Police divers are also expected to carry out more searches in the sea off Newhaven where his 20ft yacht, Sulis, was moored.The two youths were first arrested after the discovery of the blood and then released on police bail. A police spokesman said: "They have now been re-arrested for murder in connection with the disappearance of the Rev Ronald Glazebrook. They are being questioned at Hastings police station."The yacht, which the priest had owned for a year, had been taken out on the night of Sunday 29 April and towed in after suffering engine trouble.Police refused to say who was on board the yacht at the time but they stressed the vicar was last seen alive on the afternoon of Saturday 28 April in St Leonards as he walked his dog, Jonti.Mr Glazebrook's daughter, who lives in Surrey, called the police after her father failed to arrive for a church service the following SundayThe police also revealed that Mr Glazebrook's car, a bronze F-registered Toyota Carina had been seen being driven in the area since his disappearance, but they refused to say who was at the wheel.Detectives have been searching for a piece of carpet stripped from the boot of the car which they believe could provide a vital clue.Mr Glazebrook,
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who was a keen musician and a member of the MCC, retired to St Leonards 14 years ago, after working as a warden for eight years at St Margaret's House in Bethnal Green, east London a social centre for the local community.His daughter, Christine, said after his disappearance: "My father was a good man and he does not deserve anything to have happened to him."He was a very complex person, very well educated He was quite adventurous, not cautious. He was very generous with his time and on other occasions with his money. He was there in a practical way for his family, very loving but not in a demonstrative way with his grandchildren and he was interested in their school life.". The popular view of work as a daily drudge that steals our time, saps our energy and erodes our spirits has been challenged by a new report which claims work provides us with "the best time of our lives". The popular view of work as a daily drudge that steals our time, saps our energy and erodes our spirits has been challenged by a new report which claims work provides us with "the best time of our lives". The study, by Richard Reeves, an expert on workplace trends, says the British have for too long been stuck in an "anti-work rut", where office life is blamed for an array of social problems.But Mr Reeves says the truth is that work has changed dramatically for the better, becoming more fulfilling, more creative, more sociable, more flexible and more central to our lives.Mr Reeves, who is director of futures at the Industrial Society, says many people now like their jobs more than they care to admit, finding them more interesting and worthwhile than other aspects of their lives. His work, entitled Happy Mondays, claims it is time to recognise the opportunities the modern world of work can offer and call a halt to years of anti-work rhetoric."Our attitudes to work need a radical overhaul. Lots of us get more out of work than other aspects of our lives It's just not socially acceptable to say so. Working hard at a job you love does not make you a social pariah Work is becoming more central to our lives. Work is how we identify ourselves, where we learn and make friends. Work is our community."He says that maxims such as "I work to live, not live to work" are depressing and outdated.
While money was an important factor, people now wanted to live fulfilling lives with meaningful jobs, rather than to simply earn a living. "The 'work to live' maxim is, at first sight, liberating, but on closer inspection deeply conservative, traps us in an anti-work mindset that limits our horizons and impoverishes our day to day existence."Average earnings have increased by more than a half in the past decade, the number of firms offering maternity leave in excess of statutory requirements had quintupled, a third of firms now offered sabbaticals and two thirds allowed their staff to work from home. In addition, Mr Reeves says that four out of 10 British workers say they are "very satisfied" with their jobs more than in France, Germany, Italy or Spain.But work was blamed for society's ills, including an increase in stress and punishing hours. But Mr Reeves says stress has not reached danger levels, there was just an overload of surveys "There is no stress epidemic in Britain's workplaces. Sometimes we feel stretched, or under pressure, or anxious, or busy at work, and we have fallen into the trap of labelling all these natural and positive feelings as stress."It was true that the intensity of work had increased.
