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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorOxygen of censorship P ressure on the South African govern- ment grew. The National Union of Mine- workers gave notice of an indefinite strike by black miners at gold and coal...
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DULWICH VULGARITY
The SpectatorLAST week, after enthusiastically driving a bulldozer to inaugurate the replacement of Broad Street Station by a modern office development, Mrs Thatcher lamented that `we live...
THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorA WEAKNESS FOR TERRORISM hat was the strike by BBC and ITN Journalist on Wednesday about? It seems to have been a protest against the Govern- ment for its intervention in the...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorMr Kinnock inches his way towards electability BRUCE ANDERSON S ensible politicians take much more pleasure in grudging concessions wrested from implacable opponents than in...
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DIARY
The SpectatorI did enjoy being the victim of a hoax the other day. A company called Verbal Books sent a letter about their New American Shakespeare, which would 'use the lan- guage of the...
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GODDAMN NATO AND GODDAMN TORIES
The SpectatorTimothy Garton Ash on America's growing doubts about paying billions of dollars to defend an enfeebled yet recalcitrant Europe Washington SO THE villains are not just E. P....
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HOW SANCTIONS HELP APARTHEID
The SpectatorSimon Jenkins on the way Western economic embargoes harm South African blacks I TELEPHONED a South African friend last week for news of the state of emergen- cy. He roared...
One hundred years ago
The SpectatorLord Randolph Churchill is evidently bent on being a sensational Minister. Some two centuries ago a learned Eng- lish Jesuit wrote a book to prove that the classics were written...
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RAMBLING RAMB OS
The SpectatorDhiren Bhagat on the men convinced that American POWs remain in Vietnam I AM in the habit of walking around cities at night, talking to whoever will talk to me: pushers,...
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THE HAWKS WITH WHITE FEATHERS
The SpectatorChristopher Hitchens on the American militarists who dodged the draft When you've shouted Rule Britannia,' when you've sung 'God save the Queen', When you've finished killing...
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THE VIRGIN OF BALLINSPITTLE
The SpectatorStan Gebler Davies investigates Ireland's latest miraculous apparition Kinsale, Co Cork THE last time the Virgin Mary put in a personal appearance in Ireland was, according to...
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THE BBC ANARCHY
The Spectatorargues that the Corporation needs a new chairman IF ANYONE asks the BBC Lord Beaver- brook's famous question: 'Who's in charge of the clattering train?', answer comes there...
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Bank note
The SpectatorBANKERS' waiting-rooms are sprucer than dentists', but the principle is much the same. Maurice Denton took it to extremes when he arrived at First National Finance, to embark on...
Dear Debenhams
The SpectatorTO ME a galleria is a tunnel — as found on Italian roads, where notices remind drivers to accendiarise their lights in the galleria. To Ralph Halpern and Sir Terence Conran it...
Serve us wrong
The SpectatorIT SERVES the pension funds right. How it serves their beneficiaries, actual and prospective, those for whom they manage their £100,000-odd million of money that is another and...
CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorDon't do something, just stand there, says the City's purist CHRISTOPHER FILDES T he City is losing its best regulator just when it is embarking on its last chance, or another...
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LETTERS Reagan deserves better
The SpectatorSir: Christopher Hitchens's article, ghoulishly announced as 'Living with a dying President', (20 July) was one of the most tasteless, dishonest, and pretentious I have ever...
Yoof
The SpectatorSir: We are writing on behalf of the `self-besotted goof' of this country to ask John Osborne how he can blame us for the `fine mess' of starvation, greed and injus- tice the...
Staying Anglican
The SpectatorSir: Regular readers of your paper will know that Auberon Waugh celebrates the advent of the silly season with a pilgrimage to the tomb of St Thomas Aquinas. I had been...
Artist's incomes
The SpectatorSir: It is difficult to know exactly what Giles Auty is bemoaning in his article (The art of endurance', 3 August). Is it the cessation of the part-time art teacher or British...
TIE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorSUBSCRIBE TODAY! I would like to take out a subscription to The Spectator. I enclose my cheque for £ (Equivalent $ US& Eurocheques accepted) RATES: 12 Months 6 Months...
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BOOKS
The Spectator`Against me you cannot fight' John Keegan EAGLE AGAINST THE SUN by Ronald H. Spector Viking, f16.95 THE LIGHT OF MANY SUNS: THE MEANING OF HIROSHIMA by Leonard Cheshire...
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Rough days, diamonds and justice
The SpectatorWilliam Deedes THE RANDLORDS: THE MEN WHO MADE SOUTH AFRICA by Geoffrey Wheatcroft Weidenfeld & Nicolson, £12.95 0 ne of my favourite flights of fancy is to transpose Cecil...
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Good and seemingly good on the kibbutz
The SpectatorFrancis King A PERFECT PEACE by Amos Oz Chatto & Windus, £9.95 ■■ 111 W ith the passing of the years, people of the outside world have tended in- creasingly to see the...
