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4. Is Boris faking it? The makeover of a candidate: a new, serious Boris Johnson is now being offered to the voters of London--thanks to the heavy stage-direction of Tory party minders

5. Highlights and lowlights

6. Atomised: after giving America the bomb, Robert Oppenheimer became the target of a political witch-hunt in the 1950s. But did he engineer his own downfall?

8. The secret life of Labour voters: the polls tell us they are out there in their millions--so why is it so hard to find anyone who will say loud and proud that they are voting Labour? Hester Lacey goes on a hunt in Dorset and Brian Cathcart corners one in Muswell Hill

9. Push here panic: Charles Clarke's insistence that Britain is in a 'state of emergency' is a cynical sham. We're safer today than we have been at any time since the 1930s, writes Brian Cathcart

10. The Daily Mail and the Stephen Lawrence Murder.

11. A law that does the police no good

12. When journalists get it wrong

13. Oh, to be a lefty back then!

14. From Anthony Eden to the Yuppie

15. Take me back to the dull old days

16. From the Suffragettes to Lucky Jim

17. Those Frenchies are asking for it

18. Odd man out

19. Scandal: how the press tried to destroy the McCanns

20. The book of Dave: in conversation with the editor of GQ, the would- be prime minister reveals ... that he 'doesn't really like Pot Noodles'

21. A question of character: the deaths of four soldiers at Deepcut army barracks have inspired a compelling play in this year's fringe. Brian Cathcart, who investigated the real-life cases, is intrigued to see himself brought to life on stage

22. Person of 2007: model of youthful courage; We asked you to nominate the person who did most for the good of humanity over the past 12 months, and you made a singular choice. The NS Person of the Year Humanity Award for 2007 goes to the boy whose Guantanamo campaign has just been crowned with success

23. 'Everybody this case touches, it hurts': the damage that was done in the early days of the Lawrence murder investigation cannot be easily undone, particularly not if the announcement of a new forensic breakthrough is part of a publicity stunt

24. The press approach to the EU is tainted by lies and hostility

25. The greening of Greenland: as the Arctic ice retreats, some communities find that a new way of life beckons. Greenlanders are getting their place in the sun at last, reports Brian Cathcart--but for how long?

26. Third age: a history lesson

27. US offensive repulsed

28. The bean that threatens the Amazon

29. Nuclear: welcome to Los Alamos

30. Perfect storm

31. Ladies' man

32. A Better Press: A Response to John Lloyd's 'Regulate Yourself'.

33. Strange case of the army 'suicides': when four young soldiers were found dead at the Deepcut barracks in Surrey, their parents called for an investigation. Why won't the government make the results public?

34. Spies: at last, a 'not guilty' verdict

36. INSIDE STORY THE ROYAL WEDDING: Revealed: What made Charles marry now; Why? And why now? They have been lovers for much of their adult lives, and, since the death of Princess Diana, have all but lived together. So why do these two fiftysomethings now want to risk antagonising the Church and a public still devoted to Diana by marrying?

37. A quiet revolution For a century Rotarians have been doing good in a low-key way, planting trees and taking tea with hospital patients. Then they decided to eradicate polio from the face of the planet

38. The police force we deserve?

39. Watching us with an untrained eye

40. The end of the bad-apple theory

41. Thugs, liars, racists - but killers?

42. Damned from their own mouths

43. Uncovering the part-time coppers

44. The Neutron and the Bomb: A Biography of Sir James Chadwick

45. Down with the Old Canoe: A Cultural History of the Titanic Disaster

46. Glimpsing the fly in the cathedral: Marking the centennial of the first description of the atomic nucleus.

47. Calling time on reckless editors

49. How Mitterrand bet his life - and his country Big secrets, big lies: Mitterand's French gamble Mitterand's big secret was the 14-year lie; Big secret, big lie. Brian Cathcart on the furore in Paris over revelations by the late leader's personal doctor

50. The wars of too many words

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