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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT he IRA launched a mortar attack on 10 Downing Street from a van parked in Horseguards Avenue. One bomb exploded in the garden behind No 10, and the War Cabinet adjourned to...
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SPECTAT THE OR
The Spectator56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL Telephone: 071-405 1706; Telex: 27124; Fax: 071-242 0603 WHO MADE THEM HOMELESS? T he cold weather and heavy snow of the last week has...
THE SPECIATOR
The SpectatorSUBSCRIBE TODAY — Save 18% on the Cover Price! RATES 12 Months 6 Months UK 0 £66.00 0 £33.00 Europe (airmail) 0 £77.00 0 £38.50 USA Airspeed 0 US $99 0 $49.50 Rest of Airmail...
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DIARY
The SpectatorCRAIG BROWN W e had to cancel our son Silas's christening last Saturday because we were stuck in the snow in Essex and the church was in Sussex. I am a Catholic, and Catholics...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorTime to get the stinker Murdoch out of here AUBERON WAUGH The picture was captioned: 'Hot lips . . . painted-up Viscount Linley with two of the transvestite guests at his...
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MARGARET THATCHER: THE SILENT YEARS
The SpectatorNoel Malcolm discusses Mrs Thatcher's plans, and those which others have for her THERE can be few more frustrated hu- man beings on the face of the planet than the one who now...
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NO NEED TO RETALIATE
The SpectatorJames Buchan on how the allies are doing the Israelis' work for them Jerusalem FOR such a crude individual, Mr Yitzhak Shamir, the Prime Minister of Israel, is astonishingly...
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One hundred years ago
The SpectatorThe police believe that the Whitechapel murders attributed to 'Jack the Ripper' have commenced again, after a cessa- tion of seventeen months, the last or seventh, having...
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ANOTHER SHOT IN THE FOOT
The SpectatorWilliam Deedes regrets that war reporting can no longer be left to editorial discretion THESE have not been heroic days for war correspondents. In marked contrast to some...
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EX-PARTY PRIVATEERS
The SpectatorStephen Handelman on the old apparatchiks who want to corner the new Soviet market Moscow HE LOOKED vaguely important in his tailored Western suit. Pudgy, self- confident and...
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THE CHEQUE IS IN THE POST
The SpectatorJonathan Rauch explains how the Americans work out what the war will cost NO ONE in Washington can remember anything like the eeriness of this war. It is not what war is...
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LORD SALISBURY'S BLACK MAN
The SpectatorGeorge Chowdharay-Best on an ethnic innovator in Parliament CONTROVERSY over the selection of Mr John Taylor for the safe Conservative seat of Cheltenham recalls the somewhat...
SPECFAT TEIE OR
The SpectatorHow to save yourself 51 trips to the library ... or over £30 on The Spectator If you're forced to share The Spectator with fellow students, then you'll know how difficult it...
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If symptoms persist .
The SpectatorI sometimes wonder whether judges, in sentencing criminals to terms of impris- onment, arrive at their decisions by throwing dice. In my last prison clinic, for example, I...
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KINDLY LEAVE THE PULPIT
The Spectatorthe public should pay back political clerics and actors in their own coin THE PUBLIC is influenced not merely by the professional media but by self- proclaimed high-minded...
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Polly's folly • • EVERYTHING must go from 42 Berkeley
The SpectatorSquare, where Polly Peck set up its head office, regardless of cost or taste. The house is crammed from cellar to roof with lavish purchases — giltwood torcheres in the...
Fasten seat-belts
The SpectatorThe classic victims of financial recession are airlines. Their assets are their routes and their aircraft — but the routes, as TWA is finding, may not be theirs to sell, and if...
Regular folk
The SpectatorTHE reason why most folk-songs are so terrible is, as Tom Lehrer said, that they are written by the people. That goes for self regulation too. Fimbra, which is sup- posed to...
. . . Odd lots
The SpectatorPOLLY assets held out of this sale include a small fleet of BMW cars. These were provided for the use of 14 ladies who seem to have been consultants. The cars have been called...
Tim, Alan and Co
The SpectatorI MUST take care to exclude Tim Cong- don, Sir Alan Walters and Co from the parrot-house. They liked the idea of the ERM no better than I did (as readers may be patient enough...
CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorAnother idea from those wonderful parrots who gave you the ERM CHRISTOPHER FILDES H ere at last comes the interest-rate cuts — but not the devaluation. The last time we...
