Inside Opinion
Philip Hensher: Why modern art is a matter of experience
Only two days after Ai Weiwei's installation opened, Tate Modern took the decision to restrict access to it. The installation consists of 100 million ceramic models of sunflower seeds, ten centimetres deep.
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Leading article: Can they cut without killing the recovery?
Come Wednesday, the country will finally know what awaits it, when the Chancellor announces the results of the Government's Comprehensive Spending Review. Expectations, it is fair to say, are doom-laden. The extent to which the UK has been living beyond its means is well known and well understood. That at least some of our woes can be laid at the bankers' doors does not alter the reality that almost everyone will take a hit.
Dom Joly: Howdy doody. It's the £2012 hotline. Can I interest you in a Lord Coe piggy-back?
Weird World of Sport: On the morning of the opening ceremony Lord Coe arrives at your door and carries you piggyback style through the streets of London to the venue
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- David Lister: If the Royal Ballet can tour in Japan, why not Manchester?
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1 Rupert Cornwell: Crumbling America has a $2.2 trillion repair bill
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3 Leading article: A beautiful mind
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6 Leading article: Integration has two sides
7 John Rentoul: Clegg drives his voters away
8 Robert Fisk: Israel comes face to face with the man who would wipe it off the map
9 Leading article: Can they cut without killing the recovery?
10 Dom Joly: I could have told myself where to go, but my kids did
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Columnist Comments
• Mary Ann Sieghart: A touch of decency in politics
The Coalition has brought a return to civilised ways of doing things
• Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: Why must some guilt be collective?
I hate it that some people are forced to carry the weight of history
• Philip Hensher: Why modern art is a matter of experience
Many visitors hardly care whether it is art or not, so long as it's fun




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