13 MAY 1989

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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK

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0 n the day of the Prime Minister's tenth anniversary in power Mr John Smith captured, in a by-election, the Vale of Glamorgan for Labour from the Conserva- tives with a 12 per...

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SPECTATOR

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The Spectator, 56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL Telephone 01-405 1706; Telex 27124; Fax 242 0603 BREAKING EASTERN PROMISE T he British Goverment's pusillanimous and...

THE SPECTATOR

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SUBSCRIBE TODAY - Save 15% on the Cover Price! RATES 12 Months 6 Months UK 0 £55.00 0 £27.50 Europe (airmail) 0 f66.00 0 £33.00 USA Airspeed CI US $99 1=1 US$50 Rest of Airmail...

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POLITICS

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And now for something not completely different NOEL MALCOLM I t would be churlish not to salute the extraordinary nature of Labour's by- election victory at the Vale of...

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DIARY DES WILSON

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I have always rather liked David Owen. For all his self-evident faults, working with him, at least on the 1987 General Election campaign, could be challenging and re- warding;...

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POLAND: THE FIRST CAMPAIGN

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Next month, Poles will have real votes for the first time since the war. Timothy Garton Ash follows the election trail Warsaw POLAND has taken a high dive into deep water,...

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One hundred years ago

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A TELEGRAM from Vienna of May 6th announces that the Czar intends to have himself crowned as King of Po- land, and that the laws, or rather, administrative ukases, now pressing...

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THE FOURTH ZERO

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No US missiles, no US troops? Ambrose Evans - Pritchard reports on the new problem with Germany Washington DOES anybody still believe that the West German government can be...

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MY QUERENCIA IN LEBANON

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Charles Glass returns to the country where he had been held hostage Zgharta, Lebanon SOME bulls seek out a place in the ring, where, despite successive woundings by...

A DICTIONARY OF CANT

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PEOPLE, as in, 'Accountancy is peo- ple.' In fact, accountancy is not people, it is arithmetic. All sorts of careers insist that they 'are people', implying that there is human...

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THE SUITS

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Michael Heath

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ONE PARTY: NO SPARE PARTS

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Peter Kemp finds Zimbabwe's prosperity stifled by bureaucracy and threatened by scandal Harare AT FIRST sight it may seem absurd to find parallels between Mrs Thatcher and...

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AUDIT OF BARNETT

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real reasons for British disdain of technology CORELLI Barnett has emerged as the universities' fiercest critic. His view, first expressed in Audit of War (Macmillan, 1986) and...

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BELLY DANCING AT LUNCHTIME

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Nigel Cousins tries to understand the feelings of his Muslim pupils THE record player was turned up full, swelling the music till the large room was filled with strange yet...

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THE LITTER CRISIS OF 1991

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from 1995 on the campaign that proved litter kills IT WOULD be fair to say that litter was not central to public affairs in the late 1 980s. In 1989, nobody foresaw the Euro-...

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THE OBSERVER'S HONOUR

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predicament of Britain's oldest Sunday THE troubles of the Observer arising out of its ownership by Tiny Rowland's con- troversial firm Lonrho do not lessen as time passes. It...

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Come off it, CBI

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WHAT gets into the Confederation of British Industry? I know it is a trade union, but does it have to proceed at the pace of the slowest and the thickest skinned? There are...

The Florentine touch

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THE billboards of Florence carry the Christian Democrats' posters urging the voters to move Italy into the middle of Europe. Personally, I much prefer it where it is. I felt no...

• • . but spares the boards THE reformers offer

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a merger policy with the burden of proof shifted to the bidder, to show that what he proposes is in the Public interest. Picture the long, long trail a - winding through the...

CITY AND SUBURBAN

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Labour takes the pooper-scooper to its economic policy . . . CHRISTOPHER FILDES C ats still elude the reformers of the Labour party, but dogs are caught. Labour has adopted a...

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Rumanian thorns

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Sir: For Professor Roy MacGregor-Hast ie (Letters, 29 April) to assert that living standards in Bucharest in 1968 were higher than they were in London suggests that the aspects...

