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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorP resident Reagan went into hospital for a cancer operation: a small growth was removed with a portion of his colon, but his doctors claim that he will make a full recovery. He...
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THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorBURNING HATRED W hen is mass murder news? Three British children and their pregnant mother were burnt to death over the weekend after an arson attack at North East London. Had...
BLUBBERING
The SpectatorWEDNESDAY'S Daily Express devoted the whole of its front page to a 'picture e xclusive' about the killing of pilot whales m the Faroe Islands. 'Blood on the beaches', said the...
UNCIRCUMSPECT
The SpectatorIT WAS daring of the feminists to hold their conference of the United Nations Decade for Women at Nairobi, the holy place of male supremacy. Indeed the mili- tant anti-feminist...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorThe cutting edge which Mrs Thatcher has never gained CHARLES MOORE I t has often been pointed out that it is a waste of time for anyone to try to alter the Prime Minister's...
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DIARY
The SpectatorI have a possibly dubious tip which may be useful to anyone enduring hospital menus. Recently sprung from Intensive Care, I remembered Somerset Maugham's advice that the only...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorTime for all good men to climb on the Band Aid bandwagon AUBERON WAUGH T he 1980s will be culturally defined by Band Aid,' pronounces Ms Julie Bur- chill, the post-teenage...
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SKINNING THE NUM TIGER
The SpectatorJohn Lloyd on the efforts of Ian MacGregor and his pit managers of the Coal Board to destroy the power of the union ON THE walls of his colliery, pickets had written: `Bulmer...
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THE CRIPPLING OF REAGAN
The SpectatorChristopher Hitchens suggests that Mr Reagan's cancer now makes him President only in name Washington THE QUESTION I had been wanting to ask did not come up until half way...
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GORBACHEV ON WALKABOUT
The SpectatorMark Frankland on the Soviet leader's new populist style Moscow SOVIET officials sometimes rebuke for- eigners, above all foreign journalists, for paying too much attention to...
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THE APOSTLES OF THE SLAVS
The SpectatorTimothy Garton Ash on they way communism has provoked religious revival MORE than 100,000 people gathered in the Moravian village of Velehrad earlier this month, to mark the...
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THE CARDINAL COMPROMISES
The SpectatorRichard Bassett on how the Hungarian bishops are letting religion be ground down Pannonhalma THERE HAVE been Benedictines in western Hungary since the year 1001. Their greatest...
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WHY I SHALL STAY AN ANGLICAN
The SpectatorA. N. Wilson prefers the advantages of truth to those of authority IT IS hard to write about bishops these days without being offensive. And I fear I will not be taken...
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THE DALLAS AFFAIR
The SpectatorBroadcasting: Paul Johnson on the evils of a television cartel UNLIKE a great many people ; I have never seen the television serial Dallas. I understand it is quite dreadful....
One hundred years ago
The SpectatorThe news from St Petersburg and Afghanistan is far from reassuring. It is admitted that there is another hitch in the negotiations. The Russians wish so to define the Zulfikar...
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THE ECONOMY
The SpectatorOf smoke signals, and the shape of things (maybe) to come JOCK BRUCE-GARDYNE lot of our members,' we were told last week by one of the CBI's in-house economists, 'had been...
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Sleeping partners
The SpectatorTHE bad news from Robert Flemin g is that he has lost a few hundred thousand pounds (chairman Joe Burnett-Stuart's breezy phrase) by settin g up as a freelance stockjobber. The...
CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorMr Bearish the broker gets an offer he can refuse CHRISTOPHER FILDES friend Mr Bearish the broker has had a bid for his firm. It is a g enerous bid, by the standards of past...
Gentleman's cartel
The SpectatorWHEN IS a cartel not a cartel? Answer: when it's a g entleman's a g reement. No business could be more g entlemanly than commercial television, as witness the stiff upper lips...
