Page 6
PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorVirginia Bottomley released back into the community M r John Major, the Prime Minister, indicated that he had no intention of extending the remit of the Nolan Commit- tee on...
Page 8
POLITICS
The SpectatorIf the bedpans go unemptied, it will be the nurses who forfeit sympathy BORIS JOHNSON I t was with predictable terror that the Tory backbenches witnessed events in Har-...
Page 9
DIARY
The SpectatorNICK HORNBY T en years ago this month, 39 people died in the Heysel Stadium disaster. It is true that a group of English fans were cul- pable; it is also true that since then...
Page 10
ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorThis house believes you should make friends with the mammon of unrighteousness CHARLES MOORE B y the time you read this, I shall have delivered a speech at the Cambridge Union...
Page 11
WESTMINSTER'S SECRET SERVICE
The SpectatorMichael Cockerell has just completed a BBC investigation of the Government Whips' Office. Here, he gives a preview of the programme's discoveries AT THE START of May, the...
Page 13
If symptoms
The Spectatorpersist.. . WRONGDOERS and lawbreakers used to seek sanctuary in the church; nowa- days they seek it in the hospital. It isn't only the police they wish to avoid: it is each...
Page 14
`DO YOU WANT ME TO KILL HIM?'
The SpectatorW.A.P. Manser tells how he was charged by MI6 with intercepting Guy Burgess during the spy's flight to Moscow. But one mystery remains ACCORDING TO 1959 Cabinet papers...
Page 17
Will of the week
The SpectatorProfessor Geoffrey Bernard Abbott FLETCHER, of Thirlmere Lodge, Elm- field Road, Gosforth, Tyne and Wear, Professor of Classics (1937-46) and then of Latin (1946-69) at King's...
Page 18
IT SHOULD GO LIKE A BOMB
The SpectatorJames Buchan discovers a curious consequence of the latest privatisation: the City will own a mass of weapons grade plutonium THE CITY of London is about to be offered the...
Page 19
Mind your language
The Spectator`Mummy, why can you have an iron- monger, but not an ice-cream-monger?' asked Veronica as the Mr Whippy van tinkled into earshot. `Don't come the Shirley Temple with me, 0...
Page 20
ACCOUNTING FOR BRITAIN'S WAR CRIME
The SpectatorNigel Nicolson was Nicolai Tolstoy's chief witness in the libel action brought by Lord Aldington. Here he says what the court missed BEFORE LORD ALDINGTON brought his famous...
Page 23
One hundred years ago
The SpectatorON WEDNESDAY a meeting of the Women's Employment Defence Associ- ation was held at Mrs. Courtney's, to discuss the bearing of the new Factory Act on the condition of working...
Page 24
BRITAIN'S MOST DANGEROUS WOMEN?
The SpectatorAlasdair Palmer delves into the mur world of criminality to discover the prison system's darkest secret DESPITE the Home Secretary's determi- nation to ensure a tougher and...
Page 25
THE RING OF NO CONFIDENCE
The SpectatorRobin Harris, formerly one of the Tory party's leading policy-makers, argues that Major's `listening' initiative is his silliest idea yet MR MAJOR'S newest promise is to...
Page 27
O NO JOHN! NO JOHN!
The SpectatorNO JOHN! NO! Michael Argyle, the judge in the Oz trial at the Old Bailey, finally answers his critics, especially Mr Mortimer QC TWO CHEERS for dear old John Mor- timer of...
Page 28
AND ANOTHER THING
The SpectatorThe Digger visits the Last Chance Saloon and gets a drink on the house PAUL JOHNSON T he so-called stern rebuke administrat- ed by Rupert Murdoch to his News of the World...
Page 29
. CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorLloyd's gets ready to unveil its strategy, as borrowed from Moshe Dayan CHRISTOPHER FILDES L atest word from the leaning tower of Lime Street is that Lloyd's of London is...
Page 30
Orwell predicted it
The SpectatorSir: In Philip Hensher's 29 April review of John Le Carre's new novel, he writes: 'No mere novelist could have been expected to forecast the end of the Cold War . . . and none,...
LETTERS The race business
The SpectatorSir: Alasdair Palmer's article 'Does white mean right?' (18 February) on the heri- tability of intelligence and the genetic basis of race differences in intelligence contains a...
