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Is Musk right to ditch the Twitter logo?
Getty Images By Natalie Sherman Business reporter, New York When Jean-Pierre Dube saw the news that billionaire Elon Musk was scrapping Twitter’s blue bird logo in favour of an Art Deco-style black and white X, the marketing professor thought it was a joke. “Why take a recognised brand, with a lot of brand capital around…
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How desperate US prisoners try to escape deadly heat
Getty Images By Brandon Drenon & Juan Benn Jr BBC News As temperatures rise, prisoners locked in cells without air conditioning – and the staff guarding them – are struggling. Calvin Johnson spent 37 years in a Texas state prison, including 37 summers in a jail cell with no air conditioning. On the countless blisteringly…
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Ghana minister Cecilia Abena Dapaah reported a robbery. Why was she arrested?
Ministry of Sanitation and Water Resources By Favour Nunoo & Damian Zane BBC News, Accra & London A government minister in Ghana must have thought she was doing the right thing by going to the police to report a theft at her house, but it backfired spectacularly and she is now under arrest herself. According…
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Iraq and others condemn Quran-burning in Denmark
Reuters By Laurence Peter BBC News Iraq and some other Muslim-majority countries have strongly condemned the burning of a Quran on Monday by a group called “Danish Patriots” outside the Iraqi embassy in Copenhagen. The far-right group livestreamed a similar act on Facebook on Friday. Nearly 1,000 demonstrators in Baghdad tried to reach the Danish…
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Obamas’ personal chef Tafari Campbell dies in paddleboarding accident
The White House By Max Matza BBC News A personal chef to former US president Barack Obama has died during an accident on a paddle boarding trip near the Obamas’ Massachusetts home. Tafari Campbell, 45, worked in the White House before staying on with the Obama family after Mr Obama left office in 2016. On…
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Paris to bring back swimming in Seine after 100 years
By Hugh Schofield BBC News, Paris With a year to go to the Olympics, Paris is in the final phase of a historic clean-up which will soon see swimmers and divers back in the River Seine. Banned for a century because of the filthy water, city swimming is set to be one of the major…
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Electric cars are the future, but is the UK ready?
Getty Images By Justin Rowlatt Climate editor, BBC News The future is electric for the cars on our roads, but is the UK ready for such a major change? At the risk of infuriating all you petrolheads out there, let’s just get it out there – electric cars are the future. They are clean, quiet,…
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‘A real sense of chaos ensued’: Is it time to embrace the corporate ladder?
Employees in companies flattening their organisational structures are finding out if less hierarchy is better – sometimes, they’re learning the hard way. About four years ago, managers at the London-based consulting firm where Dani works decided to flatten the company’s traditional hierarchy. The goal was to simplify the corporate structure and make the office less…
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What our childhood heroes teach us
From Pippi Longstocking to Matilda, the quirky, fictional outsiders who fight authority and injustice are the most memorable. Cath Pound explores the enduring appeal of the best heroes and heroines of children’s literature. What is it that makes a great hero or heroine in children’s literature? The books in our poll feature characters with super…
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Can slow breathing guard against Alzheimer’s?
There are believed to be many benefits to slow, controlled breathing. Researchers may have found another – a surprising protection against Alzheimer’s. Stop scrolling. Now inhale slowly, concentrating on expanding your lungs, to a count of five. Exhale, just as slowly and deliberately, as you count to five. You might find that, in just that…