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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The Spectator`The kiddy was all right when I last looked at him — he must have fallen down the stairs playing.' S it Alan Green, QC, Director of Public Prosecutions, resigned after police...
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THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorSUBSCRIBE TODAY - RATES 12 Months 6 Months UK 0 01.00 0 £35.50 Europe (airmail) 0 £82.00 0 £41.00 USA Airspeed 0 US$110 0 US$55.00 Rest of Airmail 0 £98.00 0 £49.00 World...
SPECTATOR
The SpectatorThe Spectator, 56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL Telephone: 071-405 1706; Telex 27124; Fax 071-242 0603 LOCAL DIFFICULTIES hatever the rhetoric at Blackpool this week, and...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorThe Conservative Party wants to be led: but first Mr Major must hoist the colours SIMON HEFFER espite the claims of omniscient pun- dits, it is not always easy to judge the...
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DIARY
The SpectatorI get a letter from Debrett's, asking me if I want to be in their book People Of Today. When I boast about it to my best friend, who's in the proper one, (People Of Yester- day,...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorAmong the neater, sweeter maidens in a cleaner, greener land AUBERON WAUGH I wish him better luck this week, but quite possibly the Tories will be too busy asking themselves...
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KEEPING UP APPEARANCES
The SpectatorHenry Porter reveals how the middle classes have coped with their sudden impoverishment A FEW months ago my wife sat next to a Conservative MP at dinner. I could not hear what...
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THE OLD ORDER CHANGETH
The Spectatornext Secretary-General of the UN is more impressive than the incumbent IN THE warm Asian night the crickets sang and the carpets, laid out on the lawn by the swimming-pool,...
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One hundred years ago
The SpectatorTHE Times of Thursday gives a detailed account of the rain-making experiments lately tried in Texas, near the town of Midland. The experiments, which were conducted by a...
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SIGNING ON THE DOTTY LINE
The SpectatorChristopher Monckton reveals what the draft treaty on European political and monetary union actually says NO, said the Press Office of the European Communities in London, I...
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THE DOCTORS' DILEMMA
The SpectatorJames LeFanu certifies the internal market in the National Health Service as dead THROUGHOUT the party conferences of the last two weeks, the behaviour of the National Health...
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If symptoms persist . . .
The SpectatorTO MOCK the bourgeois virtues is, of course, a bourgeois privilege and pas- time, and we do it not because the virtues are not virtuous, but to demonstrate to the world our...
HAVE THE TORIES CUT TAXES?
The SpectatorAndrew Dilnot argues that, after 12 years in office, the Conservatives have increased the tax burden WHEN IS a change from 34.75 to 37.75 not an increase? When a Conservative...
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A MADE-UP TALE
The SpectatorVicki Woods describes an experience on a train that left her a liberated woman WHEN Germaine Greer published her book The Female Eunuch in 1970, it was grist to the earnest...
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AND ANOTHER THING
The SpectatorPugilism again — this time of the literary sort PAUL JOHNSON T here is nothing I enjoy more than a lit- erary row, and for this reason alone I applaud Nicholas Mosley's...
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. . . but dons bite back
The SpectatorNOW his successor tells Aerospace's share- holders that Rover is eating the company's cash, but that it has bright prospects in nuz- zling up to Honda. What he means is that he...
Where charity begins
The SpectatorMAKE the taxman subscribe to your chari- ties — here's how. You open an account with the Charities Aid Foundation, which sends you a cheque-book. Use it for pay- ments to...
Dog bites Prof...
The SpectatorTHE dog called Rover is biting the hand that feeds it, and Roland Smith, the dog- loving Prof, must rue the day he gave it kennel-room at British Aerospace. He can't say I...
CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorFirst stop Blackpool, next stop Bangkok, with a detour through Lombard Street CHRISTOPHER FILDES T his is the week when Norman Lamont has to fly to Bangkok via Blackpool. He...
Jarndyce v. Outhwaite
The SpectatorSIXTY–FIVE of the plaintiffs in the Outh- waite case — Lloyd's latest outcrop of liti- gation — are already dead. More will have joined them before it is over. I do not pre-...
Poles apart
The SpectatorCHANNEL Tunnel trains will soon run through to North Pole International. Bri- tish Rail has put up a notice to say so. Has Sir Alastair Morton of Eurotunnel lost his bearings,...
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God bless America
The SpectatorSir: Stephen Robinson's unbalanced attack on President George Bush (Partial vision, selective morality', 5 October) almost recalled Christopher Hitchens' demented ravings...
