2 APRIL 1988

Page 4

PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK

The Spectator

`Our executive is willing to give you one last chance.' M r Tony Benn announced that he was standing as the Left's candidate against Neil Kinnock for the Labour leadership....

Page 5

The Spectator, 56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL Telephone 01-405

The Spectator

1'706; Telex 27124; Fax 242 0603 OUTHOUSE TO WHITE HOUSE? F rom the guttermost, to the upper- most,' chants Jesse with a charmingly defiant smile; 'From the outhotise to the...

THE winners of the Spectator-Sunday Telegraph young writer awards will

The Spectator

be announced in our Spring Books issue of 16 April. The winners of the Spectator-Adam and Company three cities art prize for the best reflections of Edinburgh, Glasgow or Lon-...

THE SPECENTOR

The Spectator

SUBSCRIBE TODAY - Save 15% on the Cover Price! ' RATES 12 Months 6 Months UK 0 £45.00 0 £23.00 Europe (airmail) 0 £55.00 0 £28.00 USA Airspeed 0 US $90 0 US$45 Rest of...

IN LAST week's leading article, we sug- gested that Corporals

The Spectator

Wood and Howes 'were on an undercover operation' on the day on which they were murdered by the mob in Belfast. This suggestion seems to have been mistaken, and we apologise for...

Page 6

POLITICS

The Spectator

Mr Benn's tragedy: a second performance is announced NOEL MALCOLM H egel remarks somewhere', as Marx remarks somewhere else, 'that all important historical characters and...

Page 7

DIARY STAN GEBLER DAVIES

The Spectator

R adical surgery can have a deleterious effect on personality. I mean that the consequence of having chunks of one's body sliced up or hacked out is liable to be a foul temper....

Page 8

ANOTHER VOICE

The Spectator

An Easter message from the curious incident of the dead cat AUBERON WAUGH Last week, the Archbishop of Canter- bury launched what was described as a major investigation into...

Page 9

A LONG WAY FROM GUATEMALA CITY

The Spectator

Anthony Daniels sees the poor people of La Perla labouring under superstition and ideology FINCA la Perla is a short ride by light aircraft from Guatemala City, but in all...

Page 11

PUSHING THEIR LUCK

The Spectator

Ambrose EvanyiPritchard finds that the American drug culture has been pushed back to the ghetto Washington WASHINGTON is becoming like San Salvador. There are about two...

Page 12

HOLY TO A WHOLE PEOPLE

The Spectator

Alexander Norman meets the Dalai Lama, who will be cold-shouldered by the Government here next week New Delhi THE prospect of spending 40 minutes in the company of an...

Page 14

THE DEBASEMENT OF HERITAGE

The Spectator

Gavin Stamp finds the civil service mind blighting the care of historic buildings A FEW weeks ago, in the course of a largely unnecessary external cleaning of Chiswick House,...

Page 15

One hundred years ago

The Spectator

THE best proof yet received of the increasing order in Ireland, is that the two men accused of murdering J. Fitz- maurice, near Listowel, in Kerry, have been convicted and...

Page 16

YOO-HOO TOFU

The Spectator

Alexandra Artley visits an advanced vegan household in Hertfordshire THE COLD, soggy, grey linings of other people's wellies make me want to scream. But as they were so kindly...

Page 17

AN INDIAN DANCE IN LEICESTER SQUARE

The Spectator

spread of bhangra fever among young Asians in London WHO can doubt that the teenage children of East End Indians are a new race of mankind altogether, closely allied to the...

Page 22

ENDING FEAR OF THE IRA

The Spectator

The media: Paul Johnson wants to extend Thatcherism to Ulster THE relationship between the media and the IRA in Ulster has now reached a crisis and the Government has a duty...

The Spectator

Page 23

Nanny rules

The Spectator

ANOTHER needless handicap for person- al pensions is the nannyish restriction on what can happen when they mature. The pensioner must at once buy an annuity from a life...

CITY AND SUBURBAN

The Spectator

Institutionalised arrangements for watering the workers' beer CHRISTOPHER FILDES P ersonal pensions are under starter's orders for the off this summer like a high-class horse...

