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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The Spectator`Evening all!' C ommonwealth leaders meeting in the Bahamas agreed, with difficulty, a set of measures designed to force the South African government to end apartheid, but...
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PLO GUNSMOKE
The SpectatorThe problem remains that there are now not one but several PLOs, and that, as the failure of Britain's own recent initiatives has shown most vividly, it is difficult to find any...
FOX'S PAD
The SpectatorIT IS somehow fitting that Samantha Fox, the 'page three' model with enormous breasts, is thinking of buying a house on the same estate as Mrs Thatcher in Dul- wich. Perhaps...
THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorMR FOWLER WEAKENS I t is hard to escape the impression that Mr Norman Fowler, the Health and Social Services Secretary, is backtracking on some of his most radical social...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorFrom Magdala to Southwark Crown Court FERDINAND MOUNT A ccording to its masthead, the Voice is 'Britain's Best Black Newspaper'. The front-page story in last week's edition...
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DIARY MAX HASTINGS
The SpectatorA lmost every member of the British middle classes shares one common fantasy: the certainty of our competence to join the panel of Any Questions? Year after year, we sit at home...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorThree women: the Princess of Wales, Tina Brown and Mrs Tomalin AUBERON WAUG H I was slightly shocked to see the Daily Mail's estimate that only 20 million people of Britain had...
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THE QUEEN MOTHER'S CIRCLE
The SpectatorNicholas Coleridge on the surprising mixed company found in a royal sphere of influence IRANIAN emigres still revere Timur Khan Mir Panji, mother of the last Shah, as the...
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THE SURRENDER OF HONG KONG
The SpectatorBrian Eads finds China's 'News Agency' rapidly taking power and Britain rapidly abdicating Hong Kong JUST across the road from the Royal Hong Kong Jockey Club's Happy Valley...
One hundred years ago
The SpectatorAll the signs point to a war with Burmah. The Viceroy of India has prepared an ultimatum, which left Ran- goon for Mandalay on the 22nd inst., and which must be accepted or...
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CULTURE AND ANARCHY
The SpectatorTimothy Garton Ash on Hungary's qualified tolerance of cultural freedoms Budapest 'TELL me,' says the famous Hungarian writer, 'what are the intellectuals talking about in...
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MURDOCH'S RICH INDEBTEDNESS
The SpectatorNicholas von Hoffman on Mr Murdoch's acquisition of some amazingly unprofitable television stations New York MANY a poor man has come to these shores, become an American and...
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CHATTING UP TECHNIQUES
The SpectatorZenga Longmore on the ways of gaining or losing friends in Africa AS A young black woman, travelling around southern Africa with my white stepbrother, I was chatted up from...
STUDENTS ARE TWICE AS LIKELY TO ENJOY THE SPECTATOR AT
The SpectatorLESS THAN HALF-PRICE. More stimulating than any lecture, funnier than the set books, The Spectator should be required reading for every student. With Student Subscriptions...
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IS THERE A LAW OF CONSENT?
The SpectatorAlan Watkins argues that the Gillick judgment is hypocritical where the Victorians were clear EVERYONE who is interested in the history of journalism knows about W. T. Stead,...
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CRYING OUT FOR REFORM
The SpectatorPaul Johnson argues that the Government needs more law to break the closed shop Street managements are still being led by the nose it is their own fault. On the other hand,...
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THE ECONOMY
The SpectatorWhy monetarism is too simple for Mr Lawson JOCK BRUCE-GARDYNE T wo years ago, when Nigel Lawson returned in glory to the Treasury, I ven- tured (from another pulpit) to...
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CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorSpain is no longer content with Costa-mongering CHRISTOPHER FILDES Madrid o nceonce had a project called the Costa Inlanda. This started from the observation that Spain was...
Correction
The SpectatorIn Peter Kemp's article last week on the International Brigades, an error in tran- scription led to the reading: 'when I transferred to the Spanish Foreign Legion I found the...
