Darlene and Cisco’s fateful dinner date Photograph: PR company handoutDarlene and Cisco’s fateful dinner date Photograph: PR company handoutMr Robot: episode by episodeTelevision & radioMr Robot recap: season two, episode 10 – pass the smelling salts!With romance, assassins and plans for world domination, we’re finally seeing the big picture – not to mention the even bigger conspiracy. And what an ending
She’s well acquainted with the touch of the velvet handJeepers H Creepers, that was some ending.
US newsThe fascist who 'passed' for whiteLawrence Dennis was a leading light in the American fascist movement of the 1930s. He was a fan of Hitler and a self-avowed anti-semite. Now a new book reveals that he was actually black - although even his wife didn't know. Gary Younge reportsLawrence Dennis was, arguably, the brains behind American fascism. He attended the Nuremberg rallies, had a personal audience with Mussolini, and met Nazi leaders; throughout the 1930s he provided the intellectual ballast for America's bourgeoning pro-fascist movement.
WH AudenDespite the poet’s best attempts to destroy it, readers still turn to his poem about Germany’s invasion of Poland in times of crisis. Why?
There are many acclaimed poems that address themselves to the question of love. There are many that address themselves to the problems of war. There are others, both ancient and modern, that seem to speak directly to our contemporary condition, and to various crises, fears and threats of annihilation.
England This article is more than 2 months oldFamily appeal for help to return body of son killed in UK to AnguillaThis article is more than 2 months oldTwo boys, aged 12, to appear in court for murder of Shawn Seesahai, 19, in Wolverhampton
The family of a 19-year-old man who was stabbed to death in Wolverhampton have launched a fundraising appeal to return his body to his home country of Anguilla, after two 12-year-old boys were charged with his murder.
World newsFormer New York police officers accused of killing for mafia· Murder, racketeering and kidnap among charges · Ex-detectives deny using their jobs as coverAs a former mafia killer, Eddie Lino must have known his death might always be around the corner. But he wasn't expecting it to find him in retirement, on a Brooklyn freeway in 1992, when two police officers reportedly pulled him over in his Mercedes. Maybe he thought he was about to get a ticket for speeding.