LETTERS Chinese gift horses
The SpectatorSir: Much has been made recently by the Labour Party and by the Sunday Times of donations to the Conservative Party by, inter alia, rich Chinese businessmen from Hong Kong. The...
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On the ropes
The SpectatorSir: Mr Fenton Bresler taxes me with call- ing the late Lord Goddard repulsive and the late David Maxwell Fyfe a mediocrity. (Justice for the judge', 5 October). They were...
Queer business
The SpectatorSir: Lady Longford appears to believe that it was a sledging accident that 'was fatal to [Princess Louise's] trust in her husband,' and M.R.D. Foot does not challenge this old...
On your Marx
The SpectatorSir: Your issue of 14 September carried a letter from an A.L. Rowse wondering why Graham Greene et al had been so silly about politics. Presumably this isn't the same A.L....
Career girls
The SpectatorSir: It really irritates me that Dominique Jackson (Stuck for business', 14 Septem- ber) can say 'Sheer economic necessity is still the main reason women resort to sell- ing...
David Lean
The SpectatorSir: I am working on the research for the official biography of David Lean, and would be immensely grateful for any mem- ories — or letters — your readers might have. I am...
Fat red line
The SpectatorSir: Your correspondent asks (14 Septem- ber) why the Russians one sees queuing for food are so fat. The answer is because bread is plentiful and exceedingly cheap.I have a more...
Quick obits
The SpectatorSir: I am sorry that Dominic Lawson, while poking fun at the Independent's obituaries, (Diary, 28 September) could not have found room to praise the Telegraph for its...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorSuffering abominable relations Charles Moore WILL THIS DO? THE FIRST FIFTY YEARS OF AUBERON WAUGH, AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY Century, £15.99, pp. 288 R eviewing this book is rather...
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For Any Correspondent
The SpectatorThis morning's risible memorandum reads: `Clock, cheese, coal, car, plug, thingummy, garbage, weeds'. Wisdom, new and old gurus say, consists In jacking the grovelling boredom...
Doing theology to the sound of church bells
The SpectatorPeter Hebblethwaite MICHAEL RAMSEY: THE ANGLICAN SPIRIT edited by Dale Coleman SPCR £7.99, pp. 176 V ed Mehta tells the classic Michael Ramsey story. Warned that the Archbishop...
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Ravings of a drug-crazed Wykehamist
The SpectatorAndro Linklater SONGS OF THE DOOMED by Hunter S. Thompson Picador, £15.99, pp. 315 T he real identity of Dr Hunter S. Thompson, author of such horror gothic works as Fear and...
Ageing
The SpectatorAgeing is an agony. Just white hairs, I'd thought; But now that teeth are falling out And hearing is a sort Of fought-off deafness, it seems nothing That my hair is white. And...
Senility
The SpectatorTo say that it's sad to be old, That is indeed to betray Dodderiness, the dotard's whining Loss of the human way. For all men know their nature. We are not earth or sky, Nor...
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Partial for the Observer's sake
The SpectatorAnthony Sampson DAVID ASTOR AND THE OBSERVER by Richard Cockett Deutsch, £17.99, pp.294 L ooking back from today's competitive and money-conscious journalism, it is hard to...
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Trains, boats, bridges and tunnels
The SpectatorJ.G. Links ISAMBARD KINGDOM BRUNEL: ENGINEERING KNIGHT ERRANT by Adrian Vaughan John Murray, £19.95, pp. 285 I f you arrive at Paddington station from Bristol and make for the...
Liquid Paper
The SpectatorSmooth as a snail, this little parson pardons our sins. Touch the brushtip lightly and — abracadabra — a clean slate. We know those who boil their brains by sniffing it, which...
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From the man who gave us Glam Rock
The SpectatorNigella Lawson LEADER by Gary Glitter Ebuty Press, £13.99, pp. 192 J ust how good a book can you expect from a singer most famous for the lyrics: `Come on, come on. Come on,...
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More than sugar and spice
The SpectatorAnita Brookner WILDERNESS TIPS by Margaret Atwood Bloomsbury, £14.99, pp. 247 M argaret Atwood's last published work was the excellent Cat's Eye, a novel which dismantled the...
SPECTATOR
The SpectatorDIARY 1992 £10 Plain £11 Initialled The Spectator 1992 Diary, bound in soft red leather, will shortly be available. Laid out with a whole week to view, the diary is 5" x 3"....
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Memoirs are made of this
The SpectatorPatrick Skene Catling A GIRL IN PARIS by Shusha Guppy Heinemann, £14.99, pp. 278 I f everyone, as they say, has a novel in them (an awful thought), think how full they must be...
