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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorRatner's truth game J ohn Major denied that recession was deepening, saying that Britain was recover- ing from its economic problems. The Treasury select committee doubted that...
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SPECIVOR
The Spectator56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL Telephone: 071-405 1706; Telex: 27124; Fax: 071-242 0603 THE BRITISH DISEASE T here is a prejudice in this country that any public servant...
THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorSUBSCRIBE TODAY â RATES 12 Months 6 Months UK 0 £71.00 0 £35.50 Europe (airmail) 0 £82.00 0 £41.00 USA Airspeed 0 US$110 0 US$55.00 Rest of Airmail 0 £98.00 0 £49.00...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorTaxing times for the confused voters of Britain NOEL MALCOLM A ccording to some Tory MPs â the certifiably paranoid ones, I suppose â Mr Kinnock had a splendid time during...
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DIARY
The SpectatorMILES KINGTON A ny day now I am due to reach my fiftieth birthday, and I had hoped to arrive at that safe haven without ever having to go skiing, enjoy opera, become a poker...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorA rough beast whose hour has come round at last CHARLES MOORE M r Boris Yeltsin must have been through some difficult encounters in his career, but few can have been more...
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HOPELESS IN GAZA
The SpectatorIan Buruma reports on the wretched ghetto at the heart of the Palestinian diaspora Jerusalem AS I was driven through the filthy streets of Gaza, where children rooted through...
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HONOUR AMONG THIEVES
The SpectatorEdward Theberton finds the Nigerians as endearing and as corrupt as ever Port Harcourt, Nigeria 'WHAT about me?' 'What about you?' I replied to the policewoman who had attached...
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WHERE ARE THE SANDINISTAS NOW?
The SpectatorJanine Di Giovanni finds them harmlessly occupied in the pursuit of money Next week, the British-based Nicaragua Solidarity Campaign is sponsoring a bicycle race from London to...
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AUGUST'S WINTER ON THE ICE CAP
The SpectatorSimon Courtauld recalls his uncle's solitary confinement in Greenland, which did him no harm SIXTY years ago this weekend, on 5 May 1931, my uncle Augustine (August) Cour-...
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If symptoms persist . . .
The SpectatorI WAS outraged when I heard last week of the summary dismissal of 600 em- ployees from Guy's Hospital. To think that the management would find no more than 600 out of a total...
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HE FLIES THROUGH THE AIR . . .
The SpectatorWilliam Cash reports on the latest human projectile experiments, which involve flying pigs I WROTE in the Spectator Christmas issue on the exploits of the eccentric Shropshire...
One hundred years ago
The SpectatorTHE INFLUENZA is spreading rapid- ly in London, but is worst in Yorkshire, where it has made havoc in Sheffield as well as in many of the Eastern towns and villages. In...
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Unlettered
The SpectatorA reader was sent this document, issued by IBM Field Engineers: Abstract: Mouse Balls Available as FRU (Field Replacement Unit) Mouse balls are now available as FRU. Therefore,...
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WHERE THE BARD FEARED TO TREAD
The Spectatorjarring jargon in the job ads MANY state schools now deprive children of Shakespeare, and kids leave at 16 without having read through one book, merely 'extracts'. It's not...
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Feuding cats and dogs
The SpectatorI AM obliged to the Souvenir Press, which has sent me a review copy of Vivienne Angus's Know Yourself Through Your Cat. It offers an unusual insight into our leaders of business...
Out to lunch
The SpectatorNOW we know what the Department of Trade and Industry is for. Peter Lilley, the man in the revolving chair, had been wondering. It is for getting between a stockbroker and his...
BTR's golden pensions
The SpectatorI AM told not to be beastly to Sir Ian MacLaurin, just because Tesco is suddenly paying him £11/2 million a year. He is said to have done a splendid job. I should think it even...
CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorNorman Lamont has a lost weekend but a winning game CHRISTOPHER FILDES N orman Lamont flew to Washington and back for the weekend. It is pleasant at this time of year, the...
Banham's Bane
The SpectatorSell Unilever. That company â as a rule the most boring, for its size, in the world â is about to succumb to Banham's Bane. The disease, named for the genial director-...
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LETTERS Catholic conservatism
The SpectatorSir: I have no objection to Noel Malcolm's slightly unfair teasing about my pamphlet on Conservatism (Politics, 13 April) but his caricature of Catholic social teaching does...
