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Archives for June 26, 2011 - July 2, 2011

Your Letters

15:43 UK time, Friday, 1 July 2011

Re: The mother-in-law's viral manners e-mail evaluated. I quite like her attitude, the mother-in-law that is. However, if she served me sweetcorn I still wouldn't eat it.
Jo Peaks

Actually Vicky (Thursday's Letters), an increasing birth rate is only one way of increasing the population growth - you could have a decrease in infant mortality, people living longer, fewer people dying through better medication or simply not getting sick as often.
Lisa, London

Re: Colin Main (Thursday's Letters), The Universe is expanding at an exponential rate so it would have taken longer as the space the light needed to travel through was constantly getting bigger.
Sally, London

As I age, I am more and more surprised how I can understand each individual word, but not necessarily the sense.
Rachel, Wayzata

runs riot.
Lynn, London

I have a question stuck in my brain and I need help. If its midnight on Thursday has Thursday just started or just finished. I can't seem to find a definitive answer anywhere. Help!
Ian, Redditch

10 things we didn't know last week

15:41 UK time, Friday, 1 July 2011

Snippets from the week's news, sliced, diced and processed for your convenience.

1. Jeremy Paxman tried but failed to get into his college's University Challenge team.

2. The male water boatman sings with its penis.
More details

3. The pope tweets.
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4. The US only got its first roundabout in 1990, it was in Nevada.
More details

5. Birds have their own version of Red Bull.
More details

6. The average length of time that ships are hijacked for by Somali pirates is five months

7. Listening to the radio is what makes Britons happiest.

8. Jodhpurs, wildebeest and roux are some of the hardest words for kids to spell.

9. Dinosaurs would beat any other animal when it comes to head-butting.
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10. A tennis ball can lose 12.9 mph post-bounce on a clay court versus grass.
More details

Seen 10 things? . Big thanks to Alan Homer for this week's picture of 10 pegs on top of his washing machine.

Caption Competition

12:50 UK time, Friday, 1 July 2011

Comments

Winning entries in the Caption Competition.

The competition is now closed.

This week it was an attempt by the congregation at St George's Church in Stockport to beat the world record for the biggest jacket ever made. It's made up of nearly 8,000 knitted panels.

Thanks to all who entered. The prize of a small amount of kudos to the following:

6. LaurenceLane
Even in death, Shrek the sheep just kept on giving.

5. Vicky S
No , Beatrice and Eugenie are going to share it.

4. Gray Gable
Blimey, Joseph's put on weight.

3. SimonRooke
The Guiness Book of Records says "Yes" but the Noise Abatement Society says "No".

2. Nick Fowler St. George's manages to gain the World Record for the Number of People Asking "Why?"

1. MightyGiddyUpGal
Heidi Withers' wedding dress arrives in the post compliments of her future mother-in-law.

Paper Monitor

10:20 UK time, Friday, 1 July 2011

A service highting the riches of the daily press.

The story of Carolyn Bourne, the woman who emailed her prospective daughter-in-law Heidi Withers to complain vociferously about the younger lady's alleged lack of manners, has everything.

It takes in warring females and - most crucially so far as the British press is concerned - open class warfare, with Mrs Bourne depicted as a sort of latter-day Hyacinth Bucket in contrast to the evidently less genteel Miss Withers.

The tale refuses to die, with Miss Withers' father's description of Mrs Bourne as "Miss Fancy Pants" providing a second full day's coverage.

And now it is apparent that the papers have divided neatly into two camps: Team Bourne and Team Withers.

Unsuprisingly, the Daily Telegraph is firmly in the former category. It has commissioned the UK's foremost arbiter of social norms, Spectator agony aunt Mary Killen, to And she clearly has every sympathy with forthright articulations of the code of etiquette.

"Who among us is ever entirely satisfied with our offspring's choice of loved one? It can be hard to feel unconfined delight when a stranger is parachuted into the bosom of a happy family by a love-blind child," she declares. "Which is why I'm sure we all read the e-mail from Carolyn Bourne to her future step-daughter-in-law, Heidi, and found ourselves gasping at each of the girl's breaches in etiquette."

Bel Mooney of the Daily Mail - the newspaper that, surely, Mrs Bourne peruses each morning with her toasted crumpets - is also

She recalls with a shudder the long-term former partner of her son. Ms Mooney's darling offspring was considerate enough to ensure that his consort was never seated adjacent to her during concerts, she recalls: "He knew she'd whisper, fidget and generally not know how to behave - which would spoil the evening for me."

