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World News in English. Mashed: Vanity Fair.Celebrity.Lifestyle.Money..

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World News in English. Mashed: Vanity Fair. Celebrity. Lifestyle.Money

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World News in English.
The Cheat Sheet
This is Meghan Markle's Diet
Travel&Leisure
Family recipe.http://sh.uploads.ru/t/thI9J.gif 
It's an old Middleton family recipe.
Money
President Kennedy’s Favorite Waffle Recipe
Celebrity.  Lifestyle.
16 Hsting Rules Kate Middleton Never Breaks
Quotes about Life
Prince Philip to retire from public duties at age of 96
Vanity Fair.
All types of modern short stories are here with better language.
You are welcome to read these short stories so as to enjoy your time.
Life Hacks
Popular Destinations for Flights
Gig poster

etc

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The Queen Mother Ring

Princess Diana Style Aquamarine Ring,  Meghan Markle Style Aquamarine Ring, Featuring 10 Carat Aquamarine Accented with White Sapphires Set in 14 kt White & Yellow Gold Cocktail Ring. This ring features a Genuine Natural Aquamarine! Center Stone is a 10 carat Genuine Aquamarine, Emerald Shape, Princess Cut. Accented with a total of .48 pts Genuine White Sapphires The Aquamarine is set in 14 kt Yellow Gold. The 14 kt White Gold Band is inlaid with Genuine White Sapphires. Handmade Designer Ring in 14 kt White and Yellow Gold. Sparkling Blue Genuine Aquamarine is Emerald Shape and Princess Cut to showcase the brilliance, color, and clarity of this gorgeous gemstone. Includes complimentary ring sizing and gift box. Each Fine Jewelry Purchase of $500 or more includes Professional Jeweler Appraisal at no additional charge. A $75 value, FREE only to Etsy customers! See video of this ring at https://youtu.be/AmzBpQDmlpY More

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About Princess Diana's/  Meghan Markle's Aquamarine Ring: Princess Diana wore her emerald cut Aquamarine Cocktail Ring to an auction at Christie’s in 1997. She wore her Aquamarine Cocktail Ring with a Diamond Eternity Band. Her ring is part of a set that includes an Aquamarine and Pearl Bracelet. Princess Diana was also pictured wearing the same jewelry set during a visit to Sydney in 1996. Her bracelet features a larger emerald-cut aquamarine, clasped between six rows of pearls.
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Prince Harry gave his mother's ring to his new bride, Meghan Markle as a wedding gift. Princess Meghan wore Princess Diana’s Aquamarine on her right hand which was visible while she waved at photographers on her wedding day!

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Politics
Queen Elizabeth Expected to Invite Donald Trump for State Visit in June

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After much back-and-forth, Queen Elizabeth is expected to formally invite Donald Trump to make a state visit to the United Kingdom.

According to the Sunday Times, the controversial visit will occur next month and will likely coincide with the 75th anniversary of D-Day, which is June 6.

Timing the visit – which has been on the table since the president’s January 2017 inauguration – has reportedly been in the works since last year, and a joint announcement from Downing Street officials and the White House is expected within days.

A trade delegation will reportedly follow in September.

Trump previously made a visit across the pond in June 2018, though it was a working visit and not a formal state visit, which traditionally include a Buckingham Palace meeting and military welcome.

During the trip, Trump met with Queen Elizabeth at Windsor Castle, received a royal salute from a Guard of Honor and enjoyed afternoon tea which first lady Melania Trump also attended.

At the time, Trump’s visit was widely protested throughout London by people who took to the streets in a so-called “Stop Trump March,” bearing signs reading “Trump Not Welcome” and “Dump Trump.”

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Celebrity
The reason Meghan Markle has chosen different doctors to deliver her baby than the traditional ones

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From Cosmopolitan

There are only a few weeks to go before Meghan Markle's due date, and we could not be any more excited. Meanwhile, the royal family are doing everything to prepare for the birth of Harry and Meghan's first child - but it looks like it's not going to be quite as traditional as previous royal births. Exciting!

The reason for this is that while the Queen has a specialist and very highly-regarded team of gynaecologists on-hand to deliver royal babies, the Duchess of Sussex has reportedly chosen to avert tradition and appoint her own.

Royal Household gynaecologists Alan Farthing and Guy Thorpe-Beeston attended the birth of all of William and Kate's children. However, Meghan doesn't want "men in suits" to deliver her baby, reports The Daily Mail. Fair enough.

Having politely declined the services of Alan and Guy as lead physicians, Meghan and Harry have chosen a female doctor to oversee the birth of their first child. However, royal protocol is royal protocol, and the Queen's doctors can't be excluded from the birth all together.

Instead, while the female doctor will lead the delivery of the baby, the more traditional team will still be around ready to step in should there be any complications during the birth.

"Meghan said she doesn’t want the men in suits," a source told Daily Mail. "She was adamant that she wanted her own people."