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Mr Heath's road from Suez
The SpectatorSir: When Edward Heath denounces the allied commitment to the liberation of Kuwait as 'the new imperialism' does he stop to think what he was up to in 1956? As a government whip...
Sir: In Amanda Craig's description of induced abortion (Poor woman,
The Spectatorpoor potential human', 5 January) and most of the subsequent correspondence, it is im- plied that the procedure can be not only bloody and horrifying to the layman or woman but...
Regimental colour
The SpectatorSir: When one of the few pleasures of active service in the desert is receiving The Spectator, you will appreciate that such pleasures are considerably enhanced by reading...
Sir: A Mr Vines's criticism of my book Loopy has
The Spectatorcaused great discontent, and I am told that of the many letters I have received, some have been sent to you. Personally I was delighted that my ran- dom ramblings should be...
LETTERS
The SpectatorOfficial denial Sir: I must express surprise over the article ('Unconditional Surrender II, 9 February) written by Mr Murray Sayle. The article as a whole contains thoughtful...
Not for the squeamish
The SpectatorSir: I write in some relief after reading Elaine Rankin's letter (2 February) follow- ing the anti-abortionists' reaction towards Amanda Craig's account of some abortion...
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Nursery need
The SpectatorSir: Alexandra Artley is quite right to ask publicly (Letters, 9 February) of the Governors of the Thomas Coram Founda- tion precisely the question that the parents and staff at...
Where freedom reigns
The SpectatorSir: I agree with all of what Charles Moore had to say in his Glaspie Syndrome article (Another voice, 26 January), except for his assertion that the Americans are 'freer than...
Thanks for the library
The SpectatorSir: In view of the fact that you published Mr Menhinick's letter on 2 February, I hope that you would also be prepared to publish mine. The gift of books to Thomas Peacocke...
Sir: We write as parents of a child attend- ing
The Spectatorthe Thomas Coram Children's Centre, in response to Alexandra Artley's letter. Our three-year-old son who has hydro- cephalus has certainly benefited from his eight-month...
Sir: I was interested to read the criticisms of Amanda
The SpectatorCraig's article from Mr David Paintin (Letters, 19 January). Perhaps what Mr Paintin wanted was a kind of advertisement for the services of the abor- tionist, yet instead the...
Essential reading
The SpectatorSir: 'Product placement' is, of course, a mainstay of the Hollywood economy nowadays, but nobody has yet remarked that newspapers appear to be following its lead. Two of this...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorA paradox wrapped in an enigma Caroline Moore SAMUEL BUTLER by Peter Raby I n 1860 a group of pioneers landed in New Zealand and marked the occasion by making a bonfire of...
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Lord Haw-Haw meets King Arthur
The SpectatorFrancis King THE KING T he best way to convey both the matter and the manner of this posthumously published novella is by a quotation. Lance- lot is speaking to someone not...
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Can thy soul know change?
The SpectatorPiers Paul Read MODERN CATHOLICISM: VATICAN II AND AFTER edited by Adrian Hastings £20, SPCK, pp. 496 I t is now 25 years since the close of the Second Vatican Council, called...
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You worse than senseless things
The SpectatorPeter Levi WRITER'S BLOCK by Zachary Leader Johns Hopkins University Press, £19.50, pp. 272 titer's Block has been familiar as a W phrase since the Fifties and, I think,...
Two Galleries
The SpectatorStrolling these stuccoed chambers walled with dreams What is it that you like? You come and go With news of Rubens and Correggio And Jove's outrageous rapes, Ovidian themes Of...
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Ruddy marvellous, Ruddy awful
The SpectatorJuliet Townsend THE LETTERS OF RUDYARD KIPLING VOLUME I: 1872-89; VOLUME II: 1890-99 edited by Thomas Pinney Macmillan Press, £45 per volume or both for £80, pp. 800, pp. 700...
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The wickedness of Papa and Baby
The SpectatorAnthony Daniels HAITI: THE DUVALIERS AND THEIR LEGACY by Elizabeth Abbott Robert Hale, £17.95, pp. 432 H aiti exerts a fascination out of all proportion to its size and...
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Exaggerations rather than fantasies
The SpectatorIsabel Colegate THE STORIES OF EVA LUNA by Isabel Allende Hamish Hamilton, £13.99, pp. 250 I sabel Allende's most recent novel — her third — was Eva Luna, which estab- lished...