How wonderful - a man who thinks of both his mum and his girlfriend. She clearly didn't deserve him.

Foremost among Team Heidi, somewhat improbably, is the Guardian's Alexander Chancellor.

He is particularly vexed by Mrs Bourne's admonition of the younger woman for failing to get up early "in line with house norms".

Chancellor splutters: "This doesn't sound very hospitable. Shouldn't working people from the city be allowed a bit of a lie-in on a country weekend?"

Likewise, he strongly disapproves of Mrs Bourne depicting Miss Withers' desire to get married in a castle as "brash, celebrity-style behaviour".

This, he says, "is to condemn every cash-strapped, castle-less couple in Britain with Cinderella dreams". Blimey. Paper Monitor now feels guilty for spending so many tea breaks flicking through the newspapers and sniggering at coverage of footballers' marriage ceremonies.

The Daily Mirror does not come out overtly for Miss Withers, but it is clear where the sympathies of the newspaper of Andy Capp lie. Its is interspersed with mother-in-law jokes, such as Ken Dodd's "I haven't spoken to my mother-in-law for 18 months. I don't like to interrupt her" and Les Dawson's "My mother-in-law fell down a wishing well. I was amazed, I never knew they worked."

Perhaps more mother-in-law jokes will be one innovation brought to the Independent by its new editor Chris Blackhurst. Previously, Indy owner Evgeny Lebedev had conceded that his paper was Surely its future lies in channelling the spirit of Les Dawson.


Your Letters

17:42 UK time, Thursday, 30 June 2011

While I sympathise with the prospective mother-in-law who provided today's Quote of the Day, I would draw her attention to the remarkably British sentiment expressed by Caesar, who once remarked that rebuking someone for their ill-breeding was itself ill-bred.
Edward Green, London, UK

Re this story, if the black hole was created when the universe was 770 million years old, the universe was no more than 770 million light years across in size. So how did the light take 12.9 Billion years to travel 770 Million light years? Did it stop off for a snack on the way - maybe a light meal? (Geddit? I'll get my anorak.)
Colin Main, Luton, UK

So an increased birth rate is the cause of population growth. Well I never, I had my money on cloning and mirrors.
Vicky, East London - A Stadium, No Ticket.

I bet I'm not the only person who wondered to whom this article referred!
QJ, Stafford, UK

It really doesn't take a scientist to tell you that eating larger portions or eating more frequently will make you fatter.
Basil Long, Nottingham

Andrew of Malvern (Wednesday letters), I think we should bagsy Corfu back.
Trina, UK

I'm confused. Why is the pic that Rob Orme (Wednesday letters) mentions clearly of GCSE students?
Trish, Scotland

The headline said that jellyfish have forced nuclear plant to shutdown! I had high hopes for an entertaining tale of those environmentally conscious, placard wielding, jellyfish pickets. Then I read the article.
Alexander Lewis Jones, Nottingham, UK

This is why we don't wear coats.
Mike, Newcastle upon Tyne

Popular Elsewhere

14:57 UK time, Thursday, 30 June 2011

A look at the stories ranking highly on various news sites.

When an article starts with a polar bear trainer saying "Don't worry, it just means he loves me" the mind boggles as to what exactly the bear is doing. How can you not click on that? Daily Mail readers certainly haven't been able to resist. The picture in question shows around the neck. It goes on to suggest the polar bear can communicate even more complicated rules than "If I put my gnashers around your neck I promise I won't actually bite". As Mark explains "Agee has rules and we are always working inside those".

Here's a claim and a half as the Guardian's most read storyÌýsays isÌýhasÌýfound possiblyÌýtheÌý".Ìý The picture shows Chinese government official inspecting a new road. UnfortunatelyÌýtheÌýmanipulation of the photoÌýwas done so badly they looked like they were levitating above it. Cue an onslaught of parodies showing the three men landing on the moon, (presumably to inspect its drivability). Curiously, it turned out the inspectors did visit the road but the photos taken were not to the liking of the person who made the doctored picture.

Times readers are getting their fill of . Having taken a mere £121 on its opening weekend, it takes a box office analyst (no less) to guess that would mean there were just 20 paying audience members. The Times is particularly creative in the insulting metaphor stakes saying it features "exchanges so painful to watch that you would be better off rubbing Scotch bonnet peppers in your eyes".