Test case for cuffs
The SpectatorTHE Barclays affair is re g arded throu g h- out the City as the test case for g olden handcuffs. Can the buyer of a firm effec- tively bind its key people to stay? Con- tracts...
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Amendment
The SpectatorSir: Paul Johnson in the 6 July issue of the Spectator suggests a possible case for pro- secuting television 'as an accessory after the fact of murder, kidnapping and aerial...
Theological
The SpectatorSir: Can anything be done to save the word `theological' from going gaily into perma- nent loss of meaning? Increasingly, it is used by trade union leaders, politicians, and...
Sir: The anonymous (why?) author of the profile of Betty
The SpectatorKenward (6 July) has been misinformed. Mrs Kenward's position nev- er at any time 'became a shade tenuous'. She was as highly thought of and as valued in the Seventies as she is...
Jennifer's genius
The SpectatorSir: Your profile of Mrs Betty Kenward (6 July) did less than justice to the subtleties of her remarkable prose style. Much of Jennifer's genius lies in the fantasy of...
LETTERS Arrogance
The SpectatorSir: A propos Dr A. L. Rowse's stimulat- ing letter (6 July), I regard myself as a second-rate person rather than a third-rate one, and I hope this evaluation will be accepted...
Mooning
The SpectatorSir: As the subject of 'mooning' at Greenham Common has raised its ugly head (?) in your columns (Home life, 13 July), may I submit to you an epigram (veiled in the decent...
At the Salisbury
The SpectatorSir: I was also upset to find the 'gays' in the Salisbury and almost afraid to go down the steep stairs there to find the john. Unlike Alan Watkins (Diary, 29 June), I put the...
THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorSUBSCRIBE TODAY! I would like to take out a subscription to The Spectator. I enclose my cheque for £ (Equivalent $ US & Eurocheques accepted) RATES: 12 Months 6 Months...
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CENTREPIECE
The SpectatorResearch under attack: promise aborted by the misplacing of funds COLIN WELCH W ith his usual self-lacerating regret, Sir Keith Joseph in a recent interview deplored his own...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorThe private happiness of Claud Patrick Marnham FIGURE OF EIGHT by Patricia Cockburn Chatto £10.95 BEAT THE DEVIL by Claud Cockburn Hogarth Press £3.95 BALLANTYNE'S FOLLY...
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Epitaph
The SpectatorHis full folly he would not confess to; He could not judge what showed his better sense; His vices — he was reckoned to possess few Were, like his many virtues, a pretence. C....
A true poet from the great world
The SpectatorPeter Levi SELECTED POEMS by Charles Johnston Published for Charles Johnston by the Bodley Head, f4.50 C harles Johnston has been publishing a book a year of brilliant verse...
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The West still declining
The SpectatorBohdan Nahaylo HOW DEMOCRACIES PERISH by Jean-Francois Revel Weidenfeld & Nicolson, £12.95 T his is a powerful and pugnacious work, even if the subject — the West's...
Correction Shirley Robin Letwin's review of Troubled Lives: John and
The SpectatorSarah Austin (Spectator 29 June) appeared with the incorrect price. It is £19.50 and not £30 as stated.
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Delightful, but depravity's not there
The SpectatorPhilip Glazebrook OXFORD BOOK OF AGES chosen by Anthony and Sally Sampson OUP, £8.95 L ike the album known to contain a photograph of yourself, the Oxford Book of Ages, with...
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Modesty and moderation allow spills but no thrills
The SpectatorPatrick Skene Catling HERE LIES ERIC AMBLER by Eric Ambler Weidenfeld & Nicolson, £10.95 mysterious gas which may have caused all his car into a ditch beside the Lausanne-...
7301
The SpectatorLearning to read you, twenty years ago, Over the pub lunch cheese-and-onion rolls; Learning you eat raw onions; learning your taste For obscurity, how you encode teachers and...
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What's wrong with Somerville?