"It is slightly surprising," another added. "These people [the Queen’s doctors] are the best of the best and when it comes down to it, their role would actually be very limited in the birth itself, assuming all goes to plan."

Meanwhile, we're busy being desperate to find out whether the royal baby will be a boy or a girl (although, Serena Williams may have accidentally already revealed that...). Any. Day. Now.

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Meghan Markle's mom, Doria Ragland, lives in L.A., and the Daily Mail and The Mirror are reporting that she's soon headed to England just in time for her daughter to give birth.

According to the Daily Mail, Doria Ragland is soon flying from L.A. to England to be with Meghan Markle as Meghan preps to deliver her first child with Prince Harry (any day now, HOORAY!). According to royal insiders, "Doria should be here for the birth and will be staying. But then she has to get back to her dogs and work."

Doria and Meghan have a particularly close relationship, and it was rumored that Doria would be helping out with the new baby in the weeks following the birth-so it sounds like that rumor may be true. OK! is also reporting that Doria's flying over to celebrate Meghan's second baby shower, which will likely be a much quieter affair than her star-studded New York shower.

Meghan and Doria have managed to secretly spend some time together, most recently just after her New York baby shower. Doria didn't spend Christmas Day with the royals, and despite some rumors, she's apparently not about to go live with Meghan and Harry in their royal home permanently. But, apparently, she's planning on splitting her time between her home in L.A. and Frogmore Cottage, where Meghan and Harry recently moved.

The last we saw Doria formally was at the wedding. Let's all remind ourselves how adorable she and Meghan were, because I can never get enough royal wedding photos, ever:

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See what Duchess Kate and Meghan Markle will look like when they are 60 - the results are amazing!

Fancy seeing what the Duchess of Cambridge could look like when she is 60? Well, here's your chance! Thanks to a new facial mapping technology, which shows scientifically how we will age years into the future, we can now predict how members of the royal family and celebrities alike will age 25 years down the line. The pioneering software, called Future Face, uses complex computer face mapping algorithms and has been created by the Harley Street facial cosmetic surgeon Dr Julian De Silva.

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Duchess Kate may look like this when she is 60

Dr De Silva uses pictures of patients which are super-imposed over each other. The software picks up on key signs of ageing such as sagging skin around the eyes and predicts how much the face will change in the following years. He also tried the software on Meghan Markle and her husband Prince Harry - and the results are fascinating! Dr De Silva said: "This new facial mapping technology allows us to look scientifically into the future and see exactly how a person will age. Meghan Markle comes out best from the Future Face algorithm. Her genes, olive complexion and terrific lifestyle choices suggest she will age the best of the well-known people we tested."

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Meghan Markle doesn't appear too different

Speaking about the technology used on a picture of Kate, Dr De Silva explained: "The Duchess of Cambridge is also ageing very gracefully, but the years ahead may take a great toll on other celebrities such as Kate Moss who is expected to pay the price for years of partying in her 20s and 30s and her smoking habit." He added: "The software shows that Prince Harry will begin to look increasingly like his father Prince Charles in 35 years when he will be 68 and approaching old age. Years of touring and late nights might slightly speed up the ageing process for a pop star like Harry Styles, who is shown how he will look at 59 in 35 years."

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Prince Harry may look like his father Prince Charles

Dr De Silva, from the Centre For Advanced Facial Cosmetic & Plastic Surgery in London, developed the Future Face technology to help show patients how they will look in years to come so that appropriate surgery can be planned. The Future Face software analyses the changes in the position of the eyelids, eyebrows, cheek bones, jawline, chin, forehead, nose, and lips from images taken years apart. Other factors which have also been taken into consideration include; genes, skin colour and lifestyle - smokers and heavy drinkers will find their skin ages considerably quicker.

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Celebrity
Prince Harry and Prince William's Separate Lives: 'It Was Only Going to Work Until They Married'
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Prince William and Prince Harry are heading down different paths.
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Despite the royal brothers’ very different roles — William, 36, is preparing to be the future king while Harry, 34, prepares for first-time fatherhood — longtime palace staffers had the “homogeneous idea” of the two princes working in tandem. However, it’s now clear that with the additions of Kate Middleton and Meghan Markle — and their growing families — a united foursome wasn’t feasible.

“It was only going to work until they married — and it went on a while longer than perhaps was originally thought,” one palace courtier tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue.

For more on Prince William and Prince Harry’s separate lives, check out this week’s issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands Friday

Last month, Meghan and Harry officially split from Kate and William, breaking up their joint “court” at Kensington Palace by creating two separate offices.
“It’s a shame,” says a royal household source. “There was power in that unity and great strength in the foursome, but I see why it is happening. There is always that tension: trying to do the PR thing and then realizing that they are just real people. They want their own place and their own things.”

The royal brothers heavily relied on each other growing up, especially in the wake of their mother Princess Diana’s death in 1997. And those who know the brothers say that the current distance between them will not last.
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“There is never any doubt that they will be there for each other 100 percent and support each other when it matters,” according to one insider.

