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More tea Vicar? "singers of some discernable talent will never get past this stage" By Dek Hogan Published: 03 September 2005. Bouncy Brenda was first up this week, bursting with personality and ...
AS a leading choirboy in my midteens I became involved in an adolescent romance with the vicar’s daughter. Her father strongly disapproved, but being a man of the cloth and somewhat enlightened ...
On their debut album Hermits on Holiday, DRINKS sound like a 21st Century take on Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra, with Presley’s guttural drawl and Le Bon’s dulcet croon, their voices have a lovely ...
More tea, vicar? Gisborne Herald. 18 Mar, 2023 01:17 AM Quick Read. Subscribe to listen. Access to Herald Premium articles require a Premium subscription. Subscribe now to listen.
Tea, cakes and dainty sandwiches may conjure up memories of an England past – but one woman could make this delightful image a reality with her new venture. Former journalist Anne Gillion has ...
A controversial rector’s leaving party turned into an unholy row at the weekend when a violent fracas broke out. Ann Douglas, rector at St John the Evangelist’s in Church Road, Woodley, was ...
Disclaimer: This event listing has been supplied by a registered event organiser. The views and statements expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the views of British Cycling or its associated ...
Tasting panel of three locals and four tea-mad German visitors ‘I know for a fact supermarkets throw out fresh food and meat that is in date’: chef Conor Spacey on Ireland’s massive food ...
She has been asked for help, guidance and forgiveness but never before has this reverend been asked for a pint and a packet of pork scratchings. However, that is about to change, as Reverend Derath ...
"More Tea, Vicar?", a show that explores the eccentric world of Middle England through the works of John Betjeman, is being staged at the Lion Ballroom in Leominster on Thursday 7 June.
The television vicar is a great British institution — more precisely, an English one, since he’s always C of E. He may be a doddery old buffer, or a genteel snob. But he’s always a figure of ...