The SpectatorLewis Jones STILL LIFE by A.S. Byatt ChattolHogarth, £9.95 S till Life is a romance of academe, of Cambridge in particular. Frederica Potter, the heroine, receives telegrams...
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ARTS
The SpectatorTheatre Sweet Bird of Youth (Haymarket) Dreamplay (Pit) Dramatis personal Christopher Edwards I t is fitting that Harold Pinter should direct the first British production of...
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Op e ra
The SpectatorAlbert Herring (Glyndebourne) Magical breakthrough Rodney Wiles do not believe it is an exaggeration to describe Glyndebourne's new staging of Britten's comedy as a...
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Cinema
The SpectatorReturn to Oz (`U', Leicester Square Theatre) A paler shade of yellow Peter Ackroyd T hose who return to the haunts of their childhood generally discover that such places are...
Exhibitions
The SpectatorPatrick Heron (Barbican Art Gallery till 1 September) Painting in Newlyn 1880 - 1930 (Barbican Art Gallery till 1 September) Prisoner of theory Giles Auty T wenty years ago...
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Radio
The SpectatorSporting life Noel Malcolm A ccording to Vatican Radio, the Holy Father recently gave an audience to a deputation of Spanish cyclists in which he `re-affirmed the value of...
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High life
The SpectatorGetting down to business Taki imagine that there must . have been some Spectator readers among the contri- butors to Live Aid, although not among the 1..9 billion that...
Television
The SpectatorSaint Bob Alexander Chancellor S hould Bob Geldof be knighted or given the MBE? Should he be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, or should he not? These are tricky questions which...
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Galloping consumption
The SpectatorJeffrey Bernard S he could be mad. Only time will tell. She has a book about the 50 worst movies ever made, with quotes from the dreadful scripts and the gem from Genghis Khan,...
Home life
The SpectatorBaby talk Alice Thomas Ellis I was sitting quietly in the drawing-room yesterday evening when I heard somebody calling my name in the garden, so I stepped on to the balcony...
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Competition
The SpectatorNo. 1381: Strong medicine Set by Jaspistos: Two poetasters, named Wilhelmina Stitch and Patience Strong, used to (and for all I know still do) write a daily newspaper column of...
Postscript
The SpectatorUnpompous circumstance P. J. Kavanagh E dward Fitzgerald described marriage as 'standing at your work-table with a clear mind, and a big bonnet knocking at the door and asking...
No. 1378: The winners
The SpectatorJaspistos reports: Competitors were asked for a poem beginning 'Jenny kiss'd me when we met' but, unlike Leigh Hunt's, expressing displeasure on the occasion. Jenny came in all...
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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...
Solution to Crossword 714: Just good friends N 130 3 RD
The SpectatorC ER 4 TIR VI IrlEIR I lI c hE 1 A T H'ill E y I DIED H AI' E O AL I %LI I L T b B O E I I EllbS ERN1 3 0 I E'bOVECOT .._ A I NIS I_ t HT TM...
Chess
The SpectatorPrime specimen Raymond Keene J on Speelman's performance at Taxco is the best ever by a British player in the Interzonal stage of the World Cham- pionship. Indeed, by virtue...
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Spectator Wine Club
The SpectatorAuberon Waugh T he chief appeal of this offer is the first wine on the list. For 12 months I have been tasting first 1982 then 1983 red Burgundies, searching for a single...
ORDER FORM SPECTATOR WINE CLUB
The Spectatordo Recount, 44 Lower Sloane Street, London SW1 Telephone: 01-730 6377 PRODUCT PRICE NO. OF VALUE CASES 1. Coulanges la Vineuse, Bourgogne 12 bots. £46.37 Rouge 1982 Paul...
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Crossword 717
The SpectatorA first prize of £20 and two further prizes of £10 (or a copy of Chambers Dictionary, value £11.95 — ring the words 'Chambers Dictionary' above) will be awarded for the first...