“Maybe they’ll come back together a little later,” says the source close to the royal household. “It’s another stage in the growing up. Sometimes you have to break away in order to come back.”

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Prince Harry, Meghan aim to keep baby arrival plans private

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LONDON (AP) — Prince Harry and his pregnant wife Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, say they have decided to keep plans around their first baby's arrival private.

Kensington Palace officials said in a statement Thursday that Harry and Meghan "look forward" to sharing the news of their baby's birth once they have had a chance to celebrate privately as a new family.

The decision means that Harry and Meghan are not likely to pose for the world's photographers and TV crews on the hospital steps with their newborn, a break from the royal tradition followed by Prince William and his wife Kate, the duchess of Cambridge, when she gave birth to their three children.

As a future king, William is expected to help mark great occasions, while Harry — sixth in the line of succession — has more leeway. Both have in the past expressed deep misgivings about intrusive press coverage.

Harry and Meghan — an American actress best known for her work on "Suits" — wed in May in a spectacular, internationally televised ceremony at Windsor Castle.

They are expecting their first child in late April or early May. The palace press office has announced very few details about their plans, refusing to comment on unconfirmed British press reports that Meghan may opt for a home birth.

Harry and Meghan say they have not learned the gender of their baby.

The couple recently moved from central London to a more secluded house near their wedding venue.

They recently set up an Instagram account, leading to speculation they may post the first pictures of their baby on that site. That account broke an Instagram record for quickly attracting millions of fans.

They said in their statement they are grateful for the goodwill messages they have received from around the world.

Harry and Meghan have asked people who want to send them baby gifts to instead donate to selected charities for children and parents in need. They mentioned several charities in particular, including The Lunchbox Fund, WellChild, Baby2Baby and Little Village, which all have different connections to the royal couple.

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"Even in the dead winter, the little Prince George has on wool shorts and high socks. This is the most British thing ever. Americans do not do this. I'm going to make a bold statement and say if Harry and Meghan have a boy, he's not going to appear in the traditional British short pants and pulled-up knee socks in December." Andrews agrees, predicting Markle and Prince Harry's child will be dressed more "trendily" than traditionally.

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Celebrity
The Meghan Markle ‘Duchess Difficult’ Rumors Just Won’t Stop—and This One Is Bizarre
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Late last year rumors started flying that Meghan Markle was a quote-unquote difficult duchess. Apparently she's been upsetting dozens of palace staff members by having the audacity to—gasp—send emails at 5:30 in the morning. This "up and at ’em West Coast energy," as The Daily Mail put it in November, is reportedly rubbing some the wrong way—so much so, tabloids have coined the phrase "Hurricane Meghan."

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It's obvious this narrative is a complete exaggeration. Royals expert Katie Nicholl confirmed as much to Glamour when she said, "Meghan brings a different regime to the palace. She does things differently. She's a very intelligent, articulate, and driven woman. I think she works at a different speed than most people. She's got an incredible work ethic. But I think it's a case of her getting used to a new regime, and the new regime getting used to her. There's nothing that can't be ironed out."

Nevertheless, the "diva" rumors are persisting—and this latest one is particularly bizarre. According to The Sun, staff members at Frogmore Cottage, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's new home, have been "banned" from using the parking lot closest to the residence and instead must use the one a mile away.
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General Views Of Frogmore Cottage
Frogmore Cottage, Meghan Markle and Prince Harry's new home
Getty Images

The sources who spoke to The Sun seem to confirm a change in parking permits is happening, but here's the kicker: It was reportedly the superintendent of the castle's decision, not Markle's. And yet all the tabloids reporting this story are making it seem as though Markle woke up and randomly decreed, "You know what would be fun? Forcing all the staff members to walk a mile to work each day." The headline in one article starts with "Not in Meg Back Yard," which is apparently the acronym insiders are using to describe this change. That makes it sound like Markle is the one behind the choice.

Which is frustrating. This is a woman who bakes banana bread in her free time and says the word wonderful like a Disney princess. I find it hard to believe she's changing the parking situation at Frogmore just because she and Prince Harry "don't want to look out of their window and see cars coming and going," as one source claims. Meghan Markle does yoga, for crying out loud. She's calm. She's zen. She's doesn't give a fuck if the chef's 2007 Toyota Camry is parked outside her house. She's too busy deciding which vegan paint color her new living room should be.

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In all seriousness, there's probably a perfectly logical reason why the parking at Frogmore Cottage is changing—and my guess is it has nothing to do with Markle being "difficult." It's ridiculous that ambitious and opinionated women are still getting slapped with that word in 2019. If this story is true, and the Frogmore staff does feel inconvenienced, I wouldn't be surprised if Markle starts some kind of shuttle service to accommodate them. It'll be a luxurious-as-hell service too, with leather seats and TV screens playing old Suits episodes on a loop. Mark my words.

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Fire at Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris

A massive fire broke out at Notre Dame Cathedral in central Paris on Monday afternoon, sending flames shooting out of the roof of the Catholic landmark and toppling its iconic spire.