One's enough
The SpectatorSir: Rupert Christiansen rightly notes two troubling issues in the 'philosophy of biography' (Books, 9 March). Permit me to add a third, a problem that may in part explain why...
Pilgerish tendencies
The SpectatorSir: John Pilger and David Munro (Letters, 20 April) accuse me of 'little more than black propaganda' in my studiously factual analysis of their television documentary, 'Are the...
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Recipe for failure
The SpectatorSir: I would not presume to question Charles Moore's predictions of the innova- tions that the new Archbishop of Canter-. bury will adopt ('Another voice', 9 March); however,...
Owzat!
The SpectatorSir: So, at long last, after many months of trying, I have caught that rascal Arnold out ('Afore ye go', 23 March). He's finally given the game away. Thirty five pee â in...
Summit of ambition
The SpectatorSir: I enjoyed Charles Moore's 'Another voice' of 6 April. I imagine an editor of any sort of magazine or newspaper perpetually engulfed in a blizzard of unsolicited letters,...
Not so cosy
The SpectatorSir: I thought Christopher Fildes (City and Suburban, 20 April) was, on the European Bank for Reconstruction and Develop- ments, at last hitting in The Spectator the fine form...
Alice in Commieland
The SpectatorSir: Gary Kasparov, the World Chess Champion, has often accused communist regimes of being lands of mirrors, where true values are inverted. The parallel with Lewis Carroll's...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorGood sex, but that is all James Buchan T hese two books, written 30 years apart but published in England in the same month, share certain features: uncertain taste, showy...
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Papering over the cracks
The SpectatorRichard Lamb CHURCHILL: A LIFE by Martin Gilbert Heinemann, £20, pp.1066 I n 1962 Martin Gilbert invited Randolph Churchill to dine in Merton. Randolph was delighted to be in...
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Fresh food and ancient gossip
The SpectatorJ.G. Links ITALY: A GRAND TOUR FOR THE MODERN TRAVELLER by Charles Fitzroy Macmillan, £16.99, pp.313 FLORENCE: A LITERARY COMPANION by Francis King John Murray, £15.95,...
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Best novel of the year
The SpectatorChristopher Hawtree ALWAYS THE ISLANDS OF MEMORY by Noel Virtue Hutchinson, £12.99, pp. 198 W hy do so many covers of books look the same nowadays? It is as if designers can...
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In defeat defiance
The SpectatorNigel Clive CRETE: THE BATTLE AND THE RESISTANCE by Antony Beevor John Murray, £19.95, pp. 383 T he publication of this book has been well timed to coincide with the 50th...
Alone in a valuable house
The SpectatorAnita Brookner FAMILY MONEY by Nina Bawden Gollancz, £13.99, pp. 250 m a Bawden's new novel is about property, about how much it will fetch and how much will be lost if the...
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Ranging ever more widely
The SpectatorAlan Bell THE DESIRED EFFECT by Andrew Gimson Chapmans, £13.99, pp.288 T he beautiful Belinda, working in Knightsbridge as secretary to an interior decorator, is beginning to...
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Cares that wait upon a clown
The SpectatorMark Archer E veryone who collects art dreams of coming across a neglected genius, unappre- ciated in his lifetime and still cheap enough to be bought. Albert Houthuesen, who...
Time for the return of the native
The SpectatorTeresa Waugh TOUJOURS PROVENCE by Peter Mayle Hamish Hamilton, £13.99, pp. 213 0 h dear, oh dear, oh dear, where do I begin? For I too have lived in France and come away from...
Those who use words like 'love' and 'lust' and 'hornier'
The SpectatorHad better not set foot in California Whence sexist talk of that kind's long since gone: If music be the food of viable on-going creative one-to-one meaningful relationships,...
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Cherry Blossoms
The SpectatorThe essence of their beauty Is that it dies away So exquisitely quickly. How could one possibly pay Even respect to a flower in flower Day upon day upon day?
Agony
The SpectatorWhat agony, our dream-encounters. Can you not understand How pitiably a man is torn, How utterly unmanned, To wake with hands stretched out for one Beyond all reach of hand?...
