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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT housands prepared to march to Hyde Park in London to demonstrate opposition to war against Iraq; they included Mr Charles Kennedy, the leader of the Liberal Democrat party....
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POLL TAX ON WHEELS
The SpectatorT he government has a thing about the mediaeval period. Charles Clarke complains that universities 'have governance systems that stretch back to mediaeval times'. David Blunkett...
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DIARY
The SpectatorMINETTE MARRIN I f diaries are all about name-dropping and indiscretion, and they usually are, perhaps I should say that I had lunch on Tuesday with the Prime Minister at No....
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THOUGHT FOR THE DAY
The SpectatorNo backwoods, octogenarian, crypto-fascist Tory is more obscurantist than Lord Irvine ROD LIDDLE A. 'cording to Gordon Brown at the weekend, Derry Irvine was so aghast at the...
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WHAT DO THEY WANT?
The SpectatorVICTORY FOR SADDAM Lloyd Evans had an open mind until he joined the peace movement and met Bianca Jagger I'M bursting with excitement. I can hardly get the words down fast...
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Ancient & modern
The SpectatorWHETHER war against Iraq is justified or not, hardly a day goes by without someone condemning it because (a) the enemy will be crushingly defeated and (b) the West will seize...
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BRITAIN IS RIGHT TO STICK BY AMERICA
The SpectatorConrad Black says that Tony Blair is acting in the national interest by being George W Bush's principal ally THE President of the United States said on the evening of 11...
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Mind your language
The SpectatorI AM excited by a letter from Kensington, but before that let me notice a fear ful symmetry between Martin Bashir's interview with Michael Jackson and the advertisements that...
HOW MANY POINTS FOR ORGASM?
The SpectatorJonathan Maitland says that the popularity of Scrabble is at an all-time high WHAT is the greatest board game in the world? It's a tough one. Chess, with its infinite variety,...
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Banned wagon: global
The SpectatorA weekly survey of world restrictions on freedom and free trade JAMES TOOLEY recently wrote in these pages of the success of private schools in Africa and India, which in the...
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MY LEFTY FRIENDS ARE WRONG
The SpectatorPhil Craig marched against cruise missiles, but now believes that Bush will be vindicated WE were there for peace. We were there to confront the American cowboy warmonger. We...
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FACING THE CHOP
The SpectatorMatthew Leeming visits an Afghan death row and finds the inmates surprisingly cheerful WALKING down the Panjshir Valley with my guide Tayub, I was followed by a long skein of...
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AND ANOTHER THING
The SpectatorFrom wild boar piglets to the dray horse's battering sandal PAUL JOHNSON W hich is the most striking representation of an animal in art? I ask this after having been ravished...
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SHARED OPINION
The SpectatorIf only more prominent people dared to be pompous FRANK JOHNSON I n common with millions of other Irvineists up and down the country, I sometimes wonder whether we, as a...
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Racing uncertainties
The SpectatorFrom Dr Andrew D. Lawson Sir: The inability to discuss racial difference without being pilloried as a racist is well illustrated by Rod Liddle's article on black athletes...
The ludicrous UN
The SpectatorFrom Mr Oleg Gordievsky Sir: Analysis of the 20th century's history makes me entirely agree with Mark Steyn's conclusions ('Let's quit the UN', 8 February). The UN's foundation...
Capo Berlusconi
The SpectatorFrom Mr Ronald Harrison Sir: Count Capponi (Letters, 8 February) typifies the reaction of so many Italians when confronted with home truths — they prefer not to believe them and...
No coward
The SpectatorFrom Mr Kenneth Beecham Sir: Much as one despises Hitler for the misery he inflicted, Andrew Roberts (Books, 8 February) is surely at fault in describing Adolf as a coward....
Chuff Daddy
The SpectatorFrom F. Gxynplaine MacIniyre Sir: Andrew Lambirth (Arts, 1 February) has speculated as to the meaning of the railway engine in Giorgio de Chirico's paintings. It is true that...