The cause of the blaze is not yet known. There were no immediate reports of injuries or fatalities.

Fire officials told Agence France-Presse that the fire was potentially linked to the renovation of the building. Scaffolding could be seen ablaze on the roof of the famous facade.

Church spokesman Andre Finot told French media that the fire cathedral’s frame was also aflame.

“Everything is burning,” Finot said.

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The steeple of the landmark Notre Dame Cathedral collapses as the cathedral is engulfed in flames in central Paris on Monday. (Photo: Geoffroy Van Der Hasselt/AFP/Getty Images)

Hundreds of people gathered in the streets below to watch the blaze, some in tears, others simply shouting its name.

A CNN International correspondent said that blowing cinders were falling on their heads.

Dramatic images posted to social media showed the roof of the medieval cathedral engulfed in flames, and its spire collapsing into the church.

The Gothic cathedral is one of the world’s most famous tourist attractions.

The foundation stone was laid by Pope Alexander III in 1163 and construction took over two decades. It survived the French Revolution in the late 18th century and benefited from a surge in popularity following the publication of Victor Hugo's "The Hunchback of Notre-Dame" in 1831.
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Smokes ascends as flames rise during a fire at the landmark Notre-Dame Cathedral in central Paris on April 15, 2019 afternoon, potentially involving renovation works being carried out at the site, the fire service said. (Photo: Francois Guillot/AFP/Getty Images)

Trump addressed the fire further at a Monday economic roundtable in Minnesota. He said his communication was in communication with France. He called Notre Dame a “truly great cathedral” and said the blaze put a “damper on what we’re about to say.”
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“They’re having a terrible, terrible fire. You probably saw,” he remarked. “But I will tell you that the fire that they are having at the Notre Dame cathedral is something like few people have witnessed.”

He continued: “When we left ... the plane, it was burning at a level you rarely see a fire burn. It’s one of the great treasures of the world. ... Probably, if you think about it, it might be greater than almost any museum in the world, and it’s burning very badly. Looks like it’s burning to the ground.”

While traveling on Air Force One to the event, the president offered advice on fighting the fire.

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The Royal Family Just Responded to the Notre-Dame Fire—and They Got Surprisingly Emotional

After the massive fire that roared through Paris’s Notre-Dame cathedral, the world has responded with messages of support and personal memories of the 856-year-old architectural and historical icon.

And while they’re usually the picture of stoicism, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Charles both offered particularly emotional condolences.
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An official announcement came from the Queen’s office, addressed to the president of France, Emmanuel Macron. It read:

“Prince Philip and I have been deeply saddened to see the images of the fire which has engulfed Notre-Dame Cathedral. I extend my sincere admiration to the emergency services who have risked their lives to try to save this important national monument. My thoughts and prayers are with those who worship at the Cathedral and all of France at this difficult time. Elizabeth R.”

(The R stands for regina, which means “queen.”)

Prince Charles offered a separate heartfelt sentiment, saying, “My wife and I were utterly heartbroken to learn of the terrible fire at Notre-Dame Cathedral this evening and wanted to let you know immediately how much we are thinking of yourself and the French people at this most agonizing of times, and of the emergency services who are so bravely tackling the blaze.”

The note continues, “I realize only too well what a truly special significance the Cathedral holds at the heart of your nation; but also for us all outside France it represents one of the greatest architectural achievements of Western Civilization. It is a treasure for all mankind and, as such, to witness its destruction in this most dreadful conflagration is a shattering tragedy, the unbearable pain of which we all share.”
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Charles ended with a reference to the 1992 fire that damaged Windsor Castle: “Cher Monsieur le Président, our hearts go out to you and the people of France more than you can ever know, especially in view of our experience with the devastating fire at Windsor Castle twenty-seven years ago. We send you our most profound sympathy, however inadequate that may be.” He signed off in French with très cordialement à vous (very sincerely yours).

Prince Charles’s response, in particular, was surprisingly personal and emotional—not something we usually see from the royal family as a whole. And according to The New York Times, the architects who restored Windsor Castle after its fire have hope, saying that “we shall see Notre-Dame magnificent again.”

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Billionaires and private donors mobilise to rebuild Notre-Dame

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Painstaking renovation work is likely to cost hundreds of millions of euros over several years, if not decades, though experts breathed sighs of relief that the damage was not even worse.

Billionaires and private donors pledged hundreds of millions of euros on Tuesday to help rebuild Notre-Dame cathedral in Paris which has been devastated by fire.

President Emmanuel Macron has vowed the emblematic monument will be rebuilt after its spire and roof collapsed Monday night in a blaze thought to be linked to extensive renovation work.

French billionaire Bernard Arnault announced Tuesday that he and the LVMH luxury conglomerate he controls would give 200 million euros ($226 million) for the reconstruction efforts.

The pledge came after Arnault's crosstown rival Kering, the fashion group founded by fellow billionaire Francois Pinault, offered 100 million euros to help "completely rebuild Notre-Dame".

