Charles Windsor challenged to declare full income as he becomes first monarch to release tax payments
IF THERE is a buzzword for the political and news agenda this week, that word is education — the lack of it, the attempted denial of it and the downright oddness of it.
To illustrate the last point, we go to Samworth Church Academy in Mansfield, where pupils have been banned from putting their hands up to answer questions in class after the head teacher said it was always the same ones responding.
Apparently, the academy will now only allow the raising of hands “to establish silence for listening,” according to principal Barry Found.
Peter Murrell’s weakness for the allure of prestige goods is symptomatic of modern consumer culture, says MATT KERR
MARTIN HALL examines the way the Roman orator took on different schools of philosophy
ALAN MORRISON recommends a consummate, heart-warming collection about a working-class upbringing in the industrial north-east
DR HANA SAADA asks why a war crime against innocent children on this scale does not dominate the world’s coverage of the US-Israeli war on Iran


