New Statesman Logo

Monday, March 06, 2006

Home
Contact us
About New Statesman
Subscribe now!
Advertising

Special Supplement - Privatised water

Save up to 40% with the New Statesman Bookshop

This week
Where did it all go wrong? Education - The Education Bill has turned into a definitive confrontation between Tony Blair and his party. The argument goes to the heart of new Labour's idea of the role that education should play in the nation's life - a very different idea, explains Peter Wilby, from what drove the pioneers of comprehensive schools Read this article
Leader: Palestine's future is in our hands Read this article
The media column - Decca Aitkenhead Read this article
Touch me, feel me, renovate me Read this article
more


Regulars

IBS
Search 1.4 million book titles. Enter book title or author in the box below.

First-time subscribers save 10%

The Electronic Town Hall - New Media Awards

Search archive

Receive updates
Enter your email address to receive regular updates about NS and related events.
To unsubscribe, click here

The back half

Making waves
Art - Winslow Homer's vision of the sea was transformed by the storm-racked English coast, finds Richard Cork

Just her luck
Film - Christopher Bray on the tragic career of Kay Kendall, whose reputation was marred even before it was made

Mad, bad world
Film - A self-consciously serious look at the brutality of geopolitics. By Victoria Segal

Syriana (15)

Andrew Billen - Purple haze
Television - A tale of 1970s corruption is an exercise in confused nostalgia, writes Andrew Billen

The Lavender List (BBC4)

The back half
'Making waves' Read this article
'Just her luck' Read this article
'Mad, bad world' Read this article
more

Book reviews
American beauty Read this article
'Kiss and tell, and tell' Read this article
'A rake''s progress' Read this article
more