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Tom Sutcliffe: Terror rides to remember

The Week In Culture

Inside Columnists

Brian Viner: Our in-joke barely makes us laugh now. It's just an instinctive one-liner

Thursday, 4 March 2010

Harry Secombe used to sing that if he ruled the world, every day would be the first day of spring, and on Monday, as I motored up the A49 to Ludlow under an intense blue sky, lambs skipping through meadows sparkling with the last of the overnight frost, I knew just where dear old Harry was coming from.

Alex James: Hedge find worthy of the investment

Wednesday, 3 March 2010

Rural Notebook

Tom Sutcliffe: Here's how to protest against bank bonuses

Tuesday, 2 March 2010

What shall we do about bankers? It's a question that neither seems to be getting an answer nor going away, which is a most frustrating combination. And I wonder whether, in the absence of any immediate hope that it will be answered, it needs a bit of grammatical tinkering.

Tim Walker: This summer's cinematic trend is the light-hearted ensemble action thriller

Monday, 1 March 2010

The Couch Surfer: We should expect one bad film, one good film, and one so-bad-it’s-good-film from the genre

Norway's Audun Groenvold (right) leads a semi-final in the men's freestyle cross

Dom Joly: Skis or board? Let the Wu-Tang decide

Monday, 1 March 2010

Four skiers line up in a small cabin while members of their Olympic team shout at them

Dom Joly: I'll go anywhere, as long as it ends in '-stan'

Sunday, 28 February 2010

I'm off to Kazakhstan on Tuesday. I've always wanted to start a column by saying that. Now I have.

Richard Ingrams’s Week: Even the most hard-bitten hack can get deeply upset

Saturday, 27 February 2010

They don't give many honours to journalists these days, which is probably a very good thing. For it is a sad fact that so far from being the hard-bitten, cynical old hacks that the public supposes them to be, many journalists have a pathetic craving for honours and awards despite the fact that they have been so devalued as to mean almost nothing by now.

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Columnist Comments

matthew_norman

Matthew Norman: What would Foot have made of it now?

He was the last great bridgehead to an age when politicians fought for their beliefs

andreas_whittam_smith

Andreas Whittam Smith: Tales of bullying from the frontline of the NHS

The Inquiry into Mid Staffs made me think of Abu Ghraib in Baghdad

terence_blacker

Terence Blacker: The futility of chasing first-time voters

They blame, whine, and do absolutely nothing to change the situation

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