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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorS everal bodies were found at 25 Cromwell Street, Gloucester, and police began looking for more nearby; newspapers implied that a man charged with murdering three women was...
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SPECT TIE AT OR The Spectator, 56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL
The SpectatorTelephone: 071-405 1706; Telex 27124; Fax 071-242 0603 BREAKING OF A PRESIDENT L et us say it clearly: the Clinton presi- dency is finished. But it is not finished in the...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorDecay all around I see, and possibly even change SIMON HEFFER L ast month I interviewed Mr Enoch Powell before an audience of about 150 members of the Conservative Party....
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DIARY
The SpectatorT here have always been two sides to the Labour Party, the grim Puritans who would like to see pleasure severely rationed and the left-wing Cavaliers who would have it spread...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorWe should not sit in judgment on Chinese penis-hunters CHARLES MOORE S wap the Vietnamese jungle for Cana- dian icefields, and it is like a scene out of Apocalypse Now as the...
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THE EARTH IS FINE; THE PROBLEM IS THE GREENS
The SpectatorAndrew Kenny argues that the misguided belief in global warming will cost billions of pounds â and hundreds of lives Richard's Bay, Natal COMPARE these two apocalyptic pro-...
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LA FORZA DEL DESTINO
The SpectatorMatt Frei investigates the electioneering tactics of Europe's most modem and bizarre political party Rome THE CANDIDATE clutched the micro- phone clumsily with both hands,...
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MILLIONAIRES FROM NOWHERE
The SpectatorAnne Applebaum is not surprised that there are no rules governing who wins fame and fortune in post-communist Poland Warsaw NIKODEM DYZMA has lost his job as a dancing master....
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Mind your language
The Spectator'MOAB is my wash-pot; over Philistia will I triumph,' says the Psalmist in the name of the Lord. It seems that tri- umph, like vengeance, is the Lord's, for triumphalism has...
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YOU LUCKY BLIGHTER, MOHAMAD
The SpectatorMartin Vander Weyer, who advised Dr Mahathir on the privatisation of the Malaysian national airline, reflects on Malay anti-Britishness 'You blighters don't know how lucky you...
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One hundred years ago
The SpectatorIT IS alleged that the problem of apply- ing an electric motor to a wheeled vehi- cle has at last been solved, and that the electric parcels-van which has been driv- ing about...
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WYSTAN AUDEN WAS A SWEETIE'
The SpectatorAlasdair Palmer interviews Jack Hewit, who was once, among other things, Guy Burgess's lover `A WOMAN once swore to me that I was a Wykehamist. She was absolutely certain. The...
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If symptoms
The Spectatorpersist.. . I HAPPENED to be visiting friends in Gloucestershire last weekend when the remains of the fourth and fifth bodies were found at No 25 Cromwell Street, Gloucester....
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AND ANOTHER THING
The SpectatorA strong stench of putrefaction from a curried Parliament PAUL JOHNSON O ne of my possessions which gives me constant pleasure is a framed crudely print- ed handbill from the...
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Wind of change
The SpectatorIF YOU can't have a summit you can always have a conference. This penny has dropped with the Organisation for Eco- nomic Co-operation and Development, which is rather on its...
CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorBang, bang, you're off the dole in Detroit it's the unemployment summit CHRISTOPHER FILDES D etroit has evolved its own way to deal with unemployment. It's murder. There is a...
The harder they fall
The SpectatorBOND PRICES have come down like an express lift, bondholders (like your bank or pension fund) are feeling queasy, so here come UBS, the brokers, with a message of comfort:...
Indie heads for dock.. .
The SpectatorTHE BATTERED ship Newspaper Pub- lishing â 'Old Indie' â alters course, with Tony O'Reilly's Zero still embedded in her funnel. Mr O'Reilly (as I noted at the time) staged...
. . . or round in circles
The SpectatorMICHAEL HESELTINE must now decide whether, as a condition of his blessing on the deal, he wants to see independent (or Independent) directors on Newspaper Pub- lishing's board,...
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LETTERS
The SpectatorPredictable Pergau Sir: Your editorial of 26 February propos- ing that the British aid programme should be abolished and transferred to the Department of Trade and Industry was...
