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DIARY
The SpectatorCHARLES MOORE I n his reaction to the Budget, Mr Kin- nock displayed a real hatred for the rich (of whom, in the tax definition, he is one). What is the reason for this feeling?...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorConstraints of an empire on which the Sun never sets AUBERON WAUGH A curious incident which occurred at Barrow-in-Furness was reported in some of the newspapers on Sunday. On...
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THE BUDGET
The SpectatorTEASING SOME OF THE PEOPLE... Noel Malcolm on how the Chancellor's delivery enraged the Opposition OH that Mr Lawson, he does like having his little jokes. I don't mean the...
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THE BUDGET
The SpectatorTHE HOLE IN THE HEART Jock Bruce-Gardyne detects Mr Lawson's abandonment of money management A FEW weeks ago in these columns I alluded to the plight of the distinguished...
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THE BUDGET
The SpectatorMAKING TAXES COMPULSORY Christopher Fildes regrets the continued survival of the biggest perk of all NIGEL Lawson's cleverest trick of all was his first, five years ago. He...
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THE GREENING OF THE REDS
The SpectatorBohdan Nahaylo reports the popular anger against the nuclear power programme of the Soviet Union LONG before the Armenians poured out on to the streets of Yerevan demanding...
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WHEN CLUBS ARE TRUMPS
The SpectatorCharles Glass wonders how the Jewish conscience can cope with the violent use of power UNUSUALLY for a rebellion in which at least 80 unarmed civilians have been killed by...
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THE IDYLLIC LABOUR CAMP
The SpectatorRichard West finds that those who praise communist Vietnam hate prosperous Thailand Bangkok A FEW weeks ago, in northern Thailand, gunmen opened fire on some tourists making a...
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One hundred years ago
The SpectatorON Wednesday, a very curious scene took place in the House of Commons, Mr Bradlaugh — who was so lately kept out of the House at the sacrifice of weeks of valuable Parliamentary...
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PRINCESSES IN PRISON
The SpectatorChristopher Howse on the relatives of Haile Selassie who have been shut in a room for 14 years IN 1950 Sybil Desta was a sporty Bet- jemanesque girl who liked tennis and...
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A LEVEL BEST
The SpectatorMichael Trend sees a threat to the standards of sixth form education MUCH has been said in recent weeks about the new GCSE examination — the replacement for 0 levels and CSEs;...
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SQUATTERS' WRONGS
The SpectatorPolice evicted hundreds of squatters in Hackney last week. Phillip Swarbrick tells his own story FOR anarchists, squatting is part of their ideology. To young Sloane Rangers...
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MAXWELL WRIT LARGE
The SpectatorThe press: Paul Johnson takes a cool look at Cap'n Bob's apotheosis ROBERT Maxwell must be feeling pleased with himself this week. He has done rather well with his flurry of...
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Sir: If Rae Mitchell of Magdalene College is trying to
The Spectatorquote Plautus, is not the better reading, 'Dictum sapienti sat est'? Tom Castro 82 Adelaide Grove, London W12
Damaging admissions
The SpectatorSir: Mr Mitchell's response (Letters, 12 March) to your leader on the Cambridge admissions system is worrying. He says that 'A levels are the key element in admission' and...
LETTERS A political right
The SpectatorSir: I welcome many of Noel Malcolm's comments (Politics, 27 February) about the dangers of a return to devolution in Northern Ireland. The Anglo-Irish Agree- ment suggests the...
Related?
The SpectatorSir: I enjoyed Enoch Powell's review of my new book (12 March) but I was mystified by your decision to accompany the review by a portrait of the present Taoiseach. I can assure...
Breakages Ltd
The SpectatorSir: Whether or not presenting a film on the civil service, even after 18 months' secondment to the Department of Energy, is the best way of learning about the perils of public...
Bishop Blomfield
The SpectatorSir: I have lent, and therefore lost, the recent Spectator article on the Synod and its compromise, so cannot refer with accuracy, but I learnt of the Gay HQ in St Botolph's,...
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Nostalgia for another Germany
The SpectatorTimothy Garton Ash NOSTALGIA is not a quality you would naturally associate with East Germany. But watching last month's brief television flashes from Dresden and East Berlin,...
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SPECIAFOR
The SpectatorHow to save yourself 51 trips to the library . . . or almost £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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GERMAN SPECIAL Bavaria
The SpectatorParadise by way of wurst and beer Piers Paul Read T o most Englishmen Bavaria is a pic- turesque province of Germany where jovial peasants wearing lederhosen yodel, eat saus-...
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Bonn
The SpectatorBuilding on shallow foundations Julian Bullard I n 1963, when I first set eyes on it and on him, Bonn was what John le Cane later called it: a small town. .A single bridge...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorHow fast is the USA sinking? Ferdinand Mount THE RISE AND FALL OF THE GREAT POWERS by Paul Kennedy Unwin Hyman, £18.95 H istories of civilisation come in one size — large —...
