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PORTRAIT
The SpectatorS even hundred police made 24 simultaneous raids around London, seizing half a ton of ammonium nitrate fertiliser in Hanwell, west London, arresting two men in Uxbridge, one in...
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We are not at war
The SpectatorA s clay broke on 11 May 1941, Londoners could survey the devastation wrought by 100,000 incendiary bombs. Whole streets had been razed. More than L400 Londoners had been...
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ANTHONY SAMPSON
The SpectatorH as any prime minister been quite so insulated from Parliament and Cabinet? Blair's solo performance last week, as he flew from Madrid to Libya to Brussels with his plane-load...
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It is hard to exaggerate the scale of the immigration crisis that now faces Tony Blair
The SpectatorPETER OBORNE A fter the 2001 general election massacre, a consensus swiftly established itself in the Conservative party. William Hague had fought on the wrong issues. Instead...
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This is not the time to knock the BBC, but it should carry more news from Europe
The SpectatorSTEPHEN GLOVER fter the Hutton inquiry all fair-minded people should rally to the BBC. It is true that over the years the Corporation has sometimes displayed a bias in favour...
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More destructive than the Luftwaffe
The SpectatorJohn Prescott is going to destroy large areas of England with new homes, even though more than 700,000 properties â enough to meet housing needs for the next four years â...
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Prepare for an October surprise
The SpectatorBruce Anderson says that embarrassments over the European constitution may force Tony Blair to call an early election IF or nearly seven years, Tony Blair's caution was the...
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Return of the Dark Ages
The SpectatorHarry Mount laments the passing of an age when children had to recite Greek verbs before breakfast Ivy hatever you might think of The Passion of The Christ, at least Mel Gibson...
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Mind your language
The SpectatorThe Metropolitan Police have put up big posters on the Underground telling people what to do if they see a bag without an owner. 'Don't touch, check with other passengers,...
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Some luvvies will believe anything
The SpectatorBrendan O'Neill is not as convinced as the Redgraves are by the tales of torture told by Guantanamo's freed British prisoners N one of us knows for certain what goes on inside...
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Listed runways
The SpectatorRoss Clark warns that new rules on listed buildings could make it easier for the government to pull down ancient churches that stand in the way of airport extensions I ha), e...
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Ancient & modern
The SpectatorPhilip Pullman, author of the apparently anti-Christian His Dark Materials, and the Archbishop of Canterbury debated the significance of religion, and both enthusiastically...
Kosovo goes to hell
The SpectatorTom Walker says that Tony Blair is too busy doing global management to bother much about the consequences of Nato's humanitarian intervention in the Balkans F rom the kitchen...
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All levelled like a desert
The SpectatorDavid Lovibond is filled with sadness as he visits the wrecked landscapes that inspired a poet who loved old England and hated rich developers Inelosure like a Bonaparte let...
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Don't reason with this mule, Governor just hit it over the head
The Spectatord I S T1 FILDES I have a question for the Bank of England's monetary policy committee: how do you attract a Missouri mule's attention? When the economists have quite worked out...
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The lone defender
The SpectatorFrom Stuart Allison Sir: I was disappointed to read that the government's programme of creeping republicanism â the removal of the Crown from Treasury notepaper, the police...
A political animal
The SpectatorFrom Chris Patten Sir: Frank Johnson (Shared opinion, 20 March) comments on my principal reason for not wishing to be considered as a candidate for the chairmanship of the BBC...
A place in the sun
The SpectatorFrom Toby Young Sir: I feel some sympathy for Sheridan Morley (Letters, 27 March). Like him, I've been sacked from numerous journalistic posts and I've always had a very low...
Evolution is only a theory
The SpectatorFrom Angus Watson Sir: In your 20 March issue Andrew Kenny misses the point in the argument against Darwinism ('Down with superstition'). To question evolution theory on the one...
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Smug papists
The SpectatorFrom Sheila Donaldson Sir: Obviously he doesn't realise it, but P.J. Kavanagh's review of The Catholic Revival in English Literature (Books, 20 March) reflects all the smug...
