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Brown's magic is a trick
The SpectatorAs he contemplates the surf on his Breton holiday beach this weekend, David Cameron has an opportunity to reflect on how swiftly the tides of politics can change. Just three...
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JEFF RANDALL 1 t was the call that never came. For
The SpectatorJEFF RANDALL 1 t was the call that never came. For three hours last week, I sat with my hand hovering over the phone. I had been told that Bill Kenwright would be getting in...
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ILJ]EBOOK
The SpectatorJOAN COLLINS The shiny new 'Vodka Palaces' lie scattered across the bay of St Tropez like the discarded toys of a spoiled child. Each year they seem to grow bigger, as do the...
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What the courtiers saw: the inside story of the great royal fightback
The SpectatorAfter Diana's death ten years ago, some doubted that the monarchy could survive. Matthew d'Ancona talks to the Palace officials who were there — some of them speaking publicly...
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The real Diana was our future Queen
The SpectatorThe Princess was no mere do-gooder, says Patrick Jephson, her former private secretary; nor was she one to pursue celebrity: she took her royal duties far too seriously for...
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GLOBAL WARMING
The SpectatorTHEODORE DALRYMPLE Do I grow cleverer with age, or does the world grow more stupid? Today, for example, I read what a police spokeswoman said after a man on a motorbike had been...
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The curious case of the spy who fell to his death
The SpectatorJames Forsyth investigates the life and death of Ashraf Marwan, a Mossad spy and suspected double agent who recently fell from the window of his flat overlooking the Mall Ivhen...
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The last Tommy says: 'It was a waste of time'
The SpectatorNinety years after he went over the top at Passchendaele, Harry Patch, 109, talks to James Delingpole, 42, about the horrors and the humanity of trench warfare Two years ago,...
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Can working men's clubs survive the smoking ban?
The SpectatorJeremy Clarke reports from the dingy 'smoking alley' outside the Custom House club and wonders whether J.S. Mill would have backed the ban Ipressed the buzzer on the wall of the...
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Mind your language
The SpectatorI was reading in bed (quietly for a change, since my husband was off on some drugsponsored jamboree in Tallinn) the Oxford BBC Guide to Pronunciation (£14.99) — a work of the...
Bush's exit strategy: cut and run but not too far
The SpectatorDouglas Davis says that the US has abandoned its dream of a democratic Iraq and is now aiming for regional stability by wooing moderate Arab states and marginalising Iran More...
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How will the BBC save billion? Axe the journalists, of course
The SpectatorThe Beeb is desperately strapped for cash, says Rod Liddle. But you can bet it won't be the useless middle managers who'll take the bullet Ashort while after becoming...
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EU vs US Sir: Irwin Stelzer can't have it both way
The SpectatorEU vs US Sir: Irwin Stelzer can't have it both ways (Now we know: Brown is a European, not an Atlanticist', 11 August). If Gordon Brown is going to have to give up his...
Don't credit Brown
The SpectatorSir: In extolling Gordon Brown's virtues, Fraser Nelson repeats the myth that creating an independent Bank of England was done at Brown's initiative (Politics, 4 August). In...
All's fair in Gaza?
The SpectatorSir: It was interesting to read Francesca Unsworth's boast in her letter about Melanie Phillips's article on Alan Johnston, that the BBC 'is reporting from the region fairly and...
Buy the poppy crop
The SpectatorSir: In his article of over 1,000 words on Afghanistan, David Miliband devotes 12 words to the opium trade ('Why we are in Afghanistan for the long haul', 11 August)....
Carbon updating
The SpectatorSir: From an environmental economist's perspective, Ross Clark's criticism of carbon trading (The West is running a protectionist racket', 11 August) is less an argument against...
Pugin's other biographer
The SpectatorSir: James Joll writes in his review of God's Architect: Pugin and the Building of Romantic Britain (Books, 11 August) that Pugin has 'hitherto lacked a considered full-length...
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Don't knock paranoia. It may be terrifying — but it could save your life
The SpectatorMATTHEW PARRIS Acouple of years ago, trying a freefall parachute jump for the first time and experiencing a new way of hurtling through space, I also discovered that I was a...
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Not so much the Mad Hatter, more the Mad Scientist now
The SpectatorPAUL JOHNSON 1 n this age of creeping censorship 'mad' is not a word to be used lightly. It would certainly be unlawful to use it in Kipling's sense when he refers to frontier...
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The last dotcom entrepreneur
The SpectatorJudi Bevan meets Simon Nixon, founder of Moneysupermarket.com, who floated his online price comparison business on the day the stock market started to plunge Chilling echoes of...
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Unintended market consequences
The SpectatorAllister Heath /f only Alan Greenspan had read John Locke more attentively. The 17thcentury philosopher, who doubled as a brilliant economist, was among the earliest exponents...
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Warding off the barbarians
The SpectatorRaymond Carr COUNTERPOINTS: 25 YEARS OF 'THE NEW CRITERION' ON CULTURE AND THE ARTS edited by Roger Kimball and Hilton Kramer Ivan R. Dee (wwwivanrdee.com), £22.99, pp. 512,...
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At home with the English
The SpectatorMichael Hall THE ENGLISH HOUSE by Hermann Muthesius Frances Lincoln, £125 (three vols, boxed set), pp. 788, ISBN 9780711226883 £100 (plus £2.45 p&p) 0870 429 6655 1 n 1896...