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Last Page
The SpectatorIf it's true the miracle of life's sustained solely by God's attention, then something has distracted Him from me. My sins, perhaps? The kindly man who came and left hell's...
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Plunging to new depths in the Valley
The SpectatorByron Rogers LOVELY ME by Barbara Seaman Sidgwick & Jackson, £13.95 T he critic Gloria Steinem had to fight her literary editor to get the review into the paper. He thought...
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The father of modern sculpture
The SpectatorBenedict Read RODIN: A BIOGRAPHY by Frederic V. Grunfeld Hutchinson, £30 I n 1902 a ceremonial dinner was held at the Café Royal in honour of the French sculptor Auguste...
A Wish for St Patrick's Day
The SpectatorHoly Patrick we need snakecharmers now, The snakes have crawled back again. Exorcise the demons of intransigence, Send your green fire into the frozen branch. Robert Greacen
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Pantaloon in Holborn Circus
The SpectatorAlan Watkins MAXWELL: A PORTRAIT OF POWER • by Peter Thompson and Anthony Delano Bantam, £2.95 MAXWELL THE OUTSIDER by Tom Bower Aurum, £12.95 MAXWELL by Joe Haines...
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The folk that live on the Hill
The SpectatorAnthony Howard MAN OF THE HOUSE by Thomas P. O'Neill with William Novak Bodley Head, £15 T here are some politicians — Rab Butler was one, Willie Whitelaw is another — whose...
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ARTS
The SpectatorExhibitions 1 Schrecken und Hoffnung: Peace and War as Seen by Artists (Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, till 28 April; Hermitage, Leningrad, 20 May-29 June) Artists of a shared...
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Cinema
The SpectatorBabette's Feast (`U', Lumiere St Martin's Lane) Barfly (`18', Odeon Haymarket) Not by bread alone Hilary Mantel W hen Karen Blixen no longer had a farm in Africa and had...
Theatre
The SpectatorHapgood (Aldwych) A Touch of the Poet (Comedy) Trick of the light Christopher Edwards T om Stoppard's new play shows him at the top of his ingenious form. With cun- ning (or...
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Pop music
The SpectatorTime to drop the bop Marcus Berkmann I have never been a great fan of dereg- ulating broadcasting — the forthcoming cable and satellite 'explosion' seems likely to supply...
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Exhibitions 2
The SpectatorGerhard Richter (Anthony d'Offay, till 16 April) Germans abroad Giles Auty H ans Hofmann was born in Bavaria in 1880 but moved permanently to New York in 1937. Many see him...
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Television
The SpectatorFunny women Wendy Cope F rench and Saunders (BBC 2) was one of the comedy programmes I intended to review last week but the tape went missing until after my deadline. Once I...
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Low life
The SpectatorParadise with snakes Jeffrey Bernard T h Bangkok is is an extremely attractive oven. At lunchtime yesterday the mercury touched 90°F. I have now thawed out and heat has to be...
High life
The SpectatorSlippery slopes Taki Gstaad I thought the best epitaph to all that very sad Klosters business was Adam Shaw's contribution entitled 'You can die for breaking the laws of the...
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Home life
The Spectatorwhy, oh why? Alice Thomas Ellis M ysteries, mysteries. Why, wonders the fifth son, does walloping a bottle on the edge of the table enable one to remove its lid, and why does...
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CROSSWORD 850: Swivel-guns by Mass
The SpectatorA first prize of £20 and two further prizes of £10 (or, for UK solvers, a copy of Chambers Dictionary, value £13.95 — ring the words 'Chambers Dictionary' above) for the first...
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Competition entries
The SpectatorTo 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...
CHESS
The SpectatorDutch treat Raymond Keene T he Euwe Memorial in progress in Amsterdam is a key test for Nigel Short. Apart from the dangerous Yugoslav Grandmaster, Ljubomir Ljubojevic, Bri-...
COMPETITION
The SpectatorDon't!'? J aspistos I N Competition No. 1514 you were invited to write a poem offering advice to a person about to marry. More people do than don't, and yet the advice was...
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For bette or wurst
The SpectatorI AM not really into Hun food. I don't think they really have a cuisine, what they have is a lot of good produce and 1,500 types of sausage which they eat for break- fast, lunch...
No. 1517: Alphabet allegro
The Spectatorwas an Ibis, asleep on the Nile./ J was a Joke which made nobody smile,' are two lines from a jolly alphabet poem by Maurice Baring. Sixteen lines of your own poem, please,...
Solution to 847: Seedy
The SpectatorS7T_y_RGEN T 29 37 PUAIHRAM , LIIIR 141133UMENIEIOS-ELED U GI NIP D E 0 Al Ul TI NI LADL S ELT' . A. T R I 0 T PURDISPRISONE D A U A R N E pl. EH OLE/ E Thematic answers, each...