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PORTRAIT
The Spectatorp resident George Bush of the United States made a state visit to Britain, accompanied by a huge entourage. 'This is the right moment for us to stand firm with the United States...
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Infantile resentment
The SpectatorB y the time this magazine hits the streets it will be jostling for space with about a million marchers. It is important to be fair to those who have turned out to parade their...
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MARY KENNY
The Spectatorim iranda Sawyer's Channel 4 programme pleading for the abolition of the age of consent, Sex Before 16: Why the Law is Failing, featured the following adults: the editor of a...
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The man with the joyless task of relaunching Tony Blair
The SpectatorPETER OBORNE N ormally the leaves are still on the trees, full of their autumn glory in russet and brown, when Parliament rises ahead of the Queen's Speech. Not this year. For...
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Tile Questing Vole
The Spectatory oung Sama bin Laden, niece of the international terrorist (and a member of a family branch, it should be stressed, with not the faintest interest in jihad), was staying in...
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The threat to rugby
The SpectatorRachel Johnson wonders whether Earth has anything to show more fair than 15 beefy rugby players, especially when it's raining. But lawyers take a more calculating view of the...
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Nothing to lose but their chains
The SpectatorMichael Ledeen says that our most potent weapon in the war against terrorism is democracy: people everywhere want to be free T he most controversial part of George W. Bush's...
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Read all
The Spectatorabout it Freedom is working in Iraq: Richard Beeston on the newspapers, satellite television and Internet cafés that have sprung up since liberation Baghdad A n acquaintance...
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A hanging matter
The SpectatorThere is a sound moral case for restoring the death penalty, says Bruce Anderson, but the practical barriers seem insurmountable —u ntil well into the 1980s, the death penalty...
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Mind your language
The SpectatorA query comes from Argyllshire: 'What is the infinitive of can?' The reference is not to canning peas. But before I forget, Harry Henry of Esher, who sounds a sport, reminds me,...
How to avoid trouble and strife
The SpectatorIf you are a man, get a wife. Andrew Gimson says that family breakdown is causing such harm that governments will soon have to legislate in favour of marriage Iv ithin the next...
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Wannabe Yanks
The SpectatorTheodore Dalrymple regrets that we import many of America's vices but none of her virtues I n the modern world, the availability, indeed ubiquity, of entertainment is the most...
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Ancient & modern
The SpectatorAs WMDs fail to surface in Iraq, it looks more and more likely that we went to war on false pretences. This is no new phenomenon. According to the Greek historian Herodotus (c....
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Terror on the veld
The SpectatorMore than 1,000 South African farmers have been killed since the end of apartheid: Andrew Kenny stares into the heart of darkness Cape Town H eart of Darkness has claim to be...
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Why not invade Israel?
The SpectatorIf rogue nations are to be brought into line by the US, shouldn't Israel be punished for ignoring UN resolutions? Gerald Kaufman is just asking. . . T he unprecedented security...
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THEODORE DALRYMPLE
The SpectatorOur beautiful, new and sophisticated youth culture is striding ever onward and upward, reaching the very highest peaks of attainment. For example, a friend of mine went recently...
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How incredible, how depressing, that
The SpectatorRichard Desmond might buy the Telegraph STEPHEN GLOVER m ost people arc assuming that Conrad Black will lose control of the Dai l y Telegraph. the Sunday Telegraph and The...
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Welcome, the chairman says, as BP starts its Campaign for Real Shareholders
The SpectatorBp uy a share in British Petroleum (now called BP) and the chairman's thanks come with it. 'I am pleased to welcome you,' writes Peter Sutherland. 'Thank you for the confidence...
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An old man of 83 versus an evil world
The SpectatorPAUL JOHNSON H e sits, writing, thinking, mainly praying, in his bare lonely silent little apartment. Far below him is Bernini's majestic piazza, which can hold, and sometimes...
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In defence of fisking
The SpectatorFrom Dr Mark Sedgwick Sir: David Pryce-Jones is ungenerous in his analysis of Robert Fisk's reporting (Fisking means never having to get it right', 15 November). Certainly, Mr...
Stereotypical Clive
The SpectatorFrom Francis Wheen Sir: I'm glad to see Clive James's tribute to 'clever Aussies' (Letters, 15 November), but puzzled by his assertion. 'At the time my generation of expatriates...
Oboe lesson
The SpectatorFrom Jo West Sir: Please thank Eric Anderson (Diary, 15 November) for coining the acronym OBOE (Over-Bureaucratisation Of Everything), but please also point out that grammar...
Sheepish Sir Max
The SpectatorFrom Herb Greer Sir: Max Hastings (Britain is furious with America', 8 November) cites some curious sources for his gloom about the Americans in Iraq. Newsweek has always...
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The English Conquest
The SpectatorFrom Robert Armstrong Sir: In his review of Melvyn Bragg's book The Adventure of English (Books, 22 November), Andrew Roberts talked about `the battle for survival that Old...