City and suburbia

The Spectator

I HAVE the answer for the City Commu- ter Services Group. You didn't know there was such a group? Nor did I until this week, when it reported, but it turns out to be one of...

Elephantine sagacity

The Spectator

WARD Hunt and his island are on the map, and not before time. The intrepid baronet Sir Ranulph Fiennes, defeated in his attempt to walk to the North Pole on his frost-bitten...

The tax on owners

The Spectator

THIS same government has now tilted the balance further away from personal own- ership of shares. See what happens if you choose to own shares directly. Your future capital...

Page 24

Dutiful dukes

The Spectator

Sir: Mr Latimer (Letters, 26 March) does not say why he considers the incomes of late-19th-century landowners to be evi- LETTERS dence of lack of generosity. In fact the peers...

Cornish Mudd

The Spectator

Sir: Naturally, in the enlightened freedom of your pages, Mr Mackay of Darwen, Lancs, is entitled to his opinion of the Cornish (Letters, 25 March). It was ex- pressed with the...

Can't write, won't write

The Spectator

Sir: Jeff Bernard (Low life, 13 February) was good enough to quote me as saying that writing novels is a substitute for living. May I offer him the full text (by courtesy of the...

Critical yen

The Spectator

Sir: As a former freelance journalist, I know how hard it is to earn an honest penny, but isn't Richard West (`The idyllic labour camp', 19 March) becoming just a teeny bit...

LETTERS

The Spectator

Professional closed shops Sir: As the guilty author of the occasional 'clearly inspired' article about the Spanish practices of the learned professions (although not, I am...

BBC debate

The Spectator

Sir: Michael Leapman's account in 'Lime grove conspirators' (26 March) is a sad distortion of the real and important debate that is going on in BBC news and current affairs, a...

Page 25

Good riddance

The Spectator

Sir: I am glad to see that Jeffrey Bernard is now finding solace in music (Low life, 16 January). Only a few years ago the Coach and Horses, of which he is such a notable...

Mystery

The Spectator

Sir: I find your suggestion (Diary, 19 March) that the appeal of the Independent lies in its sparse coverage of royal events less convincing than one advanced recently by a...

A Calendar for 1988 by Posy Simmonds Ani l 14 Desmond

The Spectator

DuJff, (:2), a retired engineer, very lame and rather deaf, a resident of Deddinham Court Rest Home, is man of the month.

Page 26

BOOKS

The Spectator

Secreted in White's Hugh Trevor-Roper THE SECRET SERVANT: THE LIFE OF SIR STEWART MENZIES, CHURCHILL'S SPYMASTER by Anthony Cave Brown Michael Joseph, £19.95 S tewart...

Page 27

The Kitchen Table

The Spectator

In memory of my mother Making a home was what you could do best; and cookery (the ritual at the heart of it) you had a kind of genius for. So what I first recall, thinking of...

0 uncommon Alan Bennett

The Spectator

Patrick Skene Catling TALKING HEADS by Alan Bennett BBC, f4.95 I don't know why it should be only Catholics who are thought never to escape their religious upbringing,' Alan...

Page 28

An extremely wearing business

The Spectator

Anita Brookner THE FASHION CONSPIRACY by Nicholas Coleridge Heinemann, £12.95 T he extent of the conspiracy is indi- cated by the photographs, which show beaming and...

Page 29

Remembering the suffering of the Poles

The Spectator

Radek Sikorski THE INHUMAN LAND by Jozef Czapski (available from The Polish Cultural Foundation, 23 Coleridge Street, Hove, Sussex BN3 5A B, f6, plus 50p postage) W hich is...

Page 30

A selection of recent paperbacks

The Spectator

Fiction: Only By Mistake by P. J. Kavanagh, John Calder, £5.95 The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne and The Temptation of Eileen Hughes by Brian Moore, Paladin, £3.50 each Close...

Page 32

Edmund Gosse goes to Australia

The Spectator

Francis King OSCAR AND LUCINDA by Peter Carey Faber, £10.95 T he narrator of this remarkable novel — as it were, Peter Carey himself — is a present-day Australian who looks...

Page 33

Round the world in nine airborne days

The Spectator

Montagu Curzon VOYAGER: THE FLYING ADVENTURE OF A LIFETIME by Jeana Yeager and Dick Rutan, with Phil Patton Heinemann, f12.95 E veryone familiar with the The Right Stuff, Tom...

