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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorI n his Budget, Mr Norman Lamont intro- duced a new lower rate tax band of 20p on the first £2,000 of income. Mr Kinnock promised to vote against the total package, which will...
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THE
The SpectatorSPECTATOR The Spectator, 56 Doughty Street. London WC1N 2LL Telephone: 071-405 1706; Telex 27124; Fax 071-242 0603 AN ALMOST-REAL ELECTION T wo spectres are not haunting...
TIE SPECTATOR
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DIARY KEITH WATERHOUSE
The SpectatorI t was with a wince that I read that L.S. Lowry's 'VE Day', which has gone missing from the Kelvingrove municipal art gallery in Glasgow, was valued at £150,000. I never learn...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorVote Labour if you're for the Union dead CHARLES MOORE T his election is simple for me. I believe that one should vote out of self-interest, since that is the way the system...
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A DAMNED CLOSE RUN THING
The SpectatorSimon Heifer looks forward to a general election that promises to be more significant for the politicians than for those choosing them WE HAVE, as Cardinal Newman put it,...
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PLENTY BORROWED, NOTHING NEW
The SpectatorA constrained Chancellor, an opportunist opposition, this is where Christopher Fildes came in SO IT HAS come at last — a Budget for racers. I would be churlish not to welcome...
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If symptoms
The Spectatorpersist.. . I WAS ON duty at a different prison last weekend. It was one of the Victorian panopticon monsters, whose magnificent ironwork is not much — areciated by those who...
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A PIG
The SpectatorIN MUD' Stephen Robinson interviews Pat Buchanan, and finds him wickedly charming Washington FORGET, for a moment, the ringing calls to put 'America First', the plaintive cry...
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One hundred years ago
The SpectatorMr. Henry Tate has withdrawn his gen- erous offer to give his collection of pic- tures to the public, in consequence of the failure of the Treasury to fulfil his conditions as...
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ALL WHITE ON THE NIGHT?
The SpectatorAndrew Kenny wonders how he should vote in South Africa's referendum Richards Bay ON TUESDAY, we white South Africans will be invited to answer 'yes' or `no' to this question:...
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THE END OF GEOGRAPHY
The SpectatorNoel Malcolm unravels the confusion of modern place names, and offers a solution NOW THAT 'PC' (Political Correctness) is part of the language, perhaps it's time to introduce...
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Unlettered
The SpectatorA reader received this letter from Ren- dall and Rittner Limited, residential managing agents: Dear Sirs, Unfortunately, Rendall and Rittner Limited has had a complaint that...
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A PRINCE AMONG PRIESTS
The SpectatorGiles Milton reveals that Prince Philip is returning to Orthodoxy AT THE age of 70, Prince Philip seems to be in a reflective mood. A glance at his diary for the following...
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AND ANOTHER THING
The SpectatorLexicographer, spare those minor clerics PAUL JOHNSON I n what work do these terminal sentences appear? 'He died of erysipelas in the head, contracted by attending a political...
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SHIVA NAIPAUL PRIZE
The SpectatorTHE IMPORTANCE OF BEING ENGLISH GLEB SHESTAKOV ONE GREY morning in the autumn of 19—, a red car might have been seen speeding round the sharp turns of the B45– in the county...
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LETTERS Battle of all mothers
The SpectatorSir: Clive James is the perfect export refer- ence here (`Let my people stay', 7 March). Once sent overseas, the product remains forever stable. Some miracle of technology keeps...
Between friends
The SpectatorSir: Your weekly column of 'crass, illiterate, ignorant etc.' communications from public bodies is elegantly juxtaposed by the felici- ties of gymnastic syntax emanating, almost...
Deliberate error
The SpectatorSir: One of the few constants in a changing world is the eerie capacity of the British press to Get It Wrong. What I take to be a woman journalist, Colin Welch, repeats (Books,...
Bring back ducking
The SpectatorSir: Africa has something to offer to the British debate on 'the law and order card' (Politics, 15 February). In the 1970s I was working among the Afar in Ethiopia and noticed...
