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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The Spectator'Thank goodness there's no life on board.' wo Iraqi diplomats sought political asylum in Britain; both had reached the ends of their careers. One had been ambas- sador to...
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The Spectator, 56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL Telephone: 071-405
The Spectator1706; Telex 27124; Fax 071-242 0603 IT AIN'T NECESSARILY SO P op videos, violent crime, law suits and junk food: much of what we import from across the Atlantic is of...
SPECTAT THE OR SUBSCRIBE TODAY — RATES
The Spectator12 Months 6 Months UK O £77.00 El £39.00 Europe (airmail) 0 £88.00 0 £44.00 USA Airspeed 0 US$125 ID US$63.00 USA Airmail D US$175 0 US$88 Rest of Airmail El £111.00 0 £55.50...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorThe Howard League for Personal Advancement gets austere ANDREW GIMSON T he belief that our prisons are, in the words of the Home Secretary, Mr Michael Howard, 'too lax', is...
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DIARY
The Spectator0 n Monday I stopped at the petrol sta- tion on the A339 at ICingsclere specifically because I thought you got free glasses there. You don't get glasses, I was disap- pointed to...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorRape: between the female whinge and the male cringe AUBER ON WAUGH My heart had been bleeding for Angus Diggle all week, and then this account of rancorous English academics...
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THE RISE OF THE BIG BUCKS NANNY
The SpectatorNicholas Coleridge analyses a new social phenomenon — the nanny who is better off than her employer The manner, however, reminded me of thrust- ing young business exec-...
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A BLACK MARKET IN HUMANITY
The SpectatorCharles Glass argues that many Serbs are doing their best to help the Bosnian Muslims, none more so than black-marketeers Sarajevo HE WAS like most of the Serbian soldiers...
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One hundred years ago
The SpectatorTHE VANITY OF SPARROWS Sir, — Permit me to ask those bird-lov- ing correspondents of yours, whose let- ters I have read with great interest in the Spectator, whether they have...
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'THESE BUDDHISTS ARE ALL FOREIGNERS'
The SpectatorWilliam Dalrymple visits the site of India's most lethal religious dispute, and meets one side of the argument Bodh Gaya, Bihar RELIGIOUS DISPUTES are to India in the Nineties...
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Mind your language
The SpectatorDOWN TO fundamentals this week, I'm afraid. Mr Thorbjoern Berntsen, the Norwegian environment minister, famously called Mr John Gummer, his British counterpart, a drittsekk....
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SPE I CTATOR
The SpectatorDIARY 1994 £12 Plain £13 Initialled T he Spectator 1994 Diary, bound in soft leather, will shortly be available. With a new layout and a whole week to view, Monday to Sunday,...
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A RUINED APOCALYPTIC VIEW
The SpectatorRoss Clark visits the deserted remains of Britain's top-secret atomic weapons testing ground THERE IS a distinct thrill in being where one is not really supposed to be; a...
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CLEVER DICKIES
The SpectatorAdam Nicolson explains why he can never take seriously men who wear bow ties WHAT IS wrong with bow ties? Why do you automatically suspect someone who is wearing one? I have a...
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DESERVING AND UNDESERVING SUICIDES
The SpectatorDr Theodore Dalrymple suggests a way in which the NHS can save lives and £50 million a year WHAT IS the commonest single cause of emergency medical (as compared to surgi- cal)...
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AND ANOTHER THING
The SpectatorHow know-nothing Major made the Tories the Stupid Party again PAUL JOHNSON Such a battle is inevitable, sooner rather than later. Major cannot continue to lead the party for...
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Lloyd's finds favour
The SpectatorAT LLOYD'S of London, the best news for years — which is not saying much — is the rush to put money in. The merchant banks are now scrambling to come up with new schemes, and...
CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorMuddled signals and conflicting movements make for railway accidents CHRISTOPHER FILDES L 'merick Junction was so designed that all trains from all directions had to come in...
Time with the families
The SpectatorI RECALL my surprise when a friend of mine at Oxford said that he was going to work for Barclays Bank. He wanted, so he said, a job he could combine with hunting. I now see that...
Who's in charge?
The SpectatorI DO NOT believe that what the railways need now is franchising, or unbundling, or reorganising or restructuring. What they need is running. That is a full time job, not just...
Money with menaces
The SpectatorTHEO WAIGEL, Germany's finance min- ister, has been laying down the law on mon- etary union for Europe. If Frankfurt doesn't get the central bank, he says, the whole thing is...
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A crooked business
The SpectatorSir: Roderick Smart's kindly meant sub- terfuge does not serve his pupils well ('Cut- ting the old school tie', 21 August). Getting into university is a crooked enough business...