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo also said Tuesday that the city would unlock 50 million euros, and would propose holding an international donors' conference in the coming weeks to coordinate the pledges to restore the gothic architectural masterpiece.

The privately run French Heritage Foundation has already launched a call for donations on its website  -- wwwfondation-patrimoine.org -- while several pages were set up on the Leetchi fundraising portal.

The Ile-de-France region comprising the greater Paris region is to provide another 10 million euros.

- Wooden beams offered -

Specialised craftsmen and rare materials are also expected to be needed to restore the monument, which welcomes more than 13 million visitors each year -- an average of more than 35,000 people a day.

The head of a French lumber company told FranceInfo radio that it was ready to offer the best oak beams available to rebuild the intricate lattice that supported the now-destroyed roof, known as the "Forest".

"The work will surely take years, decades even, but it will require thousands of cubic metres of wood. We'll have to find the best specimens, with large diameters," Sylvain Charlois of the Charlois group in Murlin, central France, told the radio station.

The United Nations' Paris-based cultural agency UNESCO has also promised to stand "at France's side" to restore the site, which it declared a world heritage site in 1991.

"We are already in contact with experts and ready to dispatch an urgent mission to evaluate the damage, save what can be saved and start elaborating measures for the short- and medium-term," UNESCO's secretary general Audrey Azoulay said in a statement Tuesday.

- Done in years? -

The painstaking renovation work is likely to cost hundreds of millions of euros over several years, if not decades, though experts breathed sighs of relief that the damage was not even worse.

But many officials were urging the government to mobilise the resources to quickly restore the cathedral.

"Since yesterday I've been hearing that it will take a decade, what nonsense!" former culture minister Jack Lang told AFP outside the church on Tuesday.

He called instead for an ambitious three-year project to rebuild the destroyed roof and its towering spire, which collapsed as a burning ember around two hours after the blaze erupted.

"You have to set a short deadline, as we've done in the past with other exceptional works," he said.

The gothic edifice had been undergoing an 11-million-euro ($12.4-million) overhaul financed by the French state to repair damage inflicted by time, pollution and the weather.

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The Telegraph
Notre-Dame's relics rescued by hero priest who rushed into flames
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He helped wounded victims in the 2015 attack on the Bataclan in Paris and
survived an ambush in Afghanistan while serving as an Army chaplain.

Now, a French priest has been hailed as a hero once again for rushing into the burning Notre-Dame cathedral to recover the sacred Crown of Thorn Relics and the Blessed Sacrament.

On Monday night French officials expressed fears that the centuries-old artefacts would be lost to the flames, which broke out at 7pm and consumed the Cathedral's spire and roof.

But Jean-Marc Fournier, chaplain of the Paris Fire Brigade, succeeded in bringing them to safety, prompting emergency workers to declare him "an absolute hero."

"He showed no fear at all as he made straight for the relics inside the Cathedral, and made sure they were saved. He deals with life and death every day, and shows no fear," one source told French media. 

Catholics believe the Crown of Thorns was worn by Jesus Christ during the Crucifixion.

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A priest wipes the Crown of Thorns at Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, in April 2017.
The relic, venerated by Catholics as once worn by Jesus Christ, was threatened by a devastating fire at the cathedral on April 15, 2019. (USA Today)

It is not the first time Father Fournier has been praised for his bravery and public service.

In 2015 he comforted the wounded after the Isil terrorist attack which left 89 dead at the Eagles of Death Metal concert in the Bataclan concert venue.

And, during his time as an army chaplain, he survived an ambush which killed 10 troops.

The story was first broken by Etienne Loraillere, an editor for France's KTO Catholic network.

Despite dramatic images showing the top of the Cathedral engulfed in flames, no one was killed in the blaze, though one fire fighter has been seriously injured.

Notre-Dame's fire alarm went off at around 6.45pm and all members of the congregation had left the Mass and were outside when the fire took hold fifteen minutes later.

Firefighters worked through the night to extinguish the flames, and on Tuesday morning Paris officials confirmed the structure of the Cathedral had been saved.

They also formed a human chain to pass valuable works of art and artefacts to safety.

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Reuters
Trump offers condolences, assistance to France's Macron after Notre-Dame fire: White House

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U.S. President Donald Trump waves as the president walked to Air Force One prior to departing Minnesota for Washington, DC at Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport in Minneapolis, Minnesota U.S., April 15, 2019. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump during a phone call on Tuesday expressed condolences to French President Emmanuel Macron over the Notre-Dame fire that devastated the Parisian landmark and offered U.S. assistance in rehabilitating the cathedral, the White House said.

"Notre Dame will continue to serve as a symbol of France, including its freedom of religion and democracy," White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said in a statement. "We remember with grateful hearts the tolling of Notre Dame’s bells on September 12, 2001, in solemn recognition of the tragic September 11th attacks on American soil. Those bells will sound again." 

Macron has pledged to rebuild the cathedral, which is considered among the finest examples of European Gothic architecture and visited by more than 13 million people from around the world a year.

