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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The Spectator'Give it to me straight, doctor. How long have I got?' L iberal Democrats smashed the pre- vious Tory majority in a by-election in Kincardine and Deeside. Labour won Langbaurgh...
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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 OPTIONS FOR TROUBLE A t the Nato summit in Rome last week...
THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorSUBSCRIBE TODAY — RATES 12 Months 6 Months UK El £71.00 0 £35.50 Europe (airmail) 0 £82.00 n £41.00 USA Airspeed fl US$110 C1 US$55.00 Rest of Aimmil 0 £98.00 0 £49.00...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorOur leaders wait for a sign of what the led would like them to do next s MON HEFFER 0 ne of the better examples of alterna- tive comedy with which politics has lately provided...
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DIARY
The SpectatorP . D . JAMES t his has been a busy year for me with overseas trips but the most memorable was one with Malcolm Bradbury to Buenos Aires, arranged by the British Council....
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorWhy those on the right side of 50 are worried about Europe CHARLES MOORE I keep on being told, always by people older than myself, that the young are in favour of Europe. It...
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ENGLISH, OUR ENGLISH
The SpectatorTHE TROUBLE with viewers and listen- ers is that although they do not watch or listen with much care, they are absolutely certain that they have seen and heard cor- rectly. A...
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The Fuji Bank — An apology
The SpectatorIn our issue dated 26 October 199.1,. we stated that The Fuji Bank had failed in its duty to preserve savings in its trust and was the laughing stock of the world banking...
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NOT FORGETTING PEARL HARBOR
The SpectatorThe fiftieth anniversary approaches. Murray Sayle remembers to remember Tokyo AN ENEMY reconciled, says St John of the Cross, is an enemy truly vanquished. A noble thought,...
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CANINE QUALITY TIME
The SpectatorHenry Porter joins a basset-hound on a sponsored walk in Central Park New York THE OLD basset-hound in Central Park wore a little lumberjack's sheepskin hat with the earflaps...
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ANIMAL CRACKERS
The SpectatorMark Almond explores the link between fascism and zoophilia THE Greens may be languishing in British opinion polls here, but taking up the cause of the environment and...
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POWER IS NOT AUTHORITY
The SpectatorNoel Malcolm explains what sovereignty is and why it matters TELL IT it not in Vilnius, publish it not in Ljubljana, whisper it not in the streets of Kuwait City, but the idea...
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SPEC T ATOR
The SpectatorDIARY 1992 £10 Plain Ell 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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PORN BEFORE LAGER
The SpectatorDigby Anderson wonders why commercial freedom of speech is scorned by civil libertarians PATRONS of the Royal Court Upstairs theatre are hearing passages such as, 'Just relax...
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One hundred years ago
The SpectatorA CORRESPONDENT of the St. James's Gazette of Thursday says that the drinking of salt-water is a perfect cure for seasickness, though it makes the drinker very miserable for a...
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HOIST BY HIS • OWN CANARD
The SpectatorStephen. Spender argues that Salman Rushdie is a victim of the immigration he supports SALMAN RUSHDIE was sentenced to death a thousand days ago, by order of the Ayatollah...
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FROM BLEAK HOUSE TO BEDLAM
The Spectatora woman denied justice for twenty years STANDING on a seat at the side of the hall, the better to peer into the curtained sanctu- ary, is a little mad old woman in a squeezed...
If symptoms
The Spectatorpersist. . LAST week, I was consulted by a young man whose hair was done into dyed blond spikes by the application of hair gel. He wore an earring and outlandish clothes which...
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Unlettered
The SpectatorA reader received this letter: It is now six months since you bought Your Vauxhall Calibra from us. We trust that the vehicle has exceeded your expectations in every way and is...
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'LOOK, A SQUIRREL!'
The SpectatorJohn McEntee examines Lord Snowdon's shutter technique THIRTEEN years after his divorce from Princess Margaret, Lord Snowdon retains a perfectly mannered silence about...
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AND ANOTHER THING
The SpectatorOn making an exhibition of oneself PAUL JOHNSON A t the end of this month I am going to hold the first exhibition of my paintings, and I have been thinking a lot about the...
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Cruelty to stags
The SpectatorTHE CITY'S way of selling shares was designed by the City to suit itself. This unworthy suspicion of mine is reinforced by the grumbling now directed towards S. G. Warburg. In...
Papering over
The SpectatorHAWKER Siddeley is still trying to per- suade the City to reject the £1,500 million bid from BTR. Its efforts appear vain, but the flow of paper continues unstaunched. Wearying,...
Scorched earth
The SpectatorIF THERE is one more depressing sight than a Conservative Chancellor who lets public spending rip, it is his fan club telling him how clever his scorched earth policy is. By...
CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorThe Maxwell boys take charge but the banks have taken charges CHRISTOPHER FILDES Beneath this stone, in hopes of Zion, Doth lie the landlord of the Lion. His sons keep on the...