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Another good read from the slums
The SpectatorCaroline Moorehead THE RAG NYMPH by Catherine Cookson Bantam, £14.99, pp.351 hen Catherine Cookson put an appallingly difficult early life, a nervous breakdown, and recurrent...
Wresting tragic grandeur from the ordinary
The SpectatorFrancis King SCUM by Isaac Bashevis Singer Cape, £14.99, pp. 218 A writer shows his true worth when he takes some incident familiar from countless other novels and then makes...
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ARTS
The SpectatorExhibitions 1 Unresolved issue Giles Auty Richard Diebenkorn (Whitechapel Gallery, till 1 December) Jenny Franklin (Crane Gallery, till 16 November) Luke Elwes (Rebecca...
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Exhibitions 2
The SpectatorHidden Treasures (San Vitale, Ravenna, till 17 November) The glory that was Ravenna Roderick Conway Morris I t is as well Edward Gibbon was Hono- rius's chronicler and not...
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Cinema
The SpectatorUranus (`15', selected cinemas) The hunting of the nark Harriet Waugh Monsieur Archambaud, the most interesting character in Uranus, points out, how is it that under...
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Theatre
The SpectatorMurmuring Judges (Olivier) Rough justice Christopher Edwards D avid Hare's new play is the second in an intended trilogy about British institu- tions (the first, Racing...
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Architecture
The SpectatorArt and Craft: Architectural Drawings of the Regency Period (RIBA Heinz Gallery, till 26 October) Reassessing the Regency Alan Powers thought to learn great things: I found I...
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Pop music
The SpectatorChart stoppers Marcus Berkmann T h e pop world has tasted turmoil this week after the much mooted upheaval in Top of the Pops' 28-year-old format. After years of steadily...
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Television
The SpectatorA dog's life Martyn Harris J ulie Burchill is a clever girl from a small town in the West Country. Her father was a factory worker and a Stalinist, as was Julie herself until...
High life
The SpectatorThe price of greatness Taki Berlin r ivingriving down Unter den Linden one can feel something of its former cosmopoli- tan elegance, but it is mostly an exercise in imagining...
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New life
The SpectatorIn the club Zenga Longmore D ays seemed like months as I waited on tenterhooks for the re-opening of the One O'Clock Club, the social nerve centre of Brixton's mother and baby...
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Game, set and match
The SpectatorST WILFRED, Archbishop of York, was one of the most illustrious prelates of the Anglo-Saxon Church. He was a monk of Lindisfarne and built many churches, notably those of York,...
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SPECTATOR WINE CLUB
The SpectatorB efore the great Christmas rush starts I thought I would have another look at the remarkable Montes series of Chilean wines which proved so popular last year, and at anything...
ORDER FORM SPECTATOR WINE CLUB
The Spectatorc/o Hedley Wright & Co. Ltd. The Country Wine Cellars, Twyford Centre London Road, Bishops Stortford, Herts CM23 3YT Tel: (0279) 506512 Fax: (0279) 657462 Price No. White...
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CHESS
The SpectatorWinter of the patriarch Raymond Keene I must not let the year slip away without celebrating the 80th birthday (which was in fact 17 August) of the great patriarch of Soviet...
COMPETITION
The SpectatorRF,G Az 12 YEAR OLD SCOTCH WHISKY l v,VAS RE 12 YEAR OLD SCOTCH WHISKY Was he there? Jaspistos I n Competition No. 1697, having been reminded that there may exist...
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CROSSWORD
The SpectatorA first prize of £20 and two further prizes of £10 (or, for UK solvers, a copy of Chambers English Dictionary — ring the word `Dictionary') for the first three correct solutions...
Solution to 1027: Popinjay
The Spectator'HIE J alhilo'a V A 1:1 DEW T'A 0 0 CILIElniledgill,,,.0 , EAHAAREUROP 3 R,A121211XIIII'D 1313E1 AVB E RIIIMM 'AID•J E . 2 b Elli3EI D CIEEMO R REP .F1313 II Da...
No. 1700: Utterly astonishing
The SpectatorSome people thought the choice of Julie Burchill as last week's Spectator Diarist slightly surprising. You are asked to im- agine that our editor has invited an utterly...
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SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorBoycott heroes Frank Keating AS WALES were being pulverised by the breathtaking tackles of the Western Samoans at Cardiff Arms Park on Sunday, the wincing eyes of the mournful...
YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
The SpectatorQ. Following our barbecue my wife and I received thank you notes from almost every one of our guests. The consequence is that if we are invited back by any of our friends we...