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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorM r Douglas Hurd, the Home Secret- ary, announced a special police investiga- tion of fresh evidence on the conviction of four people for the 1974 Woolwich and Guildford pub...
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THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorSELECTIVE MEMORY T he death of Rudolf Hess after 46 years in captivity — half his long life — might seem an event of scant significance, but at least it will put an end to...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorThe need for competition which should put ministers in the docks MA RTIN IVENS I n the bad old days before Mrs Thatcher, the Conservative Party had a ritual re- sponse to...
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DIARY
The SpectatorBARRY HUMPHRIES s if I didn't have enough on my A plate, I manage the professional affairs of a famous Australian actress, diseuse, swami and monstre sacra. At present she is...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorHow to save the children from a new wave of sex-abuse zealots AUBERON WAUGH T he implications of the Cleveland con- troversy go far beyond the question of the apparently...
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HOW HIROSHIMA FEEDS HATE
The SpectatorHiroshima is a rallying-point for peace campaigners. But, Ian Buruma argues, many Japanese resent the West's victory and are tempted to revenge was The idea of leaving...
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One hundred years ago
The SpectatorAMONG the Statutes now to be re- pealed, there are some very curious pieces of legislation. In the third year of Edward I was passed what in effect is a primitive Press Law. It...
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PATHETIC, NOT TRAGIC
The SpectatorTimothy Garton Ash looks back over the life of Hitler's former deputy RUDOLPH Hess was probably the most famous prisoner in the world. He was also one of West Berlin's...
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JAIL-BREAKING GLASS
The SpectatorCharles Moore welcomes the return of a prodigal correspondent I REMEMBER another occasion when Charles Glass caused anxiety to his wife. He came to the Spectator's annual...
THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorSUBSCRIBE TODAY - Save 15% on the Cover Price! Please enter a subscription to The Spectator I enclose my cheque for £ (Equivalent SUS & Eurocheques accepted) RATES 12 Months...
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BY A CITY CHURCHYARD
The SpectatorGavin Stamp regrets the secret competition to develop land near St Paul's Cathedral ARCHITECTS sometimes deserve to be laughed at more than they are. Always good for a laugh...
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A VICTORIAN REVIVAL?
The SpectatorMrs Thatcher is winning the battle over values P RIME ministers, being cynosures, often precipitate general debates by casual re- marks on which the media seizes. Harold...
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TELECOM HORROR COMPETITION
The SpectatorTelephone and be hanged Charles Moore reports on the sufferings revealed by the competition entrants. THE best British Telecom horror story must encapsulate the character of...
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Thieves
The SpectatorSir: Two more British Telecom horrors; don't give me the prize — like you, I have nowhere to Put it — but just print them, please. Planning a visit to Glyndebourne, I naturally...
Sir: Re the article by Adam Mars-Jones ('Homosexual men as
The Spectatorsoft targets', 15 August) the following quotation from the Catholic Catechism may be of interest: Which are the four sins crying to Heaven for vengeance? The four sins crying...
Sir: My article 'Predatory Homosexuals' was originally titled 'The New
The SpectatorHomosex- uality'. In it I attempted to draw attention to 'the gay movement' that emerged through pop fashions, new universities and council sponsorship in the late 1970s....
LETTERS Moscow enterprise
The SpectatorSir: Have we at last come across a service to the public in which the Soviet Union is ahead of this country? The moving account by Max Hastings of his vain attempts to persuade...
Sir: Gavin Stamp in expressing his hatred of the new
The SpectatorBT phone kiosks (Letters, 15 August), goes so far as to describe the sticky-label adverts from .prostitutes as a 'design flaw'. If so, the same design flaw was just as evident...
Sin of Sodom
The SpectatorSir: In the course of a heterosexual lifespan now in all too clear sight of the Biblically- decreed finishing post, it has been my good fortune to know, admire and, yes, to love...
Wright on the BBC
The SpectatorSir: Although some of the detail in Simon Freeman's article (`The BBC gets camera- shy', 8 August) is inaccurate, difficulties did exist over the proposed edition of Panorama on...
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Sin song
The SpectatorSir: It was his mother whom Ned didn't want them to tell (Competition, 18 July). A. P. Herbert's poem, 'Don't tell my mother I'm living in sin; for see what it done to me! A...
Thrumbled
The SpectatorSir: The young William Cooper ('Choirs and kisses', 11 July) may have had cause to be grateful for small mercies. It was always an excitement to swing the thurible, but I have...
Falkland motives
The SpectatorSir: My friend Michael Horovitz may believe that there was 'no valid use or reason' (Letters, 8 August) for the Falk- land campaign and the deaths caused by it. While not...
Gulf club
The SpectatorSir: The answer to Mr Moore's query (Diary, 15 August) lies in Iran/Iraq chauvi- nistic rivalry some 30 years ago when I lived in Basrah, Iraq. It was promulgated (I know not...
Wrong inferences
The SpectatorSir: I respect Mr Wythe's contempt for my belief that MPs need somewhat more than the glory to sustain them in a political career. But I must correct two mis- statements of fact...
The real Bill
The SpectatorSir: May I answer the attacks of John Gibbs and Mabyn Fletcher (Letters, 8 August) please? Far from being a 'sort of patronising middle-class twit' who sells Militant and has a...
