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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorRose blight T he annual rate of inflation rose to 8.3 per cent, its highest level for seven years. The Chancellor, when asked where the rate would stand by the end of the year,...
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SPECT THE AT OR
The SpectatorThe Spectator, 56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL Telephone 01-405 1706; Telex 27124; Fax 242 0603 PRACTICALITIES T hose who have argued that Britain should grant the right of...
THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorSUBSCRIBE TODAY - Save 15% on the Cover Price! RATES 12 Months 6 Months UK ❑ £55.00 0 £27.50 Europe (airmail) 0 £66.00 0 £33.00 USA Airspeed 0 US $99 0 US$511 Rest of...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorReading the entrails: what Labour needs to win NOEL MALCOLM as it just coincidence that on Sun- day night, while the Euro-election results came in, Britain underwent one of...
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DIARY
The SpectatorI have applied for a renewal of my provisional driving licence having been seized yet again by a resolution to learn to drive. With my 69th birthday approaching this does,...
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THOMAS CRANMER SCHOOLS PRIZE A £500 competition for reciting from
The Spectatorthe Book of Common Prayer, page 31
ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorTrying not to laugh off the obligations of charity and pity AUBERON WAUGH W ell, yes, I suppose I could easily accommodate 30 or 40 of them in attics, cellars and out-houses....
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THE PEER AND THE BEERAGE
The SpectatorThe brewers have made Lord Young drink how they did it MY LOCAL pub used to be called the Alma. There were two rooms with a fire in the snug and a juke-box in the public bar....
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A DICTIONARY OF CANT
The SpectatorMETRICATION. The most common argument for it is that it is desirable because it is inevitable, like Europeanisation. My old philosophy tutor would have called this a 'non...
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A CHIP OFF THE OLD BLOCK
The SpectatorJames Taylor looks at the growing threat to Benazir Bhutto: the son of Zia-ul-Haq Dubai IJAZ ul-Haq, the urbane, dark-suited Gulf regional manager of the Bank of America,...
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CAN THE WALL COME DOWN?
The SpectatorRichard Davy finds that East Germany is far from ready for unification THE EAST German regime has not been happy about Mr Gorbachev's triumphal progress through West Germany....
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THE SLOW DEATH OF FREE TRADE
The SpectatorUS trade nationalism is a Washington THE Great Depression and the Smoot- Hawley Tariff Act of 1930 have been woven together in the political folklore of America for two...
T. E. UTLEY MEMORIAL PRIZE
The SpectatorON THE first anniversary of the death of T. E. Utley, the great political writer whose writing illuminated the Daily Telegraph and the Times — and many other journals — over a...
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THE NEXT BIG GAME
The SpectatorDavid Spanier talks to the biggest money-winners in Las Vegas — the casino-owners Las Vegas 'IT'S what God woulda done . . . if He had the money.' One guy who's got the money...
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EVERYTHING BUT THE BARK
The SpectatorAlexandra Artley shares some old family recipes for the English table dog FASHIONS in food come and go, but as a nation of hunters and carvers we English still produce some of...
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VERSES AND WORSE
The SpectatorRoy Kerridge visits Bradford in the wake of the Rushdie affair 'I THINK Salman Rushdie's Satanic Verses is a wonderful book!' a literary young lady told me, her eyes shining....
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THE TELEVISION MULTIPLIER EFFECT
The SpectatorThe media: Paul Johnson raises awkward questions about coverage of political unrest TELEVISION is a 'hot' medium, which raises the emotional temperature, particu- larly when...
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Say yes to the TSB
The SpectatorSO WHAT does the Abbey do for an encore? It is something to have found a way out of the regulatory maze planted by Michael Bridgman at the Building Societies Commission — even...
CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorAbbey: a good thing for the annual outing and for share-owning too CHRISTOPHER FILDES T his is the week of the City's annual works outing. The office boys are left to man the...
Signal honour
The SpectatorTHE knighthood for the Government Broker is as fitting as his refulgent top hat, but may, alas, be the signal that he will soon hang that hat up. Sir Nigel Aithaus's full job...
Shuffle and deal
The SpectatorTHE safest bet of all is that more building societies will follow the Abbey (you have remembered, I trust, that money in the front-runners, the National & Provincial or the...
Mid-term grumbles
The SpectatorTHE Prime Minister fell out with the Chancellor of the Exchequer, and the electorate fell out with both of them. Behind the scenes the Prime Minister's personal economic...
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Hong Kong
The SpectatorSir: Congratulations. But as a civil servant, I must remain Anonymous Hong Kong
Honourable exception
The SpectatorSir: In The Spectator of 17 June ('Honour- able gentlemen') you quote me as writing: It would have been better for China, as well as the students themselves, if they had...