Nostra culpa
The SpectatorSir: I am one who has parachuted into for- mer Yugoslavia ten times in the last two- and-a-half years. Over that period I have made more than 40 short documentary films for...
SPECTAT um OR SUBSCRIBE TODAY - RATES
The Spectator12 Months 6 Months UK â £77.00 â £39.00 Europe (airmail) â £88.00 â £44.00 USA Airspeed â US$125.00 â US$63.00 USA Airmail â US$175.00 â US$88.00 Rest of...
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LETTERS Bad manners
The SpectatorSir: Of course Mr Dawkins' irreverent and atheistic views (Letters, 19 February) are absolutely right, but does he not realise that a gentleman keeps such thoughts to him-...
Frozen assets
The SpectatorSir: Three weeks ago, during that bout of rather severe weather, I took out a mort- gage on a small one-bedroom igloo. My estate agent had assured me that, given the imminent...
The editor's due
The SpectatorSir: Paul Johnson is quite right about the desirability of editors being thrashed by their victims (And another thing, 26 Febru- ary); I can only assume that it is Mr Major's...
Woman's work
The SpectatorSir: Can any of your Roman Catholic corre- spondents explain something for me? Two ministers have publicly explained that they have left the Church of England for the Roman...
Hurd's history
The SpectatorSir: Since either charity or shortage of space forced Dr Noel Malcolm to curtail his indictment of Douglas Hurd, perhaps I could take up some of the slack relating to his...
Head Kielanowski
The SpectatorSir: Notwithstanding my boundless admira- tion for all Spectator articles written by Anne Applebaum to date, I feel compelled to correct erroneous details she wrote about...
Get it right
The SpectatorSir: Judy Garland did not say, as Sheridan Morley wrote last week (Arts, 12 Febru- ary), 'We are . . . a long way from Kansas City.' The line, perhaps the greatest in liter-...
Man's work
The SpectatorSir: There is a new exception to the general rule of ladies first (Letters, 26 February). `I'd definitely support "youthanasia" . . The Eastern Orient Express from Singa- pore...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorHarder than hard times Paul Foot DICKENS'S JOURNALISM: VOLUME I, SKETCHES BY BOZ AND OTHER EARLY PAPERS, 1833-1839 edited by Michael Slater Dent, 1...30, pp. 580 I f...
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Nothing Personal
The SpectatorHere, winter tricks us: sun and calm, small summer, to make the unsuspecting almonds bloom. Then wind-stripped petals, snow to blight the bud. Who sees the world like this is...
His pale courtesan in beauty and decay
The SpectatorMain de Botton VIOLETTA AND HER SISTERS: THE LADY OF THE CAMELLIAS, RESPONSES TO THE MYTH edited by Nicholas John Faber, £8.99, pp. 305 E ver since Alexandre Dumas fits penned...
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The age of innocence
The SpectatorAnita Brookner LAND GIRLS by Angela Huth Sinclair-Stevenson, f14.99, pp. 308 O ne settles down with a smile of plea- surable anticipation as the scene is set: an elderly woman...
Riddled with craziness
The SpectatorPeter Levi WINTER POLLEN by Ted Hughes Faber, f17.50, pp. 465 T here are nearly all the essential pieces of an autobiography of this most surprising and entertaining of poets...
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Mum's the buzz word
The SpectatorCaroline Moorehead THE GREAT UMBILICAL: MOTHER, DAUGHTER, MOTHER, THE UNBREAKABLE BOND by Rachel Billington Hutchinson, £17.99, pp. 238 M others â those with daughters, that...
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Crossing Nicaragua with Smokes
The SpectatorAlbert Read DESPERADOES by Joseph O'Connor Flamingo, f14.99, pp. 426 J oseph O'Connor's second novel needs ruthless editing. The story is concentrated at either end of the...
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Rising to Dizzy heights
The SpectatorJane Ridley LETTERS OF BENJAMIN DISRAELI, VOLUME V: 1848-1851 edited by M. G. Wiebe, J. B. Conacher, John Matthews and Mary S. Millar University of Toronto Press, f61.75, pp....
Witness for the prosecution
The SpectatorMark Almond SEASONS IN HELL: UNDERSTANDING BOSNIA'S WAR by Ed Vulliamy Simon & Schuster, f6.99, pp. 370 N ot since the Crimean War have the hacks won out so clearly over the...