Officious prodnose

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Sir: Mr Lodge (Letters, 25 March) ques- tions my standing to intervene over the clauses concerning water quality and en- forcement in the Water Bill. In strict legal terms the...

Apostrophe

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Sir: Mr Auberon Waugh (Another voice, 29 April) wonders if the Queen wishes to celebrate, in Russia, the 70th anniversary of 'her cousin's murder'. Hasn't he got that apostrophe...

Sir: I am surprised that more people have not written

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to you on the proposed reform of the legal profession. I am closely associ- ated with a man who was charged with the murder of his wife less than 20 years ago. The first...

LETTERS Low-down lawyers

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Sir: Whilst Auberon Waugh may or may not be justified in referring to Lord Hail- sham's time on the Woolsack as 'the Brezhnev years' (Another voice, 22 April), I believe Noel...

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No invention

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Sir: In your most generous profile (6 May), you quoted me as claiming to have in - vented stories for Private Eye. Not SO. There may have been errors of fact, misquotations and...

Mysterious

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Sir: Auberon Waugh (Another voice, 29 April) ridicules someone who explained to him 'how glasnost and perestroika wer e cunning ploys, hiding a new determinati on on the part of...

Crowd concern

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Sir: Lord Justice Taylor's commission of inquiry into events at Hillsborough is not a hysterical response to a transient drama, as as Auberon Waugh suggest (Another voice, 6...

Abuse

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Sir: In your Christmas edition you pub- lished Nigel Burke's dictionary of weasel words: 'ABUSE.... "He abused his right to remain silent by remaining silent throughout his...

Rank error

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Sir: Roderick Sale (Letters, 25 February) is incorrect to state that rank is granted by the Ministry of Defence — it is the prerogative of HM the Queen to grant military rank,...

Polish reading

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Sir: It is with some delay that I came to know how it happened that I am getting The Spectator every week. I read your letter from 12 January and accompanying discussion with...

Act of a madman

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Sir: The Spectator's memory is playing tricks. You say (Leader, 6 May) that Mr Hogg and I failed after Hungerford to make the point that you could not legislate against the...

Brief encounter

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Sir: It is a historian's business to correct mistakes for the record (Letters, 6 May). My last encounter with Graham Greene was not 60 years ago, but perhaps 30. A brief...

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It u

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N SPECIAL The night our house burnt down Murray Sayle Aikawa, near Tokyo THE night of 19 December last was cold and starry. Our house stood in a clearing in a pine forest...

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JAPANESE SPECIAL

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Investment in Europe Breaching the trade barriers Roland Gribben s Britain a Trojan horse for Japanese invaders? Or are these samurai going to invigorate our industry? The...

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JAPANESE SPECIAL

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Bringing up children Holding on to mama-san's apron strings Ian Buruma M y daughter is half Japanese. That is to say, her mother, my wife, is Japanese. Not that our daughter...

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BOOKS T he Sultan of Brunei is particularly fond of taking

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jacuzzis. In his fine house in Osterley the jacuzzi is set in a semi-circle of darkened glass so that he can stare out into his garden without being stared at himself. The...

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Witness for the prosecution

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Gilbert Adair MY LIFE by Marlene Dietrich Weidenfeld & Nicolson, £14.95, pp.243 A few years ago the Austrian actor- director Maximilian Schell planned a documentary feature...

They Shall Not Grow Old

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Logic, grammar, each grey vocable Broke into pieces when the telegram Fell from her faint fingers, dainty bomb Exploding on the carpet like a bubble. No punctuation, though...

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Even a whiff of genius

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J. G. Links FELIX MENDELSSOHN: A LIFE IN LETTERS edited by Rudolph Elvers, translated by Craig Tomlinson Cassell, £14.95, pp.334 hat sort of man was Mendelssohn? His...

