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PORTRAIT r yp '
The Spectatorj ' / _1 _J M r Andrew Smith resigned as Secretary of State for Work and Pensions. This added interest to a Cabinet reshuffle by Mr Tony Blair, the Prime Minister, and provoked...
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Help the aged
The SpectatorA ndrew Smith, the Work and Pensions Secretary, resigned this week, so he says, in order to spend more time with his family. Or maybe he was peeved at some of the comments made...
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GRAYDON CARTER
The SpectatorA s somebody who loved model trains as a kid, and who took a year off school when he was 20 to work as a lineman for the Canadian National Railway, I got on the GNER train at...
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Blair 's disdain for his colleagues could bring about his downfall
The SpectatorBRUCE ANDERSON 1 t is easy to botch reshuffles, although it is unusual to do so twice in succession. as Tony Blair has now managed. But when they change their governments, all...
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CHARLES MOORE
The SpectatorT hrce years this week after the twin towers fell, one senses people's longing to believe that it is all nothing to do with us — the dreadful, late-1930s illusion that...
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Why we must not
The Spectatorappease the Kremlin Russia's continuing brutality in Chechnya is the root cause of the Beslan massacre. So why does Blair grovel to Putin? The answer, says Simon Heifer, is oil...
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We still don't get it
The SpectatorMark Steyn says that three years after 9/11 the West remains in denial over Islamic terrorism e is sedated,' said Bill Clinton's heart surgeon on Tuesday. 'But he is...
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Mind your language
The SpectatorIn my opinion,' said Doris Eades, 74, 'the council has so much money it doesn't know what to do with it and comes up with hair-brained schemes like this.' So said a newspaper...
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Lilla's war with China
The SpectatorFrances Osborne on how her great-grandmother fought Beijing for 30 years and finally won, aged 100 L ittle old ladies with bottles of ink, mounds of writing-paper and firm hands...
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No way to write an article
The SpectatorGeneral Sir Mike Jackson turns his guns on Bruce Anderson, whose hostile analysis of Britain's defence arrangements appeared in this magazine last month N eedless to say, I was...
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A free market in religion
The SpectatorIf Christianity is not the one true religion, why be a Christian? Why not be a Buddhist? Mary Wakefield puts the question to Keith Ward, the liberal theologian A t nine in the...
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How the Right has won in the US
The SpectatorJohn Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge say that the Republicans, unlike the Tories, believe in the future, not in the past c oufrom England?' asked the Arizona delegat e in the...
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Ancient & modern
The SpectatorToday's rich are not, apparently, giving enough of their wealth to good causes. The ancients would have known why. Euergesia — 'benefaction, philanthropy' — had always been...
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How Putin silences the journalists who criticise his brutality in Chechnya
The SpectatorSTEPHEN GLOVER T he Prime Minister has enjoined us to be 'in complete solidarity with Russia and the Russian people', and invites us to draw a parallel between the terrorist...
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Count me in
The SpectatorFrom Edward Gamier QC MP Sir: As one of the (so far few) Conservative MPs to have publicly supported the proposal to debate the Prime Minister's impeachment, I was not...
Desperately seeking war
The SpectatorFrom Ian Taylor Sir: You write (Leading article, 28 August) that in the run-up to the war Chirac and SchrOcler were looking for 'excuses to do nothing' (as though this was...
A-levels are ace
The SpectatorFrom David Miliband Sir: Peter °borne raises a number of issues to contend with my assertion that the rise in A-level grades is the product of higher standards of teaching and...
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Regional spin
The SpectatorFrom Dr Jeremy Stocker Sir; Martin Vander Weyer ('Regional forecast', 4 September) is right to draw attention to the stealthy advance of regional government. Here in the...
Dishonoured heroes
The SpectatorFrom Dennis Outwin Sir: Anthony Daniels's review of Dr Mayhew's book The Reconstruction of Warriors (Books, 4 September) omits to mention Sir Archibald McIndoe's most famous...
