He certainly helped to make religious groupings a powerful force in US politics. Perhaps most significantly, he made a major contribution to free speech in his US Supreme Court loss against Larry Flynt of Hustler infamy delivering stronger free speech rights in relation to parody. So Jerry - the Teletubbies "Say Goodbye", especially Tinky Winky.


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The beauty of the Taj Mahal has been diminished in recent years by pollution discolouring the once pristine marble from which this labour of love is constructed. The solution has been staring us in the face all this time - apply a mud pack. Well not staring me in my face. My days of mudpackery are long gone.

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A re-print of a 1982 Birmingham Mail newspaper published to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Aston Villa Football Club's European Cup victory caused confusion in the local property market. A number of readers found the £53,500 price for a four bedroomed house very appealing. The current market valuation would be ten times this amount. So they decided to take the logical next step. That's right, ignore that they were reading a re-print of a quarter of a century old newspaper, and try to buy this bargain house.

These same individuals also tried to re-negotiate their salaries to the 1982 average of £7,117, pay £297 for a Sony 22 inch colour TV, £470 for a Sony video recorder, 58 pence for a pint of beer, £1.64 for a gallon of petrol, £16,731 for a Porsche 911, £80 for a Sony Walkman and 16 pence for a vegetarian Mars Bar.

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Alan Johnson, the UK's Secretary of State for Education and Skills has published the list of the top 167 books for teenage boys. This initiative is to help encourage reading. Something that boys are apparently not so good at.

The top 5 are:

1) The Top 10 of Everything 2007 by Russell Ash

2) Strange Powers of the Human Mind (Forbidden Truths) by Herbie Brennan

3) A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson

4) I Know You Got Soul by Jeremy Clarkson

5) Guinness Book of Records

You have to wait for number 14 to get the first work of fiction - Douglas Adams's Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy - unless you consider the complete list a masterclass in detached from reality thinking.

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TV celebrity chef Gordon Ramsey had one tonne of horse manure dumped outside his Michelin 1 star rated Claridge's restaurant by protesters from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals because horse meat was featured on chef Ramsey's TV programme "The F Word". This has solved a long-running mystery as to the mischievous "F" in the programme title. Having watched and enjoyed the programme but having no clue as to what the "F" in Ramsey's programme stood for, it all became suddenly crystal clear - dial "F" for Fertiliser.

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Jose Mourinho prepared for the culmination of Chelsea Football Club's season - their FA Cup Final appearance - by being arrested in a dog related incident. This might bring back curious memories of reports about footballer Stan Collymore but that would be totally misplaced and somewhat worrying.

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Wednesday 16 May 2007

Today my 8 year old daughter has her weekly spelling test at school. This week the words set are:

coat
leaves
note
mean
table
sound
light
point
watch
wave
fly
form

These are, as I'm sure you immediately realised, homonyms. Words that share the same pronunciation and/or spelling, as my daughter explained to me.

My alternative homonymical spelling test list is:

fluff
slip
loll
post
bug
inhale
no
new
taxes
dubya
prudence
sleaze

The usual competition rules and prizes if you can guess the multiple meanings or spellings.

Friday 11 May 2007

As the western work week comes to an end, I thought I’d share some really huge news from the last few days as reported in the UK. For those of you reading this overseas somewhere, the UK is situated in northern Europe, just above France (fill in your own jokes related to centuries of Anglo-French rivalry) and, thanks to global warming, has a sub-tropical climate, this week featuring rain.

The REALLY HUGE NEWS this week is:

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Tony Blair has announced his resignation and, with the speed of action that has typified his ten years in power, will stop being prime minister in seven weeks time.

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The Eurovision Song Contest is with us once again. It is being held in Helsinki and Thursday brought the semi-final and success for Belarus, Macedonia, Slovenia, Hungary, Georgia, Latvia, Serbia, Bulgaria, Turkey and Moldova. Also success for the viewing and listening public who, thanks to the rules that give Germany, France, Spain and the UK an automatic place in Saturday’s final, did not have to listen to the UK’s entry Flying The Flag sung by Scooch.

For those wondering what Scooch stands for:

Sorry
Continental Europe
Oh it’s so embarrassing that this song is representing the UK, my life force is ebbing away, I can’t go on ……
Oh no, they’re still singing
Can’t
Hear anymore

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Very, very many apologies for the quality of the UK entry. Even so, I’m not sure I hanker after the old days when there were songs such as Boom Bang a Bang, Ding-A-Dong, and Diggi-loo diggy-ley.

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Cezanne’s Water Melon sold for £12.8M (US$25M). Makes it bloody expensive to achieve your five a day.

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London cyclists will no longer need a special permit to cycle along canal towpaths in London. Anglers, however, still need to purchase a license during the shopping trolley fishing season.

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Knights of the realm Sir Tom Jones and Sir Elton John will perform at the memorial concert for Princess Diana on 1 July. Money raised by the concert will go to admirable charities including Centrepoint, the UK’s leading youth homelessness charity, and Sentabale which helps vulnerable and young children in Lesotho. No mention of any money going to Jimmy Saville to revive his Clunk-Click campaign.

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Google Earth may soon contain not only images of the globe but also the relevant sounds. Whatever you do, avoid using Google Earth to zoom-in on Helsinki on Saturday night.

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To mark the start of Lara Croft’s second decade, the original game is being re-worked and will be available on 27 June when she moves from No 11 to No 10 Downing Street. … Um … No that’s Gordon Brown becoming prime minister. I wonder where these politicians get their ideas? (Probably best not to conjure up an image of Gordon Brown dressed up as Lara Croft).

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Scientists have linked oral sex to throat cancer. Some experts find that somewhat hard to swallow.

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Bill Clinton announced an important arrangement to provide less expensive HIV/Aids drugs to developing countries. His other related initiative received less publicity – he once again promised to stay faithful to Hillary.

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A nine-year-old boy has hatched a chick from an egg his mother bought at a local supermarket. He’s now hoping that his new Hush Puppies will bring him the pet he really wanted.

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Paris Hilton will go to jail for 45 days. Some reports suggested that she expressed concern because of her huge fan base, the pleasure she provides millions and because her public needs her. (I’m not sure the transcript is wholly accurate or if any of the words have been spelled incorrectly). Petitions have sprung up on this important social issue. Exercise your conscience as follows:

Petition to keep Paris Hilton out of jail

Petition to send Paris Hilton to jail

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