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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorR esident Reagan announced unex- pectedly that he was to meet Mr Gor- bachev in Reykjavik for a preparatory summit to pave the way for the Soviet leader's visit to the United...
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THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorLABOUR SAVES THE TORIES T he Conservatives have the most amaz- ing luck. With three and a half million unemployed, a tired Government and an unpopular Prime Minister, they...
TIME FOR PRAISE
The SpectatorIN RECENT years, most British Govern- ment commentaries on the latest foreign Policy Moves from Washington have been marked by a pervasive dampness: damp in criticism, damp in...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorThe remarkable creation of the new fromage-coloured Labour Party FERDINAND MOUNT Blackpool r oserose is a rose is, I suppose, a rose, even when it is entwined with maidenhair...
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DIARY
The SpectatorI was particularly interested to watch Mr Caspar Weinberger warning Mr Kinnock on Panorama on Monday, because I had just spent a few days in the United States discovering...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorThe political hazard represented by special interest pressure groups AUBERON WAUGH 0 nly last week I commended a young minister in the Government, called Mr Peter Bottomley....
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HOW MR HATTERSLEY WOULD HIT THE RICH
The SpectatorSince 1979 the rich have got richer. Andrew Gimson discusses Labour's proposals, intended to make them nearly as poor as the poor LAST Sunday Mr David Blunkett, a mem- ber of...
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AIDS REACHES THE SOVIET UNION
The SpectatorBohdan Nahaylo finds the Soviet press nervous in dealing with the disease IT SOUNDS almost like a joke. What is the definition of the new Soviet policy of `openness'? A play...
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GOD ON HIS TICKET
The SpectatorEmma Gilbey listens to a presidential candidate with a direct line to God New York PAT Robertson has now let it be known he is prepared to run for the presidency. The...
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GROUNDED AT LAST
The Spectatorof Austria's greatest flying ace, an Irish baron Vienna THE beaky profile was unmistakable, the self-deprecating charm irresistible. A num- ber of strands linking us with the...
One hundred years ago
The SpectatorIT is a speciality of sanitary reformers, who are among the most useful of the many intellectual nuisances in the world, to be deficient in the quality of humour. One of them,...
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ROBERT HELPMANN
The SpectatorMichael Powell remembers the choreographer who died this week MICHAEL Powell, dictating a memoir of Robert Helpmann â dancer, mime, clown, wit, actor, choreographer, stage...
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NEW ORTHODOXIES: XII
The SpectatorTHE CURSE OF WOMEN Margaret FitzHerbert regrets that most feminists prefer equality to supremacy [Editor's Note: Margaret FitzHerbert wrote this article the week before her...
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BANNING RUPERT'S JOURNOS
The SpectatorThe press: Paul Johnson discusses the Labour Party's selective accreditation policy REMARKABLY little protest has been evoked by the decision of the Labour Party (in addition...
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CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorThe very Motor Show of money with no new models CHRISTOPHER FILDES Washington h ehe ballroom of the Washington Sher- aton would house an Olympic swimming pool, or a greyhound...
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THE ECONOMY
The SpectatorA nasty little spot of turbulence JOCK BRUCE-GARDYNE T he destroying effects of incentives to savings.' Did my eyes deceive me? Could this really be a senior member of a...
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Malay runs amok
The SpectatorSir: The old East Africa Standard in Nairo- bi, under the command of its then editor, Colonel Kenneth Bolton, was a great believer in the Daily Telegraph style book (Ronald...
Advanced opinions
The SpectatorSir: I never dreamed that the Spectator would publish an article with so many errors as you did with Brian Inglis's out- burst (Tiltdown bird', 13 September) against the fossil...
Slight slight
The SpectatorSir: The underlying misoneism which in- forms Christopher Booker's uninformed comments on my work at the Dorset County Museum (Diary, 13 September) simply demonstrates how...
Cost of Labour
The SpectatorSir: Jock Bruce-Gardyne's article of 12 July has belatedly come to my attention. In it he says, 'According to the City Universi- ty Business School, what is known of Labour's...
LETTERS Justice Anwarul Haq
The SpectatorSir: I have read Miss Benazir Bhutto's interview with Edward Whitley (23 Aug- ust) in which she has made a very serious attack on my integrity as the Chief Justice of the...
Distress
The SpectatorSir: In Low life of 20 September, Jeffrey Bernard wondered who qualified for aid from the Distressed Gentlefolks Associa- tion. In Herefordshire they reckon assistance should...
THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorSUBSCRIBE TODAY - At 20% off the Cover Price! Please enter a subscription to The Spectator .1 enclose my cheque for (Equivalent $US & Eurocheques accepted) RATES: 12 Months 6...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorRather militant himself Alan Watkins HARD LABOUR by Robert Kilroy-Silk Chatto and Windus, f9.95 A back benchers of all parties go, Mr Kilroy-Silk was undoubtedly above par...
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A thoroughly modern medievalist
The SpectatorEric Christiansen FAITH IN FAKES by Umberto Eco (translated by Hugh Bredin) Seeker & Warburg, £15 ART AND BEAUTY IN THE MIDDLE AGES By Umberto Eco (translated by Hugh...
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High browsing around Europe
The SpectatorHarry Eyres Hamish Hamilton, f14.95 T hese two accounts of travels round Europe â both referred to rather ques- tionably by their publishers as Grand Tours â are separated...
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By gone Ronnie Scottland
The SpectatorMichael Horovitz LET'S JOIN HANDS AND CONTACT THE LIVING by John Fordham Elm Tree Books, f6.95 I f you want to dismay a modem jazz fan, ask him or her to imagine London...
