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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorM r John Major decided to dump the Thatcherite principle that everyone should contribute to the cost of local services. Ministers hoped this would stop sugges- tions that the...
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SPECTATOR
The Spectator56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL Telephone: 071-405 1706; Telex: 27124; Fax: 071-242 0603 AGAINST FALSE PROPHETS We have to acknowledge that some of those who elevate the...
THE SPECTATOR
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...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorMr Major comes under a withering hail of friendly fire NOEL MALCOLM A man from the Sun asked rather a good question about how Labour could accuse the Government of changing...
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DIARY
The SpectatorA.N.WILSON A , the Evening Standard Literary Luncheon last Thursday, Martin Gilbert, the biographer of Sir Winston Churchill made a remarkably eloquent speech about his hero....
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorThe beauty, mystery and rightness of wild animals in captivity CHARLES MOORE D r Jo Gipps, who is the curator of mammals at London Zoo, wrote to the Independent on Monday to...
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REVENGE OF THE WIMPS
The Spectatortriumphant victors in the middle-class war — the accountants NOT long ago I was sitting in a business library in the heart of the City of London when an old voice came...
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THE KURDS' NEW BEST FRIEND
The SpectatorCharles Glass finds that Iran is the Kurds' greatest benefactor Teheran MOST of the Kurds fleeing from Iraq are not at liberty to decide whether to remain at home or to...
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'A TERRIBLE MISTAKE'
The SpectatorStephen Handelman meets survivors of foreign settlers in the Soviet Union of Stalin Karaganda WHEN Heimo Rautianen gropes for an English word, his mind races across half a...
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THE TRIBES THAT DEAL IN DEATH
The SpectatorAndrew Kenny finds an enduring indifference to the killing in South Africa Natal JUST down the road from where I live is a small photographic shop run by a mass murderer. The...
Unlettered
The SpectatorA reader received the following letter from a firm of solicitors: Dear Madam, We have been instructed by your neigh- bour in relation to serious allegations of harassment of our...
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EARS FOR SOUVENIRS
The SpectatorAnthony Daniels visits a Prince among his men Monrovia AT THE side of the road, near the turning to Field Marshal Brigadier-General Prince Johnson's encampment in the Monrovia...
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SPEAKS SCOTLAND WHERE IT SPOKE?
The Spectatorthe press, past and present, north of the Border YOU could argue the case that, per head of population, Scotland has produced more first-class journalists than any other nation...
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If symptoms
The Spectatorpersist... IF ANYONE retains his faith in the benevolence or wisdom of bureaucracies, I should like to take him to the Orchard Farm housing estate, where so many of my patients...
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Berd in hand
The SpectatorHIS search for a suitably grand head office started off with Grand Buildings, in Trafal- gar Square. There he tried and failed to gazump Enterprise Oil. He resisted the...
Vision and design
The SpectatorNATIONAL misunderstandings are at work. M. Attali might reasonably regard himself as the epitome of the French intellectual. Just as reasonably, to Anglo- Saxon minds he seems...
It's a fattipuff
The SpectatorTHESE international agencies, as I warned when the Berd came to London, divide into fattipuffs and thinnifers. The International Monetary Fund, though sometimes greedy, is a...
CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorKnock, knock! Who's there? Attali. Attali who? Attali and completely over the top CHRISTOPHER FILDES A SK Jacques Attali to lunch, and he will send his security man before...
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LETTERS
The SpectatorFlight or fright Sir: I am angered by the accusations of cowardice being directed at North Amer- icans by the British press in general, and that notorious xenophobe Auberon...
Cambodian commentary
The SpectatorSir: On 23 March The Spectator published an article (`The apotheosis of Pilgerism') by a former British ambassador, Derek Tonkin, about our documentary film `Cambodia: The...
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Taking the pizza
The SpectatorSir: Surely a journal of your reputation should not print deliberately misleading information. I am sure that I was not the only reader promoted to dial the number for 'Luke...
Renate Sunkler
The SpectatorSir: It was with particular sadness that I learnt — through Jeffrey Bernard's Low • life column (16 March). — that Renate Sunkler, who was writing a thesis about him, had died....
Arabist answer
The SpectatorSir: I am late in seeing Mr Buchan's article (Well educated heads in the sand', 30 March). He misquotes me, not grossly but enough to change the tone of what I said and enough...
Ala, alas
The SpectatorSir: Having been a close friend of Claudie and Perry Worsthorne for over 40 years I was amazed to read in illiterate Alastair Forbes's Diary (30 March) that he visited Claudie...
Sir: I know nothing of the professional relationship between editor
The Spectatorand guest Di- arist but assume that it would lie in the power of the former to excise from con- tributions of the latter, items as gratuitous- ly offensive, spiteful and...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorThe road to Stornoway Patrick Leigh Fermor LETTERS HOME edited by Lucy Butler John Murray, f17.99, pp.407 I t was only in his twenties that Robert Byron thought much about...
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The Trashti
The SpectatorEveryone called him the trashti, a name conceived somewhere between our languages. Speechless, perhaps an outcast, he would come at lucky intervals of seven days, pushing his...