Prince Harry seems to be taking over China - in the hits stakes, that is. Hardly a day goes by without a "China is growing, like, really fast" story getting on the most read lists. But now it seems nothing gets the cursor drifting over Telegraph readers' page like the promise of an update on Harry's love life.ÌýThey are promised a treat with the headline "" but then closely followed by "(eight times removed)". Here's the breakdown: Harry's rumoured new beau Florence Brudenell-Bruce is related to Sir Robert Walpole who was Britain's first prime minister. His granddaughter married into the royal family.

"One in six new marriages is the result of meetings on internet dating sites" claims the New Yorker's most read story. The incredibly in-depth explanation of the says that it's normal for people in their twenties to rely on the algorithm of sites like Match.com, which takes into account 1500 variables, instead of happenstance. Just like in the days of classified ads GSOH is still at a premium. But an analysis of what is meant by good sense of humour led one dating site entrepreneur to buy both Hemakesmelaugh.com and shelaughsatmyjokes.com.

Paper Monitor

11:41 UK time, Thursday, 30 June 2011

A service highlighting the riches of the daily press.

While other newspapers flirt with mediocrity, the Daily Star is making a break for genius.

OK, not the whole paper, just the Text Maniacs column. Today's is a peach.

The main subject is the strike of public sector workers. And perhaps the pithiest of the missives comes from a "Donna K'bab" in "blackpool (with kids argh!)".

"Always knew I should of became a teacher....another day off haha," she texts. She accepts teachers might not appreciate her analysis and goes on to add: "I also know full wat my kids r like!!"

Paper Monitor can think of one obstacle to Ms K'bab's pedagogical career.

But it must be said that Text Maniacs is gloriously impartial, featuring a broad range of opinion.

There's no room in today's paper for any stories about obesity. It's probably for the best as the front page blurb, dominating half the page, is an offer for various comestibles from Greggs.

Today you can get "any muffin you want!" free, while tomorrow you can have a free doughnut, free pizza on Saturday, and a free chicken lattice on Sunday. It's really saying something when a chicken lattice seems the healthiest item of a bunch.

The main story on the front is a picture of Cheryl Cole who has gone almost-blonde, but it's the badge that the paper has stuck on that draws the eye.

"1st NEW PIC IN 37 DAYS!" says the legend. Inside another badge says "1st PUBLIC SIGHTING IN 37 DAYS".

It's all rather reminiscent of those occasions when a rare bird is blown off its migratory route from Siberia to the Azores and draws thousands of twitchers to a terraced house in Weston-super-Mare.

She's gone 37 days without being captured by a Star-sponsored pap. It's like Novak Djokovic's 41-match unbeaten run. Or Joe Calzaghe's 46-0 career record. Only better.

Your Letters

16:48 UK time, Wednesday, 29 June 2011

If Greece defaults on its loans, could we send bailiffs round to get the rest of the Parthenon?
Andrew, Malvern, UK

"Goat risotto : what's it like to be kidnapped in Somalia?" I would have thought it more appropriate to say "What's it like to be a goat in Somalia?"
Rob Falconer, Llandough, Wales

"For its return to the London stage it was carried by lorry from York to Southall where it was put on the tracks and shunted to Waterloo." Well, I suppose there was no other way to get it there, what with it being a train and all.
Basil Long, Nottingham

I would like to complain that in this article the picture is clearly of GCSE students, whilst the caption implies A-level students. I'll get my tie with a rebelliously large knot...
Rob Orme, Winsford, Cheshire

Go Tuesday's letters. My favourite part of the Magazine. Do you think Jessie J reads the letters on MM and will realise she has stumped a nation...? I just assumed I wasn't in the in crowd and ignored darfaydar til today (so busy, didn't read Monday til today).
Kay, London, UK

Sorry, K Morrison (Tuesday's letters), but it's on display in the British Museum and there's no guarantee the Greeks would know how to look after it.
Edward Green, London, UK

Paper Monitor

11:55 UK time, Wednesday, 29 June 2011

A service highlighting the riches of the daily press.

Parents, they can be sooooooooo embarrassing. Just ask Andy Murray. His mother's "flirty" tweets about his next opponent at Wimbledon, Feliciano Lopez, are the subject of many column inches today.