Housewife historians
The SpectatorFrom Diana Gould Sir: I am the 'Gloucestershire housewife' James Delingpole describes in his review of the Channel 4 documentary Secret History: Sink the Belgrano as outraged...
Simian sobriquets
The SpectatorFrom John Reynolds Sir: Corrupt, vicious and incompetent — the President of Equatorial Guinea may well deserve all of these epithets ('Help me, wonga', 4 September). But 'a...
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You can sell an awful lot of worm medicine on a bus in the Andes
The SpectatorMATTHEW PARRIS A t Cerro de Pasco, we found a bus for Huanuco. Cerro is a mining town in the high Andean plain, and feels like it: stark, cold and treeless, thin air, thin...
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Don't mention it, but the nation's finances depend on the kindness of strangers
The SpectatorCHRISTOPHER FILDES New York B ack from the hills and the Hamptons comes the workaday population of Manhattan, returning to something like business as usual. Last week the...
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A Triptych by Van der Goes or a Feast for Dr Kissinger?
The SpectatorPAUL JOHNSON S uccessful businessmen who try to rise socially too far and too fast are sure to come a cropper. This has been true of all ages but never more so than at present....
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Upstairs and downstairs
The SpectatorSam Leith PENINSULA OF LIES: A TRUE STORY OF MYSTERIOUS BIRTH AND TABOO LOVE by Edward Ball Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 420, pp. 277, ISBN 0743235606 118 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800...
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The family revisited
The SpectatorAndra Linklater FATHERS AND SONS: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A FAMILY by Alexander Waugh Headline, £20, pp. 472, ISBN 0755312546 f18 (plus 12.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 T his is a very...
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A great grandmother glimpsed
The SpectatorJonathan Mirsky LILLA'S FEAST: A STORY OF LOVE, WAR AND A PASSION FOR FOOD by Frances Osborne Doubleday, £18.99, pp. 325, ISBN 0385606664 £16.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800...
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A sure but light hand on the tiller
The SpectatorJonathan Cecil ARGUMENTS WITH ENGLAND by Michael Blakemore Faber, 120, pp. 404, ISBN 0571224458 C18 (plus 12.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 T he least satisfactory feature of Michael...
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Music in a landscape
The SpectatorSimon Hefter ELGAR: CHILD OF DREAMS by Jerrold Northrop Moore Faber, £14.99, pp. 224, ISBN 0571223370 £12.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 T wenty years ago Jerrold Northrop...
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The return of Cosa Nostra
The SpectatorCaroline Moorehead BERLUSCONI'S SHADOW: CRIME, JUSTICE AND THE PURSUIT OF POWER by David Lane Allen Lane, £18.99, pp. 352, ISBN 0713997877 £16.99 (plus E2.25 p&p) 0870 800...
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Rising far above failure
The SpectatorAnita Brookner AUTHOR, AUTHOR by David Lodge Secker and Warburg, £16.99, pp. 389, ISBN 0436205270 £14.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 H enry James might be gratified by the...
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Where the funny meets the horrible
The SpectatorD.J. Taylor PARADISE by Al. Kennedy Cape, £16.99, pp. 344, ISBN 0224062581 £14.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 A century ago, Paradise might have appeared in the stout...
A deafening sort of success
The SpectatorHilary Mantel THE FALLS by Joyce Carol Oates Fourth Estate, £17.99, pp. 481, ISBN 0007185146 e 115.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 1 ‘ 'm a bride who has become a widow in...
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A refusal to mourn
The SpectatorDiana Hendry A TALE OF LOVE AND DARKNESS by Amos Oz translated by Nicholas de Lange Chatto & Windus, £17.99, pp. 517, ISBN 0701174218 rt £15.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848...
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That not impossible she
The SpectatorRobert Edric CHERRY by Matt Thorne Weidenfeld & Nicolson, f12.99, pp. 256, ISBN 0297829092 111.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 m att Thorne's new novel might have been more...