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Nothing personal
The SpectatorSir: John O'Sullivan offers a left-handed (or is it right-handed?) defence of Pat Buchanan against the charge of anti- Semitism (`Some of his best friends are Jewish', 29...
Jailhouse rot
The SpectatorSir: I am writing to you to put the record straight over Wilfred De'Ath's article on Dixon House which I must say was inaccu- rate on many points and offensive on oth- ers...
A pensioner writes
The SpectatorSir: There has been so much rewriting of history by the Daily Mirror over the past few months that I thought it might be helpful if I added to the very full letter from Joe...
Sir: So William De'Ath is profoundly opposed to drugs. Well,
The SpectatorI am profoundly opposed to unrepentant thieves: especially those who have not even the excuse of a poor education. What is The Spectator com- ing to when a shameless free-loader...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorIt makes you go blind James Buchan VOX by Nicholson Baker Granta, £14.99, £7.99, pp. 169 A nybody who has travelled on public transportation in the United States will know...
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His master's voice
The SpectatorJames Walton REAL LIFE by D. J. Taylor Chatto, f14.99, pp. 265 D J. Taylor is a brave man. Three years ago, he wrote A Vain Conceit, a work of criticism whose basic premises...
Gender
The SpectatorTo live beyond the pale of sexes in a form of otherness beyond your body or the praxis of habits or of dress is given briefly, for a second, a fractioned fraction of a pulse of...
Nothing but a phonus bolonus
The SpectatorAndro Linklater DAMON RUNYON by Jimmy Breslin Hodder & Stoughton, f17.99, pp. 410 I t is hard to believe that with such a name the Rognions, citizens of 17th- century Poitou,...
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Familiar but by no means vulgar
The SpectatorJ.G. Links THE NEW PENGUIN DICTIONARY OF QUOTATIONS edited by J.M. and M.J. Cohen Viking, £17.99, pp. 726 Q uotations are of two kinds, the old and the new — the quoted and the...
Hello to Berlin
The SpectatorNigel Spivey CONVERSATIONS WITH ISAIAH BERLIN by Ramin Jahanbegloo Peter Halban, £17.95, pp. 213 H is friends have characterised Isaiah Berlin as Dr Johnson labelled Burke: the...
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Except That Their Belief in Me
The SpectatorIf Heaven had a hole in it and could accomodate my explanations to children of God, of living, of dying, of eating and of breath, of meaning and of angels, of why, then what...
Giving the customers what they want
The SpectatorJohn Whitworth SERIOUS CONCERNS by Wendy Cope Faber, £12.99, £4.99, pp.87 U niversity students are now referred to as customers, and to keep the customers satisfied, first- and...
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Sinister rather than dextrous
The SpectatorPatrick Skene Catling THE LEFT-HANDER SYNDROME: THE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF LEFT-HANDEDNESS by Stanley Coren John Murray, £16.95, pp. 308 L eft-handed men and women and...
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The lure of Paris
The SpectatorPhilip Mansel A WOMAN, A MAN AND TWO KINGDOMS by Francis Steegmuller Secker & Warburg, £17.99, pp.279 P aris in the 18th century is the hero (heroine?) of this book. It was the...
Hitch-Hiker
The SpectatorMid-forties, smart overnight bag, Collar with a touch of blood on it, Face I don't really look at. His payment is to relax at My driving, cuss the road-up cones, Reach with...
What did you
The Spectatordo in the sex war, Daddy? Anne Chisholm THE STORK CLUB by Maureen Freely Bloomsbury, £14.99, pp.311 S elf-deprecating, rueful, comic writing has been a special talent of...
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Through China's furnace
The SpectatorColin Thubron WILD SWANS: THREE DAUGHTERS OF CHINA by Jung Chang HarperCollins, £17.50, pp.524 0 f all the personal histories to have emerged out of China's 20th-century...
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To be a hedgehog
The SpectatorJohn Jolliffe U nless you are William Trevor or V.S. Pritchett, it is extremely hard to get your short stories published in Britain now that the many magazines that printed...
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ARTS
The SpectatorTheatre 1 Wonderful, darlings! N ext week a new production of Bernard Shaw's classic melodrama Heart- break House opens at the Theatre Royal, Haymarket. It is directed by the...
