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Current AffairsPrague society combats problem of stray cats on the streets

23-12-2003 | Coilin O'Connor

Visitors to Prague may notice that - unlike many other major cities - you very rarely see a stray dog on the streets here. Perhaps this is partly down to the fact that Czechs - as a nation of dog-lovers - are loath to leave an abandoned dog to fend for itself against the elements. Cats, unfortunately, don't seem to occupy the same special place in Czech hearts, and the number of stray felines roaming Prague's streets remains a persistent problem. The Prague Society for the Protection of Animals is one organisation tackling this issue. It runs a number of cat shelters around the city. We paid a visit to one of them.  More

Letter from PragueBigger isn't always better

13-12-2003 | Pavla Horáková

New Christmas tree in Prague's Old Town Square It would not have occurred to me that something like that could happen - but I did not like the thing anyway. I'm talking about a Christmas tree, the tallest in this country, nicknamed Big Charles, that stood in Prague's Old Town Square until last Saturday when it came crashing down and nearly killed several people.  More

Letter from PragueWaiting for the blanket of grey to lift from over Prague

29-11-2003 | Ian Willoughby

If you have been to Prague then you will be familiar with the magistrala, the motorway which cuts through the top of Wenceslas Square, just in front of the National Museum. I was shocked a couple of years ago to discover that the road - which carries heavy traffic right through the centre of the capital - had been built in the 1970s.  More

ArtsArts news, Museum of Czech Cubism

28-11-2003 | Dita Asiedu

In this week's edition of the Arts, Dita Asiedu, looks at the House of the Black Madonna, where a new Museum of Cubism has just opened its doors to the public. But before that, a brief review of the latest arts news:  More

SpotlightPrague's Clementinum

19-11-2003 | Ian Willoughby

Just a stone's throw from Prague's Charles Bridge, on the Old Town side of the Vltava, stands the Clementinum, after Prague Castle the biggest complex of historical buildings in the city. Named after a church on the site dedicated to St Clement, the Clementinum was established by the Jesuits in the middle of the 16th century. After centuries as a college, it is now home to the Czech National Library and the main Prague weather station.  More

Current AffairsPrague's Na Prikope Street places 18th in Main Streets of the World survey

14-11-2003 | Jan Velinger

Na Prikope Street Manhattan's Fifth Avenue, the Champs Elysees in Paris, London's Oxord street - these and other swanky avenues regularly finish at the top of a survey called Main Streets Across the World, published annually by real estate consultants Cushman & Wakefield Healey & Baker. The latest survey out this week has shown Prague's own Na Prikope Street has made it to the top 18. Jan Velinger spoke with Jonathan Hallett, the head of the Prague branch of Cushman & Wakefield Healey & Baker. He began by asking the realties expert whether Na Prikope Street's placing had come as a surprise, or was instead part of a continuing trend.  More

Current AffairsPrague City Council gives green light to new stadium

12-11-2003 | Dita Asiedu

Moving on to some good news for Czech football fans, especially those who couldn't get tickets for September's Euro 2004 qualifier against Holland, because Prague's 20,000-capacity Letna stadium was sold-out. Prague City Council on Tuesday expressed its support for the building of a new 50,000 thousand-seat national sports stadium in the city's Strahov district.  More

Current AffairsDog licences in Prague to increase to help cover street-cleaning expenses

12-11-2003 | Pavla Horáková

Visitors admiring the beauty of Prague's spires and the colourful facades of its historic buildings are often in for an unpleasant surprise. Prague residents learnt long ago that it's safest to walk around the city with their eyes down. That's because the streets of the capital are often littered with dog excrement, which the city authorities spend tens of millions of crowns a year cleaning up. The money from dog licences is used to clean up the dog mess, though it is not enough. The city council has now proposed the licence fee be increased by fifty percent.  More

Czechs in HistoryThe Builders of St Vitus' Cathedral

12-11-2003 | Jan Velinger

Hello and welcome to Czechs in History. In today's edition: a look at Prague's most distinctive landmark St Vitus' Cathedral, ever visible above the city's Little Quarter, its Gothic and Neo-Gothic spires reaching above the Prague Castle, its most precious jewel and centrepiece. We look at how it was commissioned and constructed and how it survived times of turmoil and war. This site for coronations and final resting place for saints and kings of Bohemia - a cathedral unparalleled in importance in the Czech lands.  More

Stepping OutOn board - and wily - at the Paluba games room

26-09-2003 | Jan Velinger

It used to be one night a week in Prague on one of the city's steamboats travelling up and down a stretch of the Vltava River - the Paluba games club - a place to go with friends or to meet new ones to play a wide variety of board games you never had as a kid. But, then, Paluba changed locations: many members wanted a more regular place to visit, and the steamboat was getting expensive. Today, the Paluba games room has docked in Prague's Andel district: a club where people of all ages can get together to match wits.  More

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