Page 34

ARTS

The Spectator

Exhibitions College crew Giles Auty Exhibition Road: Painters from the Royal College of Art (Royal College Galleries, till 24 April) A number of times occur in a London-...

Page 35

Cinema

The Spectator

Empire of the Sun (PG', selected cinemas) Unlucky Jim Hilary Mantel J .G. Ballard, on whose novel this film is based, has had brushes with Hollywood before. It was he who...

Theatre

The Spectator

The Jew of Malta (Barbican) Cymbeline (Pit) Nods and winks Christopher Edwards hese two RSC productions arrive in London from Stratford. They offer prom- ise of an...

Page 36

Photography

The Spectator

Robert Mapplethorpe: Portraits (National Portrait Gallery, till 19 June) Hot shots Francis Hodgson R obert Mapplethorpe may or may not be a very fine photographer. At the mo-...

Page 37

Sale-rooms

The Spectator

Has Big Al got it right? Peter Watson examines the art market six months after Black Monday S pare a thought this weekend for the blood pressure of Lord Gowrie. He has been in...

mA _R I5

The Spectator

111A1-9Y A monthly selection of forthcoming events recommended by The Spectator's regular critics MUSIC The 1988 Celebration of British Music continues on 10 April in the...

Page 38

Television

The Spectator

Electrical faults Wendy Cope L ast Friday I was laid low by a stomach upset and spent 12 hours unable to do anything except sip Lucozade and feel extremely sorry for myself....

Page 40

High life

The Spectator

Improving with age Taki There was one guest — an academic I believe — who left early. He was heard to mutter something about being snubbed by Princess Michael of Kent, an...

Low life

The Spectator

Thai break Jeffrey Bernard I felt very much at home again last Saturday to lose some money on the Lincoln Handicap and in the rain. But memories of Thailand linger and I...

Page 41

Home life

The Spectator

Motorway madness Alice Thomas Ellis T he magpies have been behaving strangely recently. Our local ones, who I thought were divorced, appeared together on the morning of the...

Page 42

CROSSWORD 852: Capitall by Doc

The Spectator

A first prize of £20 and two further prizes of £10 (or, for UK solvers, a copy of Chambers Dictionary, value £13.95 — ring the words 'Chambers Dictionary' above) for the first...

Page 43

CHESS

The Spectator

Black knight Raymond Keene U nfortunately, I missed this year's Oxford-Cambridge match; it was arranged at short notice and clashed with an impor- tant meeting of the Hastings...

COMPETITION

The Spectator

Wrinkles for the wrinklies Jaspistos I N Competition No. 1516 you were invited to supply an advertisement for a school for the over-80s. This was not an easy competition,...

Page 44

, Simply Nico; Drakes

The Spectator

SIMPLY Nico (48a Rochester Row, Lon- don SW1. Tel. 630 8061) must have been open for over a year now, and though I have had a most marvellous dinner there I have never tried the...

No. 1519: The other view

The Spectator

If Bums's mouse, Shelley's skylark or Lawrence's snake, or any other animal addressed in a well-known poem, had been able to give its view of the matter in verse, how would it...

Solution to 849: Brand X

The Spectator

'I. R -3 E 3 C 0 6111/ 4 C I 3 0 U 6 S N 7 E S 3 S r il A I L W A V EFS1 DE L 13 A , x 09( E R 0 X Ai A I N L3 I T14711E1_1. T H E T I ME I IIIGOR I II STCIRMPIPIS...

Page 45

SPE CTATOR WINE CLUB

The Spectator

Going for quality in the N. Rhone Auberon Waugh Last November, when the Spectator Wine Club celebrated its fifth birthday with a last bottle of the original Avery's 1969 Nuits...

ORDER FORM SPECTATOR WINE CLUB

The Spectator

c/o Yapp Brothers, Mere, Wiltshire Telephone: (0747) 860 423 1. Syrah de l'Ardeche (St Desirat) 1985 2. St Joseph (St Desirat) 1985 3. Comas (Clape) 1984 4. ate R6tie (Champet)...

Page 47

The Spectator