• Chase to a view
The SpectatorTHE Docklands Light Railway, whose trains have buses running behind them in case they break down, has acquired a new master. He is Sir Peter Levene, who made his name as the...
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LETTERS Trust in us
The SpectatorSir: Charles Clover's article on the National Trust (`Trust, but no confidence', 2 Novem- ber) made a further contribution to the many thousands of words written and spo- ken on...
Trust in U.S?
The SpectatorSir: John Simpson's even-handed report on the Madrid conference ('Macheath at the peace talks', 9 November) brings to mind the old Arab expectation that one day American...
Man of his word
The SpectatorSir: Because he encompassed so many self- contradictions — millionaire socialist, obsessively secretive self-publicist and so on — for every bad tale about Robert Maxwell there...
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Mea culpa
The SpectatorSir: Roy Fuller said, 'I try my best in poetry to match/Everyday's marvellous and varied prose.' Though I checked the proof myself (Life and Letters, 2 November) I permitted him...
De Cuellar 's Boswell
The SpectatorSir: John Simpson is not fair to Javier Perez de Cuellar (`The old order changeth', 12 October). He makes little or no mention of the extremes of Cold War rhetoric which...
Looking, back
The SpectatorSir: An Young Man was the title of a book written by Leslie Paul, which was pub- lished in 1951; it related specifically to Political disillusionment but the phrase was used...
Sir: As the compiler of a collection of G.K. Chesterton's
The Spectatoraphorisms, I was interested to see my friend A.N. Wilson quoting him to the effect that people who cease to believe in God believe in anything, not nothing (Books, 2 November)....
Under a hat
The SpectatorSir: The review of Robin Lane Fox's The Unauthorised Version (Books, 2 November), although purportedly from the pen of the distinguished novelist A.N. Wilson, is actu- ally the...
Head in the cold
The SpectatorSir: Mr Thornton asks (Letters, 9 Novem- ber), whether Anthony Blunt's face could really have gone lop-sided through sitting next to an open train window. Yes: the con- dition...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorI n 1976, Gore Vidal tells us in his preface, he received a telegram congratu- lating him on his election to the Institute of Art and Letters. He telegraphed back that he could...
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A perfect gentleman and a bit of a rake
The SpectatorKate Fleming THE POWER OF CHANCE by Rupert Hart-Davis Sinclair-Stevenson, £15.95, pp.188 T o those familiar with the six volumes of the Lyttelton/Hart-Davis letters, the fact...
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Time present and time past
The SpectatorClive Sinclair HIDDEN IN THE HEART by Dan Jacobson Bloomsbury, £12.99, pp.199 H idden in the Heart tells the familiar story of two men and a woman. Rodney Foxborough is a...
Reticent • to .a fault
The SpectatorAnne Chisholm MARKING TIME by Elizabeth Jane Howard Macmillan, £15.99, pp. 452 I n The Light Years, the first volume of her projected Cazalet Chronicle, a trilogy about an...
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Just a few quick ones before I go
The SpectatorRoss Clark FATES WORSE THAN DEATH by Kurt Vonnegut Cape, £14.99, pp. 239 urt Vonnegut, German-American author of Slaughterhouse-Five, the consum- mate work on the bombing of...
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Becoming a high-flyer
The SpectatorChristopher Hawtree NIGHT OVER WATER by Ken Follett Macmillan, £14.99, pp. 408 N eedless to say, a new novel by Ken Follett which features a perilous, wartime voyage by...
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A tale told by an idiot, signifying nothing
The SpectatorPeter Levi WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE: A LIFE by Garry O'Connor Hodder dt Stoughton, £19.95, pp.337 h is writer has been a director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, has written...
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Old men forget
The SpectatorRichard Ingrams THE SPECTATOR ANNUAL edited by Fiona Glass Harper Collins, £16.99, pp.246 F ew editors can have had such a sensational debut as young Dominic Lawson when he...
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SPECT THE AT OR
The SpectatorSPECIAL OFFER "Why have we had to wait 20 years for this book? Like the glorio us , festering piles of stone he draws, John Glashan is a great national monument that should be...
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Chasing his own tale
The SpectatorDavid Montrose THE LAST VOYAGE OF SOMEBODY THE SAILOR by John Barth Hodder & Stoughton, £15.99, pp. 573 A mong far too many other thing, John Barth's last (very fat) novel, The...
Rude sketches worked up for the public
The SpectatorJohn Leighton COROT IN ITALY by Peter Galassi Yale University Press, £35, pp.264 I n Oscar Wilde's An Ideal Husband Mrs Cheveley declines an invitation to view some pictures...
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Size is Not the Soul
The SpectatorSize is not the soul nor is the neutron small when eyes go beyond the gazing and gazer beyond his cell Dust is more than matter The quantum does not wither fused in a leaf or a...
Not just a domestic prop for a genius
The SpectatorBeryl Gray G.H. LEWES: A LIFE by Rosemary Ashton Clarendon Press, £25, pp. 369 o r a very long time, George Henry Lewes' reputation has centred on the fact that, for the last...