Within 24 hours of Monday's blaze, French companies and local authorities had pledged more than 700 million euros to rebuild the cathedral, including 500 million from the three billionaire families that own France's luxury goods empires Kering, LVMH and L'Oreal.

The fire has also promoted fundraising among Americans, with New York-based French Heritage Society and the Go Fund Me crowdsourcing platform among the first to offer help.

The heritage charity Fondation du Patrimoine said it was too early to estimate the cost of the damages. Authorities say they suspected the fire was caused by accident.

(This story has been refiled to correct figure in paragraph four to 700 million, not 700 billion)

(Reporting by David Alexander; Writing by Meredith Mazzilli)

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HuffPost
Before And After Photos of Notre Dame Cathedral Show Fire's Devastation

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After a fire engulfed Notre Dame Cathedral on Monday, Paris has vowed to repair the devastating destruction of the historic church quickly.

Shortly after the fire was extinguished, people all over the world got a glimpse inside the cathedral via images that revealed the roof had been burned away and the inside of the iconic church had been charred.

Check out the before-and-after sliding images below, which highlight the damage from the fire.

    This article originally appeared on HuffPost.

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Michelle Obama Hits At Trump: America Is Now 'Living With Divorced Dad'

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Former first lady Michelle Obama
took a dig at President Donald Trump during an event in London on Sunday, saying that America was now in the care of “divorced dad.”

In a conversation with Stephen Colbert at the O2 Arena, Obama said life under Trump was a little like being a teen in a broken home:

    “We come from a broken family, we are a little unsettled. Sometimes you spend the weekend with divorced dad. That feels like fun but then you get sick. That is what America is going through. We are living with divorced dad.”

Although Obama did not mention Trump by name, she referred to him indirectly several times, including when she said the presidency didn’t change who you are but instead reveals who you are, The Independent reported.

“It is like swimming in the ocean with great waves,” Obama said. “If you are not a great swimmer, you are not going to learn in the middle of a tidal wave. You are going to resort to your kicking and drowning and what you knew how to do in the pool.”

Obama also told Colbert she turns off the news sometimes.

“I only let some of that stuff into my world when I’m ready,” Obama said. “You can’t have a steady diet of fear and frustration coming in.”

Obama is in Europe promoting her bestselling book, Becoming.

    This article originally appeared on HuffPost.

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Lifestyle
Notre Dame: How the historic French building inspired the career of Matisse

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Notre Dame: How the historic French building inspired the career of Matisse

The fire that raged through Notre Dame has made us all look at this great cathedral differently. There’s no getting around it. If you have ever been to Paris, chances are you’re furiously ransacking your memories, digging back into past sensations and worrying about what lies ahead.

In 1914, months before the outbreak of a catastrophic war, Henri Matisse was doing the same.

That year, the artist and his wife, Amélie, abandoned plans to go to Morocco and moved instead into a modest apartment with a view of Notre Dame, on the Quai Saint-Michel in Paris.

Matisse was 44. He had lived in the same building, one floor up, for years, beginning in 1899. In fact, apart from seven years of family life, he had spent his whole adult life living with this same view over the River Seine towards Paris’s most famous cathedral.

Back then, at the turn of the century, he had painted Notre Dame in broken impressionist brushstrokes (thinking, perhaps, of Monet’s great paintings of the facade of Rouen Cathedral) and as a ghostly, mauve silhouette under a light blue sky.

No details in that one. It was a strangely casual way to treat so grand a building. Matisse was acting with the heretical nonchalance of a radical painter, yes, but also with the nonchalance of a lover, of someone who knows something intimately and can treat it as a given, a birthright, without a tourist’s self-conscious reverence.

More than a decade later, the artist returned to the subject, with results that remain indelible – and haunt the psyche on a day like today.

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Matisse was happy to be back in a part of Paris he loved. His chronic insomnia had shown signs of abating. He wanted, wrote his biographer Hilary Spurling, to strip his life “back to essentials”.

First, in oil paint so thin it reads as watercolor, he painted the same view, from the same position on the Quai Saint-Michel and with the same diagonal strip of the Seine cutting across the lower half of the canvas.

Then, he did something so radical he didn’t understand it himself. In fact, he refrained from exhibiting this second View of Notre-Dame, 1914, for 35 years, when his fears were confirmed. It was regarded as “an unfinished sketch to which Matisse had unaccountably signed his name”.

Matisse had reduced the cathedral to a shell, a linear scaffolding. He drew and redrew this shell, as if teaching himself its basic structure. He left evidence of his erased lines as he put down new ones, as if the painting were less a picture than a palimpsest, piled up layers of memory and sensation.

He then lightly smeared blue paint across not only the building’s facade, but also across the entire canvas. Apart from black, the only other colour he allowed was an oval-shaped patch of green, representing a tree or large bush in front of the cathedral.

All over the canvas, but especially around the building, you can still see evidence of scratching and scraping and incising lines.

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Was it a painting of Notre Dame?

