headlines
Thursday
26
May
2016
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Hillary Clinton's email server violated rules, audit findsEfforts by the former secretary of state to move on from her email controversy hit a major setback as investigation finds disregard for department guidelines -
Italian navy saves 550 refugees as smugglers' trawler capsizes in MedPraise for sailors’ swift action as dramatic photographs show overloaded boat turning over as naval vessel approaches
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Amber Heard files for divorce from Johnny DeppThe actor cites ‘irreconcilable differences’ in court papers a little more than a year after they were married -
highlights
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Neanderthals built mysterious cave structures 175,000 years agoConstructions discovered deep in a French cave rank among the earliest human building projects ever discovered, but their purpose remains unclear
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We're just the same as any person on the high streetHuman pups like to live in packs, play with squeaky toys, eat from bowls and nuzzle their ‘handlers’. Ahead of a new documentary, Spot, Bootbrush and Kaz open up about their community
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What happened to the 12 Syrian refugees rescued by the pope?When Pope Francis saved a dozen refugees from a Lesbos detention centre and took them to Rome it was ‘like a miracle’, one of them said. A month on, what is their new life like?
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Royal Mail stamps honour 50 years of Pink FloydStamps mark half-century since group turned professional, with albums and live performances represented
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Manchester United move held up by image rightsMourinho’s move to United has been held up because Chelsea hold the rights to the manager they sacked in December
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Marcus Rashford in line for debut against AustraliaDaniel Sturridge, the Liverpool striker, missed England’s latest training session but Wayne Rooney is available after winning the FA Cup on Saturday
opinion
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Too gay for TV? Get used to it, honey
Too gay for TV? Get used to it, honey
David FergusonA TV reporter was told by one viewer that his ‘gayness’ on screen was a problem. Well, guess what: we’re no longer going to try to pass as straight for your benefit -
Photographs don't lie: why does Austria flirt with fascism?
Jonathan JonesGustav Metzger used a photo of Jewish men scrubbing Viennese streets under the gaze of sneering Nazis to remind the world about antisemitism. The narrow defeat of Norbert Hofer proves his message is as relevant as everPhotographs don't lie: why does Austria flirt with fascism? -
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Do people start losing friends at a certain age?
Do people start losing friends at a certain age?
Guardian readers respond
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Pilot Nadiya Savchenko released by Russia in prisoner swap dealSavchenko flies home as part of deal in which Kiev frees two Russian servicemen
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Gawker denied new trial in Hulk Hogan sex-tape lawsuitThree-week trial that ended in $140m verdict was an inside look at the business of celebrity gossip and a debate over newsworthiness versus celebrity privacy
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in depth
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Why Trump is dredging up Bill Clinton's pastIt might seem counterintuitive for a man with a controversial sexual history to focus on the former president – but in this election cycle, nothing is certain
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Uniting group as officials seek peaceMullah Haibatullah Akhundzadah inherits a divided movement after a US drone strike killed Mullah Akhtar Mansoor, while governments hope he is open to talks
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Why I give a hoot for competing dead jazz musician moviesMiles Ahead and Born to Be Blue immortalise Miles Davis and link him to Chet Baker. I’m all for expanding the cinetrompette genre: the candidates pick themselves
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The enduring whiteness of the American mediaWhat three decades in journalism has taught me about the persistence of racism in the US
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Desperation drives American dream in town of lost opportunityIndigenous farmers in Cajolá have seen their livelihoods devastated by free trade deals and agribusiness, and will take desperate risks to support their families
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Rockefeller reaches target, but 'work is only just beginning'Washington and Seattle, Nairobi and Lagos, Manchester and Belfast are all included in the final list of member cities as 100RC programme reveals it has had more than 1,000 applications since 2013
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The skyscraper that is a stark symbol of the housing crisisRussian billionaire and Kyrgyz tycoon among owners of often empty flats at London’s St George Wharf skyscraper
people
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Inside Chris Evans and Matt LeBlanc's Top GearIgnore the snide reports about Chris Evans and Matt LeBlanc – I was in the first show’s audience and it’s as entertaining as ever
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'Ukraine's government has no vision for reform'A year after becoming governor of Odessa, the combative ex-Georgian president talks about his anti-corruption drive and his frustration with Petro Poroshenko
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You can take Shia LaBeouf on a road trip – if you can find himThe actor and performance artist is hitchhiking for a month and inviting the public to track him down and take him … anywhere
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Wodehouse prize for comic fiction declares joint winnersAward named after much-loved author shared between Hannah Rothschild, for The Improbability of Love, and Paul Murray, for The Mark and the Void
popular
the big picture
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Steelworkers rally and a ship scuttledThe Guardian’s picture editors bring you a selection of the best photographs from around the world, including steelworkers protesting in London and Tito’s flagship scuttled
Italy Collapse of Florence road sinks row of cars