Mrs Spector at the feast
The SpectatorWilliam Mount BE MY BABY by Ronnie Spector with Vince Waldron Macmillan, £14.99, pp. 338 R onnie Spector is famous for two things: her brief career as raunchy lead in the...
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Cocktails and laughter, but what came after?
The SpectatorPhilip Glazebrook SHANGHAI by Harriet Sergeant Cape, £16.99, pp. 384 I n 1832 an agent of the East India Company, Hugh Lindsay, was searching the China coast for a site upon...
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ARTS
The SpectatorArt This blinkered isle Andrew Solomon on the xenophobia of the British art establishment M rs Thatcher, taken to an interna- tional art exhibition last year, asked, in a...
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Exhibitions
The SpectatorThe Passionate Eye: Impressionist and other Master Paintings from the E. G. Biihrle Collection (Royal Academy, till 9 April) Art and artillery Giles Auty W riting about major...
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Music
The SpectatorHonouring the rooster Peter Phillips A composer we are almost certainly going to hear nothing about this year, unless we happen to be resident in Yugos- lavia and probably not...
Cinema
The SpectatorMiller's Crossing ('18', Canon Haymarket; Gate) Big, black, classy joke Galli - tele Annan M iller's Crossing is a big, sinister, gangster movie, with terrific aplomb, stun-...
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Dance
The SpectatorThe Royal Ballet (Covent Garden) Not very Chekhovian Deirdre McMahon F amily tensions and sibling rivalries have been the subject of a number of Kenneth MacMillan's ballets,...
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SPECTATORS FOR RUMANIA, POLAND AND EASTERN EUROPE
The SpectatorDominic Lawson writes: Two years ago we appealed to our readers to buy half-price subscriptions to The Specta- tor which we undertook to send to people in Poland. The scheme was...
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Gardens
The SpectatorTommy this and Tommy that Ursula Buchan I t is hard to know quite why the word 'amateur' should so often be used pejora- tively. After all, the beauty of being an amateur is...
Television
The SpectatorRed romps Martyn Harris C ompassion may have returned to the Tory Party but the arrogance, savagery and vanity of Alan B'Stard MP show no sign of flagging. In the last episode...
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High life
The SpectatorSavage customs Taki A if flying Olympic Airways from Athens wasn't bad enough, on this trip I had to endure the added burden of a Customs and Excise bully who did every- thing...
New life
The SpectatorOf dogs and babies Zenga Longmore r ay excuse me if I sound somewhat like 'Jennifer's Diary' this week, but an occa- sion such as Charles Moore's housewarm- ing party simply...
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AN UNAPPRECIATIVE sneer has taken over as the dominant critical
The Spectatormode of recent years: the barbed notice, the snide interview, gleeful disappointment and smugly dissatisfied condescension have column-inched their way into fashionable...
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SPECTATOR WINE CLUB
The SpectatorWise and foolish virgins Auberon Waugh I n a recession, the foolish virgins buy cheaper wine than usual and cause them- selves endless pain and misery. Once you have grown...
ORDER FORM SPECTATOR WINE CLUB do Sarah Wykes, Majestic Wine
The SpectatorWarehouses, 421 New Kings Road, London SW6 4RN. Tel: (071) 731 3131 Fax: (071) 736 1113 Price No. Value White 1. Highgate Sauvignon 1989 2. Brown Bros Dry Muscat 1988 3,...
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Valentine
The SpectatorJaspistos CalVAS REGatt SCOTCH WHISKY i n Competition No. 1663 you were asked for a heartfelt Valentine. There are two Saint Valentines, both very faint historical figures...
CHESS
The SpectatorCut Short Raymond Keene N igel Short has curtailed Jon Speel- man's career in the Candidates tournament for the world championship by winning their qualifying match at...
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No. 1666: Good poem
The SpectatorThis is a dead straight competition. I simply want an original, unpublished poem (maximum 16 lines) entitled 'Snow'. This week the top winner will get £50 (I reckon a good poem...
Solution to 993: Review board aL 0 E A a
The Spectatordon anartaruarolia nanonmE alCIEL onimpack A P sn K I. AiaDo, normitha A In chin tin den 0 ill lanari rpm El 'LIMPER aria NAN 13 G C H nail 0 Nana u ci km A . 1ffl A T...
CROSSWORD
The Spectator996: Down under 37 by Doc 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') for the...
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SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorIrrational anthems Frank Keating THE Band of the Royal Marines, on duty at Twickenham's rugger international this Saturday, have been practising a brand new national anthem....