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Happy child father to a happy man

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Anita Brookner SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS: A MEMOIR by John Updike Deutsch, £12.95, pp.245 OUT ON THE MARSH by David Updike Constable, £10.95, pp.168 T enderness of memory is what...

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Reductio

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But once out of earshot — it's odd - out of earshot and printshot and screenshot - how implicitly one believes every second depends now on a permutation of cloud or the blowdown...

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The missionary position

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Anthony Blond THE CLUB: THE JEWS OF MODERN BRITAIN by Stephen Brook Constable, f15.95, pp.464 I have some respect for those who have returned to orthodoxy. (George Steiner)...

A Japanese Fable

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O nce upon a time there were three young crows perched side by side on a dead branch of a tall red-ivied tree which stood by itself in the middle of a dirty field. They were...

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Appointment

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in New Hampshire Philip Glazebrook A PRAYER FOR OWEN MEANY by John Irving Bloomsbury, £12.95, pp.543 I f the argument of this weighty but never ponderous novel was to be...

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ARTS

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I f you could implement a single, simple step aimed at improving overall standards of thought and execution in contemporary art, what would you recommend? My own modest...

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Theatre

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A Madhouse in Goa (Lyric, Hammersmith) Shouted down Christopher Edwards two distinctly separate parts. Each has a voice to match its contents. The first, Where the action is...

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M u s i c

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Maggie and the musicians Peter Phillips T he tenth birthday celebrations of the reign of Margaret Thatcher have brought into focus in recent days the endless political sniping...

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Cinema

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Mississippi Burning (`18', Odeon Haymarket) Betrayed (`18', selected cinemas) Race for the box office Hilary Mantel W elcome to Mississippi — the Mag- nolia State.' The...

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Pop music

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Before they get rich Marcus Berkmann A ll successful bands, sooner or later, find themselves accused of 'selling out'. Such an attitude presumes that pop music is an art form,...

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High life

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Count me in Taki I chi, ni, san, chi . . . ichi, ni, san, chi. . . . I hear it in my sleep and, come to think of it, throughout the day too. In Japanese it means one, two,...

Television

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Back to the keyboard Wendy Cope T here's another kind of screen in my life now, belonging to a new toy that I have christened Strad. Strad has a mind of his own, so I am...

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Low life

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Curtain call Jeffrey Bernard T o Newmarket last week for the 2,000 Guineas and lunch with Charles St George at Sefton Lodge. It would have been a perfect day but for the awful...

Home life

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Dog's dinner Alice Thomas Ellis I never used to have very strong views about dogs in the dining-room. I know cats who sleep on the dining-table. You sweep them off before...

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1111111111111Illimlowum

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WHEN Bruce Oldfield was on the Whit- bread Prize committee the year before last, he warmly commended Kazuo Ishiguro's Artist of the Floating World. It was an odd sort of...

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Competition entries

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To enable competitors to economise on postage, entries for one or more weeks of the competition and crossword may be posted together under one cover addressed 'Competition...

COMPETITION

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A sideways look Jaspistos I n Competition No. 1573 you were asked for an extract from a humorous essay by Wallace Arnold entitled 'A Sideways Look at the Fairer Sex'....

CHESS

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A mongst chess-playing Members of Parliament, past and present, the strongest was Marmaduke Wyvill. In 1847 he was elected MP for Richmond, Yorkshire, a seat he held until 1868,...

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No. 1576: Solar gas

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You are invited to write a Sun leader (approximately 150 words) commenting on one of three imaginary future events: the voluntary resignation of the Monarchy; the abolition of...

CROSSWORD

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A first prize of £20 and two further prizes of £10 (or, for UK solvers, a copy of Chambers English Dictionary — ring the word `Dictionary' above) for the first three correct...

Solution to 905: Changing places r.'• • • • • or

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I N T I F ! A j S A RNOUS q uib c A REDIT15N1 T C H V H I AEI N E WE a E D A L A r - 11A _tr 2(/ E r. N E . N Tri vi ° E R TrtL I JEDUNDEE • GI VI 811 N U L E AI 0L 's e...