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Thirsty Tea Partiers will be glad to learn that Rush Limbaugh has a fruity new sideline. The conservative radio host has launched his own brand of iced tea, available in original and raspberry flavors, reports the Palm Beach Post . The beverage, named Two If By Tea and being sold online…

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Investigators are poring over film footage of a missing college student from New York and searching for a truck spotted circling her apartment building before she vanished early this month. Lauren Spierer is seen smiling broadly on surveillance footage as she walks down the hall of her apartment building near…

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China welcomes Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir

Controversial leader to meet President Hu Jintao despite being subject of war crimes warrants The Sudanese president, Omar al-Bashir, will visit China this month despite facing two international arrest warrants for war crimes. A foreign ministry spokesman said the allies would discuss Darfur, next month’s secession of south Sudan, and an expansion in co-operation. The announcement comes a week after the chief prosecutor of the international criminal court, Luis Moreno Ocampo, told the UN security council that genocide and crimes against humanity continued unabated in Darfur because Bashir had learned to defy the council’s authority . Moreno Ocampo said the crimes included air attacks on civilians and the direct killing of members of the Fur, Massalit and Zaghawa ethnic groups. Bashir denies all the allegations and does not recognise the ICC’s authority. China is a permanent member of the security council, which urged its members to support the findings of the ICC when it referred Sudan to the court. However, China is not obliged to execute the ICC warrants because it has never signed up to the body. China has previously warned that the charges against Bashir could lead to greater instability in the region. Bashir visited Chad and Kenya last year without being arrested even though both countries recognise the ICC. The African Union had urged its members not to execute the warrants. Bashir will meet President Hu Jintao of China and other senior leaders during his 27-30 June visit. Foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said: “The two countries, accepting the new situation, will discuss how to advance and consolidate our traditional friendship, expand and deepen comprehensive co-operation and exchange views on the north-south peace process and Darfur issue. “Bilateral trade is rising. Sudan has already become China’s third-largest trade partner in Africa with co-operation in each sphere consistently developing.” Sophie Richardson, Asia advocacy director of Human Rights Watch, said: “The Chinese government loves to claim it is a friend of the African people. If that is the case they have no business welcoming someone who has done tremendous harm to precisely those people. “The fact that at a time when some of the atrocities in Sudan were at their peak, it was not only the principal supplier of arms but the principal purchaser of Sudanese oil means it has questions to answer about its own complicity. It ought to be more concerned about pressing for justice than helping Bashir evade precisely that.” After coming under sustained pressure in the run up to the Beijing Olympics in 2008, China sent peacekeepers to Darfur and appointed a special representative to the region. The Khartoum government will lose about a third of the country’s territory and up to three quarters of its oil reserves when the south secedes on 9 July. A UN humanitarian report said on Thursday that fighting between the northern Sudanese army and armed groups aligned with south Sudan had led to dozens of deaths and opened up a new front. China has called for a peaceful resolution to the clashes along the internal border. In April Bashir told the Guardian that he accepted full personal responsibility for the conflict in Darfur but accused the ICC of “double standards” and conducting “a campaign of lies” . He said Britain and other western countries were pursuing a politically motivated vendetta against him with the aim of forcing regime change in Sudan. Sudan Africa China Omar al-Bashir Human rights International criminal court Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk

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China welcomes Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir

Controversial leader to meet President Hu Jintao despite being subject of war crimes warrants The Sudanese president, Omar al-Bashir, will visit China this month despite facing two international arrest warrants for war crimes. A foreign ministry spokesman said the allies would discuss Darfur, next month’s secession of south Sudan, and an expansion in co-operation. The announcement comes a week after the chief prosecutor of the international criminal court, Luis Moreno Ocampo, told the UN security council that genocide and crimes against humanity continued unabated in Darfur because Bashir had learned to defy the council’s authority . Moreno Ocampo said the crimes included air attacks on civilians and the direct killing of members of the Fur, Massalit and Zaghawa ethnic groups. Bashir denies all the allegations and does not recognise the ICC’s authority. China is a permanent member of the security council, which urged its members to support the findings of the ICC when it referred Sudan to the court. However, China is not obliged to execute the ICC warrants because it has never signed up to the body. China has previously warned that the charges against Bashir could lead to greater instability in the region. Bashir visited Chad and Kenya last year without being arrested even though both countries recognise the ICC. The African Union had urged its members not to execute the warrants. Bashir will meet President Hu Jintao of China and other senior leaders during his 27-30 June visit. Foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said: “The two countries, accepting the new situation, will discuss how to advance and consolidate our traditional friendship, expand and deepen comprehensive co-operation and exchange views on the north-south peace process and Darfur issue. “Bilateral trade is rising. Sudan has already become China’s third-largest trade partner in Africa with co-operation in each sphere consistently developing.” Sophie Richardson, Asia advocacy director of Human Rights Watch, said: “The Chinese government loves to claim it is a friend of the African people. If that is the case they have no business welcoming someone who has done tremendous harm to precisely those people. “The fact that at a time when some of the atrocities in Sudan were at their peak, it was not only the principal supplier of arms but the principal purchaser of Sudanese oil means it has questions to answer about its own complicity. It ought to be more concerned about pressing for justice than helping Bashir evade precisely that.” After coming under sustained pressure in the run up to the Beijing Olympics in 2008, China sent peacekeepers to Darfur and appointed a special representative to the region. The Khartoum government will lose about a third of the country’s territory and up to three quarters of its oil reserves when the south secedes on 9 July. A UN humanitarian report said on Thursday that fighting between the northern Sudanese army and armed groups aligned with south Sudan had led to dozens of deaths and opened up a new front. China has called for a peaceful resolution to the clashes along the internal border. In April Bashir told the Guardian that he accepted full personal responsibility for the conflict in Darfur but accused the ICC of “double standards” and conducting “a campaign of lies” . He said Britain and other western countries were pursuing a politically motivated vendetta against him with the aim of forcing regime change in Sudan. Sudan Africa China Omar al-Bashir Human rights International criminal court Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk

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Prince Harry is likely to return to military service in Afghanistan next year, although you won’t be hearing about it when he does. The prince—whose first tour of duty in the combat zone was cut short after a media leak —has qualified as an Apache attack helicopter pilot, been…

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Glenn Beck can’t seem to get much traction on his upcoming political rally in Israel. So far, not a single leading GOP presidential candidate has expressed interest in attending the pro-Israel demonstration organized by the ousted Fox mega-mouth. As of now only former Democratic vice presidential contender Joseph Lieberman and…

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Hockey fans enraged by the Canucks’ 4-0 home loss to the Boston Bruins in Game 7 of the Stanley Cup finals are on the rampage in downtown Vancouver. The mood turned ugly in the game’s final minutes downtown, where some 100,000 fans had gathered to watch. Groups of angry…

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UK swimming beaches and lakes ranked and mapped

Europe has ranked every bathing place, beach and swimming area across the EU. How do the UK’s beaches and lakes compare? Find which are great – and which are banned • Get the data • Get the map Do you like swimming outside? But how clean is your beach? Since 1990, the European Union has been monitoring over 21,000 beaches, lakes and rivers across Europe – anywhere where swimmers go al fresco, in fact. So that huge dataset covers Brighton Beach, the Hamsptead swimming ponds and the classic Mediterranean beaches of the South of France, Spain and Greece. So, what does the data, out today from the European Environment Agency , show for the UK? The overall figures are good – 96.8% of our swimming areas meet the legal standards, if not the full guidelines. This is down slightly on last year – but more swimming areas are now being surveyed. But three beaches had to be closed because standards were not high enough, including Blackpool North, Newhaven in Sussex and Tywyn in Wales. The rankings only include outside swimming places – not man-made lidos or pools. This is how the data looks on a Google Fusion map : Most British bathing areas do comply – but a significant number only meet the mandatory rules, not the wider-ranging guidelines. What is happening across Europe? According to the report: In 2010, 92.1% of Europe’s coastal bathing waters and 90.2% of inland bathing waters met the minimum quality standards. Only 1.2% of coastal bathing water and 2.8% of inland sites were non-compliant. The remainder are unclassified due to insufficient data. In general, coastal bathing water quality deteriorated between 2009 and 2010 – the number of bathing water bodies meeting the mandatory values fell by 3.5%, while those meeting guide values fell by 9.5%. Inland water quality has also dropped. The number of rivers and lakes achieving the guide values fell by 10.2%, although compliance with the mandatory values was almost stationary. Rivers were particularly problematic, with only 25% of river bathing waters achieving guide values. If you want to, you can find out what variables from the Directive they use to rank each beach here . The EEA use six, slightly confusing, categories. In plain language they mean: •  CG – The best beaches, complying with the law and the guidelines • CI – complies with the mandatory requirements – but not the guidelines •  B – banned or closed (temporarily or throughout the season) • NF – insufficiently sampled • NC – Does not comply with the legal requirements • NS – not sampled Eventually we will try to map all of Europe’s 21,000 beaches – and you can download every country’s data here . The full UK data is below . What can you do with it? Data summary Download the data • DATA: download the full spreadsheet More open data Data journalism and data visualisations from the Guardian World government data • Search the world’s government data with our gateway Development and aid data • Search the world’s global development data with our gateway Can you do something with this data? • Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group • Contact us at data@guardian.co.uk • Get the A-Z of data • More at the Datastore directory • Follow us on Twitter • Like us on Facebook Pollution Swimming holidays Swimming Beach holidays Simon Rogers guardian.co.uk