Not exactly. But neither was it abstract.

A painting, Matisse saw, was something, like memory itself, that was hard-won, boiled down, licked by fire. It needed to be built and rebuilt, and it was always changing in the minds of those who saw and loved it.

“Everything must be constructed,” Matisse told collector Sarah Stein – “built up of parts that make a unit … a human body like a cathedral.”

Above all, you could say, Matisse was attempting to represent in paint a process we’re all involved in now, as we contemplate a triumph of human faith, community, genius and sublime beauty that no longer exists as it did just yesterday.

What was that process? The overflow of remembered sensations into present ones.

In that overflow, surely, there is hope.

© Washington Post

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This Cute Photo Taken Just Before the Notre Dame Fire Started a Viral Search

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From Oprah Magazine

    A photo taken of what appears to be a father playing with his little girl outside Notre Dame Cathedral has gone viral
    The picture was snapped by a tourist roughly an hour before the Cathedral caught fire. She's asking Twitter to help her find the dad so she can share the picture.

Just a few moments before the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris caught fire-causing devastating destruction-a tourist captured a joyful moment on camera outside of the iconic landmark. 23-year-old Brooke Windsor from Michigan snapped a sweet photo of what seems to be a father and his little girl playing. Now, she's turning to Twitter for help finding the pair so they might have this happy keepsake.

"Twitter if you have any magic, help him find this," Windsor wrote in a post that's been shared nearly 160,000 times.

She explained in her Twitter comments that after taking the pic, she thought about sending it to the person she presumed was the dad-but she said that she wasn't certain what the relationship was between the duo. It was "simply the dynamic I observed from them while debating on interrupting this moment," that led her to believe it was a father and daughter.

    Brooke Windsor @brookeawindsor

    I took this photo as we were leaving #NotreDame about an hour before it caught on fire. I almost went up to the dad and asked if he wanted it. Now I wish I had. Twitter if you have any magic, help him find this 🙏🏼
    414K
    3:00 AM - Apr 16, 2019 · Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris

"If it were me, I'd want the memory. Hoping he feels the same way," Windsor added, regarding her decision to tweet the pic.

Roughly an hour after she captured this blissful instant, she told the BBC she "watched in shock and heartbreak with the rest of Paris," as the beloved Cathedral, built in the 12th and 13 centuries, burned.

Twitter is suggesting that this photo encapsulates life-how one moment, everything can be so serene, and the next, chaos can strike. Others say that, like the Cathedral itself, the photo also offers a beacon of hope.

While prominent artifacts have been destroyed, and the holy place may never return to its former glory, several French tycoons-including CEO of LVMH, Bernard Arnault-announced that he'd be donating at least 200 million euros toward restoration efforts. And French president Emmanuel Macron assured the country that he was committed to rebuilding as well. He said in a statement to Reuters yesterday, "Notre-Dame is burning, and I know the sadness, and this tremor felt by so many fellow French people. But tonight, I’d like to speak of hope, too. Let’s be proud, because we built this cathedral more than 800 years ago, we’ve built it and, throughout the centuries, let it grow and improved it. So I solemnly say tonight: we will rebuild it together."

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People Claim To See Jesus In Flames Engulfing Notre Dame Cathedral

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The whole world witnessed the massive fire that destroyed Paris' Notre DameCathedral on Monday, but some people claim they saw something even moreamazing: an image of Jesus

The whole world witnessed the massive fire that destroyed Paris’ Notre Dame Cathedral on Monday, but some people claim they saw something even more amazing: an image of Jesus.

“When I looked at this photo last night, I was really astounded by what I saw,” 38-year-old Lesley Rowan told Scotland’s Daily Record. “When I look at it I see a silhouette of Jesus. I really see a vivid image.”

Rowans said she believed the image was a positive one.

“I feel like it will bring comfort to people in Paris and all over the world at this sad time,” she said.

Others who’ve seen photos of the cathedral are also convinced they see a divine image in the flames.

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Police official: Short-circuit likely caused Notre Dame fire
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PARIS (AP) — Paris police investigators think an electrical short-circuit most likely caused the fire at Notre Dame Cathedral, a police official said Thursday, as France paid a daylong tribute to the firefighters who saved the world-renowned landmark.

A judicial police official told The Associated Press that investigators made an initial assessment of the cathedral Wednesday but don't have a green light to search Notre Dame's charred interior because of ongoing safety hazards.

The cathedral's fragile walls were being shored up with wooden planks, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak by name about an ongoing investigation.

Investigators so far believe the fire was accidental, and are questioning both cathedral staff and workers who were carrying out renovations. Some 40 people had been questioned by Thursday, according to the Paris prosecutor's office.

The police official would not comment on an unsourced report in Le Parisian newspaper that investigators are looking at whether the fire could have been linked to a computer glitch or the temporary elevators used in the renovation work, among other things. The prosecutor's office said only that "all leads must be explored."

