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Monday 21 January 2008
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Charlie Wilson's War: Meet Charlie's better half
Joanne Herring, the millionaire hostess who helped a womanising American congressman fight the Soviet-Afghan war, tells Mark Palmer the truth about their relationship.
21 Jan 2008

Infidelity: Desperately seeking someone
In the digital age, having an affair has never been easier. Author Angela Levin spent five months interviewing middle-class professionals for an extensive study that charts the rise of the no-strings-attached* relationship. In the first of a three-part investigation, she reveals why the UK is in the grip of an infidelity epidemic.
21 Jan 2008

Smile! You're not the only one in a bad mood
Today is Blue Monday, statistically the most depressing day of the year. Frances Booth tries to find reasons to be cheerful.
21 Jan 2008

Quite Interesting
A quietly intriguing column. This week a medly of Ms.
19 Jan 2008

Culture clinic: Alexander McCall Smith
This week: novelist Alexander McCall Smith submits to a little light therapy.
19 Jan 2008

Facebook fun: Is the game up for Scrabulous fans?
Close down the Facebook version of Scrabble and stop the cheats, says purist Jonathan Maitland.
18 Jan 2008

New beat for controversial Kirsty Young
The former newsreader is used to proving her critics wrong and is now intent on winning over 'Crimewatch' viewers, she tells Roya Nikkhah.
18 Jan 2008

Ladies, why you must write the wrongs
Margaret Cook, who wrote a hard-hitting memoir after she was dumped by husband Robin, says that exposing the faults of famous men is essential to restoring a woman's self-esteem.
17 Jan 2008

Are we losing our children to television?
As a survey reveals that nearly 80 per cent of children now have a TV set in their rooms, Cassandra Jardine assesses the pros and cons.
17 Jan 2008

Why clever women do themselves down
As a survey claims men overstate how bright they are, Fay Weldon argues that the smarter sex found it to their advantage to play up to them - until now.
16 Jan 2008

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Scrabble board and tiles
Close down the Facebook version of Scrabble and stop the cheats, says purist Jonathan Maitland.
London embankment at dusk
High costs, poor schools, and the prospect of ever more punitive taxes are driving wealthy expats away - and it's Britain's loss, reports Alice Thomson.
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