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| | The Spectator - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The Spectator is a conservative British political magazine, established 1828, published weekly. |  | | Like The Daily Telegraph, The Spectator is Atlanticist in outlook, favouring close ties with the United States rather than with the European Union, and is strongly supportive of Israel. |  | | Editorship of The Spectator is traditionally a route to high office in the British Conservative Party, and past editors include Iain Macleod and Nigel Lawson. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Spectator
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| | The Spectator - who' s taking responsibility |
 | | The Spectator was established in 1828 and Taki [and it seems also by nature], has been writing for the magazine for 25 long, hard years. |  | | This article is about a columnist called Taki, who writes for The Spectator. |  | | When I received an email from a friend [aka Aunty Sharon] alerting me to an article she had read in Private Eye relating to a columnist in The Spectator, Taki Theodoracopulos who identified black people as the root of all evil, I can’t deny that I rushed out to do my research. |
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http://www.blink.org.uk/print.asp?key=1614
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| | The Spectator's Auschwitz-Jenin Parallel |
 | | The Spectator, the oldest continuously published magazine in the English language (since 1828), should have exercised better editorial judgment on this historic occasion. |  | | While much of the British media (including BBC) provided helpful educational material on the Holocaust, The (London) Spectator ran an article by Anthony Lipmann, who declared that on this day |  | | Yet The Spectator chose, on this of all dates, to suggest the IDF are modern-day Nazi storm troopers. |
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http://www.honestreporting.com/articles/45884734/critiques/The_Spectators_Auschwitz-Jenin_Parallel.asp
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| | The Spectator.co.uk |
 | | Established in 1828, The Spectator is the oldest continuously published magazine in the English language. |  | | The Spectator has had a 177 year history. |  | | 83% of The Spectator's readers are AB 99% of The Spectator's readers are ABC1 |
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http://www.unipeak.com/gethtml.php?_u_r_l_=aHR0cDovL3d3dy5zcGVjdGF0b3IuY28udWs6ODAvYWR2ZXJ0aXNpbmcucGhw
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| | The Spectator.co.uk |
 | | The Spectator was established in 1828, and is the oldest continuously published magazine in the English language. |  | | The Spectator's taste for controversy, however, remains undiminished. |  | | Contact Us send your thoughts to the editor, or, indeed, ask or complain about anything to do with the magazine. |
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http://www.unipeak.com/gethtml.php?_u_r_l_=aHR0cDovL3d3dy5zcGVjdGF0b3IuY28udWs6ODAvYWJvdXRfdXMucGhw
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| | Animal Rights Timeline 19th-20th Century Victorian Age/Anti-Vivisection |
 | | Frances Power Cobbe, letter to the editor, "The Clergy and Vivisection [Cobbe, April]." Spectator (London:1828-) 57 (1884 Apr 19): 517. |  | | Frances Power Cobbe, letter to the editor, "The Clergy and Vivisection [Cobbe, May]," Spectator (London:1828-) 57 (1884 May 03): 582. |  | | Frances Power Cobbe, "The Rights of Man and the Claims of Beasts," Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country (London:1830-1869) 68 (1863 Nov): 586-602. |
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http://www.animalrightshistory.org/arh_timeline/victorian.htm
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| | Henry Nutcombe Oxenham |
 | | [1884-Feb 23] Henry Nutcombe Oxenham, letter to the editor, "The Clergy and Vivisection," Spectator (London:1828-) 57 (1884 Feb 23): 249-250. |  | | [1884-Feb 09] Henry Nutcombe Oxenham, letter to the editor, "Vivisection at Oxford," Spectator (London:1828-) 57 (1884 Feb 09): 184. |  | | Even were the torture of animals proved—as it never yet has been—to subserve the advance of medical science, that would make it, if somewhat less odious, not less absolutely unlawful and immoral. |
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http://www.humane-history.org/bibliography/oxe_henry-oxenham.htm
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| | The Spectator - who' s taking responsibility |
 | | The Spectator was established in 1828 and Taki [and it seems also by nature], has been writing for the magazine for 25 long, hard years. |  | | When I received an email from a friend [aka Aunty Sharon] alerting me to an article she had read in Private Eye relating to a columnist in The Spectator, Taki Theodoracopulos who identified black people as the root of all evil, I can’t deny that I rushed out to do my research. |  | | The particular article which is causing upset, in Taki’s ‘High Life’ column is entitled ‘Thoughts on thuggery’, which featured in the 11 January issue of The Spectator. |
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http://www.blink.org.uk/print.asp?key=1614
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| | Encyclopedia: Pope Benedict XVI |