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Exhibitions
The SpectatorStephen Harper (England & Co., till 28 March) Michael Hoare (Sue Rankin, till 24 March) Maro Gorky (Long & Ryle, till 29 March) Let them eat paint Giles Auty A week ago I was...
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Music
The SpectatorNotes from the underground Peter Phillips I n the hierarchy of professions in music it is a moot point whether being a critic comes lower than playing in a pit orchestra. At...
Dance
The SpectatorFokine a son gout Deirdre McMahon T his year is the 50th anniversary of Mikhail Fokine's death. He was one of the most influential choreographers of this century, yet the...
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Cinema
The SpectatorThe Double Life of Veronique ('15', Curzon Mayfair) Obscure camera . Vanessa Letts T he Double Life of Veronique is the art- house film par excellence — elusive and...
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Theatre 2
The SpectatorThe Recruiting Officer (Olivier) Wit with T his is a lively revival of George Far- quhar's best-known comedy, written in 1706. Although it is often described as a Restoration...
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Gardens
The SpectatorWhat's the use of worrying? Ursula Buchan Y ears ago, when I first became a gar- dener, I worked alongside a likeable ex- docker, with a face like a disappointed punchball and...
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High life
The SpectatorQualified success Taki Gstaad There is nothing like an all-night party to set one's skiing back a decade or so. Or rather, set it ahead, because ten years ago I was skiing far...
Television
The SpectatorMorse the pity Martyn Harris I nspector Morse is a cult, which means it is impossible to argue for or against it, or ever to understand why anybody should watch it. 'But it's...
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Long life
The SpectatorRecollected ecstasy Nigel N icolson T he other day George Weidenfeld and Ed Victor gave a party at the Groucho Club for my 75th birthday and I was allowed to invite 22 other...
Low life
The SpectatorLike it or lump it Jeffrey Bernard Thursday but couldn't go because of the forthcoming operation on my head. I want- ed to see how Dennis Waterman plays the part in Jeffrey...
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Imperative cooking: how to shop, lesson 1 HAVE YOU watched
The Spectatorpeople shopping? I watched a male Youf buying a pair of enor- mous plimsolls, his face contorted in fanati- cal determination. He knew exactly which sort he wanted, interrogated...
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SPECTATOR WINE CLUB
The SpectatorSomething to sing about Auberon Waugh N ethergate Wines, of Clare, formerly Redpath and Thackray of Cambridge, have given us some spectacularly successful offers in mixed...
ORDER FORM SPECTATOR WINE CLUB
The Spectatorc/o Nethergate Wines Ltd 11/13 High Street, Clare, Suffolk C010 8NY Tel: (0787) 277244 Fax: (0787) 277123 Price No. Value White Pouilly Fume (Benhiers) 1990 12 Bots....
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CHESS
The SpectatorBlunderful life Raymond Keene T here has been some wonderful chess played in the super-strong tournament in the Spanish town of Linares, but there have also been some fearful...
12 YEAR OLD SCOTCH WHISKY
The SpectatorCOMPETITION 12 YEAR OLD SCOTCH WHISKY Bouts rimes Jaspistos I n Competition No. 1718 you were in- vited to write a poem in any metre to a given rhyme-scheme. Fingering my...
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CROSSWORD 1050: Underneath the arches by Doc
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 1047: A la carte
The SpectatorThe unclued lights are characters from the Savoy operas. 23A + 29D gives DICK DEAD-EYE. Winners: Mrs M.R. Wishart, Whit- ley Bay (£20); Alan Gilchrist, Brighton; M.C.C. Rich,...
No. 1721: Beckett's turn
The SpectatorThe next work of literature to be trans- formed into a musical may be Waiting for Godot. You are invited to provide a lyric, solo or duet (maximum 16 lines) from this surely...
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YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
The SpectatorDear Mary. Q. Please suggest a solution to a problem I personally experience at least once a week — this is of running into someone who I know I know, but being quite unable to...
SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorPenalty points Frank Keating FOR ALL cricket's pyjama games, and soc- cer's ten-men teams of mindless midfield dynamos, I fancy international rugby union has changed more...