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Cultural conscience of the rich
The SpectatorDuncan Fallowell CONVERSATIONS WITH CAPOTE by Lawrence Grobel Hutchinson, L10.95 I n this embattled world the homosexual has increasingly taken on the full-time job of being...
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Garden Olympics
The SpectatorIn the urn a torch has lit the busy-lizzie. Officious pigeons start some vague proceedings. The crowded, brightly-hatted nasturtium audience Raises green parasols against the...
A dog-lover thrown to the wolves
The SpectatorAllan Massie MARTHE: A WOMAN AND HER FAMILY: A FIN-DE-SIECLE CORRESPONDENCE translated by Donald M. Frame Viking, f12.95 M arthe is a collection of letters which, without art...
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Queen of music teachers
The SpectatorJohn Jolliffe MADEMOISELLE: CONVERSATIONS WITH NADIA BOULANGER by Bruno Monsaingeon, translated by Robyn Marsack Carcanet, f6.95 T he author of this book (who is a...
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Recommended recent paperbacks
The SpectatorNon-Fiction Thomas Hardy: A Biography by Michael Millgate, Oxford, £7.95 The Autobiography of Margot Asquith with an introduction by Mark Bonham Carter, Methuen, £4.95 Victoria...
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French movie-brats as critics
The SpectatorAndrew Robinson CAHIERS DU CINEMA, THE 1950s: NEO-REALISM, HOLLYWOOD, NEW WAVE edited by Jim Hillier RKP/BFI, 176.95 I n a year officially designated British Film Year, when...
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ARTS
The SpectatorArchitecture Forty under forty (RIBA till 23 August) A plethora of utopias Rowan Moore Y ou may by now, perhaps several times, have read an article that goes as follows. It...
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Cinema
The SpectatorMy First Wife (`15', selected cinemas) Way down under Peter Ackroyd I t can only have been a fortnight ago that we witnessed a film made by a Yugoslavian in Australia; now,...
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Music
The SpectatorYouthful and European Peter Phillips la ving moaned about the lack of exciting foreign orchestras in the Proms this year (the Edinburgh Festival is streets ahead on this), it...
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Gardens
The SpectatorBucket and spade Ursula Buchan T he stamens of the philadelphus have finally browned, the last pink petal of Madame Gregoire Staechlin, that great fat blowsy tart of a rose,...
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Television
The SpectatorMan behind the bomb Alexander Chancellor I hate to return to the subject of nuclear war, about which there is much too much on television at the moment, but last Sunday's...
High life
The SpectatorHome sweet home Taki s anyone unlucky enough to visit the capital of the olive republic of Greece knows, Athens is a veritable concrete desert, devoid of greenery, smog-filled...
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Home life
The SpectatorSlugging it out Alice Thomas Ellis W hat a bitter, sullen summer — or perhaps it's just me. I'm feeling very resentful because I've hardly set foot out of doors for fear of...
Low life
The SpectatorSleeping partners Jeffrey Bernard W e were discussing John Osborne's alternative bedmates in the Coach and Horses the other day and I found myself wondering who were, might...
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Postscript
The SpectatorOther men's trousers P. J. Kavanagh I t must have begun a couple of years ago when I sat sucking my pen and staring out at the rain and decided I needed a change. Not a...
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CHESS
The SpectatorHypermodern Raymond Keene 0 ne of the most fascinating characters in chess history was the great Aron Nimzo- witsch. He was a lonely, suspicious genius, largely responsible...
COMPETITION
The SpectatorStrong medicine Jaspistos I n Competition No. 1381 you were asked for a poem with a message of doom and despair in the manner of Wilhelmina Stitch or Patience Strong. Just...
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Here's herbs for happiness I THINK tarragon is y most
The Spectatorfavourite herb, tying closely with basil. Here is a curious but very delicious receipt incorpor- ating the former. Panna 1 lb fresh spinach leaves 1 onion chopped finely 10...
No. 1384: Sine cura
The SpectatorA short obituary notice, please, of an imaginary public figure who led an envi- ably and outrageously work-free and trouble-free life. Maximum 150 words. Entries to 'Competition...
Solution to Crossword 717: Chary
The SpectatormaummaGamamaa j I L umm v amommonamm walEgnonpncT Quo Eden° u ennui ILA i eon M im, iiiR o n al1111111 eigNaEnan UHEnEmannonsoT ruarinertmd am.doa E...
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IMPERATIVE COOKING COMPETITION
The SpectatorWinners and egg breakers Digby Anderson T he winner of the competition is P. G. Urben of 2 Upper Rosemary Hill, Kenil- worth; second, P. A. Roche, Heidestraat Noord 24, 2080...
Spectator Wine Club Owing to the exceptional response by Spectator
The Spectatorreaders to the July Wine Club offer, stocks of our No. 1 wine, Coulanges La Vineuse 1982, are now exhausted. Recount Wines, however, have been able to secure a further...
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CROSSWORD
The Spectator720: Brave new world by Doc A first prize of £20 and two further prizes of £10 (or a copy of Chambers Dictionary, value £11.95 — ring the words 'Chambers Dictionary' above)...