Your Letters
For the love of god, please stop being so negative in the reporting of Moneygeddon (I refuse to use the R-word). How is having such negative headlines all the time going to reassure anybody that we're not all doomed? It's just an excuse to keep digging at politicians. I'm far from being a Labour supporter, but just let them get on with it without scaring the daylights out of everybody every day.
Adam Molloy, Cardiff
It looks like Paper Monitor's . In these days of cuts and streamlining the ´óÏó´«Ã½ can't have two paper reviewers, so one of them has to go. Either Paper Monitor starts appearing at 6am too or starts studying the job section.
Steve Bowman, London
Re Paper Monitor: The "Smith" in question in Gordon Brown's English people to be proud of should be both Zadie and Maggie. But definitely not Jacqui...
The Bob, Glasgow
Re : Could it be because they appear to have built a go-kart track in the middle of it?
Hennell, Lincoln, UK
Is it me or have astronomers been baffled a lot recently? First the then the . I'd like to see then exhibit some other levels of confusion. Perhaps they could embrace a new word 'confuzzled' instead - it's high time that was in a headline.
Sarah, Colchester
In defence of The Bob (Letters, Tuesday), the joke is funny if you say it was Marx, and factually correct if you say it was Proudhon. Which is the better condition for a joke?
Phil, Guisborough
And to think, after all that work learning to spell "Massachusetts" in kindergarten, I've been spelling Lake Chargoggagoggmanchauggagoggchaubunagungamaugg incorrectly all these years.
Nadja, north of Boston, Massachusetts USA
Re : Who are these people? Couldn't you find someone that people have heard of?
Nick Morton, Camborne, Cornwall
Re . Why would final tickets for an illegal cup cause worry? (If you don't like the joke, or even if you do, you might be interested that it's all nouns except for an adjective.)
Warren, Bristol
I love .
Steven, Sunderland
As long as doesn't re-release The Power of Love, I don't mind what she does.
Chris Kenny, Southampton, England
Could be the shortest film ever? "Naming Pluto tells the story of Venetia Phair who was 11 years old in 1930 when she suggested the name to her grandfather....she piped up, 'why not call it Pluto?', and that's the story, that's the whole story."
Chris Kenny, (still living as above, in Southampton)