Language problems
The SpectatorSir: I should like to applaud Donald Michie's article (`Jasper Lupo's Spaghetti Code', 3 June) which tackles, quite success- fully I think, the task of alerting the lay reader...
Pollstering
The SpectatorSir: Pace Michael Trend (`From Tyler to Thatcher', 10 June), there has never been any doubt that the community charge could be successfully, if expensively, implemen- ted. This...
LETTERS
The SpectatorSalman Rushdie Sir: Paul Johnson's article on the Salman Rushdie case ('When the cursing had to stop', 17 June) is based on several factual and logical errors. He says that...
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A lady bishop
The SpectatorSir: In your admirable and encouraging article (Worth holding the Fort', 10 June) you bestow upon Barbara Harris, the controversial American bishopess, the title 'Dr'. Is this...
The Duchess of Hohenberg
The SpectatorSir: Having been, believe it or not, com- plimented on my review of Antony Lamb- ton's polemical blast at the Battenbergs (Books, 10 June), I was vain enough to re-read it and...
Wright stuff
The SpectatorSir: In his article about the former Speaker of the House of Representatives Jim Wright (`The wrong stuff, 27 May), Ambrose 'Honestly, Mildred, flying is as safe as cross- ing...
Benevolent Bulgars
The SpectatorSir: Anthony Blond is not entirely correct in stating (Books, 13 May) that the Danes were 'the only people in Europe who cared so much for their Jews that, led by their King,...
Polish opinion
The SpectatorSir: I am very grateful to you for sending me The Spectator. I work as a journalist in the Polish press. The knowledge of various political and ideological trends in the West,...
Monetary union
The SpectatorSir: Would Sir Martin Jacomb ask his board to take a far-reaching decision, having just glossed over matters central to its discussion? This is his approach to your readers (The...
Compton Collier
The SpectatorSir: I was sad to see that in Mr Auberon Waugh's otherwise excellent article ('Another voice', 10 June), he referred to one of the most famous of outdoor chil- dren's...
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`TEACH THE FREE MAN HOW TO PRAISE'
The SpectatorTHOMAS Cranmer was born 500 years ago, on 2 July 1489. As the first great Protestant Archbishop of Canterbury, as the supervisor and chief architect of the Book of Common Prayer...
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THE SPECTATOR
The Spectatorin conjunction with the Prayer Book Society, is proud, on the occasion of the 500th anniversary of the birth of Thomas Cranmer, to announce THE THOMAS CRANMER SCHOOLS PRIZE...
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BOOKS T he first volume of Alistair Horne's life of Macmillan
The Spectatorwas a success. It is dis- appointing to have to report that the second is not. Home invites mockery by writing on page 595, 'His Boswell, who had the good fortune also to be...
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The blonde who preferred fame
The SpectatorDavid Sexton WARHOL by Victor Bockris Muller, £18.95. pp. 528 FAMOUS FOR 15 MINUTES: MY YEARS WITH ANDY WARHOL by Ultra Violet Methuen, £12.99, pp. 274 WARHOL: A PERSONAL...
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Maligned sacrificers of children
The SpectatorJasper Griffin THE PHOENICIANS edited by Sabatino Moscati BompianilJohn Murray, f60, pp. 766 P osterity has no mercy for the defeated. The Phoenicians, an energetic seafaring...
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Practising what the other preached
The SpectatorAntonia Douro THE GODWINS AND THE SHELLEYS by William St Clair Faber, f20, pp.572 W illiam St Clair's look at the philo- sopher and the poet inspects the links in the chain...
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A story of a lifetime
The SpectatorFrancis King SHOWING THE FLAG by Jane Gardam Hamish Hamilton, £11 .95, pp. 162 M any years ago, in Finland, Malcolm Sargent remarked to me that there were performances of an...
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That hideous and concealed strength
The SpectatorAndrei Navrozov GORBACHEV'S STRUGGLE FOR ECONOMIC REFORM by Anders Aslund Pinter, f35, 12.95, pp. 225 CAN THE SOVIET SYSTEM SURVIVE REFORM? edited by G. R. Urban Pinter,...
After Martial, VIII, 20
The SpectatorYou write prolific verse daily logorrhoea of two hundred stanzas at least. You show none of them, recite none of them. You have no talent,
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A newfangled and funny romp
The SpectatorD. J. Taylor A HISTORY OF THE WORLD IN 10 1 /2 CHAPTERS by Julian Barnes Cape, £11.95, pp.309 Y ou can already picture the judges of this year's Sunday Express fiction prize,...