Right to reply
The SpectatorSir: A BBC bureaucrat, Mr Drummond, writing to you last week (Letters, 21 August), refers twice to the 'hysteria' of my articles. What he means is that he does not agree with...
Sir: The Oxbridge admissions system would indeed defeat the analytical
The Spectatorpowers of some of our greatest thinkers. Unfortunately it is the ingenuity displayed by schoolmasters such as Mr Smart that confuses the situa- tion. His clever stratagems have...
Serving God's people
The SpectatorSir: Damian Thompson bases his vision of the future Church of England (`Many mort- gaged mansions', 7 August) on a number of false assumptions. 'Appeals to present generosity,'...
LETTERS War of words
The SpectatorSir: Until I read Paul Johnson's piece (And another thing, 14 August) of apoplectic nonsense on Bosnia I had no idea that I was either a Greenham woman, a professor of peace...
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Just complaint
The SpectatorSir: The answer to Christopher Howse's perplexity over the Westminster epigram (Books, 14 August) is that it is not about politicians at all but about lawyers, who in those days...
Sir: I would like to offer two quotes from Mr
The SpectatorIzetbegovic's Islamic Declaration in order to help settle the dispute between Sir Alfred Sherman and Mr Noel Malcolm: 'There can be no peace or co-existence between the Islamic...
Tinned Fanny
The SpectatorSir: As my Spectator of 31 July went astray in the post, I first learnt of Jaspistos' sur- prising ignorance of the identity of the orig- inal Fanny Adams when I read Alastair...
Punch and Judy
The SpectatorSir: While I agree with everything Noel Malcolm says about Bosnia (Letters, 14 August), it is difficult to believe that the Serbs have no more formidable an advo- cate than Sir...
Disgusting
The SpectatorSir: Why, when Britain brews some of the finest beers in the world, are they becoming virtually impossible to find in a growing number of bars and clubs in London and, I...
A patriot abroad
The SpectatorSir: In John Grigg's review of Professor Simpson (Books, 14 August) he hardly mentions that careful research enabled Professor Simpson to discover the role played by MI5 in the...
Never forget
The SpectatorSir: Simon Heffer's article on David Hunt, Secretary of State for Employment (Poli- tics, 14 August), failed to mention the one thing which many of us will never forget about...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorOnly a wit among lords? Robert Harris TELL THEM I'M ON MY WAY by Arnold Goodman Chapman, £20, pp.464 NOT AN ENGLISHMAN: CONVERSATIONS WITH LORD GOODMAN by David Selbourne...
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The sense of an ending
The SpectatorChristopher Hawtree LAST WORDS by Karl Guthke Princeton University Press, £16.99, pp.224 I f one were to give full vent to prejudice, it would be to suggest that there could...
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Survival is not all there is
The SpectatorM. R. D. Foot T his book is both fascinating and appal- ing. It explains, in precise retrospect, what happened to its author, a young Dutch solicitor who was arrested by the...
Truth Lives Within Your House
The SpectatorI chuckle to think that a fish immersed In water needs to slake its thirst. Don't you see — your hearth is the house of God, Not the forests to whi,ch in vain you plod. Truth...
Solid joys and lasting pleasure
The SpectatorMichael Hulse PRAGUE TALES by Jan Neruda translated by Michael Henry Heim Chatto and Windus, £10.99, pp.346 J an Neruda (1834-1891) was one of the foremost Czech writers of the...
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A true heroine of romance
The SpectatorAndro Linldater FLORA MACDONALD: THE MOST LOYAL REBEL by Hugh Douglas Alan Sutton, £16.99, pp.259 F ew heroines can have exercised so immediate and constant a hold on popular...
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How the very best DWEM's saw themselves
The SpectatorPeter Levi THE LANGUAGE OF AUTOBIOGRAPHY by John Sturrock Cambridge University Press, £35, pp.312 F or many years I have confusedly exag- gerated John Sturrock's intellectual...
FOOTBALL NEWS
The SpectatorORIENT BEEF NO MATCH FOR WEST HAM MOTHERWELL AS EXPECTED AFTER CLINICAL HEARTS JOB NO ROOM FOR CHESTERFIELD AT TIGHT VILLA CLYDEBANK SWAMPED BY CLYDE STOKE TO INCREASE HEAT FOR...
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Clattering of saucepans and gongs
The SpectatorHilary Corke T here is a sense in which the word is even more important than the deed, and whatever fate comes visiting the one who suffers and records matters less than the...
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From Cambridge to St Petersburg
The SpectatorHarriet Waugh DEAD MEAT by Philip Kerr Chatto and Windus, 174.99, pp.243 A PHILOSOPHICAL INVESTIGATION by Philip Kerr Arrow, £4.95, pp.36I D ead Meat is Philip Kerr's fifth...