Judy has christened the handsome Spaniard "Deliciano". The Guardian described Judy's Twitter messages as a "", while the Daily Express says she described him as being like a "". The Daily Star even describe Judy as "giggly" when she talks about Lopez. That must be a first.

The Independent is keen to let us know what all the fuss is about. It says Lopez "". What a man. Can't you just feel all that testosterone raging through his veins?

The Daily Star says Murray has "ordered" his mum to stop flirting. According to the Independent he was quite clear about it, albeit in a very teenage way, saying:

I think it's about time she stopped that nonsense. Makes me want to throw up. It's disgusting.

Interestingly, the Daily Express also runs a story on its front page asking why Judy and Murray's girlfriend Kim Sears don't smile much when they watch him play. If the above reports are correct, Paper Monitor thinks "giggly" Judy will have a very big smile on her face later today - and a twinkle in her eye.

Your Letters

16:49 UK time, Tuesday, 28 June 2011

Who hate all the Pis?
Kieran Boyle, Oxford, England

The picture that accompanies this story will help to explain why tau will struggle to catch on. You just can't put on a Homer Simpson voice and say "Mmmmm, tauuuu". Although I suppose he would like "Mmmm, double piiii"
Ruaraidh, Wirral, UK

Am I the only person worried that you can get a PhD in theoretical physics from CalTech and still have trouble multiplying by two?
Rik Alewijnse, Feering, UK

My husband has just enthusiastically described his new computer monitor to me as "wide enough to display 2.5 Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú News websites at standard font size". How about that for a unit of comparative measurement?
Anna, Milton Keynes, UK

If only Mardy Fish were having John McEnroe-style tantrums, it would be a great case of nominative determinism. Um, especially if he took it out of people by slapping them with a wet kipper.
Sarah, Basel, Switzerland

"UK has Greek contingency plan"? I suggest they better give it back then!
K Morrison, Lowestoft, UK

Popular Elsewhere

15:12 UK time, Tuesday, 28 June 2011

A look at the stories ranking highly on various news sites.

if the Monarchist League of Canada have their way. The Telegraph's most popular story says they are campaigning to have a monarch of their own to set up home in Ottawa. It's in response to republican critics who say that they only get a visit from their head of state every two to three years. They've chosen Harry as he has "virtually no chance of becoming king". They are due a visit from the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, but it's suggested the majority of Quebecois may be a little bit prickly.

Some scientists aren't shy of predicting we'll find an alien life form. But Andrei Finkelstein, director of the Russian Academy of Sciences' Applied Astronomy Institute, has upped the stakes by putting a time scale on it. He has given . According to the Guardian's most popular story, his confidence is because 10% of the known planets circling suns are much like Earth. And, much like Earth, he thinks they'll probably look like us as well with a head, two arms and two legs.

Entering competitions according to a popular Daily Mail story. The gloriously named Liz Denial, fresh off winning over £16,000 on Deal or No Deal, has surrounded herself with her winnings from daily competitions for the photoshoot. Only they appear to be lots of tea bags and Rice Crispy Squares. Oh, and there's the life size cardboard cut out of Ricky Gervais. It's not quite clear how she is living off it.

The palms are sweaty and the gaze averted for what is about to be said. Having a quiet think on your own can have its benefits. That's the message from a widely emailed New York Times article. It argues, or rather says in a calm thought-out manner, that which drug companies are keen to provide a cure for. But introverts, it finds, get better school results despite having equal IQ levels to extroverts.

As if to add to that social anxiety, Boston Globe readers pile in with their . People who e-mail and then walk over to make sure you've got the e-mail are high up on the list. PerhapsÌý their readers wouldn't much like working with anyone who's been on the Apprentice as another annoyance is people who insist on talking only on speaker phone.

Paper Monitor

13:47 UK time, Tuesday, 28 June 2011

A service highlighting the riches of the daily press.

All hail the new queen of centre court.

Yes, the Duchess of Cambridge did not even have to lift a racket to be served up on most of the front pages.

Prince William and his wife saw Andy Murray sail through to the quarter finals of Wimbledon on Monday but Murray has been pretty much relegated to the back pages. This is understandable considering he had not shaved and even admitted himself that he was a little on the whiffy side.

The front-page picture is a composite with the all-white duchess on one side and Murray performing an overblown bow on the other. You can just about see his face covered in the aforementioned fluff.