 | | Piers Paul Read wrote in The Spectator on March 5, 2005 : The Spectator is a conservative British political magazine, established 1828, published weekly. |  | | // Leaders and revolutionaries Mahmoud Abbas - new President of the Palestinian Authority Gordon Brown - British Chancellor of the Exchequer George W. Bush â President of the United States Hugo Chávez - President of Venezuela Chen Shui-bian - President of the Republic of China; leader of Taiwan. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Pope-Benedict-XVI
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| | 100 years of cinema exhibition in Europe - Belgium |
 | | The Phenakistiscope, which was invented and brought to perfection by Joseph Plateau between 1828 and 1832, was a disk fitted with vertical crevices: on the inside of the disk were eight images representing eight successive phases of the same movement. |  | | The spectator was placed in front of a mirror and looked with one eye through the crevices of the disk which was rotating rapidly. |  | | Il Phenakistiscope, che fu inventato e perfezionato da Joseph Plateau tra il 1828 e il 1832, era costituito da un disco munito di alcune fessure verticali: all'interno del disco erano inserite otto immagini che rappresentavano otto fasi successive dello stesso movimento. |
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http://www.mediasalles.it/ybkcent/ybk95_b.htm
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| | Ruskin MP I Notes |
 | | The Spectator was founded in 1828 (shortly after the Athenaeum) by Robert Stephen Rintoul with financial assistance from the radical M.P., Joseph Hume, a supporter of the Trades Union movement. |  | | A sympathetic review of Modern Painters I appeared in the Spectator, 7 December 1844. |
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http://www.lancs.ac.uk/users/ruskin/empi/notes/yspect.htm
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| | ESSAYIST ESSAY - LoveToKnow Article on ESSAYIST ESSAY |
 | | Leigh Hunt, clearing away all the didactic and pompous elements which had overgrown the essay, restored it to its old Spectator grace, and was the, most easy nondescript writer of his generation in periodicals such as the Indicator (1819) and the Companion (1828). |  | | The peculiarity of Lambs style as an essayist was that he threw off the Addisonian and still more the Johnsonian tradition, which had become a burden that crushed the life out of each conventional essay, and that he boldly went back to the rich verbiage and brilliant imagery of the seventeenth century for his inspiration. |  | | It is true that Lamb had great ductility of style, and that, when he pleases, he can write so like Steele that Steele himself might scarcely know the difference, yet in his freer flights we are conscious of more exalted masters, of Milton, Thomas Browne and Jeremy Taylor. |
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http://www.1911ency.org/E/ES/ESSAY_ESSAYIST.htm
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| | 100 years of cinema exhibition in Europe - Belgium |
 | | The Phenakistiscope, which was invented and brought to perfection by Joseph Plateau between 1828 and 1832, was a disk fitted with vertical crevices: on the inside of the disk were eight images representing eight successive phases of the same movement. |  | | The spectator was placed in front of a mirror and looked with one eye through the crevices of the disk which was rotating rapidly. |  | | The Fantascope he had developed made magnifying of objects possible, which was obtained by using lighting variations and by moving the chariot on which the device was placed. |
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http://www.mediasalles.it/ybkcent/ybk95_b.htm
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| | The Spectator |
 | | Robert Stephen Rintoul founded The Spectator in 1828 as a weekly paper of news and commentary. |  | | He intended it to be impartial and even-tempered, but the paper has always worn the colors of Liberalism, particularly after the Reform debates of the 1830s. |
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http://www.rossettiarchive.org/docs/ap4.s7.raw.html
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| | The Spectator |
 | | The Spectator, a weekly periodical, was started by Robert Stephen Rintoul in 1828. |  | | Rintoul's objective was to produce a magazine of what he called "educated radicalism". |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Jspectator.htm
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| | Diamonds, Rifle Rangers and Rock Slides: Codman's "Native" Landscapes, essay by Jessica Skwire Routhier |
 | | The Reverend Carlos Wilcox, "Account of the Late Slide from the White Mountains," New York Spectator (September 15, 1826), reprinted in Mudge, "Historical Epilogue," 87. |  | | Eric Edward Purchase makes reference to an 1828 painting by Cole entitled Distant View of the Slides that Destroyed the Whilley [sic] Family in the Willey Slide: The Problem of Landscape in Nineteenth-century Narrative (Ph.D. diss., University of Connecticut, 1994), 145. |  | | Wilcox, "Account of the Late Slide from the White Mountains," 94. |
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http://www.tfaoi.com/aa/3aa/3aa471.htm
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