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Scientists work to make healthier white bread

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The research aimed at lovers of white bread has been funded by the government to improve the health benefits of UK food.
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19 hours ago
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Taylor Swift college class for parents taking Swifties to Eras tour

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Glasgow Clyde College say the event will help people get "up to speed" on the pop star.
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22 hours ago
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Line of Duty actor Brian McCardie dies at 59

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McCardie recently starred in BBC drama Time, and was to appear in Outlander prequel Blood of My Blood.
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22 hours ago
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“Forgotten” poem by C.S. Lewis published for the first time

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University of Leeds Literary Archivist Sarah Prescott holds ‘Mód Þrýþe Ne Wæg’

Enlarge / University of Leeds Literary Archivist Sarah Prescott holds "Mód Þrýþe Ne Wæg," by C.S. Lewis. (credit: © CS Lewis Pte Ltd)

Renowned British author C.S. Lewis is best known for his Chronicles of Narnia, but Lewis's prolific oeuvre also included a science-fiction trilogy, an allegorical novel, a marvelous retelling of the myth of Cupid and Psyche, various nonfiction works of Christian apologetics, and literary criticism. Now, a literary scholar has discovered a previously unknown short poem by Lewis among a cache of documents acquired by the University of Leeds 10 years ago. Written in 1935, the poem has been published for the first time, with an accompanying analysis in the Journal of Inkling Studies.

The journal's title refers to the so-called "Oxford Inklings," a group of Oxford-based scholars and writers who met regularly to read each others' works aloud, most often at an Oxford pub called The Eagle and Child (aka the Bird and the Baby). In addition to Lewis, the group included J.R.R. Tolkien and Charles Williams. (All three were the main characters of James A. Owens' fantasy series, The Chronicles of the Imaginarium Geographica.) I once called the Inklings "arguably the literary mythmakers" of their generation.

Lewis and Tolkien shared a love of Norse mythology, and Lewis read the first early drafts of what would become Tolkien's Lord of the Rings trilogy. Tolkien later said he owed his friend "an unpayable debt" for convincing him the "stuff" could be more than merely a "private hobby." Tolkien, in turn, was the one who convinced Lewis—an atheist in his youth—to convert to Christianity.

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22 hours ago
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Ukraine's 'Harry Potter castle' hit in deadly Russian strike

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Four people are killed in an attack on a private university in the Ukrainian port city of Odesa.
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1 day ago
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Dodgers pitcher makes incredible reflex catch

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Watch as Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto catches a ball travelling at 104mph during their 2-1 win over the Washington Nationals.
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4 days ago
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