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Retail sales figures reveals depth of consumer slump

The slump in retail sales in May does not bode well for GDP growth in the second quarter Retail sales dived by twice the expected rate in May as consumers cut their spending on clothes and other non-food items to pay for higher petrol prices. Retailers said the difficult economic outlook had depressed consumer confidence and encouraged shoppers to stay away from the high street. Sales volumes dropped 1.4%, more than reversing the 1.1% increase in April that was mainly attributed to the royal wedding and unseasonally warm weather. Vicky Redwood, senior UK economist at Capital Economics said the figures showed that April was a temporary blip to a long-term downward trend. “The underlying trend in sales over the past several months still looks broadly flat at best. What’s more, we expect this trend to worsen as households respond to the intensifying squeeze on their real pay. We continue to think that overall household spending will drop by about 1% this year,” she said. Redwood pointed out that recent swings in spending have been primarily driven by consumers cutting food bills, but non-food sales also fell, reversing April’s gain. Clothing, household goods and department store sales all dropped to leave sales over the year since last April virtually flat at 0.2% up. The slump in retail sales in May does not bode well for GDP growth in the second quarter and further increases the chances that the Bank of England will delay raising interest rates until 2012. Economist Howard Archer of IHS Global Insight said the figures would be seen by the Bank of England as justifying a low interest rate policy and maintenance of quantitative easing. But hints that rates would rise towards the end of the year in line with market expectations were likely to discourage consumers from spending. “Many consumers are likely to be worried that the Bank of England could start to raise interest rates before the end of the year. Even if the Bank of England only edges interest rates up, it will affect consumer psychology as people are bound to see the move as the first in a series of hikes,” he said. He said the implications for GDP growth in the second quarter were also likely to concern the Bank of England. “This is particularly worrying for second-quarter GDP growth prospects, given that consumer spending accounts for 65% of GDP,” he said. Consumer price inflation remained at 4.5% in May, which was substantially above average annual earnings growth of around 2% in April. Archer added: “Consumer spending fell by 0.6% quarter-on-quarter in real terms in the first quarter of 2011, and the likelihood is that it will stay very weak for some time to come as household purchasing power remains under severe pressure from high inflation, low wage growth and tighter fiscal policy. Furthermore, soaring utility bills will shortly add to the squeeze on consumers. In addition, unemployment is still high and debt levels are elevated. “Meanwhile, the weak housing market has adverse repercussions for consumer spending. A healthy housing market activity boosts demand for carpets, fittings and furnishings as well as major household appliances while rising house prices can have a significant wealth effect.” Retail industry Economic growth (GDP) Economics Bank of England Interest rates Phillip Inman guardian.co.uk

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England v Sri Lanka – live! | Andy Bull