Devil in the detail
The SpectatorFrom Gerald Hitman Sir: I am intrigued that a man as able as Jeremy Clarke should have been unable to help Nick Griffin with a working definition of racism (`Britain's most...
Pseudo-liberal justice
The SpectatorFrom David M. Benda Sir: That the likes of Peter °borne should see a moral equivalence between the assassination of a vile terrorist and the killing of innocent civilians in a...
Fear itself
The SpectatorFrom Patrick Carden Sir: Following the Spanish bomb outrage, which had not occurred at the time of the writing/publication of Simon Jenkins's 13 March cover story on Mr Blair's...
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Books furnish a room, but libraries can be a menace
The SpectatorPAUL JOHNSON I have been given a superb Thames & Hudson book, The Most Beautiful Libraries in the World, and browsing through it has prompted thoughts on this difficult...
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The neocons have been making mischief for more than 100 years
The SpectatorFRANK JOHNSON W hat books, if any, important politicians read, as well as being of itself interesting, could also influence how they rule. In the late 1940s, it became known...
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Chunnel vision
The SpectatorHave a toehold in both Paris and London, suggests Gerald Cadogan T he other day, a good friend asked me where he should look for a property investment. He has a gain that must...
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Compromise county James Leith
The SpectatorU ntil 1994 we lived in Surrey. 'Surrey's not a county,' an Eton beak pointed out to my son, 'If s a suburb!' So, a writer-wife with no ties to London and a house-husband (me)...
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Bargain basements
The SpectatorSally Gimson T he most alarming aspect of living in London, for many people, is the extortionate cost of renting or buying somewhere to live. On the open market, it is...
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Grand designs
The SpectatorSebastian Dekker U nless you want to break the law, incur a substantial fine Or, even worse, a prison sentence, you must be very cautious about trying to improve your home....
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A leading light amidst the gloom
The SpectatorRaymond Carr FLOURISHING: LETTERS 1928-1946 by Isaiah Berlin, edited by Henry Hardy Chau°, 430, pp. 755, ISBN 070117420X J saiah Berlin was a much-loved friend and a dominant...
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All his world a stage
The SpectatorJonathan Croall GIELGUD'S LETTERS edited by Richard Mangan Weidenfeld & Nicolson, £20, pp. 564, ISBN 0297829890 A. s in the theatre, so in his letters: John Gielgud was a man...
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The Catholic Cheshire Cat
The SpectatorPiers Paul Read IN SEARCH OF A BEGINNING: MY LIFE WITH GRAHAM GREENE by Yvonne Cloetta, as told to MarieFrancoise Alain, translated from the French by Euan Cameron Bloomsbury,...
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The hard school of education
The SpectatorEric Anderson I'm A TEACHER, GET ME OUT OF HERE by Francis Gilbert Short Books, £9.99, pp. 207, ISBN 1904095682 m y only experience of a tough inner-city school was on...
Swedish exercises in crime
The SpectatorAntonia Fraser FIREWALL by Henning Mankell Harrill, £14.99, pp. 422, ISBN 1843431122 H enning Mankell, the Swedish crimewriter who is the creator of Inspector Kurt Wallender,...
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Taste and passion with a dash of luck
The SpectatorNoel Malcolm THE DEVONSHIRE INHERITANCE: FIVE CENTURIES OF COLLECTING AT CHATSWORTH by Nicolas Barker Art Services International, £40, pp. 431, ISBN 0883971380, available from...
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Sixth son of Himself
The SpectatorIsabel Colegate RATHCORMICK: A CHILDHOOD RECALLED by Homan Potterton Vintage, £7.99, pp. 303, ISBN 009946179X H ave we had enough Irish childhoods, lackadaisical days remote...
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God as a Good Thing?
The SpectatorA. N. Wilson A CASE FOR RELIGION by Keith Ward Oneworld Publications. 185 Banbuty Road, Oxford 0X2 7AR, Tel: 01865 310597, 416.99, pp. 246, ISBN 1851683372 T his is a brave...