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GAME OF CONSEQUENCES
The SpectatorSet by Caroline Moore T he first three winners in the nine-week Spectator Game of Consequences will receive outstanding prizes. The first prize is a valuable 18th-century...
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LETTERS Bourguiba and the Jews
The SpectatorSir: Maybe it would be possible to add a few remarks to the excellent piece Rowlin- son Carter wrote from Tunis (`The survival of Arafat', 12 October): these relate to the...
Dizzy precision
The SpectatorSir: Your correspondent (Andrew Gim- son, 'Peter Walker starts running', 12 October) cites Mr Peter Walker referring to Disraeli as 'the son of a Jewish book- seller'! These...
Sod the reader?
The SpectatorSir: Kingsley Amis's splendid catalogue of manifestations of 'Sod the public' (19 October) is one to which we all could add. I cannot help wondering if even you, Sir, sometimes...
Disinterested
The SpectatorSir: Is Christopher Booker saying that as an Observer correspondent in Moscow I served Soviet interests? In his Diary of 21 September he hid behind quotation marks. Perhaps he...
Sir: I am sorry to see displayed on the front
The Spectatorof the Spectator, and repeated ad nauseam inside, the three-letter word as offensive to decency as any four-letter word or as its six-letter synonym. David Cairns Applecroft,...
Selling Ulster
The SpectatorSir: I hesitate to disillusion Richard In- grams (Diary, 12 October), but Churchill tried the very volte-face he suggests over Ulster in 1940. The price of handing the six...
Admirable vodkas
The SpectatorSir: I am shocked by Mr Waugh's reference to vodka — 'the dullest and most brutish way of imbibing alcohol which mankind has yet invented' (Another voice, 5 Octo- ber). As he...
THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorSUBSCRIBE TODAY! I would like to take out a subscription to The Spectator. I enclose my cheque for £ (Equivalents US& Eurocheques accepted) RATES: 12 Months 6 Months...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorAn awkward friend Colin Welch ORWELL: THE WAR COMMENTARIES edited by W.J.West Duckworth and the BBC, f14.95 I f recordings had been miraculously made of the Worcester County...
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Writing to stay sane
The SpectatorAnthony Storr STRINDBERG: A BIOGRAPHY by Michael Meyer Secker & Warburg, f25 M ichael Meyer is a man of the theatre, an outstanding translator of both Ibsen and Strindberg,...
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The world in the afternoon
The SpectatorFrances Partridge ROSAMOND LEHMANN'S ALBUM with an introduction and postscript by Rosamond Lehmann Chatto & Windus, f8.95 E veryone who entertains visitors for weekends knows...
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A very feminine condition
The SpectatorAntonia Douro COUSIN ROSAMUND by Rebecca West Macmillan, £9.95 I n Cousin Rosamund Rebecca West con- tinues the saga of a set of dowdy, childish, over-sensitive virgins,...
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Pedro, the fisher of souls
The SpectatorElizabeth Jennings THE LOST EMPIRE: THE STORY OF THE JESUITS IN ETHIOPIA by Philip Caraman Sidgwick & Jackson, £13.95 E thiopia is, of course, a potent word today; it...
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Socially most inconvenient
The SpectatorBrian Martin MORE LETTERS OF OSCAR WILDE edited by Rupert Hart-Davis John Murray, f12.50 I n 1962 Rupert Hart-Davis, of Lyttelton Hart-Davis correspondence fame, pub- lished...
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Dangerously close to success
The SpectatorJohn McEwen VINCENT BY HIMSELF edited by Bruce Bernard Orbis £25 (£30 in 1986) E veryone familiar with Bruce Ber- nard's Photodiscovery and The Bible and Its Painters knows...
`Shall I have any lasting reputation?'