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What Winnie did with Hitler
The SpectatorRupert Christiansen WINNIE AND WOLF: A NOVEL by A.N. Wilson Hutchinson, £17.99, pp. 361, ISBN 9780091796761 © £1439 (plus £2.45 p&p) 0870 429 6655 1 n her infamous five-hour...
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In tune but out of time
The SpectatorMichael Howard GEORGE KENNAN: A STUDY IN CHARACTER by John Lukacs Yale, f16.99, pp. 224, ISBN 97803001221213 © £13.59 (plus £2.45 p&p) 0870 429 6655 George Kerman died on 17...
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A choice of crime novels
The SpectatorAndrew Taylor Since the 1990s, a tartan tide has flooded the coasts of crime fiction, and it still shows no sign of ebbing in terms of either quality or quantity. Broken Skin...
Short but neat
The SpectatorChristian House No ONE BELONGS HERE MORE THAN YOU by Miranda July Canongate, £9.99, pp. 205, ISBN 9781841959306 © £7.99 (plus £2.45 p&p) 0870 429 6655 Short-story compilations...
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Peanuts and popcorn and crackerjack
The SpectatorRobert Stewart BASEBALL HAIKU: THE BEST HAIKU EVER WRITTEN ABOUT THE GAME edited by Cor van den Heuvel and Nanae Tamura WW Norton, £11.99, pp. 214, ISBN 9780393062199 © £9.59...
Homage to arms
The SpectatorPatrick Skene Catling COWARD ON THE BEACH by James Delingpole Bloomsbury, £12.99, pp. 328, ISBN 9780747590705 £1039 (plus £2.45 p&p) 0870 429 6655 1 f you are not the right age...
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From Shetland with truth
The SpectatorAnovelist is rarely well-advised to write his masterpiece in his fifties, unless his position at the top of the tree is secure. His themes and style are no longer likely to be...
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Blackpool's cheap thrills
The SpectatorRobert Gore-Langton wonders why this rundown resort still retains its popularity Whatever happened to poor old Blackpool? The last time I went it was alive, busy and reasonably...
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The power and the glory
The SpectatorAndrew Lambirth President's Eye Royal West of England Academy, Queen's Road, Clifton, Bristol, until 9 September Variations on a Still Life Redfern Gallery, 20 Cork Street,...
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Lessons from the East
The SpectatorRoderick Conway Morris Venice and Islam: 828-1797 Doge 's Palace, Venice, until 25 November Gazing up at the walls of the Sala dello Scrutinio in the Doge's Palace, at the...
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Bourne again
The SpectatorToby Young The Bourne Ultimatum 12A, nationwide Whatever happened to the good, honest practice of sticking numerals after a sequel's title to indicate what number it was in the...
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Could do better
The SpectatorMichael Tanner Carmen Jones Royal Festival Hall s part of its reopening season the Royal Festival Hall is staging a month-long run of Carmen Jones, the 1943 musical by Oscar...
Music and mayhem
The SpectatorLloyd Evans Tony Blair – the Musical Gilded Balloon Tony! The Blair Musical Chambers St Yellow Hands St George's West Jihad: the Musical Chambers St The Bacchae King's Theatre...
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Yesterday's world
The SpectatorKate Chisholm The hunt is on for the missing first edition of Radio Four's Today programme, which celebrates its 50th anniversary in October. Radio Four has been broadcasting...
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Matters of trust
The SpectatorRobin Oakley T t is before 7 a.m. in the office at Lambourn's Kingsdown Stables. Trainer Jamie Osborne is on his own but brews fresh coffee from a cafetiere, served in matching...
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Plans for peace
The SpectatorTaki Gstaad Here, at last, is the Taki plan to save George W. Bush's presidency from the disaster it has been turned into by his neocon advisers. Yes, the Iraq war is a failure,...
Great expectations
The SpectatorJeremy Clarke hree hours to go before the new season kicks off and I'm sitting in the beer garden in my new claret-and-blue Fred Perry polo shirt. I've got a credit-card-style...
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Home truths
The SpectatorAidan Hartley Laikipia TTask my neighbours how one fixes a chimney 'Throw a live, flapping turkey down it,' says one. It appears chimneysweeps are unknown in Kenya. 'Or lower...
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Explosive discussions
The SpectatorRoy Hattersley Remember, remember the 24th of August. According to the announcement on the noticeboard next to the bus stop, that is the date on which the next firework display...
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The king of tieland
The SpectatorAlex Bilmes discusses neckwear with Michael Drake 1 nexplicably — I ask him to explain, he can't — Michael Drake wasn't wearing a tie when I met him at his Clerkenwell factory...
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Northern exposure
The SpectatorTim Heald enjoys the quirky charms of Helsinki Snow was falling the only time I visited Helsinki before. I remember a concert in the Finlandia Hall (Sibelius surely?); reindeer...
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Field marshals FRANK KEATING
The SpectatorSpend half an hour or so in front of a television on Saturday when Hampshire are in the field at Lord's in the one-day county cup final. I guarantee some vivid and telling...
SOU/ PJ171)
The SpectatorDear Maly Q. When staying with a friend some months ago, I foolishly dropped a small Clarice Cliff dish which broke into several pieces. Knowing his penurious state, one in...