He's a real glimmer man
The SpectatorCarole Angier EXCURSIONS IN THE REAL WORLD by William Trevor Hutchinson, £16.99, pp.200 S ome real passion must have brought William Trevor's parents together, but that was by...
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Escaping the throne, finding the guillotine
The SpectatorMark Archer PAINTING AND SCULPTURE IN FRANCE 1700-1789 by Michael Levey Yale University Press, £44, pp. 318 A yone who has read Sir Michael Levey's earlier books or who saw the...
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Gall is divided into three parts
The SpectatorLucy Hughes-Hallett MASAI DREAMING by Justin Cartwright Macmillan, £14.99, pp.291 A i anthropologist, female, a French Jew, is telling her 11 year-old brother about the Masai,...
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ARTS
The SpectatorEdinburgh Festival Better by the Mile Five days in the life of Festival-goer Rupert Christiansen I never actually saw the legendary car sticker which read 'Glasgow may be...
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The Proms
The SpectatorUnfamiliar pleasures Peter Phillips T here's been some wonderful music played at the Proms recently. Whether it has been outstandingly well played hasn't mattered very much to...
Theatre
The SpectatorHot Stuff (Cambridge) The Cenci (Lyric Hammersmith Studio) Schlocky horror show Sheridan Morley T hose of you who were with me last week may recall that I am not hugely in...
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A Tits D Varg A monthly selection of forthcoming events
The Spectatorrecommended by The Spectator's regular critics DANCE Vivarta, Phoenix Arts, Leicester (0533 554854) and The Place (071 387 0031), from 17 September. A two-week festival of...
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Exhibitions
The SpectatorRussian Painting of the Avant-Garde 1906-1934 (Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, till 5 September) The Line of Tradition: Watercolours, Drawings and Prints by Scottish...
Cinema
The SpectatorThe new old Clint Mark Amory T here is an extraordinarily satisfying moment in Godfather II when (a little late in my case) you realise that young Robert de Niro is actually...
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How to save yourself 51 trips to the library .
The Spectator. . or over £35 on The Spectator If you're forced to share The Spectator with fellow students, then you'll know how difficult it can be to track a copy down. Now you can save...
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High life
The SpectatorRevenge of the towelheads Taki His parents heard abotit it and com- plained to the Palace Hotel management, which of course did nothing at all except to inform me that...
Television
The SpectatorMug shots Martyn Harris uanto?' said Giovanni incredulous- ly, `Quanto?' They seemed to be his only two words of Italian, but he made a con- vincing enough foreigner for the...
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Long life
The SpectatorThe change in Spain Nigel Nicolson M y 1959 Baedeker warned me that Spaniards attach great importance to dress. 'To walk through a town in shorts, without a jacket or in short...
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Imperative cooking: mussel appeal
The Spectator; IT WAS quite the best breakfast I've had for a long time. Which is all the more sur- prising because it was in France. The way to get good breakfasts in countries such as...
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I SPAIN'S FINEST CAVA {tau diu I
The SpectatorCHESS SPAIN'S FINEST CAVA Choreography Raymond Keene AS THE WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP be- tween Garry Kasparov and Nigel Short approaches, the interest in chess is mount- ing....
COMPETITION
The SpectatorplIKE MALT , Prizes and praises Jaspistos IN COMPETITION NO. 1793 you were invited to write a poem following the rhythm and rhyme- and half-rhyme scheme of Auden's — 0 where...
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W.1 1 tJ
The SpectatorE j GRAHAM'S PORT W & J GRAHAM'S M PORT CROSSWORD 1124: Materialistic by Doc A first prize of £20 and a bottle of Graham's Malvedos 1979 Vintage Port for the first correct...
No. 1796: Anagrammatic
The SpectatorYou are invited to compose a dialogue in which the words of each speaker in turn contain anagrams — of single words or phrases or both mixed. Maximum 100 words. The entries, I...
Solution to 1121: Sticky A R 2 R 0 2 1 E
The Spectator4 RIL 6 LI 0 7 C 1.1 1 MAL ICOBUSIM 7 hASBAG B'ST LIMFANG A lip TTE D &N TftN T E R '11 The unclued lights are names of characters in A.A. Milne's Winnie- the-Pooh' stories....
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SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorAll hail and farewell Frank Keating WHERE HAS all the chivalry gone? Why didn't Allan Border get a formal three cheers from the England team when he made his final entrance on...
YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
The SpectatorQ. I leave next Sunday for Greece on a yacht. I am sailing with three men. Do I crouch on my bunk with the hair-drier to dry my knickers or is there a socially acceptable way to...