Since the cathedral will be closed to the public for years, the rector of the Catholic parish that worships there has proposed building a temporary structure on the plaza in front of the Gothic-era landmark, and City Hall gave its approval Thursday "subject to technical restraints."

"The rector has no cathedral for the moment. .... But I'm going to try to invent something," Bishop Patrick Chauvet said.

A crypt containing vestiges dating from antiquity is located under the vast esplanade.

President Emmanuel Macron has said he wants Notre Dame to be restored in five years, in time for the 2024 Summer Olympics, which Paris is hosting. Restoration specialists have questioned the ambitious timeline, with some saying it could take three times that long to rebuild the 850-year-old architectural treasure.

Earlier Thursday, Macron held a ceremony at the Elysee Palace to thank the hundreds of firefighters who battled the fast-moving fire at Notre Dame for nine hours starting Monday evening, preventing the structure's destruction and rescuing many of the important relics held inside.

"We've seen before our eyes the right things perfectly organized in a few moments, with responsibility, courage, solidarity and a meticulous organization", Macron said. "The worst has been avoided."

The cathedral's lead roof and its soaring spire were destroyed, but Notre Dame's iconic bell towers, rose windows, organ and precious artworks were saved.

Macron said the firefighters will receive an Honor Medal for their courage and devotion.

Paris City Hall also held a ceremony in the firefighters' honor Thursday afternoon, with a Bach violin concert, two giant banners strung from the monumental city headquarters and readings from Victor Hugo's "The Hunchback of Notre Dame."

Remarkably, no one was killed in the blaze that broke out as the cathedral was in the initial stages of a lengthy restoration.

A large swath of the island in the Seine River where Notre Dame is located was officially closed Thursday by police, who cited "important risks" of collapse and falling objects. The area had been unofficially blocked off since the fire.

Meanwhile, workers using a crane removed some statues to lessen the weight on the cathedral's fragile gables, or support walls, to keep them from collapsing since they were no longer supported by the roof and its network of centuries-old timbers that were consumed by the inferno.

They also secured the support structure above one of Notre Dame's rose windows with wooden planks.

Among the firefighters honored Thursday was Paris fire brigade chaplain Jean-Marc Fournier, who told the Le Parisian daily he was able to save the cathedral's consecrated hosts. The paper said he climbed on altars to remove large paintings, but that he was especially proud "to have removed Jesus" from the Cathedral — a reference to the Catholic belief that consecrated hosts are the body of Christ.

An earlier report credited Fournier with helping salvage the crown of thorns believed to have been worn by Jesus at his crucifixion, but Fournier told France Info Thursday he arrived after rescuers had already broken the relic's protective covering and an official who had the secret code needed to unlock it finished the job. He praised the action that preserved "this extraordinary relic, this patrimony of humanity."

Among others honored was Myriam Chudzinski, one of the first firefighters to reach the roof as the blaze raged. Loaded with gear, they climbed hundreds of steps up the cathedral's narrow spiral staircase to the top of one of the two towers.

"We knew that the roof was burning, but we didn't really know the intensity," she told reporters. "It was from upstairs that you understood that it was really dramatic. It was very hot and we had to retreat, retreat. It was spreading quickly."

Benedicte Contamin, who came to view the damaged cathedral from afar Thursday, said she's sad but grateful it's still there.

"It's a chance for France to bounce back, a chance to realize what unites us, because we have been too much divided over the past years," she said.

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Here's a friendly reminder that time is moving scarily fast: Prince Louis turns one on Tuesday next week. The youngest member of the royal family, who's sibling to Prince George and Princess Charlotte, was born last year on April 23 - which means it's nearly time to celebrate his birthday.

But unfortunately for the littlest royal, his first birthday is timed perfectly with the day George and Charlotte have to go back to school after the Easter holidays. Prince William and Kate Middleton are currently in Norfolk with their children, staying at the residence they own at the Queen's Sandringham Estate, Anmer Hall.

The Cambridges were photographed on a day out nearby Anmer Hall last week with George and Charlotte, along with cousins Mia and Lena Tindall, and their parents Zara and Mike Tindall.

But sadly all fun things must come to an end, and the family is going to have to return to London over the Easter weekend to ensure Prince George is back in time to start the new term at his school, Thomas' in Battersea. Princess Charlotte is also reported to be going back to Willcocks Nursery on April 23 for her last term there before she joins Prince George at Thomas' in September.

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Prince William also has other engagements on his youngest son's first birthday; he is due to arrive in New Zealand on April 25 to honour the victims who died in the Christchurch mosques terrorist attack last month. Travel time to New Zealand is around 24 hours, meaning the Duke of Cambridge will probably be leaving London on the evening of April 23 to ensure he's there on time.

The bad timing means William, Kate and the wider family will likely celebrate Prince Louis' birthday a couple of days early, on Easter Sunday. Last year, while attending the Easter day service in Windsor, Kate told some children she had put on an Easter Egg hunt for George and Charlotte earlier that morning, so a similar plan might be in place for this year, coinciding with Louis' birthday celebrations.

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