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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT he Conservative Party, led in the House of Commons by Mr John Major, the Prime Minister, invited eight MPs from whom it had withdrawn the whip to take it again; no conditions...
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DIARY KEITH WATERHOUSE
The SpectatorA clutch of glittering prizes for Four Weddings and a Funeral at the Bafta Awards puts it firmly in the category of films I must pretend to have seen, and which in the fullness...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorHow we should deal with the animal activists in our midst AUBERON WAUGH Even this petulant, teenage rubbish car- ries within it one tiny grain of truth. The police, who...
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WHO WAS FIBBING, THE OLD BLAIR OR THE NEW?
The SpectatorThe Labour leader is adept at promoting the idea that his party has transformed itself Boris Johnson wonders how much of the Old Labour lurks below the surface THERE IS a...
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NO SUCH THING AS BAD PUBLICITY
The SpectatorMark Steyn was in Oklahoma to see a new musical. Then the bomb went off. But it's all show business Oklahoma City THE MAN can tell I'm from out of town. `You're here for the...
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Mind your language
The SpectatorWHEN LAST week a little girl was caught in the dark inside a moving Tube train, the doors of which would not open, a London Underground spokesman said: 'We apologise profuse- ly...
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WHAT ARE WE CELEBRATING?
The SpectatorJohn Charmley argues that in 1945 Britain had won nothing, save the avoidance of defeat IT WAS in Warsaw in 1989, at a confer- ence organised to commemorate the 50th...
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THE NEUTRALISING OF A GENERATION
The SpectatorNeil Lyndon argues that television's obsession with sport, led by Rupert Murdoch, is creating a nation of nerds MURDOCH'S MORONS, that ever grow- ing army of followers of...
If symptoms
The Spectatorpersist.. . IS LIFE worth living ? Not in the opin- ion of one of my patients. He referred to the case of the English murderer recent- ly executed in Georgia. `That bloke in...
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BOYS WILL BE BOYS
The SpectatorThis week the Government is publishing measures designed to make divorce less painful. Judi Bevan offers some personal observations HAVE YOU HEARD about the Jewish couple in...
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IT'S NECESSARY TO LISTEN, TOO
The SpectatorNigella Lawson lasted a week at Britain's newest national radio station. Here she explains why it is heading for oblivion IT IS a Monday evening earlier this month: I am on...
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AND ANOTHER THING
The SpectatorNo animals have rights, but human beings have duties to them PAUL JOHNSON T e stinks don from New College has been making trouble again. Defending abortion, he argues (`Are...
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CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorWear your hard hat when the single-issue mob comes to the shareholders' meeting CHRISTOPHER FILDES I must buy a share in Wimpey, the builders. Then I can go to the meetings...
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Sir: Please allow Dr Dawkins more space in order to
The Spectatordevelop further his hierarchy of crimes. He had already tacitly conceded that a person who killed a four-year-old child with a meagre vocabulary should be punished less severely...
LETTERS Eating babies
The SpectatorSir: How reassuring to see that the 'How many angels dance on the head of a pin?' level of disputation is still alive at New Col- lege, Oxford, from which Richard Dawkins writes...
Sir: Thank you for printing the letter from Richard Dawkins
The Spectatorin your last issue. It is the most succinct and elegant demolition of the theory of evolution I have yet seen. J.S. Butterworth 4 Ridgeside, Bledlow Ridge, High Wycombe, Bucks
OK, McNulty?
The SpectatorSir: The question posed by Mr McNulty (Letters, 22 April) is easily answered. The edicts of the European Commission are like it or not — enforceable in a court of law. The...
Stamp liberation
The SpectatorSir: Charles Moore's encomium (Another voice, 22 April) of post-1979 public services overlooks one minor yet significant improvement: the proliferation of outlets for postage...
Taking exception
The SpectatorSir: 'All great men are bad men' (Taking the family name in vain', 25 March). Including, say, Lincoln? Acton never said it, and it's astonishing that he's misquoted by his...