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Remembering
The SpectatorJ. L. Carr Ursula Buchan T here are four remarkable figures in niches above the north porch of Kettering's parish church. They look mediaeval but were in fact carved by the...
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ARTS
The SpectatorArchitecture Looking after the human spirit Alan Powers suggests that a training in architecture should include some manual skills W hat is architecture and how do you get it?...
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Theatre
The SpectatorPeer Gynt (Barbican) The Three Lives of Lucie Cabrol (Riverside) Elsewhere (King's Head) End of the Peer Sheridan Morley P eer Gynt is the big one: shipwrecks, Troll Kings,...
Music
The SpectatorPassing over the crossover Peter Phillips M uch to my horror it is becoming apparent that the kind of music I direct is lending itself to a cliché. I don't know how widely...
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Gardens
The SpectatorForcing the issue Ursula Buchan I am very much a member of the genera- tion which grew to adulthood in the Seven- ties. I have a concentration span which has been shortened...
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Exhibitions
The SpectatorUnbound: Possibilities in Painting, Salvador Dali: the Early Years (Hayward Gallery, till 30 May) Ansel Krut (Gillian Jason Gallery, till 31 March) A tug on the chain Giles...
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Cinema
The SpectatorShort Cuts (`18', Selected cinemas) Great bits and small butts Mark Steyn R obert Altman opens with the omi- nous whirring of approaching helicopters. But this isn't Vietnam,...
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Television
The SpectatorThe making of a star Martyn Harris A few years ago I interviewed Robert de Niro for a magazine. A photographer De Niro liked was flown in from New York, accompanied by a...
SPE
The SpectatorR How to save 51 trips to . .. or over The Spectator yourself the library £30 on If you're forced to share fellow students, then you'll can be to track a copy yourself...
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Low life
The SpectatorCome and get it Jeffrey Bernard I tried my artificial leg out for the first time last week at Charing Cross Hospital near Fulham, and was told that I had done remarkably well...
High life
The SpectatorSkiless in Gstaad Taki Gstaad L ife in Gstaad is very lively right now, what with the snows fading faster than Major Hewitt's chances for promotion and the jet-set getting...
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Long life
The SpectatorTricks of the memory Nigel Nicolson sonably, as he had seen the Emperor only from ground-level, and the frost may have whitened his podgy features and the upper part of his...
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Imperative cooking: take a cold shower .10mL.0441.44 0 t.,⢠YOU THINK you
The Spectatorknow about food, cook rather well and keep a good table every day, a pukka five courses? Let's take the smile off your face. Even we good cooks need a cold shower now and then....
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i400 1 ioi - Dclatmaal SPAIN'S FINEST CAVA gpEt iagn agl
The SpectatorCHESS SPAIN'S FINEST CAVA Anatoly rides again Raymond Keene AFTER EIGHT ROUNDS of the Linares tournament Karpov's domination appeared complete. He had blown away seven of...
VI RI %I 1I
The Spectator01( 11 â111i11 , N COMPETITION Salute to the Master Jaspistos IN COMPETITION NO. 1820 you were invited to write a poem in the manner of Ogden Nash on one of these...
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J W.& J L
The SpectatorGRAHAM'S PORT r , W. & J. CROSSWORD GRAHAM'S â 1 PORT A first prize of £25 and a bottle of Graham's Malvedos 1979 Vintage Port for the first correct solution opened on...
Solution to 1147: Perm 5
The SpectatorN illiflelliNnel MEMO( 0 A SEIM LE Al N ill A S Al AN. R N N A D Dom â. V E AD ' 61 N r G i 6 ° N VI I 6 1 1 RI al N E P Ej.. E: R T RIEIU kl P T IT . H1C 1 1 U I E I 1 1...
No. 1823: Very short story
The SpectatorYou are invited to provide a very short story (maximum 250 words) in which the remark 'The art of losing isn't hard to master' occurs in the last sentence. Entries to...
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SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorSettling scores FranlaCeating THE MODERN penalty shoot-out may be a deplorably unfair way to settle a soccer Cup tie, but there can be no doubt that this ersatz,...
YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
The SpectatorQ. Some time ago I was invited to the Cotswolds by friends for the weekend. We were somewhat irked latterly to receive the news that we had been 'booked in' to a charming...