Sorry, Sir Patrick
The SpectatorSir: There is only one man in the Cabinet capable of strong leadership who would command broad support and yet revitalise the Government with new faces and intelli- gent...
A near miracle
The SpectatorSir: Giles Auty's piece (Arts, 6 May) was a lucid exposition of the true quality of Modernist Art. Indeed, to have spoken so much truth on a single page was a near miracle....
Epistolary exegesis
The SpectatorSir: As an avid reader of your magazine, I am pleased to see that its circulation is increasing. I feel, however, that it would appeal even more to the average reader if your...
Page 31
Young men forget
The SpectatorSir: I am surprised and puzzled by the omis- sion of the abolition of Exchange Controls from the Moore family's list of improve- ments since 1979 (Another voice, 22 April). This...
Polish discipline
The SpectatorSir: In his review of my book The Forgotten Few (13 May), George Pownall states that I fail to support my dismissal of the 'dash and indiscipline' view of the Polish airmen with...
Signs of rigour
The SpectatorSir: I warmed to your article paying tribute to my successor as Her Majesty's Chief Inspector of Schools, Chris Woodhead (Not exactly teacher's pet', 13 May). For the record,...
Work it out
The SpectatorSir: Dot Wordsworth (Mind your language, 25 March) is interesting about language but should be more careful with figures. Dates BC are counted backwards, so the 6,000th...
Novel idea
The SpectatorSir: I see The Spectator is sponsoring a liter- ary dinner with Baroness Thatcher. I pre- sume that you are also planning to sponsor a political dinner with Ms Jackie Collins....
Japanese courtesy
The SpectatorSir: Dot Wordsworth (Mind your language, 13 May) reports that a Japanese reader inquires why English publications western- ise Japanese names rather than use the...
Page 34
CENTRE POINT
The SpectatorWithout an Arnold Goodman, government is one long slither to a fall SIMON JENKINS I only once saw Lord Goodman's guard drop. It was three years ago, when he gave a small...
Page 35
BOOKS
The SpectatorHis master's voice Alan Judd LONG SUNSET: MEMOIRS OF WINSTON CHURCHILL'S LAST PRIVATE • SECRETARY by Anthony Montague Browne Cassell, £20, pp. 320 I n this affectionate and...
Page 36
Aspiring to the condition of opera
The SpectatorJohn Bowen POWER PLAY: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF PETER HALL by Stephen Fay Hodder, £20, pp. 402 Y ou can tell this is a 'warts and all' biography from the photograph on the cover...
Page 37
Two fixed points in a changing world
The SpectatorDavid Ekserdjian PAINTINGS IN THE UFFIZI AND PIM GALLERIES by Gregori, Paolucci and Chiarini Bulfinch, Little Brown, £75, pp. 647 I once overheard a tour guide in Florence...
Page 38
Stirring, not shaken
The SpectatorAlan Ross LORD TED: THE DEXTER ENIGMA by Alan Lee Gollancz/Witherby, £16.99, pp. 224 I an Fleming spent the last few weeks of his life in the Dudley Hotel, Hove, where I saw a...
Does our end justify our genes?
The SpectatorJohn Cornwell RIVER OUT OF EDEN by Richard Dawkins Weidenfeld, £9.99, pp. 166 W hen Francis Crick and James Watson unravelled the molecular structure of the gene in 1953 they...
Page 40
An assortment of meringues
The SpectatorWilliam Scammell THE DESTINY OF NATHALIE AND OTHER STORIES by William Boyd Sinclair-Stevenson, £9.99, pp. 195 F ancophile African film director Aurelian No goes to Hollywood to...
Page 41
Problems of a duel personality
The SpectatorAlbert Read SO I AM GLAD by A. L. Kennedy Cape, £9.99, pp. 282 A . L. Kennedy is rated by Granta, among others, as one of the promising young novelists of her generation. After...
Page 42
The vision thing
The SpectatorMatthew Parris THINGS TO COME: THE TORIES IN THE 21ST CENTURY by John Patten Sinclair-Stevenson, i1Z99, pp. 255 I like and admire John Patten and had hoped there would be...
Page 43
If we do meet again, why, we shall smile!
The SpectatorIsabel Colegate JOY STREET: A WARTIME ROMANCE IN LETTERS, 1940- 1942: MIRREN BARFORD AND LIEUTENANT JOHN LEWES edited by Michael T. Wise Little, Brown, £13.99, pp. 381 LAST...