Anti-Britishism
The SpectatorSir: The article by William Cash that you ran last October was taken by the Jewish community in Hollywood, and elsewhere, to be anti-Semitic and to be suggesting that affairs...
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Sir: I have just flowed, followed, the amaz- ing Jane
The SpectatorPeterson's recipe for April festive cake! It was enorm, a stupend, it was really, it was a big success and we all loved it. Thank you. What a woman! And what a cake! What has...
Right on
The SpectatorSir: It ill becomes Paul Johnson in your issue of 18 March (Another thing) to describe Fidel Castro as a 'mass murderer and torturer'. Castro is indeed a dictator of a rather...
Dear Jennifer
The SpectatorSir: Jennifer Paterson urged your readers to search out Carlin peas to eat on Passion Sunday ( Food, 25 March). Needless to say, current legislation is inexorably enforcing the...
Poofs can fight
The SpectatorSir: I served seven years in the army, of which six (1940-46) were overseas in East Africa and the Middle and Far East, and of those I was five years in an infantry battal-...
Celtic conquest
The SpectatorSir: I was interested to read that, in Scot- land Gian Carlo Menotti is known as Mr McNaughtie (Diary, 8 April). I have it on good authority (from a friend of a friend of...
Maggie's measure
The SpectatorSir: Congratulations to Sean Thomas (Let- ters, 15 April) for finally figuring out what women have known for years. As a man of presumably 'middling intellect' (why else did he...
Welsh humour
The SpectatorSir: Your profile of John Redwood (`Spock of the valleys', 15 April) suggested he would make a good Chancellor of the Exchequer later on. I think you mean Shad- ow Chancellor....
Working for the Japs
The SpectatorSir: In `Spock of the valleys' (15 April) Boris Johnson tells us that a Japanese doll is to be seen at the Welsh Office in acknowledgement of the Japanese compa- nies...
Sad, but true
The SpectatorSir: I was pleased to read the letter from Brenda Holliday (Letters, 22 April). I, like her, am led up with the assumption that the Community Charge was an ill-advised tax'....
What, pay him?
The SpectatorSir: It is time to make room in the back pages of your organ for a column by Mr Fayed of Harrods. You could put it next to Office Life, leaving an aisle or two between it and...
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CENTRE POINT
The SpectatorIt all depends on what you mean SIMON JENKINS ne of the pleasures of politics is that it is not mathematics. Anyone can play pol- itics. The game is full of mystery,...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorA fellow's occupation's gone Philip Hensher OUR GAME by John Le Carre Hodder, £16.99, £9.99, pp. 347 I t isn't often that a whole literary genre finds itself suddenly made...
The Media
The SpectatorThe air is full of noise, The screen of caper: Reality enjoys' No inch of paper. The most expensive lies Flourish in every home: Great gulps of froth and foam Win the first...
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Still swinging together?
The SpectatorAndro Linklater THE POISONED BOWL by Alisdare Hickson Constable, .£14.95, pp. 250 S tands England's vice where once it stood? The old flag that used to fly over every public...
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Sleep brings not darkness
The SpectatorJonathan Keates PRIVATE MYTHS: DREAMS AND DREAMING by Anthony Stevens Hamish Hamilton, £20, pp. 385 F or a long period in human history, dreams were respectable. People...
An escape, but more than escapism
The SpectatorAnita Brookner LADDER OF YEARS by Anne Tyler Chatto, £14.99, pp. 326 A dmirers of Anne Tyler — and they are legion — will certainly succumb to her new novel, all the more...
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Tempora mutantur, but not entirely
The SpectatorM. R. D. Foot CELESTINE: VOICES FROM A FRENCH VILLAGE by Gillian Tindall Sinclair-Stevenson, £17.99, pp. 228 T his is a wonderfully evocative book. Gillian Tindall stumbled, on...
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Not at liberty to choose
The SpectatorPeter J. M. Wayne THE PRISONERS' HANDBOOK, 1995 by Mark Leech OUP, £30, £9.99, pp. 465 D uring a brief period of freedom last year, I was invited to speak at a 'Roots of Crime'...