Old Baghdad in Hertfordshire
The SpectatorGeorge St. Andrews THE CAMBRIDGE DICTIONARY OF ENGLISH PLACE NAMES edited by Victor Watts CUP, ,f175, pp. 713, ISBN 0521362091 W ho would have thought of l {arrow as 'the...
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Music has charms to soothe a savage breast
The SpectatorSimon Sebag Montefiore SHOSTAKOVICH AND STALIN: THE EXTRAORDINARY RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE GREAT COMPOSER AND THE BRUTAL DICTATOR by Solomon Volkov Little, Brown, £14.99, pp....
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Some moaning at the Bar
The SpectatorMichael Beloff MY BRIEF CAREER: THE TRIALS OF A YOUNG LAWYER by Harry Mount Short Books, 0.99. pp. 170, ISBN 1904095690 T his is a sad little story of the author's antnis...
An unanswered SOS from the SAS
The SpectatorTony Geraghty SOLDIER FIVE by Mike Coburn Mainstream, £17.99, pp. 316, ISBN 1840188669 T he epic survival story of the SAS patrol known as Bravo Two Zero during the first Gulf...
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Heirs and graces
The SpectatorAndrew Barrow SNOBS by Julian Fellowes Weidenfeld, £12.99, pp. 265, ISBN 0297848763 T his provocative, titillating and seductive novel is about upperclass affectations and...
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A new infatuation
The SpectatorPeter Phillips explains how he has become doubly obsessed: with film as well as music H ave you ever rubbed shoulders with musicians and thought them dull â because they are...
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Visual edification
The SpectatorAndrew Lambirth Heaven on Earth: Art from Islamic Lands The Hermitage Rooms, Somerset House, Courtauld Institute of Art, until 22 August A i F t i other successful exhibition...
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Multi tasker
The SpectatorTom Rosenthal Jean Arp: L'invention de la forme Pubis des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, until 6 June B russels, with its faintly schizophrenic bilingual culture, seems the perfect...
Incest is best
The SpectatorToby Young Festen Almeida The Dark Donmar Hurricane Arts A t a last, a good play! Festen, a stage daptation of the Danish film of the same name, is among the two or three best...
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Handel and drama
The SpectatorMichael Tanner Sosarme Royal College of Music Vanda Bloomsbury Theatre Elor four out of every five Handel operas I see I do my best to persuade myself of and report on their...
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South African riches
The SpectatorUrsula Buchan W hen I was a child, I pestered my mother to take us to Longleat. In the end she agreed, pleased perhaps to think that I was developing a precocious interest in...
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Soured dream
The SpectatorMark Steyn Monster 18. selected cinemas I n 1943, the first musical with an 'antihero', Rodgers and Hart's Pal Joey, opened on Broadway. 'Although it is expertly done,' wrote...
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Baffling conundrum
The SpectatorMichael Vestey M ore than a year after the war against Iraq was launched, the World Service and Radio Four have been broadcasting programmes about the extraordinary diplomacy...
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Fighting shy
The SpectatorJames Delingpole S hy people are evil. I can count on the fingers of one hand the number of shy people I actually like. Mostly I agree with my (shy) friend Hugh Massingberd's...
Drivel and bilge
The SpectatorTalu New York M y house is being renovated by a team of Chinese men who speak no English and who smoke non-stop. I suppose people do not say good morning in China, or perhaps...
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Keeping fit
The SpectatorJeremy Clarke B oth of our upright vacuum cleaners broke down last week. I found a repair shop in Yellow Pages and took them along, and who should be behind the counter but...
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Tipping dilemma
The SpectatorPetronella Wyatt W hy do we tip taxi-drivers? I mean why do we really? We don't tip traindrivers, or bus-drivers, or minicab-drivers or airline pilots. So why do we always...
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Highbury high
The SpectatorFRANK KEATING I t is a relief, I suppose, that the most momentous English football fixture so far this year does not feature Manchester United. Next Tuesday at Highbury,...
Dear Mag
The SpectatorSeveral friends living overseas have indicated that they will be coming to England this mourner and that they would like to pay us a visit. However, since seeing them last,...