The SpectatorChristopher Hawtree HUGH WALPOLE by Rupert Hart-Davis Hamish Hamilton, f6.50 'ye been reading some of Hugh Wal- pole lately — urn-um — well there's something there, not...
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ARTS
The SpectatorOpera Don Carlos (Coliseum) Idomeneo and Carmen (Glyndebourne Touring Opera) Shock pleasure Rodney 114dnes I t is always a shock, but a most pleasant one, to see a great...
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Theatre
The SpectatorThe Deliberate Death of a Polish Priest (Almeida) Turbulent priest Christopher Edwards I t is unlikely that General Jaruzelski, the atheist Polish head of government, ever...
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Cinema
The SpectatorThe future of Australia Peter Ackroyd M ad Max is an Australian athlete, warrior and hero; Mel Gibson, who has always played the part, is an Australian star' who combines the...
Television
The SpectatorMedia darlings Alexander Chancellor I nsufficient credit seems to have been given to Miss Tina Brown, editor of Vanity Fair in New York, for the 'unique' televi sion interview...
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High life
The SpectatorThe Aids syndrome Taki kay it's an ugly subject, but so many high-lifers are dying from it, I think it's about time I broke silence and said my bit about Aids. First of all...
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Home life
The SpectatorForms of torture Alice Thomas Ellis I think that in a previous existence I may have been subjected to some degree of interrogation because now when people ask me questions my...
Low life
The SpectatorTired and emotional Jeffrey Bernard B ob Geldof came out with a classic last week. He said, 'I am suffering from_ com- passion fatigue.' I am not surprised. It is a fairly...
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Postscript
The SpectatorCommunicating an itch P. J. Kavanagh I was once on an Any Questions? pro- gramme with Jeffrey Archer and have never forgotten it. We chatted together before- hand, amiably...
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FINE ARTS
The SpectatorA handful of chintz James Knox 0 ne of the most dramatic rises in the art market over the last three years has been in the value of English furniture. This, like the demand for...
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Exhibitions
The SpectatorGerman Art in the 20th Century (Royal Academy till 22 December) New Image Glasgow (Air Gallery till 10 November) The German mammoth Giles Auty T he art of northerly Europe...
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Exhibitions
The SpectatorMasterpieces of Reality: French 17th-century Paintings (Leicester Museum and Art Gallery, 23 October — 2 February 1986) Anti-classical elements David Wakefield F rench art...
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SPECt E ATOR
The SpectatorYOUNG WRITER AWARDS Following the success of last year's competition, The Spectator announces the launch of its second Young Writer Awards. These important Awards provide...
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CROSSWORD
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 he awarded for the first...
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COMPETITION
The SpectatorEcho Jaspistos I n Competition No. 1392 you were in- vited to write an 'Echo' poem in the form of question and answer, the answering echo being monosyllabic, disyllabic or...
CHESS
The SpectatorNimzowitschian Raymond Keene A Moscow s he indicated to me last week, Gary Kasparov believes his Taimanov Sicilian Gambit to be sound. He demonstrated his faith by using it...
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Spectator Wine Club
The SpectatorThe price of last week's offer of Fitou Parmentier 1981 rouge was wrongly prin- ted as £26.68, instead of £28.68 per case of 12 bottles. If you have already ordered this wine,...
Imperative Cooking: they also serve
The SpectatorTHEY started at Watford North: three personalities, on the car radio, Woman's Hour, going on about dinner parties. They talked frothily for 13 minutes without once mentioning...
No. 1395: Rough play
The Spectator`Battered into almost total paralysis by the aggressive challenger' was how the Times chess correspondent described Karpov during one of his current games against Kasparov. You...
Solution to Crossword 728; Not half simple
The SpectatorMa ° U N E TO Nil 0 am B ii T L U ° S N R i 0 L S E T R _,Y1_ 017 Ii m ' r l XI 0 II. IS1- 0 U 112 u E N E , m P G a OA R 1E a E ir T c _ H E N 2 *...