Many of the papers capture every ooh and aah to escape from the duchess's mouth and they also feature pictures of the royal couple's feeble attempt at a Mexican Wave.

The says Prince William needed a little bit of encouragement from his wife before they both raised their arms on the third lap of the wave. But clearly those etiquette lessons did not extend to Mexican Waves as one's bottom really needs to come off the seat if one is not look utterly ridiculous.

Talking of whites, there's a new Knut on the scene. Meet 60st Agee, a polar bear who has formed an "amazing bond" with Mark Abbot who plucked her from a zoo as a cub.

says the pair are so close, they "wrestle, kiss, nap and even go swimming with each other". They live in Canada so perhaps the duke and duchess can drop in on their upcoming tour and try out their new improved Mexican wave on Agee.

Timing is everything and the has finally seized on a new line, courtesy of former home secretary Jack Straw, to run with a story that has been doing the rounds for ages.

The paper is outraged at claims police forces are cashing in on car crashes by tipping off local garages in return for an "administration fee".

Paper Monitor has a vague recollection of the Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú's own More or Less reporting this ages ago, but our memory must be failing us.

How to Say: Michele Bachmann

13:20 UK time, Tuesday, 28 June 2011

An occasional guide to the words and names in the news from Marieke Martin of the Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú Pronunciation Unit.

Minnesota congresswoman Michele Bachmann has formally launched her bid to become the next Republican president. But how do you pronounce her name?

It is not a very big leap to assume that it comes from the German-speaking parts of the world but the pronunciation of "ch" in her name might raise some eyebrows. Is it pronounced -k as in 'king' or as a fricative -kh as in Scottish "loch"?

Our policy is to recommend the pronunciation the individual prefers or uses, where known. Michele Bachmann's own pronunciation, as can be heard on her campaign video on YouTube, is (-aa as in "father", -k as in "king", stressed syllables in upper case).

However, there are other names of German origin that do not necessarily follow that trend - 18th Century composer Johann Sebastian Bach's last name is often anglicised as baakh (-kh as in Scottish "loch"), but some native English speakers also pronounce this name baak.

More anglicised still is the pronunciation used be the German-born American banker Jules Bache who pronounced his German last name as baytch (-ay as in 'day', -tch as in 'catch'). The anglicisations of German names can vary according to country and individual preference.

Here at the Pronunciation Unit we recommend pronouncing the composer's name baakh, given that this pronunciation is closer to the German pronunciation, which actually features a short vowel: bakh (-a as in hat; -kh as in Scottish loch). The quality of the German 'a' in Bach does not have an equivalent in British English, lying somewhere between -a as in hat and -aa as in father.

There are two sounds represented by the German digraph "ch", the soft "ch" (-kh as in German "ich"), ie, the voiceless palatal fricative, which appears after "i", "e" and "r", which sounds rather different to the hard "ch" (-kh as in Scottish "loch"), ie the voiceless velar fricative, which appears after "a", "o" and "u".

The soft "ch" is sometimes perceived by native English speakers as equivalent to the English -sh as in "shop" sound, although it is actually produced further back in the mouth. It is actually quite similar to the "h" sound in "human" or "Hugh".

The soft "ch" sound is also often anglicised to -k as in "king", for instance in the German word for "I", ich, which some English speakers pronounce as ick, or in Marlene Dietrich, which is often anglicised as DEET-rick - the German pronunciation is closer to DEET-rikh (-ee as in "meet", -kh as in German "ich").

To download the Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú Pronunciation Unit's guide to text spelling, click here.

Your Letters

15:21 UK time, Monday, 27 June 2011

Comparative measurement overload! My favourite is the new equivalent for luminosity - "twice as bright as the floodlights at Old Trafford".
Aaron, Lowestoft, UK

Really? The British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons who deal with breast enlargements are known as Baaps? Gold.
Simon Love, London

Re this week's 10 Things. No. 3 had me gobsmacked. This is *so* not new! But maybe the Daily telegraph didn''t watch Sex in the City.
Susan Thomas, Brisbane, Australia

Simon (Friday's Letters), perhaps you'd like to enlighten the rest of us? I'm actually the same age as Jessie J and still don't know what she's talking about
Amanda, London

"Darfaydar"? (Friday's Letters) I still haven't worked it out. I weep also for the present.
Raymond Hopkins, Kronoby, Finland

Simon Love (Friday's Letters), please enlighten mean as to what "dayfaydar" boots are. I've been racking my brains ever since I read your letter. I'm beginning to think that I`m stupid but I`m not used to "Essex speak".
Tara B, London, England

Darfaydar? (Friday's Letters) Clearly the force is not with her spelling.
Jo Peaks

Monitor note: If you still haven't worked it out Miss J is refering to Darth Vader. Now weep for the future.

