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It all depends on her
The SpectatorThe Liberals, as usual, open the autumn's rite of party political conferences. Next week they perform. The following week it is Labour's turn. The Tories conclude the series...
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The silence of the bishop
The SpectatorFerdinand Mount The gorgeous vestments are a little startling. Surely the Methodist Church was founded to do away with flummery. From the walls of Wesley's Chapel, austere...
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A year of mayhem
The SpectatorHenry Fairlie Washington At the end of the past ten days no one knows what to make of Edward Kennedy. At one moment he seems to be in; at the next to be out again. He has not...
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Return of mama's boy
The SpectatorNicholas von Hoffman Washington 'Mama, Mama, kin I run for President, Kin I? Kin I, pleeeeze?' 'Not till you've had your bath, Teddy dear.' 'But Mama, you said I could if I'd...
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Poland: the liberal renaissance
The SpectatorTim Garton Ash Cracow Cracow is Poland's Oxford. Its university was founded in 1364 by Casimir the Great, the last of the Piast Kings of Poland. From the castle of Wawel, which...
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Is NOW! the Time for all good men?
The SpectatorMurray Sayle I hope Sir James Goldsmith has sharp enough ears to pick out, from the chorus greeting his new magazine, the sincere welcome of an old-time, long distance...
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What the Liberals must do
The SpectatorJo Grimond The season of oratory and brash sterility is upon us, when the discords of the Party conferences will soon be heard over the BBC. This year the jamborees will not be...
A hundred years ago
The SpectatorThe two sons of the Prince of Wales, failing whom the Crown would again devolve upon a female sovereign, again a Victoria, started on Thursday from Portsmouth, in the...
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Juries: checks and imbalances
The SpectatorMarcel Berlins When the American black activist Bobby Seale came to trial in 1970, it took four months for a jury to be empanelled. More than 1,000 jurors were rejected in the...
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The disease of the unions
The SpectatorChristopher Booker Listening to a run-of-the-mill BBC 6 pm news broadcast the other day, I could not help being struck by the bizarre picture of contemporary life in Britain it...
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British Leyland: a modest proposal
The SpectatorTim Congdon In the days when British Leyland made a profit, there was a readily understandable reason why its workers went on strike. They were trying to get more money for...
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Letter from Munster
The SpectatorRichard West County Clare T he photographs of Pope John Paul II a re going up on the walls of the pubs, and the photographs of the Kennedys are c oming down. The memory of the...
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Open door policy
The SpectatorSir: I am surprised that Russia has not taken advantage of the strange moral position over Vietnam taken by the Western governments arid 'their odd interpretation of the...
The counties
The SpectatorSir: Warmest thanks to the Spectator and to Christopher Booker for the article on 'Restoration of the old counties'. In a world so full of menacing insecurity and unreasoned...
Prison overcrowding
The SpectatorSir: What a strange world we live in when Simon Courtauld can claim (Notebook, 11 August) that much of the blame for the overcrowding in our prisons lies with magistrates. It is...
Shows at the RA
The SpectatorSir: I am genuinely sorry that Mr McEwen found the 'documentary gruel' of our Ironbridge Exhibition not to his taste. He must however be sadly ignorant of exhibition finances if...
Another view of Borges
The SpectatorSir: Like Francis King (15 September) I was introduced to Jorge Luis Borges by a woman (I have always thought it does credit to a man to be liked by women). But Mr King's...
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Trains in Texas
The SpectatorSir: Far be it for me, a New Yorker who has never been to Texas, to correct a native Texan, but your correspondent Mr Lee T. Pearcy (4 August) is totally in error when he inakes...
Accomplished
The SpectatorSue Although I greatly enjoyed Tony L ambton's enthusiastic appreciation ( 25 August) of Alexander Herzen, I of ne vertheless a trifle pained (mindful ot his Own irritation at...
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Dante Re-Englished
The SpectatorPrue Shaw The Divine Comedy Dante Alighieri Trans. and introduced Kenneth Mackenzie (Folio Society E9.95) The best parts of Shelley's unfinished poem The Triumph of Life give...
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Law and order
The SpectatorGeoffrey Marshall Crime and Police in England 1700-1900 J.J Tobias (Gill and Macmillian E10) Mr Justice Page, one of Queen Anne's judges, told an inquirer after his health that...
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Confection
The SpectatorJonathan Keates Mr Home Pronounced Hume William Douglas-Home (Collins £6:95) Each of us now cherishes his favourite symptom of national decline, ready to advance it at the...
Carve-up
The SpectatorPatrick Cosgrave Apostles of Mobility Lord Carver (Weidenfeld £6) The essential purpose of Field Marshal Carver's Lees-Knowles lectures (delivered at Cambridge earlier this...
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Not bad
The SpectatorBenny Green Vintage Wodehouse Ed. Richard Usborne (Penguin 21 50) It would be simple enough to make out a long list of arguments against the existence of a paperback anthology...
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Woman-child
The SpectatorHugh Montgomery-Massingberd Gladys, Duchess of Marlborough Hugo Vickers (Weidenfeld E8.95) 'I saw an extraordinary marionette of a woman — or was it a man? It wore grey flannel...
Fantastic
The SpectatorFrancis King Wild Nights Emma Tennant (Cape £4.50) The Old Jest Jennifer Johnston (Hamish Hamilton £4.95) We all have lists of things that, though there is nothing...
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An academic approach
The SpectatorJohn McEwen Inflation breeds academicism; that, at least, is the most obvious lesson of the visual art offerings at Edinburgh this season, notably in the form of 'Degas 1879'...
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Private lives
The SpectatorPeter Jenkins Outside Edge (Queens) Private Life of the Third Reich (Open Space) Love's Labour's Lost (RSC, Aldwych) One powerful image can go a long way in an evening at the...
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Provocative
The SpectatorTed Whitehead Pretty Baby (Ritz) Scum (Prince Charles) Hard on the heels of the report recommendj ag the abolition of the age of consent comes Louis Malle's Pretty Baby (X) a...
Tinkering
The SpectatorRichard Ingrams I can't remember exactly when I stopped reading John Le Carre's novels but I rather think A Small Town In Germany (1968) was the last one I read and I'm not...
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in de ligne
The Spectatoreoffrey Wheatcroft Sitting in a cafe in Naples, I think of Vienna. Just before leaving London I caught up with t he National Theatre's production of Arthur Schnitzler's...
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Nebulous
The SpectatorRaymond Keene After nine rounds of the Riga Interzonal the situation is obscured by a number of unfinished adjournments, but the general picture looks like this: Tal 61 points,...