Scott's fatal errors
The SpectatorFrom John Harradine Sir: Your recent review of Ranulph Fiennes's Captain Scott (1 November) reminds me of an interesting conversation I had with Tryggve Gran, the last surviving...
Paul's angel Diana
The SpectatorFrom Fr John Thackray Sir: Hitherto I have thought Paul Johnson to be sound. When he named Evelyn Waugh as the greatest writer in English in the 20th century (And another thing,...
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Crime underestimated
The SpectatorFrom Sam Jordison Sir: I was flattered by the inclusion of a review of my book Crap Towns (Books, 1 November). I enjoyed reading Henry Hobhouse's opinions and was amused by his...
Bush blunder
The SpectatorFrom Peter P. Witonski Sir: Peter Oborne's assertion that President Bush needs to visit the Queen to aid him in the forthcoming American presidential election is outrageous...
Not so good old days
The SpectatorFrom Graham Wade Sir: Roger Scruton (`The beastly British', 15 November) accuses us both as individuals and as a society of 'depravity', an act of 'collective treason' and...
Older and wiser
The SpectatorFrom Gordon Haines Sir: I suggest that there is a much simpler explanation for the increase in racism with age alleged by Dr von Hippel (Letters, 15 November). The thought...
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IDS fell for the same reason as Ceausescu: his security apparatus turned against him
The SpectatorF _ or a party which all agree is unlikely to win a general election in the foreseeable future, the Conservatives arouse disproportionate interest. For weeks, an unprecedentedly...
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It is a strange time to work at
The SpectatorThe Spectator if you're a quasi-leftist IA/ . hat on earth is going to happen to us all now, do you suppose? Apparently, rumour has it, we're going to be sold. I've never been...
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Books of the Year
The SpectatorA further selection of the best and worst books of the year, chosen by some of our regular contributors HUGH MAS SINGBERD Surrounded by spin, mealy-mouthed political...
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Hitler's unbalanced Orangeman
The SpectatorAndrew Gimson GERMANY CALLING: A PERSONAL BIOGRAPHY OF WILLIAM JOYCE, 'LORD HAW HAW' by Mary Kenny New Island, £17.99, pp. 300, ISBN 1902602781 LORD HAW-HAW: THE ENGLISH VOICE...
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Their knavish tricks frustrated
The SpectatorRobert Stewart THE CONFIDENT HOPE OF A MIRACLE by Neil Hanson Doubleday, £20, pp. 571, ISBN 0385604513 T ie Enterprise of England, the name given by His Most Catholic Majesty,...
Blood-brother and king-maker
The SpectatorMark Amory TRIBE: THE HIDDEN HISTORY OF THE MOUNTAINS OF THE MOON by Tom Stacey Stacey International, 128 Kensington Church Street, London W8 4BH, Tel: 0207 221 7166 £19.95,...
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Talking to some purpose
The SpectatorJane Ridley REFORM! THE FIGHT FOR THE 1832 REFORM ACT by Edward Pearce Cape. £20, pp. 343, ISBN 0224061992 N ineteenth-century British politics used to be the historian's bread...
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A bas la difference!
The SpectatorZenga Longmore DEAD SEXY by Kathy Lette Simon & Schuster,114.99, pp. 341, ISBN 074324804X K. athy Lette's latest novel begins with a zany one-liner: 'How can we win the sex war...
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When believing is not all there is to seeing
The SpectatorAllan Mallinson How TO READ A CHURCH by Richard Taylor Rider, £10, pp. 250, ISBN 1844130533 T n his 100-page introduction to the Collins Guide to the Parish Churches of England...
Question mark over Cuba
The SpectatorHugh Thomas THE REAL FIDEL CASTRO by Leycester Coltman Yale, £25, pp. 335, ISBN 0300101880 I n the United States several diplomats have written profound books about countries...
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Beta plus and beta minus
The SpectatorJudith Flanders WILLIAM AND LUCY by Angela Thirlwell Yale, £25, pp. 376, ISBN 0300102003 s ay `Rossetti' to most people, and you v , ill get back 'Dante Gabriel', or ....
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All you need is love
The SpectatorCharlotte Moore CORA CRANE by Paul Ferris HalperCollins, £1 7.99, pp. 295, ISBN 0002261391 ora sits at the bay window, writing, in a fat manuscript book with a lock, about a...
Howard's end reconsidered
The SpectatorHarriet Waugh DISORDERED MINDS by Minette Walters Macmillan, .E16.99, pp. 432, ISBN 1405034165 M inette Walters is an unusually uneven writer. Although we know she is just one...
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How good was the Boyo?
The SpectatorJeremy Clarke DYLAN THOMAS: A NEW LIFE by Andrew Lycett Weidenfeld, £20, pp. 434, ISBN 000297607936 W hen Dylan Thomas first lived at the Boathouse, Laugharne (tel. Laugharne...
