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1. 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

2. Highlights and lowlights

4. 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

5. 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

6. A law that does the police no good

7. When journalists get it wrong

8. Oh, to be a lefty back then!

9. From Anthony Eden to the Yuppie

10. Take me back to the dull old days

11. From the Suffragettes to Lucky Jim

12. Those Frenchies are asking for it

13. Odd man out

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

15. 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'

16. 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

17. Third age: a history lesson

18. US offensive repulsed

19. The bean that threatens the Amazon

20. Nuclear: welcome to Los Alamos

21. Perfect storm

22. Ladies' man

23. 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?

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

25. The police force we deserve?

26. The end of the bad-apple theory

27. Thugs, liars, racists - but killers?

28. Damned from their own mouths

29. Uncovering the part-time coppers

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

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

32. Calling time on reckless editors

33. The wars of too many words

34. Paranoid and powerful: the editor of the Daily Mail sees himself as a victim, desperately leading the defence of the values of the mass of decent people

35. Reading the political codes

36. To protect the innocent: Barry George was wrongly convicted in 2001 after the press, with the implicit blessing of the government, had destroyed what little reputation he may have had. It should not happen again, but it probably will

37. Getting giddy over Obama

38. A right to film in people's bedrooms? Do me a favour: when it comes to matters of privacy, the very last opinions we should listen to are those of papers like the News of the World

39. An angry reader is a happy reader; People often claim they want cooler and more factual newspapers, but that is nonsense. What they really like is a news story that winds them up

40. For a discreet wedding: first, hire an open carriage: the so-called first Anglican gay marriage was very far from a secret affair, so how come the news media failed to notice it?

41. Blind to the big story of the war in Helmand: are the Taliban really in trouble, as a British commander now asserts? Don't look to journalism for an answer because, for all our gizmos, we have no way of telling

42. Let's not silence the journalists who investigate terror: the hounding of reporters like Shiv Malik should alarm us all, because the result will be that our only sources of information about domestic extremism are the government and the police

43. Trusting the detective: the Jersey child abuse affair arrived in a blaze of headlines, but three months have passed and there is little sign of progress. Did the news media get it wrong?

44. How to report a heatwave; The key is to act as though nothing of the kind has ever happened in this country before. The only cliche banned from use is: 'Phew, what a scorcher!'

45. They won, but they're not rejoicing: the right-wing commentators greeted the Tory election successes with doubt and anxiety. They aren't sure that this is the outcome they were hoping for

46. An unprecedented focus on the wounded: in Vietnam, it was body bags that mattered, and the damaged survivors were ignored. But today we read a great deal about the soldiers who have been maimed in our wars, and ministers and generals should be worried

47. A case of contempt for the law: a woman has been charged and is awaiting trial, yet the papers carry on monstering her. The government could call a halt in the interest of justice, but it would rather not

48. The Sun holds the flame aloft: most papers were disgusted by the Olympic flame's visit to London. Murdoch's Sun, however, judged the day a triumph. Now why would it think that?

49. Welcome to the national metaphor: there was hubris, there was bathos, there was a moral for every taste, and it all happened right on the doorstep. The great Heathrow cock-up offered newspapers a feast almost too rich to eat

50. You just can't rely on Tory papers, Gordon: the third Heathrow runway will supposedly be great for business and will mean more cheap flights for all. You'd think the right-wing press would be all for it. But no

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