Busy doing nothing
The SpectatorPatrick Skene Catling How TO BE IDLE by Tom Hodgkinson Hamish Hamilton, £12.99, pp. 286, ISBN 0241142512 £11.99 (plus £2.25 p&p) 0870 800 4848 T am Hodgkinson is a...
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Out in the cold
The SpectatorMichael Kennedy champions the case for Delius, who, he believes, is unfairly neglected O ne of the many 'themes' in this summer's Promenade concerts was the 70th anniversary of...
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Arboreal delights
The SpectatorAndrew Lambirth Julian Perry: Testament Guildhall Art Gallery; Guildhall Yard, London EC2, until 21 November uor the past two years, working with the 1 benefit of an Arts...
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Tear jerker
The SpectatorLloyd Evans Gompers Arcola Two Step 1/meido The Elephant Vanishes Barbican M eet my new friends. Molly is pregnant but wants to abort. Finn is a psycho. So is Steve. Mrs...
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Status symbols
The SpectatorMarcus Berkmann E verYrecord collection has them. They are the Cool Records That No One Actually Listens To. Many of them are among rock's acknowledged classics, and yet,...
Love lines
The SpectatorMark Steyn Wicker Park 12A, selected cinemas I wonder if the old scrambled-narrative formula might not have run its course — or, more aptly, be running round in circles...
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Artistic crime
The SpectatorMichael Tanner PeIleas at Milisande; II Trovatore Hanover State Opera, Edinburgh T he Hanover State Opera visited Edinburgh this year, bringing three of their productions with...
A right Charlie
The SpectatorCharles Spencer H elp! Stop, Thief! Call the cops! My byline's been pinched by a toff. Boris Johnson, the editor of this magazine and a man who contributes so generously to the...
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Probing Parky
The SpectatorSimon Hoggart n American friend of mine, based in London, was quoted in the business pages of a national newspaper the other day. She proudly sent the clipping to her mother,...
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Voice of doom
The SpectatorMichael Vestey I really must stop listening to Straw Poll on Radio Four. The feebleness of some of its contributors, and members of the audience and listeners emailing and...
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Wait and see
The SpectatorRobin Oakley J 've always doubted that all publicity is good publicity but headlines about his midweek arrest along with 15 other people brought at least one dividend for...
All in the past
The SpectatorTalc' Gstaad I t's been a busy and much too quickly gone-by summer. New sailing boats, the Olympics in Athens, judo and karate seminars, lotsa writing, and not much time left...
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Hard day's work
The SpectatorJeremy Clarke W e wandered around the impressively ancient and well-preserved town of Bergerac, looking for somewhere to post a banal postcard. Pink Floyd's 'Wish You Were...
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After me
The SpectatorPetronella Wyatt H ow thoughtful of David Mills, the Post Of fice's chief executive, to remind us how much we love queueing. In order to justify the Pinteresque waits at post...
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SIMON HOGGART
The SpectatorL ast week someone published a list of the best-selling 'brands' of wine in the UK, and depressing reading it made. At No. 1, Blossom Hill, from California; at 2, Australia's...
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EBORAti kW.) S o, back from holiday, to the weary dread
The Spectatorthat is September and the local newspaper headlines suggesting I haven't missed too much — 'woman dies, 87'; 'little evidence for [sic] fear of yobs, say police' — as well as...
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Filling the gap
The SpectatorJaspistos In Competition No. 2357 you were given some opening and closing words and asked to supply words to fill in the gap in the story. The original story was Melville's...
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Tearful end of an era
The SpectatorATING C live Woodward's resignation as manager of England's World Cup rugby winners was delightfully cranky and typical of his oddball free spirit. No one who knows him was in...
Dear Maly
The SpectatorQ. Some time ago I introduced a friend of mine to a very distinguished journalist. Their friendship has clearly blossomed, because in a recent article the journalist glowingly...