Iraq's French connection
The SpectatorFrom Mr Alasdair Ogilvy Sir: Your correspondent Dr Metzger (Letters, 8 February) is one of the Old Europeans whom The Simpsons refers to as 'surrender monkeys'. His pessimistic...
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Why Tony's not for turning
The SpectatorFrom Mr Ron West Sir: Matthew Parris's brilliant suggestion (Another voice. 8 February) about Tony Blair leading the Tories occurred to me many months ago when I read a...
Phial bodies
The SpectatorFrom Mr Walter Kennedy Sir: At a crucial presentation at the UN, Colin Powell produced a phial of look-alike anthrax and described the harm done by an equivalent amount in the...
TB is controllable
The SpectatorFrom Mr Paul Sornmelfeld and Dr Peter Davies Sir: Your cover story by Anthony Browne ('How the government endangers British lives', 25 January) was deeply depressing and...
Mugabe's monsterings
The SpectatorFrom Mr George Fleet Sir: Please could I beg you to keep up your coverage of the troubles in Zimbabwe? In the past week two single and elderly women have been harassed in their...
Wanted: Oakeshottiana
The SpectatorFrom Dr Robert Grant Sir: As the official biographer of the philosopher Michael Oakeshott (1901-90), I should be most grateful for any information or reminiscences your readers...
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CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorCharge and counter-charge Ken puts a spoke in the wheel of Gavyn Arthur's coach CHRISTOPHER FILDES L ord Mayor Gavyn Arthur has to keep his golden coach in the Museum of...
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MEDIA STUDIES
The SpectatorBritish editors are in a quandary: can they back the war if their readers don't? STEPHEN GLOVER W ar is traditionally good for newspapers. Of course, if newsprint is rationed...
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Articles of faith
The SpectatorRobert Macfarlane A DEVIL'S CHAPLAIN by Richard Dawkins Weidenfeld, £16.99, pp. 264, ISBN 0297829734 R ichard Dawkins loves fighting. More precisely, he loves winning. To be...
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She fashioned her future
The SpectatorNicky Haslam DIANA VREELAND by Eleanor Dwight HamerCollins Inc/Morrow, £30, pp. 320, ISBN 0688167381 Jr udging by her own ideals of beauty and drama. Diana Dalziel's arrival in...
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Why is a birch-tree like a melon?
The SpectatorEmma Tennant THE BOTANICAL GARDEN VOLUME L TREES AND SHRUBS, VOLUME II: PERENNIALS AND ANNUALS by Roger Phillips and Marlyn Rix Macmillan, £50 each T his is the time of year...
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Homage to A. B. Roger
The SpectatorRobert Oakeshott BEYOND NAB END by William Woodruff Abacus, £6.99. pp. 312, ISBN 0349116229 Woodruff you have not come to Oxford to take examinations, you have come to learn....
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When Irish eyes were smiling
The SpectatorMiranda France THE EMPRESS OF SOUTH AMERICA by Nigel Cawthorne Heinemann, 112.99, pp. 314, ISBN 0434008982 THE SHADOWS OF ELISA LYNCH by Sian Rees Review. £14.99, pp. 343,...
Looking and looking away
The SpectatorAndrew Gimson ON THE NATURAL HISTORY OF DESTRUCTION by W. G. Sebald Hamish Hamilton, £16.99, pp. 206, ISBN 0241141265 S ebald is perturbed by the almost complete failure of...
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Aspects of love
The SpectatorLloyd Evans THE HONEY GATHERERS: A BOOK OF LOVE POEMS edited by Maura Dooley Bloodaxe, 19.95, pp. 320, ISBN 1852243597 loodaxe, Britain's leading independent publisher of...
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A palpable hit
The SpectatorKevin Jackson PRETTY GIRL IN CRIMSON ROSE (8) by Sandy Balfour Atlantic Books. £1299, pp. 198, ISBN 1843540363 I f you happen to be one of those maddeningly quick-witted or...
Claws unsheathed in Fleet Street
The SpectatorSimon Heifer PLAYING THE GAME by Sarah Sands Macmillan, 110.99, pp. 247, ISBN 0333905547 S ometimes I have lounged in other people's bathrooms and read a few pages of what I...
