Le Journal

Alcaraz chases history at Australian Open despite split while women’s draw is open

I went to A&E with a broken wrist and caught a dose of ‘I’ve been lucky’ syndrome | Polly Toynbee

How hard can it be to run 13 miles? With help from the pub, park and peas I am finding out | Barry Glendenning
Goaded by my colleague into a half-marathon, I can’t say I’m enjoying the training but I’m slowly improving, and at least Great Ormond Street benefitsMy name is Barry and I’m a runner. As a clinically obese 52-year-old Irishman who regularly binge drinks (the NHS’s joyless definition, not my own), I would love to be able to say I took up running for health reasons but that would be a lie. Truth be told, I was railroaded into it by my Football Weekly associate Max Rushden, who publicly challenged me to run the London Landmarks Half-Marathon after I had belittled the efforts of a friend who completed it by asking: “How hard can running 13 miles be?” To cut an already short story shorter, in April I hope to plod from Whitehall, past Big Ben, the Houses of Parliament across Westminster Bridge, along Victoria Embankment and on to Trafalgar Square in the company of more than 20,000 fellow runners, most of whom should finish in front of me if they have so much as a modicum of shame.I will be running for Great Ormond Street Children’s Charity, not because of any particularly heartwarming or tragic link I have to this wonderful hospital, but because the bloke in charge of their fundraising heard the gauntlet being thrown down and asked me first. Presumably, that’s why he’s the boss. In return for the £25,096 raised thus far due in no small part to the astonishing generosity of the Football Weekly audience, the charity has sent me a 100% recycled polyester men’s turquoise running singlet bearing a teardrop-shaped logo in which a small and presumably unwell child is smiling and crying simultaneously. It’s 2XL, the biggest size they had available. I don’t think it’s supposed to be skintight.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

“Ceux qui résistent” de Chappatte : Anya et Joseph, l’honneur de Columbia

Reda Kateb : « J’ai l’impression que le racisme ne s’inscrit pas de manière indélébile dans une population »

Test Redmi Note 15 Pro : le parfait équilibre entre prix et qualité ?
Le Redmi Note 15 Pro de Xiaomi veut séduire les foules avec un argument de poids : un rapport qualité/prix imbattable. Est-il le nouvel incontournable du segment du milieu de gamme ? Notre test.

China woman, 47, shares civil servant life in Iceland, appreciates culture that respects choices
A 47-year-old Chinese woman shares her idyllic life as a civil servant in a remote town in Iceland, igniting interest and spirited discussions on social media in mainland China. The woman, known as Megan, hails from Beijing. In 2020, at the age of 42, she decided to pursue a second master’s degree in Iceland, a few years after her divorce. She earned her bachelor’s degree in accounting and her first master’s in business computing in the UK before transferring to a new energy major at a...

Joëlle Pineau, de Cohere : « Nous visons une IA qui crée de la valeur pour les entreprises, plutôt qu’une superintelligence »
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“Ceux qui résistent” de Chappatte : Terry, journaliste libre

“Ceux qui résistent” de Chappatte : Hannah, organiser la résistance

“Ceux qui résistent” de Chappatte : Ardem, au nom de la science