Predictable plots, familiar faces
The SpectatorOlivia Glazebrook BLOW FLY by Patricia Cornwell Little, Brown, £17.99, pp. 480, ISBN 0316854751 A PLACE OF HIDING by Elizabeth George Hodder & Stoughton, £18.99, pp. 576, ISBN...
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Arms and the men
The SpectatorAllan Massie IN THE NAME OF ROME by Adrian Goldsworthy Weidenfeld, £20, pp. 414, ISBN 0297846663 A drian Goldsworthy has given his book the subtitle The men who won the Roman...
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The prank that grew to giant proportions
The SpectatorBrian Masters THE MAN WHO LOST HIMSELF: THE UNBELIEVABLE STORY OF THE TICHBORNE CLAIMANT by Robyn Annear Constable & Robinson, £12.99, pp. 416, ISBN 1841197998 T he story has...
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SIMON HOGGART
The SpectatorL t ast year the Mini-bar offered o provide all your bubbles or Christmas in a single convenient case. This proved so successful that we've done it again, working once more with...
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Opera for the masses
The SpectatorStephen Pettitt on how Raymond Gubbay plans to make his latest venture pay T he news that classical music impresario Raymond Gubbay is to take over the Savoy Theatre more or...
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Inventive mix
The SpectatorAndrew Lambirth 1920s: The Decade that Changed London Museum of London, until 18 July 2004 T vast and splendid array of pictures 1 and objects is the inaugural exhibition in...
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Shock tactics
The SpectatorToby Young The Mercy Seat Almeida The Pillowman ( ottoloe Madame Bovary Lyric, Hammersmith pie Mercy Seat, a new two-hander by / Neil LaBute, has an ingenius premise. It...
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Dynamic decade
The SpectatorAlan Powers t the beginning of the new century, ritain can boast of one of the most dynamic and fertile architectural cultures of any country in the world,' writes Kenneth...
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Travelling teamwork
The SpectatorMichael Tanner ldomeneo; La Traviata; Theodora Glyndebourne Touring Opera Cllyndebourne on tour is nowise inferior to Glyndebourne at home, in fact I have regularly enjoyed...
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Aural feast
The SpectatorGiannandrea Poesio Triple Bill Royal Opera House A ccording to an anecdotal source, the great choreographer George Balanchine maintained that 50 per cent of the success of a...
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Set-pieces in Curtisland
The SpectatorMark Steyn Love Actually 15, selected cinemas I owActually is crap actually. I say that in the spirit of the movie, which begins with clapped-out rock geezer Bill Nighy...
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Time for a rethink
The SpectatorArnold Wengrow on the Theatre Museum's redevelopment plans T he Theatre Museum has hidden for 16 years in one of the most visible locations in London, a high-traffic corner of...
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Contrasting reports
The SpectatorMichael Vestey T he state visit of President George W. Bush this week coincides with the 40th anniversary of the assassination of John F. Kennedy. The BBC, however, reveres...
Trust on trial
The SpectatorJames Delingpole Eitinthough it is to lambast the BBC for its nauseating political correctness, its glib left-wing bias and its continual dumbing down, there are times when...
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Enough is enough
The SpectatorAlan Judd your day began with the unwelcome notification of a speeding fine and endorsement, you're in company with about 3,749 other drivers this morning. One in six motorists...
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Gallant show
The SpectatorCharles Moore I t is exactly true that pride comes before a fall. When jockeys get new silks, they trample on them before they race in them to avoid the nemesis that follows...
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Talk of the town
The SpectatorTali New York T hepresidential state visit may be big news in dreary old London, but here in the Bagel it's Paris Hilton's sex videos that are the talk of the town. In fact,...
All hands to the pump
The SpectatorJeremy Clarke W ind-driven rain beats on the windscreen. There's tree debris in the road and standing water in all the usual places when it rains as hard and as long as this....
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Piggy Wiggy to the rescue
The SpectatorAidan Hartley Laikipia I returned to the farm alone after two months overseas to find the land as dry as a bone. We're crying out for the rains to come. While waiting for...
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On meeting Callas
The SpectatorPetroneIla Wyatt T can't understand my friends who go to 1Bayreuth every year and sit on hard wooden benches in order to listen to the The Ring cycle. I once had a...
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DEBORAH ROSS
The SpectatorS weet Jesus, I am so utterly bored of everything that goes into family meals — the shopping, the preparing, the eating of the meal itself, which can never be entirely enjoyed...
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Yoof jargon
The SpectatorJaspistos In competition No. 2316 you were invited to supply an extract from an essay on a Shakespeare play by a pupil whose language is woefully vernacular. As well as an...
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It's still only a game
The SpectatorMICHAEL HENDERSON T o what extent should sport play a part in national life? By posing that question I don't mean whether or not people should be happy when the national team...
Dear Mary
The SpectatorQ. Like 37,000 other people, I signed up to go to jail on the declaration day and received a little Hunting Declaration badge to wear on my lapel and a yellow car sticker...