Popular Elsewhere

15:21 UK time, Monday, 27 June 2011

A look at the stories ranking highly on various news sites.

In the checklist for the cost of war you'd be forgiven for forgetting air conditioning. But NPR's most popular article brings it to our attention having worked out cooling (£12.5bn) per year in Iraq and Afghanistan. To give us a sense of scale they've worked out that's more than is spentÌýon Nasa. It's also more than was spent on cleaning up the Gulf oil spill. The expense isÌýdue to transporting the fuel to power the air conditioners. They quote the US army's former logisticianÌýwho calculates it takes 18 days toÌýdrive fuel from Karachi in Pakistan to a remote outpost in Afghanistan.

The Economist is a big fan of the bar graph. Indeed, they even have a "chart of the day" blog. But what has reallyÌýgot its readers clicking is its graph on the . Out of 18 countries displayed, cocaine bought in the USÌýis third most expensive. It's cheapest in Britain which also comes joint first with Ireland for highest consumption. For the Economist the data is interesting because despite a war on drugs the cost of cocaine has gone down.

The Daily Mail has identifies what it calls anotherÌý"hidden crime wave" - hidden because of the age of the perpetrators. TheÌýpaper says up to punishment for their crimes last year because they were below ten-years-old. It leads the paper to wade into that tricky question of at what age someone becomes responsible for their actions.ÌýIt ends with Jon Venables's former solicitor, Laurence Lee, saying reducing the limit was 'just not on' but increasing it would be against public opinion.

The has begun. Charlie Brooker has ditched the music festival and decided to stick to the moan fest in a popular Guardian article. The reassurance that it's OK to dislike tents, discomfort or indeed any "mild inconvenience" gets his readers clicking. He confines the enjoyment of the festival to people who are 23 and like running around in glitter. He confirms he doesn't fit the bill on either of those fronts.

Anything about China, normally China's growth, do well in the most read lists. But add China and corruption and you're guaranteed a spot at the top of Time's most read list it seems - it even beat an article entitled Should Flogging be an Alternative to Prison? Research from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences claims taking with them anÌýestimated $120bn. That's the equivalent of twenty years of education spending in China. The article says the twist is that if people are eventually tracked down, they cannot be sent back to China. That's because corruption allegations can lead to the death penalty in China, so people aren't sent back for human rights reasons.

Ìý

Paper Monitor

10:57 UK time, Monday, 27 June 2011

A service highlighting the riches of the daily press.

Scorchio! Boiling-hot weather across much of the UK on Sunday has the papers reaching for their thermometers.

It also means lots of pictures of children eating ice-creams, pensioners snoozing in deckchairs and scantily-clad girls soaking up the rays on packed British beaches.

It was the hottest day of the year so far, proclaim the papers, warmer than the Caribbean and the surface of Mars. Well, not quite, but you get the idea.

Talking of planets, the mercury is set to rise even higher on Monday. The says Britain will be even warmer than Miami and Barbados, with a maximum temperature of 33C.

However, there is some disagreement as to when the mini-summer is going to end. The says Monday is set to be the hottest day in five years.

But the insists the hot spell is to come to a "dramatic end" with parts of the country lashed by thunderstorms, hail and even tornadoes.

In today's celebrity-obsessed world, it is perhaps appropriate that the latest 007 managed to dodge the paparazzi and gossip columnists, and get hitched without anyone knowing.

"The name's Craig... Mrs Craig," says the , after British actors Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz, who are to play husband and wife in the upcoming film Dream House, married for real life in a quiet ceremony in New York.

The Times says the wedding was conducted amid such secrecy that M would have approved.

Rear watch alert - the reports that Pippa Middleton has been offered a "not-so-bum" deal by the Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú to appear on Strictly Come Dancing.

The Sun has been pursuing this story with admirable vigour ever since the 27-year-old made headlines around the world when she showed off her "shapely rear" at the wedding of big sister Kate to Prince William.

Now Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú bosses have put up a five-figure sum to see her bottom "boogie-woogie" across the floor, says the Sun (gleefully).

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