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My art's in the Highlands
The SpectatorJohn McEwen SCOTTISH ART 1460-1990 by Duncan MacMillan Mainstream Publishing, f35, pp.432 THE DICTIONARY OF SCOTTISH PAINTERS 1600-1960 by Paul Harris and Julian Halsby...
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Head to come off?
The SpectatorCharles Maclean INSIDE THE FIRM by Tony Lambrianou Smith Gryphon, £14.99, pp. 224 I nterested in hearing what really hap- pened that night? The long-knives night of 28 October...
Vomiting birds of paradise
The SpectatorHugo Vickers DAVID TENNANT AND THE GARGOYLE YEARS by Michael Luke Weidenfeld & Nicolson, £20, pp.212 T he Gargoyle Club was created in the mid-Twenties, enjoyed its zenith...
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Laying down the White's man's burden
The SpectatorWilliam Green DECLINE by Tom Stacey William Heinemann, £13.99, pp.273 onsidering Tom Stacey's impressive reputation, the beginning of his latest novel should be more...
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No first degree for the first lady
The SpectatorAnthony Howard NANCY REAGAN: THE UNAUTHORISED BIOGRAPHY by Kitty Kelley Bantam Press, £16.99, pp.532 I t has never been much fun being First Lady. Eleanor Roosevelt was...
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An Encounter
The SpectatorThe two of us there, talking animatedly. He, trying to buy a way into our company? The pub bore perhaps? Grey haired, a flushed ravaged Complexion. Coat well cut; seen better...
Approaching the vanishing point
The SpectatorHilary Corke IN TWO MINDS: GUESSES AT OTHER WRITERS by C.H. Sisson Carcanet, £6.95, pp.296 ANTIDOTES by C.H. Sisson Carcanet, £6.95, pp.64 T he index of In Two Minds...
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SCOTLAND
The SpectatorBoswell in the dog-house William Cash APRIL 1791 was one of the blackest months in James Boswell's life. He was still brooding over the death of his wife, his scheme to get Dr...
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SCOTLAND
The SpectatorLiterary lacuna The novel that never was Rory Knight Bruce T here is a scene in James Hogg's 19th-century religious nightmare, Confes- sions of a Justified Sinner, when the...
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Fishing
The SpectatorLow tide for seamen Allan Massie ANEURIN Bevan once described Britain as 'an island of coal surrounded by fish'. Now the coal industry contracts and the fish are running out....
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Art
The SpectatorThe dreams of Demarco James Hamilton meets the driving force behind Edinburgh's artistic life R icky Demarco talks in torrents, main- ly about the urgent need for dialogue...
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Dance
The SpectatorThe Royal Ballet (Covent Garden) High tension Deirdre McMahon A gon, created in 1957 for the New York City Ballet, was the apogee of the cel- ebrated Stravinsky-Balanchine...
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Music
The SpectatorFeel the length Peter Phillips T he premiere of Francis Pott's Organ Symphony last week was quite an occasion. Westminster Cathedral was almost full, which in itself was...
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Cinema
The SpectatorBlack on black Gabriele Annan A few weeks ago Christopher Hitchens published a fierce and funny piece warning everyone off The Bonfire of the Vanities on the grounds that it...
Theatre
The SpectatorCoriolanus (Aldwych) Rick's Bar Casablanca (Whitehall) Much Ado About Nothing (Barbican) Bring back the togas Christopher Edwards S hakespeare set Coriolanus in ancient...
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Gardens
The SpectatorWell-scrubbed pots and pans Ursula Buchan I f a gap exists between the professional and the amateur gardener, there is a posi- tive mountain chasm dividing the average...
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High life
The SpectatorIn defence of Nancy Taki New York My little boy, John-Taki, is dyslexic and goes to a special school. He makes up for his inability to read by using his imagi- nation not...
Television
The SpectatorRead all about it Ian Hislop I f anyone says anything interesting in a television programme nowadays you tend to read about it before the programme goes out. On Panorama (BBC...
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New life
The SpectatorBear effrontery Zenga Longmore L ast week, Omalara and I went for a stroll around that most unappreciated of public gardens, the lawns surrounding the Angel Town estate. Birds...
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Imperative cooking: Oomph in the grey Confederacy Ate'"... e+..,
The SpectatorTHERE are two sorts of countries; those where you can eat and drink well easily and those where it is only possible with Oomph. France, the old France, used to be so easy. In...
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CHESS
The SpectatorClub class Raymond Keene A mong recent publications by Perga- mon Press is Kasparov v Karpov 1990 by Geller, Lein, Chepizhny and Kasparov himself (E8.70). Unfortunately,...
12 YEAR OLD SCOTCH WHISKY
The SpectatorCOMPETITION co y As RE GA z 12 YEAR OLD SCOTCH WHISKY Narrative train Tom Castro I n Competition No. 1672 you were asked for a sonnet beginning, ' Opposite me . . .', and...
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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. 1675: Garden of verses
The SpectatorIn Kipling's opinion 'our England is a garden'. A poem on this subject, suited to our own day, please. Maximum 16 lines. Entries to 'Competition No. 1675' by 3 May.
Solution to 1002: Bully for you!
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SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorDivision of labour Frank Keating IN SPITE of West Ham United's progress to the Cup final being cruelly sawn off by an inept moment of knee-jerk refereeing, a mundane soccer...