11:18pm

St Pancras station’s basic design flaws

From Mr Dick Steele. Sir, It is rare that I find myself agreeing with Tyler Brûlé, probably because he inhabits a world that is unfamiliar to me

11:14pm

Welcome to the UK? I do not think so

From Mr Michael Dixon. Sir, Tyler Brûlé makes a frightening point about leaving for Paris from the St Pancras terminal

11:14pm

Companies should never apologise for making products people enjoy

From Mr Fred Smith. Sir, The key message of Alan Rappeport’s analysis of Coca-Cola’s response to New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s ‘anti-obesity’ measures is that corporate appeasement doesn’t work

11:14pm

How thrift on the pitch will lead to longer-term pay-offs

From Mr D. Cornock Thomas. Sir, Managers are expected to work in the best interests of owners and, as I understand it, Arsène Wenger is the manager of Arsenal’s key assets – on the pitch

11:14pm

Public asset adds to future tax base

From Prof Alasdair Smith. Sir, Your editorial ‘Britain adrift’ proposes that the Treasury should invest more in infrastructure. This prescription is only half correct

11:14pm

Vital that we get terminology right in currency wars

From Mr Phil Turner. Sir, On the topic of the so-called ‘currency wars’ the FT once again provides timely and informative articles

11:13pm

No obfuscation in ONS statement

From Mr Derek Bird. Sir, Tim Harford criticises the outcome of the recent consultation into the retail prices index

11:13pm

Philanthropy picks up pace in India

From Mr John Godfrey. Sir, Prabhu Guptara is more than a little unfair on his countrymen

11:12pm

Deng foresaw the last door to open

From Prof John Ure. Sir, Mark Elvin gives some examples of China’s concerted efforts to monitor and censor overseas works

11:12pm

Bank’s direct relationship withMadoff

From Mr Franck Berlamont. Sir, Patrick Jenkins’ article ‘Emilio’s perfect storm’ only briefly mentions Javier Botín’s unfortunate investment with Bernard Madoff

11:11pm

Shakespeare is more subtle

From Mr Peter Edwards. Sir, Christopher Caldwell has unfortunately employed an abuse of Shakespeare that has become too common

11:11pm

Three names that are familiar to us

From Ms Diane F. Oliver. Sir, What an arrogant, dismissive remark Christopher Caldwell made about the mention in Barack Obama’s inaugural address of Seneca Falls, Selma and Stonewall

11:10pm

Great idea, Tyler – pay for the privilege

From Mr Richard King. Sir, I applaud Tyler Brûlé’s idea that one should pay to comment

Jan 31, 2013

Farming fits into a wider landscape

From Dr Anthony Simons. Sir, Louise Lucas lays out well the difficulty of reading the financial tea leaves about agricultural investments

Jan 31, 2013

Invisible exports to Europe are real and high in value

From Mr Jean-Bernard Tanqueray. Sir, I am very much amazed by the blindness those who argue that the UK exports less to Europe than statistics state

Jan 31, 2013

Europe’s future can be built only on brains

From Mr Leif Johansson and others. Sir, We call on Europe’s leaders to approve the €80bn funding programme for research and innovation, Horizon 2020

Jan 31, 2013

Let science do the talking in climate debate

From Mr Abyd Karmali. Sir, Lord Turnbull propagates many alarming scientific errors

Jan 31, 2013

A saga more about confusion and fog

From Dr Silla Sigurgeirsdottir and others. Sir, Your editorial ‘Saga ends with Icesave redemption’ presents the Icelandic government as a wise unitary actor as the crisis hit

Jan 31, 2013

A misleading version of Iceland’s recovery

From Ms Sigrun Davidsdottir. Sir, After all the excellent FT reporting on Icesave it is astounding that your editorial should have turned the history of Iceland’s recovery into a heroic saga

Jan 31, 2013

Tomahawk option is neither cheaper nor credible

From Vice Admiral John McAnally. Sir, You report the Liberal Democrats as saying that Conservative warnings that cuts in defence spending have gone too far

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