Are you a fan or do you view pâté as meatloaf dressed for dinner? What are your favourite recipes or tips? In pictures: how to make pâté de campagne There’s no great dearth of terrines, no dreadful famine of chicken liver parfait and, as far as I’m aware, the meatpaste market still thrives in its own quiet way, but where oh where are the great slablike pâtés of my youth?

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How to make pâté
Tags: a-chicken-liver, a-shame-because, a-single-slab, coffee, feeds, food & drink, halles-cookbook, life and style, meatloaf-or-are, party, round-at-martin, spud, things-the-more, youth
A surge of low-grade stars has thrown the celebrity world into a sub-prime crisis. Now where’s Mervyn King? Going by this weekend’s headlines, setting next year’s citizenship test should be a doddle.
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Celebrity world is in sub-prime crisis
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Trial by cobbles could further unsettle Tour de France contenders who are already battered and bruised So, after two quiet, uneventful days of the 2010 Tour de France, the riders head for the cobbles. With almost all the major contenders nursing bumps and scrapes, some more serious than others, the last thing any of them wants to do today is ride across nine miles of bone-jarring pavé .

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Riders prepare for bump and grind
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Class of 2010 told to consider flipping burgers or shelf stacking to build skills as they also compete with last year’s graduates Graduates are facing the most intense scramble in a decade to get a job this summer, as a poll of employers reveals the number of applications for each vacancy has surged to nearly 70 while the number of available positions is predicted to fall by nearly 7%. The class of 2010 have been told to consider flipping burgers or stacking shelves when they leave university as leading firms in investment banking, law and IT are due to cut graduate jobs this year. Competition in the jobs market is fiercer now than for the first “post-crunch” generation of students, last year, when there were 48 applications for each vacancy.

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Graduates warned of record 70 applicants for every job
Tags: association, britain, education, feeds, graduation, money, news, recession, skills, students, the guardian, uk news, year
It can be chaotic when you go in and everyone’s bewildered. You have to get the trust of everyone, including the dog I have been a Marie Curie nurse for 10 years, looking after terminally ill people in their own home. We see patients from all different backgrounds, from every walk of life; I might be in a block of flats, or suburban house, one day, or a country cottage or farmhouse
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My week: Catherine Le Roy, nurse
Armed officers from six forces searched Newcastle and the surrounding area, trying to track down the 37-year-old The hunt intensified tonight for Raoul Moat, the Newcastle bodybuilder suspected of killing one man and seriously injuring his former girlfriend and a police officer in a shooting spree, as it emerged that police were warned he wanted to cause serious harm to his ex-partner before he allegedly struck. Armed officers from six forces searched Newcastle and the surrounding area, trying to track down the 37-year-old, who friends and acquaintances said would not give himself up easily and was likely to prefer to be shot by police. Amid fears that Moat could strike again, police mounted at least two operations in which they arrested the wrong people.

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Moat spells out vendetta with police
Britain’s film institute wants to find scores of lost films, including famous director’s The Mountain Eagle The Mountain Eagle, a 1928 black and white silent movie, is a ripping yarn about a dastardly father, a crippled son, a lovely schoolteacher and an innocent imprisoned.

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BFI hunts missing Hitchcock movie
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Serviceman from Royal Dragoon Guards died on vehicle patrol in Nahr-e Saraj district of Helmand province A British soldier was killed in an explosion in southern Afghanistan today, the Ministry of Defence said.
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British soldier killed in Afghan blast
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Could your car be an evil force? Or your toaster, for that matter? Researchers aim to reveal all Which kind of robot will be the first to arise and smite us?

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Scientists fear terror of automobiles
Dutch government finds minor inaccuracies in contested paper, but reasserts that ‘climate change poses “substantial risks” to most parts of the world’ The first major independent review of criticisms of the global assessment of climate change led by the United Nations declared today that it found “no errors that would undermine the main conclusions” of the panel of international scientists that climate change will have serious consequences around the world. However the Dutch panel of experts claims it found 12 errors – from a criticism of the number of people in Africa at risk of water shortages to mistakes in references or typing. It also suggested the summary version of the report had portrayed an over-dramatic picture by putting the emphasis on negative impacts of climate change, and it failed to explain some of the threats were not only driven by climate change

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UN report ‘not undermined’ by errors
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