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But the malady lingers on
The SpectatorCarole Angier SUMMER PLAGUE by Tony Gould Yale, £19.95, pp. 366 A s Tony Gould says in his opening line, polio is now (or seems now) a conquered, forgotten disease in Europe....
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The sound of a voice that continues
The SpectatorJohn Fowles STILL by Adam Thorpe Secker, £15.99, pp. 584 I finished this brilliantly jumped second novel, the traditionally tough fence, of a writer whose first I had much...
Murder
The SpectatorIn the small frame of the window, murder: the crane-fly, stretched on the rack of a web, and the spider, its lover, its butcher, hugged in a grim embrace. Hopeless. The...
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ARTS
The SpectatorLottery Dishing out a pot of gold Peter Brooke looks at the challenges facing the distributors of the Heritage Fund N owhere in the admirably clear and elegant Heritage...
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Theatre
The SpectatorUnder Milk Wood (Olivier) The Liberation of Skopje (Riverside) Away with the fairies Sheridan Morley T begin at the beginning: it is evening in the concrete-bunkered,...
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Cinema
The SpectatorOutbreak (`15', selected cinemas) Worse than bad acne Mark Steyn o utbreak is about a killer virus which, within hours, reduces its victims to gibber- ing wrecks, dripping...
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Exhibitions
The SpectatorTim Maguire, Ansel Krut, Jesse Cast (Jason & Rhodes, till 20 May) Minky Manky (South London Gallery, till 14 May) Two worlds Giles Auty I f I sought shows to typify the...
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Television
The SpectatorGreat shrink show Nigella Lawson I once sat next to Anthony Clare at a dinner, and expressed — polite I hope bafflement at why anyone should want to expose themselves so...
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Low life
The SpectatorAn unhappy snap Jeffrey Bernard E ery other day I am visited by both or either one of my district nurses, Dawn and Trudie Karamatzov. They dress my remain- ing but ulcerated...
High life
The SpectatorStrange heroes Talc' New York I t's a terrible thing to contemplate, but I fear that the Oklahoma City bomb might get Bill Clinton re-elected. No sooner had we learned that...
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Long life
The SpectatorA very sad home Nigel Nicolson I have spent only two days of my life in Oklahoma City, and remember only two things about it. An oil-rig, of the nodding donkey-head kind, sat...
Office life
The SpectatorShe fell into my arms Holly Budd W behaved like 14 year-olds this week. It was mainly the fault of my deputy, Nigel, for being so tall. With the coming of spring the office...
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Awards and accolades
The SpectatorMANY THANKS for your appreciative let- ters regarding the festive cake; I hope you all had a very merry Easter making it. We are still in the throes of Easter. It was Quasimo-...
BRIDGE
The SpectatorEssential logic Andrew Robson PEOPLE WHO ask me what is the most essential quality required to become a good bridge player receive an unhesitating reply: a logical mind. The...
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liSLE OF
The SpectatorLI $(0101WHISK1 ISLE OF ] VIM It 1141I 1LOILII *HMI URA COMPETITION Hey-nonny-no Jaspistos IN COMPETITION NO. 1878 you were given two lines which were inscribed on the...
CHESS
The SpectatorReal Alekhine Raymond Keene I AM CONSTANTLY STRUCK by the similarity between the play of Kasparov and that of his own chosen hero Alexander Alekhine. Alekhine's two greatest...
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A first prize of £25 and a bottle of Graham's
The SpectatorMalvedos 1979 Vintage Port for the first correct solution opened on 15 May, with two runners-up prizes of £15 (or, for UK solvers, the Chambers Dictionary – ring the word...
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SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorRovers return Frank Keating BLACKBURN ROVERS are as good as champions of the English Premier football league. The fact kindles the cockles of our romantic culture. It was...
YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
The SpectatorDear Mary.. . Q. I am forever meeting people who grand- ly announce that they are artists or writers, although I know that they have not exhibit- ed a single painting or had...