Nothing to fear in London but loud Lamborghinis | Brief letters
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Nothing to fear in London but loud Lamborghinis | Brief letters
"We've just spent two weeks in London, staying in south Kensington (London has turned into something crazy': is the city in the grip of a crime wave?, 11 October). The only crime we witnessed was being woken up in the early hours by people racing Lamborghinis and Ferraris, with little enforcement by the police. We travelled all over using public transport and walking, and felt safe, so I don't think the supposed crime wave is anything to fear. Fran Leach Plymouth, Massachusetts, US"
"It's good that The clue as to where Milan should play home fixtures is in the name (Editorial, 10 October). However, that might prove difficult for Port Vale, unless they relocate from Burslem to somewhere ships can dock. Derrick Cameron Stoke-on-Trent Robert East is spot-on when he calls for new institutions combining further and higher education to end universities' grip on the UK psyche (Letters, 9 October). But what to call these places? How about polytechnics? Ian Nash Hertford"
Visitors reported feeling safe during a two-week stay in south Kensington despite early-morning Lamborghini and Ferrari racing and minimal police enforcement. A charity book club offers mailed books every six weeks, online discussions, and supports disaster-hit families worldwide. A suggestion links Milan's home fixtures to the club's name, with a tongue-in-cheek note that Port Vale would struggle unless it relocated to a port. A proposal recommends creating institutions that combine further and higher education to reduce university dominance of the national psyche, with a suggested name of polytechnics. Skepticism remains about closing gambling shops even if taxes rise.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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