• Email Andy with all your thoughts andy.bull@guardian.co.uk • Press F5 to refresh this page or use our auto-refresher • Follow Andy on Twitter if that’s your thing 4th over: Sri Lanka 7-0 (Paranavitana 4, Thirimanne 2) There are a whole lot of thumb-twiddling pedants unleashing hell in my inbox. Turns out that thumb twiddling is one of the great British preoccupations, along with tea drinking and talking about the weather. Paranavitana knocks two past short leg and then sneaks an audacious single after dropping the ball down to the leg side, his partner squeezing home just ahead of the throw from the fielder. “When it comes to upsetting your in-laws, losing your ring is for beginners,” says Tim Travers. “A few years ago I attended an Easter family get together with my girlfriend at the times very religious parents, who were less than keen on me to put it mildly. The booze flowed freely and just as I seemed to be winning them over. Unfortunately for me some 7 year old relative decided to recount the story of Easter for me, and in my drunken wisdom I decided it’d be an excellent wheeze to correct him & inform him & his sister that Jesus was killed for murdering the Easter Bunny. Needless to say my good work was undone in a puddle of tears & I wasn’t invited back for Christmas.” 3rd over: Sri Lanka 4-0 (Paranavitana 1, Thirimanne 2) And Paranvitana pats his first run out to the off. I’ve just realised that, as Paul Swift says, I “dismissed Neil Withers apparently civil enquiry a bit too readily.” He meant that lunch will last 40 minutes didn’t he? Not that it would be taken in 40 minutes. So by rights I should reinstate his rant. Oh well. The moment has gone and besides, his email is now lost somewhere in the depths of the discarded in my inbox. 2nd over: Sri Lanka 3-0 (Paranavitana 0, Thirimanne 2) Broad gets to take the new ball at the other end, and predictably enough he decides that Don Thirimanne’s first ball in Test cricket should be a bouncer. The boy can duck though, and the ball shoots over his head to Prior. Another bouncer and Broad then flings down one wide of off stump and another wide of leg stump. Broad stops and paws at the pile of sawdust at the bowling crease, then whangs another delivery down the leg side. And the sixth ball is whipped away top square leg for two runs. Thirimanne has his first runs in Test cricket. It has been a poor first over from Broad. 1st over: Sri Lanka (Paranavitana 0, Thirimanne 0) “Here we go lads! Come on fellas!” shouts Matt Prior. James Anderson will bowl the first over of the day. His first ball is full and up on off-stump. Immediately we’re reminded what England were missing at Lord’s. There’s one delivery down the leg side, but otherwise they all whizz through past off-stump and on to Prior. “‘Where were you born and where do you live?’” says Charles Courtney. “I’m beginning to fear that the OBO has been an elaborate phishing scheme from the start. Don’t tell him your name Dunne.” Rod Bransgrove rings a silver bell, Jerusalem rings out over the PA system and the players walk out. We’re about to see a small piece of history be made at the Rose Bowl. “My friend^ Neil (a senior civil servant with plenty of time on his hands) has developed a process for denoting sarcasm in emails by suffixing the comment with ^ for sarcastic or -^ for not sarcastic,” writes Graham Page. “I think it would be a lovely gesture if you could recommend this to the obo readership-^” What would be the point? Is anything ever published on the OBO that isn’t sarcastic? It’s our default mode. Sincerity scares us. We’re English, after all. “Surely the third option as well as ‘Where were you born and where do you live’ is who does your Dad support?” points out Richard Moore. “I’m a Northants fan because of my Dad. I was lucky enough to be introduced to them by him in the year Anil Kumble played for them. I thought that I was due to support one of the top teams in the game. How foolish. Apparently my grandfather supported them and never got to see them win the County Championship, I don’t think I’m being too pessimistic to suggest that my father and I will have the same fate.” Hugh Maguire is one of many confused folk complaining that “Because your left and right hands are near mirror images of each other then a clock-wise right and an anti-clockwise left thumb rotation will be going in the same direction.” Now, I can’t agree with that. Surely as you look down on your thumbs from above you can figure out that moving one anti-clockwise and the other clockwise they will be going in opposite directions? Ryan, Ryan, Ryan . Where were you born and where do you live? Those are the only ways to pick your team. But for what it is worth all right-thinking people should support Somerset on the grounds that it is the land of sunshine, cider and sixes and that they have never won the Championship title. Someone help this fella Ryan Dunne out: “Test Cricket is all well and good but, over these long footballess months, I was thinking of picking a County Cricket side to start supporting. Anyone have any advice on how to go about this is? Is there a Glory Hunter’s favourite or, conversely, a St.Pauli style trendy neutral’s choice? My football team is the Glorious Glasgow Rangers, if that helps.” “Am I right in assuming lunch will be 40 minutes?” No, Neil Withers, you’re not. Lunch will be at 1.30pm, sadly