Page 44
It means just what I mean it to mean
The SpectatorKevin Myers FREE IRELAND by Gerry Adams Brandon, £7.95, pp. 256 M uch of the war in Northern Ireland is about words. Take the word freedom. It carries codes. As does the word...
Page 45
FINE ARTS SPECIAL
The SpectatorArt A chance to say farewell After eleven years as The Spectator's art critic, Giles Auty is moving to Australia I t is 11 years now, almost to the day, since I wrote my first...
Page 46
Exhibitions
The SpectatorMasterworks from the Louise Reinhardt Smith Collection (Museum of Modern Art, New York, till 22 August) Picasso and Drawing (PaceWildenstein, New York, till 2 June) Camille...
Page 48
Crying
The SpectatorRarely reduced to tears Alexander Sturgis explains why weeping crowds are no longer found in art galleries T he monumentally sentimental paint- ing of Lady Jane Grey feeling...
Page 49
Records
The SpectatorOriginal nostalgia Richard Osborne listens to some electrifying golden oldies A ccording to Germany's leading post- war design guru Hans Domizlaff, there were only two great...
Page 50
Salerooms
The SpectatorDreaming of summer Alistair McAlpine S hould this summer have an uncharacter- istic but occasional turn of hot and sunny weather, then playing tennis is a splendid way to pass...
Page 51
Cinema
The SpectatorRob Roy ('15', selected cinemas) A ravishing body Mark Steyn We should treasure Hugh Grant, cute Cabbage Patch hairdo and all. As far as major motion Rictures are concerned,...
Page 52
Theatre
The SpectatorJeffrey (Greenwich) The Silver Tassie (Almeida) A Midsummer Night's Dream (Barbican) Too jaded to cross the water Sheridan Morley D espite the current triumph of the Brits on...
Page 53
Television
The SpectatorPutting on a brave face Ian Hislop I wonder if David Mellor is watching The Politician's Wife (Channel Four, Tues- day 10 p.m.)? It is the story of a Conserva- tive minister...
Page 54
Women
The SpectatorWe shall not be neutered Germaine Greer 0 ne of the joys of living in the country is that I don't have to see the Evening Standard. Straphangers on the London Underground on...
Page 55
High life
The SpectatorBuddies I have known Taki A few years ago, in these here pages, our very own Auberon Waugh, wrote an amusing piece about yours truly. He wrote that I was a Cypriot waiter by...
Low life
The SpectatorMixing up the sexes Jeffrey Bernard I am fairly appalled and certainly fed up with the amount of fuss and coverage that the media gives so-called gays. There are now, and have...
Page 56
Office life
The SpectatorGiving up the pretence Holly Budd 0 thers have done it better: Captain Oates, countless gladiators, Shakespeare in his sonnets, Keats from his death-bed. Farewells may never...
Page 57
1111111.111111=111111111,
The SpectatorIN OUR OUR New Year issue, on no evidence at all I'll admit, I predicted that 1995 would see the rebirth of the French bistro. Natu- rally, all culinary pointers suggested a...
BRIDGE
The SpectatorRecord breaker Andrew Robson HUMAN BEINGS are obsessed by extremes: the highest mountain; the biggest waterfall; the longest running the- atre performance. I am often being...
Page 58
SAW Nal SCOTCH %RISC
The Spectator1 R I A ISLE OF i SIToLlt HALT SCOTCH WHISKY URA ISLE OF COMPETITION Bouts limes Jaspistos IN COMPETITION NO. 1881 you were invited to write a poem with given rhyme...
CHESS
The SpectatorMissing link Raymond Keene MIKHAIL BOTVINNIK, who died in Moscow earlier this month at the age of 83, was the last link with the old generation of greats. Botvinnik played...
Page 59
CROSSWORD
The SpectatorA first prize of £25 and a bottle of Graham's Malvedos 1979 Vintage Port for the first correct solution opened on 5 June, with two runners-up prizes of £15 (or, for UK solvers,...
Page 63
SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorRovers return Frank Keating TWO OR THREE issues ago, with jaunty confidence, this space was devoted to applause for Blackburn Rovers, evocative old-timers returning at last to...
YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
The SpectatorDear Mary. . . Q. Recently, as I left an early evening cock- tail party a man said to me, `Night-night.' This left me with a feeling of being unwant- ed and unpopular. How can...