Watts wrong
The SpectatorSir: I was much amused to see Mary Soames's remarks (Diary, 4 July) on G. F. Watts's statue 'Physical energy'. My grand- father, Dr Thomas Bond of the Westmins- ter Hospital,...
Crambe repetita
The SpectatorSir: As a devoted reader of the Spectator, I look forward eagerly to Jennifer Paterson's food column. I do, however, think that her suggestion of serving cold meat, and pre-...
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NUREMBERG, 1938
The SpectatorROBERT Byron had long realised the dange r to peace of the Nazi ideology, and from March 1938 he was engaged in volun- tary preparation of war propaganda for the Dire...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorHer spark doused forever Paul Foot THE JOURNALS OF MARY SHELLEY 1814-1844, PART 1 1814-1822 edited by Paula R. Feldman and Diana Scott-Kilvert OUP, f55 F rom the moment Byron...
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Not inclined to think well of mankind
The SpectatorPeter Quennell THE EAGLE IN SPLENDOUR: NAPOLEON I AND HIS COURT by Philip Manse' George Philip, f16.95 NAPOLEON'S MARSHALS edited by David C. Chandler Weidenfeld & Nicolson,...
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The tribulations behind a masterpiece
The SpectatorHarold Acton THE MAN ZONI FAMILY by Natalia Ginzburg, translated by Marie Evans Carcanet, £12.95 A moderately affluent member of the Milanese squirearchy when Lombardy was...
The Aristocracy of England by J. V. Beckett, reviewed by
The SpectatorAnthony Blond (8 August), is published by Blackwell at £25
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The Patent Larkin-Betjeman Verse Machine
The SpectatorSomewhere (round 1914) Art went wrong. Poets no longer versified for bread. They scorned to take a penny for a song. Journeyman Shakespeare sounded like a gong And countless...
No respite from the struggle
The SpectatorKathy Stephen A FRIEND FROM ENGLAND by Anita Brookner Cape, £9.95 ■fr A long, sustained battle has raged throughout Anita Brookner's fiction be- tween the forces of reason,...
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England, our England
The SpectatorRichard Ingrams FOREVER ENGLAND by Beryl Bainbridge Duckworth, f9.95 PEOPLE OF BRITAIN by Roy Kerridge Hale, £11.95 L ast year I took on the task of compil - ing an...
Oasis
The SpectatorThe terms of the analogy are strained— And that is as it should be, for the world Is nothing but the world and things are called By names they cannot answer to. Constrained By...
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ARTS
The SpectatorExhibition Wright in Italy: Joseph Wright of Derby's Visit Abroad, 1773-75 (Gainsborough's House, Sudbury, till 20 September) Fireworks from Derby John Henshall V isitors to...
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The Proms
The SpectatorOslo conquers the Albert Hall Peter Phillips I f I were not at this moment Sitting amongst the ruined buildings of Minster Lovell in perfect sunshine, I could refer more...
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Theatre
The SpectatorPortraits (Savoy) Murder in the Cathedral (Christ Church, Spitalfields) Studio sketches Christopher Edwards W illiam Douglas-Home's conversa - tion piece starts in 1944 in...
Cinema
The SpectatorTin Men ('15', selected cinemas) Baltimore story Hilary Mantel t seems that if you were a housewife in I Baltimore, circa 1963, what you might covet would be a house with...
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High life
The SpectatorInto my sixth decade Taki eorge Will is the very talented American writer who takes himself almost as seriously as Guardian women take themselves. When Will became 40 he wrote...
Television
The SpectatorBring on the sheep Peter Levi T his is the late season, when the news announcers look wild-eyed with boredom and even Wogan droops on his stem. It is not that we are tired of...
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Home life
The SpectatorHidden dangers Alice Thomas Ellis I had a moment of the purest satisfaction the other morning. The magpie has attempted to get into the house (or murder the magpie he sees...
Low life
The SpectatorThe vodka handicap Jeffrey Bernard I have a book coming out in October which is a collection of old racing pieces written for the Sporting Life and other papers. It is called...
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Imperative cooking: cheap-jack dinner parties ;! •.1
The SpectatorTHE GREAT thing, apparently, is to discover the interests of one's neighbour at the table, and the way to do this is to ask, `What is the nicest thing that happened to you...
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CHESS
The SpectatorSecret weapon Raymond Keene N igel Short's controversial shorts were in evidence again during the Kleinworth Grieveson British Championship at Swan- sea. Last month Zoltan...
COMPETITION
The SpectatorAnti-verse Jaspistos I N Competition No. 1485 you were invited to write a poem against poets and/or poetry. The case against poetry was representa- tively put by Nicholas...
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No. 1488: Whatevergoes
The SpectatorMasefield's 'Cargoes' (`Quinquereme of Nineveh . . .') describes three stages of one form of transport. A poem, please, in the same metre and of the same length, describing...
Solution to 819: Codology
The Spectatoronarranoria AI0 E ME LAIN EIR I JR T CIA U A T el ael A 0 A C E R© R I A ' N Y nia T H I N R I M A 0 E L . E E -, iig L • E R E --- T I MI s MI A Eli ; R N 11P1 A I...
CROSSWORD
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) together with a...