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Lizzie
The SpectatorA pumping arm, a monumental spade, A giant sexton and a sexton's lad, Black in the lemon shafts the lantern's made Thrown on the foggy night. .. The copper and The man from the...
A wronged man • need not be a good man
The SpectatorPaul Foot SMEAR! WILSON AND THE SECRET STATE by Stephen Dorril and Robin Ramsay Fourth Estate, £20, pp.390 A nyone who wants to know how the British secret service works owes a...
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It's the rich wot gets the blame
The SpectatorJonathan Clark THE LONDON HANGED: CRIME AND SOCIETY IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY by Peter Linebaugh Allen Lane, £25, pp. 484 S ince the mid 1970s, we have lived in 'a historical...
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First division material
The SpectatorJohn Whitworth S ome don once compiled a full football league of living British poets, for Poetry Review I think it was. I also think Seamus Heaney was Arsenal, as it were, and...
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Take warning by her fall
The SpectatorJ. Enoch Powell A CONSERVATIVE COUP: THE FALL OF MARGARET THATCHER by Alan Watkins Duckworth, £14.90, pp. 229 I h e revolution of 1990, which ejected Margaret Thatcher from...
God Talk
The Spectator'Can I take my toys to heaven?' Out of the mouths of babes. 'We'll see.' 'Does God have any friends — like Paul and Graham?' What has been happening at that nursery school?...
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ARTS
The Spectatorow sad it is that the season of good H Will should be prefaced by an annual occa- sion which makes good will hard to justify. Before our seasonal binge in the art world comes...
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Cinema
The SpectatorWhat About Bob (`PG', Trocadero) Seriously nutty Harriet Waugh B ob Wiley, played by putty-faced Bill Murray in What About Bob, is seriously nutty and very unhappy with it....
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Architecture
The SpectatorLe Desert de Retz: a Late 18th-century Folly Garden (RIBA Heinz Gallery, till 19 December) Follies of grandeur Alan Powers T he English landscape garden of the 18th century...
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Music
The SpectatorPeriod piece Peter Phillips 0 ne forgets how dreary the Festival Hall is. Promenaders sold on the delights of the Albert Hall, determined opera buffs, lovers of church...
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Gardens
The SpectatorSocial climbing Ursula Buchan I t may not have been the most commer - cial enterprise ever to be undertaken by Messrs Jardine and Matheson, East India merchants, nor even...
Theatre
The SpectatorKafka in Love (King's Head) Kafka on the couch Christopher Edwards T his play by the American Hal Lieber- man, directed by Ron Moody, is about the last years of Franz Kafka's...
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High life
The SpectatorMaxwell's secret vice Taki D espite the mammoth press coverage since his mysterious death, not a single item has appeared about Robert Maxwell's gambling addiction. This is...
Television
The SpectatorTea lives Martyn Harris hat would the world do without tea?' asked the Reverend Sydney Smith in 1810. 'How did it exist?' The answer of course was that it drank beer (three...
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New life
The SpectatorThe gap in our lives Zenga Longmore P iccadilly Circus is a very important tube station in the life of my two-year-old daughter. As if by magic Omalara can tell when we are...
Low life
The SpectatorBarbados bound Jeffrey Bernard O n Monday I make my fourth trip to Barbados and this morning I have been reminiscing about the last three. The first time I went there was with...
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Le Pont de la Tour
The SpectatorONCE, when the Thames served much the same function as the M4 does today, Lon- doners were proud of their river. We built our best houses alongside it and those who couldn't...
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CHESS
The SpectatorA s I predicted before the start of their match, the 21-year-old Chinese girl Xie Jun has seized the women's world cham- pionship from the Georgian Maya Chibur- danidze, who has...
WAS REGA
The Spectator12 YEAR OLD SCOTCH WHISKY COMPETITION Dirty dozen J asp istos I . a Competition No. 1702 you were in- vited to incorporate twelve given words, in any order, into a plausible...
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Solution to 1032: You need hands I SFAII 3 V n r Rae El
The Spectator' Iv 0 N AVI A 26 0 0 L F 2 E N NO T tiab Z s R . 6 A V zo LORESCEINC E E c s L N SEE I R v P I IC 111 A 'A E 1 : A T MIRITI T I S R E U R6 11 A U R —L E E S I L...
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...
No. 1705: Down Memory Lane
The SpectatorThe first Spectator Competition was set iii January 1950 by Peter Fleming, The third, set by Hilary Brett-Smith, offered £ 5 ('which may be divided') for nine lines to complete...
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SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorONE OF the reasons Sussex County Crick- et . Club has apparently scrapped its annual dinner is 'the cost involved in obtaining good speakers'. Reporting this in the Daily...
YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
The SpectatorQ. I am an antique dealer dealing with what we call in the trade important furniture. My Problem is that my social life is not my own. Whenever I go into anyone's house for...