rendering the rest of your 500 word rant about the tyranny of corporate lunches, prawn-sandwich eaters and the the evils of Rupert Murdoch entirely redundant. And unpublishable. How to lose a new wife and alienate your in-laws no2 in an ongoing series: “A friend of mine about a month after his wedding had to do a stock take/audit type thing at work,” says B. Deane. “Mindful he might lose his ring in the process, he takes it off, puts it safely in his pocket.Walking home gives all his loose change to Big Issue vendor. Gets on train. Gets home. Brain starts to work. Poor lad spent a few hours pointlessly searching for said vendor.” A wonderfully pointless stat from James Boon : “On the other hand, Strauss has scored more test hundreds than anyone else who hasn’t bowled a ball in Test cricket.” “I would have bowled as well” says Kumar, a wry grin spreading across his face. Thisara Perera comes in for Farveez Maharoof, and as we all suspected Hettige Don Rumesh Lahiru Thirimanne will make his debut at the top of the order as a replacement for Dilshan. Steve Finn drops out of the England team for Jimmy Anderson . It’s the toss Sanga calls heads, loses, and mouths ‘oh bugger’ to himself as Strauss announces that England will bowl . And now a word in a worthwhile cause from our captain, Mike Selvey: “Hi everyone. My daughter Hannah, who is 14, and four of her schoolfriends are undertaking the 3 Peaks Challenge at the end of June, in aid of SANDS, the charity for stillbirth, and neo-natal death. The task involves climbing the highest peaks in Scotland, England and Wales (ie Ben Nevis, Scafell Pike, and Snowdon) within 24 hours. They are trying to raise £1500, and at the moment are getting on for halfway there. Anything you could do to help them further would be very gratefully received. You can donate through JustGiving with this link “. Three peaks in 24 hours? That’s a lot of hard yakka uphill into the wind. But I guess that kind of thing comes naturally to the Selvey family. Dig deep folks. Josh Robinson has a point here “Has Pietersen actually been in danger of being dropped?” – no, but only because the press and public don’t get to make the selection decisions – “I know he’s been out of form for a while, and various idiots have talked about his being dropped. But given that replacing an out-of-form KP with an in-form somebody else would make only a very small difference to the quality of the England side in comparison with the change that an in-form KP could bring about, there’s hardly any point in dropping him. And I imagine the selectors are perfectly aware of that.” Just like Shane Warne’s skin , the pitch has suddenly changed colour. The grass has come off the top, but Warne still reckons that whoever wins the toss should bowl first. Good news from the middle – play will start at 12.15pm and lunch will be taken at 1.30pm. Play can stretch on till 7pm tonight. “I these days find myself idly fiddling with my recently acquired wedding ring,” Luke Richardson, that’s a dangerous habit to get in to. They feel very uncomfortable at first, don’t they? Assuming that you, like me, aren’t used to wearing rings. “Today’s tally of accidental drops, heart stopping rolls away across the office floor and incidents of it being stuck on the wrong finger is at 6 (only 1 heart stopping roll away). Still, at least I didn’t leave it at home today.” Just don’t make the mistake a friend of mine did. A few days after the wedding his wife asked him how the ring felt and he couldn’t quite find the right word so he came out with “claustrophobic” . “Jonathan Trott hasn’t been out of form has he?” Yes he has Lori McConnachie. There was some hubbub about his having to play for his place in Bangladesh last Spring, after a poor tour to South Africa. He responded with one of the most intolerably unwatchable innings in the modern history of cricket, 64 in four-and-a-half hours in the second Test at Dhaka. An expert writes: “Following Thomas Whiteley’s comment about losing time to rain during drought, I thought I’d try and claim a penny for my thoughts. It’s quite possible for extreme weather to occur (i.e. periods of rain) during a prolonged dry spell. Also, from a sample size of three, one of which was a match in Wales, it’s hard to see these inclement conditions as anything other than a bit of random variation.” Iain in Edinburgh is now going back to his Ecological stats PhD. “I can’t work out if you’re very simple or a genius,” says Phil Powell. To which I can only reply, if you’ve got to ask you’ll never know. “Simple because thumb twiddling is actually very easy, or a genius because you’ve just caused literally tens of people across the world sit in front of their computer and simultaneously thumb twiddle.” On Sky Athers, Nasser and Goldenhair are talking about Strauss’ batting technique. To be fair to them, they’re not being too hysterical about it. But it is slightly bizarre that the English media always feel compelled to pick on one batsman. Last week it was Pietersen, this week it was Strauss. Is there a single member of the top six who hasn’t supposedly been out of form and in danger of losing his place at some point in the last 12 months? “Why are you rotating one thumb in the opposite direction to the other, instead of just getting them to follow each other round in the same direction?” asks Tim Bradshaw,”It’s this kind of over