We parted; but, half-hoping She might perhaps relent, She might
The Spectatorperhaps have spoken words She had not really meant, Over my shoulder, now and then, I looked back as I went. Anon (late 7th-century)
No. I shall not die for love. I lack the
The Spectatordiscipline To face the waves and drown in them. My nature is to spin Around and around like a grain of sand Whenever a tide flows in. Anon (late 7th-century)
No
The SpectatorIt's not because I'm now too old, More wizened than you'd guess. . . If I say no, it's only Because I fear that yes Would bring me nothing in the end But a fiercer loneliness.
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ARTS
The SpectatorArchitecture The spirit of '51 Alan Powers on the future of the South Bank 40 years after the Festival of Britain T he 40th anniversary of the Festival of Britain, which falls...
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Opera
The SpectatorOtello (Orchestra Hall, Chicago) Carmen (Covent Garden) Great bruiser Rupert Christiansen A t a concert in Chicago I heard Pavarotti's first stab at Verdi's Otello, with the...
An exhibition focusing on the buildings and pavilions of the
The SpectatorFestival of Britain is being held at the RIBA, 66 Portland Place, London WI, until 16 May.
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Exhibitions
The SpectatorThe True North: Canadian Landscape Painting 1896-1939 Un-Natural Traces: Contemporary Art from Canada (Barbican Art Galleries, till 16 June) Jack Bush: Canadian Landscapes...
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Theatre
The SpectatorAll for Love (Almeida) Black Snow (Cottesloe) Dryden dusted off Christopher Edwards H owever much we must thank Ian McDiarmid, Jonathan Kent and their com- pany for the...
Cinema
The SpectatorWhite Palace ('18', selected cinemas) Sexy Susan Gabriele Annan P oor Susan Sarandon! In Louis Malle's unforgettable Atlantic City she worked in an oyster bar and had to rub...
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Dance
The SpectatorDown by the Riverside Deirdre McMahon T his year, for the first time, Rambert's annual London season was held at the Riverside Studios in Hammersmith, where the stage was...
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Television
The SpectatorThe great manipulator Martyn Harris T he Rev Al Sharpton is the American black civil rights leader, also known as 'Rev Sound Bite', who is supposed to be the model for the...
High life
The SpectatorFashion extra Taki Needless to say, the 51-year-old is my friend Mary McFadden, a lady who has been described as eccentric by those who love her, and downright nuts by those...
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Low life
The SpectatorHave a banana Jeffrey Bernard O ne of my nieces kindly came over the other day to read my mail for me since my eyes have yet to recover from what they have seen over the past...
New life
The SpectatorThe Pardoner's tale Zenga Longmore C alling on our evangelist friend Mrs Starman a couple of weeks ago, Olumba and I were perturbed to find her distraught and crying aloud to...
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May time â nuts and clouts
The SpectatorWALPURGIS Night and May Day are past so we can get on with spring. My beloved baby turnips and fresh garlic have appeared in the market and our own unbeatable asparagus and new...
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CHESS
The SpectatorSmash and Grob Raymond Keene T hat talented International Master Michael Basman has just produced a book on his favourite opening system, 1 g4 as White and 1 . . . g5 as...
cvaVAS REG 4 t
The Spectator12 YEAR OLD SCOTCH WHISKY COMPETITION ( V AS RE . GV 12 YEAR OLD SCOTCH WHISKY Sunny side down Jaspistos I n Competition No. 1674 you were in- vited to make the metre of...
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No. 1677: Your very own Rev.
The SpectatorI have been shown a staff memo in which the company announces the arrival of an 'industrial chaplain', 'a listening ear out- side the management structure . . . Catch him when...
Solution to 1004: Snow-whitish mem v el
The Spectatorann E R'T mann °moon di..m..an cinndAm anonanamanzom 1 i num A op a A J I GEE OCOMEI nel anomie MOMMDO annund Milannn MEW In MB MU 0 0 110SIODOrsEMEs...
CROSSWORD
The Spectator1007: Holy disorders by Jac A first prize of £20 and two further prizes of £10 (or, for UK solvers, a copy of Chambers English Dictionary â ring the word 'Dictionary') for...
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SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorFinal innings Frank Keating SURELY we cannot have another heat- wave summer. So how will the beguiling, burnished batting of the Indian, Azharud- din, begin to look at the...
Wallace Arnold is on holiday, this week water-skiing with John
The SpectatorMortimer in the fountain of Sir Harold Acton's palazzo in Firenze.