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50 Firsts in York

Remember that excited feeling you got when you discovered somewhere new for the first time? Discover fifty first time experiences in York....and if you've visited before, some new ideas for your next trip! We look forward to welcoming you in 2014!

Jill Turton - Step into the Pulpit at York Minster

Every hour on the hour, the duty chaplain in black hat and cloak climbs into a pulpit in the vast nave of York Minster, taps the microphone and conducts a short prayer of thanksgiving that echoes round the mighty church. When he's finished the organist resumes his practise and clergy, lay people and visitors continue on their way. It's a small reminder that as well as a tourist attraction with a million visitors a year, York Minster is also a place of worship, a church that was dedicated to St Peter nearly 1500 years ago.

Jill Turton- Where to Shop in York

Shoppping in York is an irresistible part of any visit to this vibrant city. If you are looking for a unique gift idea, want to treat the kids or even spoil yourself rotten, look no further. Find out here as Jill Turton shares her tips on York?s finest independent boutiques, vintage stores and popular high street retailers.

48 Hours in York

Singular treats await in this historic city, from Roman remains to Norse sagas, via chocolate, beer and trains


Jill Turton - why the National Railway Museum is the perfect day out

As part of its publicity branding the National Railway Museum boasts that it's the biggest railway museum in the world. They sell themselves short; it must surely be the biggest and the best. Of course, Britain has an unparalleled heritage in its railways but York has collared the cream, a staggering collection from the quaintest 'Puffing Billy' loco to a Japanese Bullet train, from opulent Royal carriages (I want one, now) to the 'muck trucks' that dug out the Channel Tunnel.

Jill Turton - Eating out in York

Once people only wrote about Bettys, the stylish tearoom in St Helen's Square that served up dainty sandwiches and Fat Rascals in surroundings that recalled a 1920s luxury liner. Bettys is still there, still decked out like the Queen Mary and still York's favourite tearoom, but York is now as global as its visitors from a top notch Italian Le Langhe, Korean Oshibi, Polish Barbakan, South Indian Coconut Lagoon and everything in between.

Nigeria’s whistleblowing banker: Governor of Central Bank lifts the lid on his country's endemic corruption

Nigeria’s whistleblowing banker

Governor of Central Bank lifts the lid on his country's endemic corruption
He's been a very busy boy: Terry Gilliam on directing Berlioz operas, nightmarish shoots - and the truth about the Monty Python reunion

Terry Gilliam: Nightmarish shoots and Monty Python

Gilliam is preparing for for the release of his latest movie, The Zero Theorem
Philip Marlowe is back on the mean streets of LA: Private eye by icon of American Literature Raymond Chandler resurrected in new novel

Philip Marlowe is back on the mean streets of LA

Raymond Chandler's private eye resurrected in new novel
Never before seen personal accounts of Great War offer vivid picture of life at the Front

Vivid personal accounts of Great War

The footage has been unearthed from the BBC archives, says Gerard Gilbert
How to be a savvy TV addict: The essential guide to viewing what you want, when you want - without the sky-high prices

How to be a savvy TV addict

Say goodbye to the cable guy and ditch expensive satellite deals for a broadband connection and a streaming service
Ban the b-word

Is it time to ban the b-word?

A campaign is calling for an end to the use of the word bossy because it is undermining female ambition
Sarkoscandals: A guide to the former French President’s alleged crimes

Sarkoscandals: A guide to the former French President’s alleged crimes

Phone-tapping by judges has led to serious charges against Nicolas Sarkozy - and much shouting
10 best planters

Go green: 10 best planters

The sun’s finally out. Pep up your garden or balcony with these pots and containers
When Spurs fell just short of glory

When Spurs fell just short of glory

The game against Benfica recalls one of the great nights at the Lane when the Tottenham Double side came agonisingly close to the 1962 European Cup final
Simon Hart: MLS may be a retirement home to some, but for Derby's Simon Dawkins it revived his career

Simon Hart: Life beyond the Premier League

MLS may be a retirement home to some, but for Derby's Simon Dawkins it revived his career
Boy George: Bad karma

Bad karma

The enthusiastic rehabilitation of Boy George after he served time for a vicious attack says much about our disregard for male victims of violence
Is the secret to liberation from the cares of this world a two-word curse?

Is the secret to liberation from the cares of this world a two-word curse?

Followers of the best-selling author John C Parkin swear by his cussing philosophy. But would Nick Duerden be convinced?
25 years of the World Wide Web: The inventor of the Internet, Tim Berners-Lee, explains how it all began

25 years of the World Wide Web

The inventor of the Internet, Tim Berners-Lee, explains how it all began
W1A: Let's fix the BBC, yah

Let's fix the BBC, yah

Can the Corporation survive the Twenty Twelve treatment? James Rampton finds out on the set of W1A
Scots literati lead battle against £150m Caltongate building project in Edinburgh's historic Old Town

The battle for Edinburgh's historic Old Town

Irvine Welsh, William Boyd, William Dalrymple and AL Kennedy among those opposed to plans for building project