complication that has cost Arsenal so dear over the last few years.” I’ll forgive you using a football analogy on the OBO, Tim, but you’ve entirely missed my point. Twiddling your thumbs is not supposed to be easy, if it was there wouldn’t be any point doing it. “With the recent announcement that we now have the opening pair of A. Strauss, OBE and A. Cook, MBE for England,” writes Colyn Alcock, “is the the most honoured opening partnership in the history of the team?” Eitherway, when it comes to syllables they’ve got nothing on their opposite numbers in the Sri Lankan side: Hettige Don Rumesh Lahiru Thirimanne is going to come in for his Test debut today, alongside Nishad Tharanga Paranavitana. Incidentally have you ever actually tried properly twiddling your thumbs? It is surprisingly difficult to do. Thread your fingers together in front of you – think of the kind of stance that Tony Blair used to adopt when he was at a lectern – then put your thumbs behind them, side by side. Now move your right thumb in a circle clockwise, and at the same time move your left thumb in a circle anti-clockwise. Let me know how you get on. “I’m with Dave Adams,” writes Ellie Hibberd. “My husband and I are taking his granddad to the match on Saturday for his first Test match in years. I equally do not want to have to spend the day trying to convince an 85 year old man that it is a good idea to sit there all day shivering in the drizzle waiting for the cricket to start – and I’m not sure he’s going to be up for the ‘let’s just drink lots of beer instead’ option. Dave will obviously have that problem with his seven year old too.” More of a whisky drinker is he? I do hope we get some play today , because the conditions look absolutely horrendous for batting. The pitch is green, the atmosphere is thick and the ground is wet. Whoever wins the toss surely has to bowl first. “There were dire stories about drought not that long ago,” grumbles Thomas Whiteley. “And yet we have lost a lot of time to rain during all three matches in different parts of the country, so what happened?” Yes, it is odd isn’t it? But much as I love indulging in a little pseudo-science I’m not going to attempt to give you an answer myself. Let’s trust that somewhere out there among the OBO readership there is someone who can give us a proper answer. They’ve just pulled the covers off the pitch and it looks as green as a landlubber’s gills after a rough night on the ocean. But beyond the brief window of dry weather that we’re about to enter the forecast is, as Dave Adams says, not very good: “Not happy with the weather situation, to say the least – looks pretty ominous until Sunday, though 15 miles down the road in Portsmouth the rain has stopped and there’s the tiniest hint of sunshine (which has little bearing on the rose bowl, because the weather is moving west to east). I have tickets for Saturday – taking my seven year-old to his first ever cricket match. I really don’t want to spend the day explaining to my son that a) I don’t control the weather, b) No, we can’t go home early, or c) that the alternative to getting wet at the Rose Bowl while not watching cricket was to spend the day shopping with his mum.” A glimmer of good news: there will be an inspection at 11.15am. Shane Warne is on Sky for the first time this summer , looking truly preposterous. Warne insists that he hasn’t had a facelift, insisting that “New Estée Lauder moisturisers for my skin have made a big difference.” I don’t believe a word of it. And not just because Estée Lauder happens to have a long-running association with Warne’s new squeeze Liz Hurley. The man looks like Ming the Merciless after a session on a sunbed. His eyebrows arch upwards at a ludicrously unlikely angle and his skin is stretched tight across his skull. So in the meantime it’s you, me and a whole lot of time to kill. Let the thumb twiddling commence. Morning everyone . Guess what? It’s raining at the Rose Bowl. The turf is turgid, with water oozing up through the grass around the covers. The pitch still needs a cut and a roll. And so even when the rain stops it is going to be 90 minutes or so before play can start. Which makes Mike Selvey’s match preview look all the more prescient : “If previous encounters are to be judged, Rod Bransgrove is more atuned to rock’n’roll than the musical, so he may not be familiar with Barbra Streisand and Funny Girl. But, as they put the finishing touches to the Rose Bowl, the ground into which he has poured heart, soul and money, probably in that order, he would be forgiven for singing quietly to himself the words of Fanny Brice in the famous show stopper: “Don’t bring around the cloud to rain on my parade.” The dream is coming true for him and Hampshire. A ground that barely existed at the start of the century, carved out of farmland, is now hosting its inaugural Test match. There is a pleasant intimacy to the venue and it deserves supporting. Full, with the sun out, it will provide a fine stage. But this afternoon the cloud descended and a steady drizzle started, an ominous portent to what is to come over the next few days. Already this does not promise to be a game without interruption. Keep singing, Rod.” Sri Lanka in England 2011 England cricket team Sri Lanka cricket team Cricket Over by over reports Andy Bull guardian.co.uk

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