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ARTS
The SpectatorT wo immense naval guns point at your chest as you go through the gates of the Imperial War Museum in Lambeth Road, SE1. Surrounding these weapons is a grass circle encircled by...
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Theatre
The SpectatorFrankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune (Comedy) Twelfth Night (Regent's Park) Sickly success Christopher Edwards T his two-hander by Terrence McNally was an enormous hit in...
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Music
The SpectatorA question of revival Robin Holloway I s it fair, when a composer decides his own body of work, to dilute or clog it up with things he has deliberately omitted? The question...
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Jazz
The SpectatorPrairie rooster Martin Gayford J azz has been notably capricious about the instruments it has favoured. Novelties and oddities such as the saxophone and the vibraharp were...
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Exhibitions
The SpectatorStephen Conroy (Marlborough Fine Art, till 29 July) Conroy was here Giles Auty E ver since a display of his work in Edinburgh first attracted the attention of London dealers...
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Cinema
The SpectatorDead end in Russia Hilary Mantel I n the town where Little Vera lives, the people are stacked up in apartment blocks, unrelenting cubes that brutalise the eye; behind them,...
Gardens
The SpectatorAllotment rules OK Ursula Buchan I am in danger of becoming an allotment bore. How can I avoid it? For one thing, I live in a part of the country where allot- ments are...
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Television
The SpectatorOff the map Wendy Cope W hat do you know about Sunder- land?' asked Kate Adie. 'Do you know where it is?' Somebody said it was in Yorkshire. 'In the North somewhere, I think',...
High life
The SpectatorThe blonde got it right Taki n common with other expatriate Greeks, I sat up all Sunday night waiting for the election results from the Olive Republic. Mind you, I was in good...
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Home life
The SpectatorGoring story Alice Thomas Ellis then I started humming a song about the snow-clad Sierra Nevada until Janet told me to stop it. When I got home a friehd rang and suggested...
Low life
The SpectatorMove over, Harry Jeffrey Bernard A nother one has left the company. Harry died last week. It was not a surprise and he had long been heading for a fatal accident staggering...
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11 1111I l!! 1 1111111 11 111[11111 EVEN serious eaters reduce their intake in the
The Spectatorheat, so you might think summer is not the best time to open a new restaurant. Still, in some cases it does give a place time to find its feet before those cooler months, much...
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CHESS
The SpectatorY elena Akhmilovskaya, the Russian defector, came, saw and departed. She had been invited to the Park Hall Grandmaster tournament in Preston, and, indeed, it was her presence...
COMPETITION
The SpectatorBardograms Jaspistos I n Competition No. 1579 you were asked for anagrams of single lines from Shakespeare's plays (modern spelling), ex- tra points to be awarded for...
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made (or you from G.DS. ICO% cotton drill 4 large
The Spectatorbutton pockets. Any site price flum L32. Details: Fteepust 9 nano, Calt nen, KWI4 7BR. Tel: (0847163197 Ell Order non. ti for nut = g month deliver!. 'Ms INTERNATIONAL...
If you wish to attend please call me on: 923-4820
The Spectator(evenings) I Homewood Avenue, Apt 4, Toronto, Ont MO/ 2,18, SITUATIONS VACANT SPECTATOR is looking for: 1. A receptionist/office administrator. Applicants should have...
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Bread of Dreams: Food and Fantasy in Early Modern Europe,
The SpectatorPiero Camporesi (trans. David Gentilcore), 27 May 32(R) Breaking Eastern promise, 13 May 5(LA) Breaking of the icons, The, 4 Mar 9(A) Breaking the magic circle, 4 Feb 15(A)...
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Thou t' wins the world computer championship, 17 Jun 43(A
The Spectatorr Yelena Akhmilovskaya, the Russian defector, 24 Jun 2(A) Childhood: An Anthology, (ed.) Penelope Hughes-Hallett, 28 Jun 28(R) a mother's revenge on a child-raper, 28 Jan...
rivalry among the ministries and departments, 28 Jan 6(PC); John
The SpectatorMajor and Stevie Smith's cat, 28 Jan 25(CS); lain Macleod on the party leadership struggle in 1963, 4 Feb 15(A); the Tory 'magic circle, 4 Feb 15(A); a self- consciously...
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Dietrich, Marlene, My Life. 13 May 35(R) Differing with Dr
The SpectatorDonne, I1 Feb 41(P) Digestive difficulties of gobbling up estate agents, The, 11 Mar 32(A) Disarmament? . . . No tanks, 3 Jun II(A) Disasters: the Hillsborough football ground...