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A cool glance at schizophrenic passion
The SpectatorPatrick Skene Catling RITES: A GUATEMALAN BOYHOOD by Victor Perera Deutsch, f8.95 G uatemala is the most spectacularly beautiful country in Central America. It is also...
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Sunday Rodeo
The SpectatorThis, then, is the meat of the cowboy cult, Herefords. I edge gingerly past raised Heads, their quick curiosity annulled At once by the imperative to feed. Generations like...
Fathers and sins
The SpectatorFrancis King GABRIEL'S LAMENT by Paul Bailey Cape, 19.95 I n Alan Bennett's entertaining new play Kafka's Dick, one of the characters re- marks that 'The only son who ever...
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The charm of an Indian chatterbox
The SpectatorAndrew Robinson TALKATIVE MAN by R. K. Narayan Heinemann, £8.95 T hey call me Talkati affectionately shorten it to TM: I have earned this title, I suppose, because I cannot...
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ARTS
The SpectatorThe Sistine Chapel Talking of Michelangelo Juliet Reynolds Venturing through the portals of the Sistine Chapel these days, jostled and deafened as always by the milling...
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Cinema
The SpectatorGeorgia on their minds Peter Ackroyd I t is difficult to explain a film which itself makes a point of not explaining anything. It was preceded by Street of Crocodiles, a...
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Theatre
The SpectatorKafka's Dick (Royal Court) Bennett's Kafka Kathy O'Shaughnessy P osthumous fame is something of a liability. In the wake of the funeral come biographies, the dead man's life...
Opera
The SpectatorOtello (Cannon Films) Quite pretty frocks Rodney Manes E ven in the face of fierce competition, I think the single most depressing thing about Zeffirelli's film of some of...
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Exhibitions
The SpectatorAvigdor Arikha (Marlborough Fine Art till 29 October) Celia Paul (Bernard Jacobson till 11 October) William Macllraith (Connaught Brown 01111 October) Mark Harris (Juda-Rowan...
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Television
The SpectatorA long way from Long Bow Wendy Cope 0 n Wednesday evening I accidentally switched on a party political broadcast. I think it is safe to assume that nobody, except the MPs...
High life
The SpectatorThe bounder Taki A s everyone who has ever heard of the Pampas knows, Louis Basualdo is the Argentinian polo professional who eloped with Lord Cowdray's teenage daughter back...
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Low life
The SpectatorUp hill, down dale Jeffrey Bernard I t is difficult to concentrate with the sword of Damocles â once sheathed in West End Central police station â hanging over me, but I...
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Home life
The SpectatorOver- Alice Thomas Ellis I believe we must spend the next five years finding ways of reallocating resources within the industry so that we market the product better overall...
THE
The SpectatorSPECTATOR Subscribe NOW and save over 20% on the retail price (equivalent to 10 issues FREE) Subscription rates are being held at the old price for a limited period only. Take...
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THE Socialists who ruled France for five years until their
The Spectatordefeat in the parliamen- tary elections last March promised to transform French society. They have in- deed done so but not quite in the way they originally intended. Elected on...
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Peasants
The SpectatorThe end of the tunnel Elisabeth Luard T he view at the thick end of Madame T'acher's tunnel, due to debouch into the flat and fertile fields of Picardy some time towards the...
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Que la fin nous illumine
The SpectatorSombre ennemi qui nous combats et nous resserres, laisse-moi, dans le peu de jours que je Miens, vouer ma faiblesse et ma force a la lumiere: et que je sois change en eclair a...
That the End Enlighten Us
The SpectatorDark enemy, you who brace us in the fight, let me, in the few days still left to spend, devote my strength and weakness to the light and so be changed to lightning in the end....
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Parisian culture
The SpectatorWaiting for something to happen John Ralston Saul or ris must still be the centre of the world; if not, why would people be coming from everywhere to blow it up? One of the...
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Wine
The SpectatorAgreeable Alsace Ausonius W ine writers tend to play safe with epithets â fruity, fresh, crisp, rounded, blackcurranty (if it's cabernet), buttery (if it's chardonnay):...
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Imperative cooking: Big Batterie de Cuisine 4 â¢
The SpectatorONCE there were no shops in Britain selling proper cooking equipment and the faithful had to turn their annual holiday in France into an expedition to buy Sabatier knives,...
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CHESS
The SpectatorLost ploys Raymond Keene R Leningrad eaders of this article will have the advantage over me of knowing the result of Wednesday's 21st game, where Karpov enjoys the plus of...
COMPETITION
The SpectatorI love to hate Jaspistos I n Coinpetition No. 1440, you were invited to supply verses airing a prejudice or celebrating a pet aversion. Opera, spinach, half-rhymes, queues,...
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Solution to 775: Handle 'I , L 2 A Y 5 S M A
The SpectatorN Y 5 P A 5 R1,.rs .. . . P IET NS,"TALMENT U N D R, U SA11 ICE AN. T' 5 E R II O, I S TrE I K! 0 N E Al yil EI PT _EAC LUSI'ON 'b E,SIE R V E N i I3 L T L 0 111 - T li I P S...
No. 1443: Danger: Men at Work
The SpectatorExtracts, please, from the diary of a supersensitive lady who imagines that she is being 'sexually harassed' in the office. Maximum 150 words. Entries to 'Competi- tion No....
CROSSWORD 778: Adventuresome by Jac
The SpectatorA first prize of £20 and two further prizes of I10 (or, for UK solvers, a copy of Chambers Dictionary, value £12.95 â ring the words 'Chambers Dictionary' above) for the...