Thursday, 24 July 2014

Nissan e-NV200 Combi review | Auto Express

Nissan e-NV200 Combi review | Auto Express



Nissan e-NV200 Combi is based on an electric van, and offers huge amounts of space with an electric motor

Verdict

3
Nissan should be commended for producing the first electric van, and the Combi version is easily the most practical electric car around. However the short range and bouncy ride will discourage family holidays and visiting remote relatives, so it's best suited to those who rarely leave the big city. The van version will suit business who need cost-effective transport for frequent short-distance deliveries, so like all electric cars it won't work for many, but will be the perfect solution for some.
Small electric cars like the Nissan Leaf and the Renault ZOE have been on British roads for a little while now, but the first large electric van is now available - and it can also be bought as a five-seater passenger car.
Nissan e-NV200 Combi pictures (Evalia model)


Read more: http://www.autoexpress.co.uk/nissan/e-nv200/87433/nissan-e-nv200-combi-review#ixzz38PoPGlAi

Tonight: Is Britain Christian?



David Cameron believes Britain is a Christian country, but these days less than half of us describe ourselves as Christian, and only 5% of us go to church on a weekly basis.

Lady being interviewed
Nadia Eweida
In ‘Is Britain Christian?’ Tonight asks if the Prime Minister is right, and if it matters if he’s not? Should we accept that Christianity needs to take a back seat in a modern secular society, or will some communities lose more than bricks and mortar?

Britain’s history, laws and traditions are rooted in Christianity. The Queen is head of the Church of England - a tradition that dates back to the Tudors. Some of our greatest art, literature and music is inspired by Christianity. But these days, less than half of us describe ourselves as Christian.

This has left some of those who continue to hold very strong beliefs feeling marginalised. British Airways employee Nadia Eweida and nurse Shirley Chaplin have both fought in the European Courts for the right to display crucifix necklaces as part of their uniform.


But it’s not all bad news for the church: in the UK, membership of Pentecostal churches has risen by around 20% over the past five years, often boosted by immigrant communities.

Vicar in the trenches: The story of Reverend Theodore Hardy in the Great War, Robert Gore Langton, Daily Express



B
ut there was one breed of non-combatants that has been rather forgotten: chaplains.

By the end of the war there were 3,500 clergy in khaki, going about their rounds in a dog collar and representing God while all hell broke loose.

They were a mixed bunch and many were frankly worse than useless.

Padres who got the least respect were the ones who preached patriotism behind the lines and frightened the men going to the front. But some performed quiet miracles on the front line, earning undying admiration.

Perhaps the most astonishing of them all was a small, unassuming country vicar and one-time headmaster from near Kirkby Lonsdale, Cumbria.

He joined up as a relatively old man at 51.

He was to become the most highly decorated non-combatant of the Great War, winning to his considerable embarrassment the DSO, MC and VC.

His name was Theodore Bayley Hardy.


Further reading






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