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Only slightly under the influence
The SpectatorFelipe Fernandez-Armesto HOW RUSSIA SHAPED THE MODERN WORLD: FROM ART TO ANTISEMITISM, BALLET TO BOLSHEVISM by Steven G. Marks Princeton, £19.95, pp. 393. ISBN 0691096848 T he...
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Ringling's big top Baroque
The SpectatorSusan Moore on one of the great unsung art collections in America C a d'Zan? Even the most seasoned traveller looks puzzled. For this Venetian Gothic edifice — its name means...
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Arthur Rackham (Dulwich Picture Gallery, till 2 March)
The SpectatorKing of Fairyland Laura Gascoigne T his year, two giants of modern British book illustration usher Dulwich Picture Gallery's programme in and out: Arthur Rackham (1867-1939)...
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Mies van der Rohe 1905-1938 (Whitechapel, till 2 March)
The SpectatorArtist and visionary Mark Glazebrook W hen the Whitechapel mounted retrospectives of giants such as Pollock and Rothko in the late Fifties and Sixties, these painters seemed...
Sensual journey
The SpectatorAlan Powers 'H ow do people get here?' asked one of the press corps who had come by coach from central London last week to a special viewing of the new Laban Centre at Deptford...
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Tosca; Idomeneo (Opera North, Lowry. Salford Quays)
The SpectatorSubversive power Michael Tanner f the various kinds of bore I've dreaded becoming, especially as an opera reviewer, a Tosca-bore (for or against) seemed to be one of the least...
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Theatre
The SpectatorA Passage to India (Riverside) Black Milk (Royal Court) Peer Gynt (Arcola) From elephant to rocks Toby Young I n his memoirs, the Broadway playwright S.N. Behrman claims that...
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Cinema
The SpectatorThe Hours (12A, selected cinemas) Acting sad Mark Steyn W ell, The Hours managed a Best Picture nomination, but come the big night it will lose to Chicago. Offered the choice...
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Radio
The SpectatorMoney talked Michael Vestey I f everything in life is politics, as the former Archbishop Desmond Tutu declared emphatically on Radio Four last Saturday, then the world is...
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Television
The SpectatorFinal demand James Delingpole I do so hate those must-see Sunday/Monday TV dramas. You can't not watch the first part because what if it turns out to be really good and you're...
Hunting
The SpectatorUp in America Charles Moore J et-lagged, 1 wake with the dawn, and think of Sir Thomas Browne's words about drowsiness and time difference: 'The huntsmen are up in America,...
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The turf
The SpectatorEnglish talent Robin Oakley I t was definitely not my day at Newbury on Saturday. It is a bit of a giveaway when you are seen visiting the cash machine after the first four...
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Food for thought
The SpectatorFor the rustics Simon Courtauld O ver the centuries, leeks have had a bad press. The Oxford Dictionary gives several references in literature to something 'not worth a leek',...
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No grit
The SpectatorAlan Judd A few gusts of snow, enough to decorate the trees and sting your cheeks but not enough to settle on London's roads; it melted there. Then the clouds cleared, the...
High life
The SpectatorSuperior living Taki w Paris hy do the French have to be so bloody-minded?' asked a Daily Telegraph headline last week. Well, sitting in Café Flore, sipping a very good white...
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Low life
The SpectatorWoo Woos and woe Jeremy Clarke F or my birthday treat, we started off at a trendy cocktail bar in Covent Garden. We were there bang on opening time. Were we eating, said the...
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gratitude
The SpectatorPetronella Wyatt I am not in the least bit surprised that the Americans are furious and bewildered by the churlish actions of France and Germany which are now threatening to...
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SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorNew life of Brian Michael Henderson Cape Town THE cricket World Cup, which is being staged in South Africa for the first time, got off to a flying start at Newlands, the...
YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
The SpectatorDear Mary. . . Q. I have a very dear friend who lives in increasingly bohemian circumstances in the country. He and his wife have repeatedly asked us to stay with them on one...