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Edward's feeling on top of the world now It was hard going at first, but after six months without a cigarette, long-time smoker Edward Lake has kicked the habit and been chosen as the Echo's Quitter of the Year
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It was hard going at first, but after six months without a
cigarette, long-time smoker Edward Lake has kicked the habit and been
chosen as the Echo's Quitter of the Year
Life couldn't get much better for ex-smoker Edward Lake this
month.
Not only did he celebrate his 70th birthday he also received the
good news that he has been chosen by Echo readers as winner of our
Quitter of the Year competition.
The prize is Guildhall Shopping Centre vouchers equivalent to the
amou...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Edward's feeling on top of the world now It was hard going at first, but after six months without a cigarette, long-time smoker Edward Lake has kicked the habit and been chosen as the Echo's Quitter of the Year
Express & Echo (Exeter UK)
; ... couldn't get much better for ex-smoker Edward Lake this month. Not only did he celebrate his 70th birthday he also received the good news that he has been chosen by Echo readers as winner of our Quitter of the Year competition. The prize is Guildhall Shopping Centre ...
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The fairy tale of Edward II.(Essay)
The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide
; ... lurid and deeply homophobic tale of crime and punishment. Andrew Lumsden, a London-based writer, was the first British journalist at a national newspaper to come out as gay, in 1970, at The Times of London. He was a founder and an editor of Gay News.
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Edward I: best of kings, worst of kings? Warmongering anti-semite, or constitutionalist and family man? Marc Morris takes a fresh look at the career of Edward I, whose reputation has suffered a roller-coaster ride over the centuries.
History Today
; [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] On an otherwise unremarkable I building opposite Holborn tube station, some five or six storeys above the commuter throng, sits a serene and noble-looking Edward I (r. 1272-1307). The work of a young sculptor Richard Garbe (1876-1957), he was placed there in 1902, and
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The Rescuer; Almost 30 years ago, a Richmond doctor's wife struck up an unlikely friendship with a prison inmate. Now it was up to her grandson to tell the story. But just who was Edward King, and, more important, where was he?
The Washington Post
; ... articulate why. Edward's case was not a frequent topic for the pen pals. More typical were exchanges about gardening, poetry and news clippings about people overcoming adversity to achieve extraordinary things. The topics appeared random, but I soon divined an ...
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Edward's smile brightens his home
Chicago Sun-Times
; Edward, 3, is a charming child with an adorable smile. Edward has been in his current foster home for the past two years. His foster mother is committed to Edward, loves him, and believes he's enriched her life. Edward is a likable child who gets along with both children and adults. He also plays
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Edward II.(Theater Review)
Shakespeare Bulletin
; Edward II Presented by triangle productions! at Theater! Theatre!, Portland, Oregon. February 27-March 20, 2004. Adapted by William S. Gregory. Directed by Andres Alcala. Set by Don Horn. Costumes by Elizabeth Wright. Lighting by Jeff Woods. Sound by Andy Buzan. Michael Mendelson (Edward II),
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King Edward II: Edward of Caernarfon His Life, His Reign, and Its Aftermath, 1284-1330.(Book Review)
Albion
; Roy Martin Haines. King Edward II: Edward of Caernarfon His Life, His Reign, and Its Aftermath, 1284-1330. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. 2003. Pp. xviii, 604. $65.00. ISBN 0-7735-2432-0. Edward II was an awful ruler. He had no political instinct, failing to cultivate relations with his
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HOW EDWARD MAPPLETHORPE GOT HIS NAME BACK
New York
; ... rocked by a succession of family tragedies. First, his mother was diagnosed with emphysema, and before he was able to digest that news, his brother Richard, an engineer with whom he had lived in LA. before he got settled, was diagnosed with lung cancer. By the ...
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Edward.(Edward W. Said's works)
Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics
; Edward W. Said, the sixty-seven year-old man, who was to turn sixty-eight on November l, was buried on the top of a mountain slope overlooking a forest of trees in a cemetery in Broummana, a village in Metn where his wife Mariam Cortas grew up and to which he would often go in the autumnal period
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It was a plot fit for a king. But who were its real victims? Isabella and the Strange Death of Edward II By Paul Doherty CONSTABLE pounds 17.99 pounds 15.99 (+ pounds 1.99 P&P PER ORDER) 0870 800 1122 The Greatest Traitor: The life of Sir Roger Mortimer By Ian Mortimer CAPE pounds 17.99 pounds 15.99 (+ pounds 1.99 P&P PER ORDER) 0870 800 1122
The Independent on Sunday
; Edward II, as every schoolchild used to know, was said to have been murdered with a red-hot poker thrust into his bowels. Edward's reign had been a catastrophe: humiliating defeat at the hands of the Scots, and crisis points of near anarchy arising from the king's dependence on what Sellar and
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