Word: londonã
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...London??€™s Simon Ratcliffe and Felix Buxton are house music’s biggest sellouts. The pair have so relentlessly contaminated house’s righteous four on the floor thump that Jaxx tracks readily tear apart dance floors of any persuasion other than indie. On Kish Kash, they finally complete their music’s dissolution into the poptastic...
...most important lesson to be learned from time abroad curtails the wanderlust slightly; despite all the high-flying adventures of time abroad, I’ve learned again how terribly much my friends at home—or in Uganda, Paris and London??€”mean...
...addition, Iraqi intelligence documents uncovered last April by reporters for the Toronto Star and London??€™s Sunday Telegraph confirm that an al Qaeda envoy visited Baghdad in March 1998. The papers were found in the bombed-out headquarters of the Mukhabarat, Saddam’s intelligence service. Using Liquid Paper, the Iraqis had tried to cover up all references in the documents to bin Laden; but by applying dried fluid journalists were able to reveal his name in three separate places...
...LONDON??€”Apparently in politics, as in life, there are different kinds of intelligence, and no single intelligence is enough to carry the day. For George W. Bush and Tony Blair, it was not traditional bookishness that made them the leaders of the English-speaking world. And it was not traditional intelligence, collected by careful spooks wary of leads and diligent about sourcing, that brought that world to war in Iraq...
...second act fast forwards a century to contemporary London??€”though the cast has aged only 25 or so years. The action now takes place in a park—an open, public space that lays the groundwork for the newly defined sexual mores of this new generation, though remnants of the earlier period remain. Here the veranda is deconstructed and pushed to the side, again making for a well-designed and symbolically rich space...