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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT he Home Secretary, Kenneth Baker, made constitutional history by being found guilty of contempt of court while carrying out official duties, in that he failed to return to...
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The Spectator, 56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL Telephone: 071-405
The Spectator1706; Telex 27124; Fax 071-242 0603 THE ENGLISH SUNDAY T he grand remonstrance against the outbreak of Sunday trading by our leading retailers, delivered in a 'private' letter...
THE SPECFATOR
The SpectatorSUBSCRIBE TODAY - 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 World...
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POLITICS
The SpectatorComing soon to a theatre near you: The Secret Views of Walter Major SIMON HEFFER Labour said it proved the unreliability of the Prime Minister, but a more benign...
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DIARY
The SpectatorWILLIAM DALRYMPLE avinder Singh, son of Punjab Singh, Prince of taxi drivers, may your beard never grow grey! Nor your liver cave in with cir- rhosis. Nor your precious...
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ANOTHER VOICE
The SpectatorA glimpse into the Black Hole lying in wait AUBERON WAUGH T wenty-four years ago, when I was enrolled as The Spectator's political corre- spondent and started the regular...
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THE TRIUMPH OF ANTI-CULTURE
The SpectatorGiles Auty exposes the sham of modern art, and suggests a remedy THE FIRST figures I drew at the age of three or four were in profile. Half of them had long proboscises,...
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If symptoms
The Spectatorpersist.. MY PATIENT announced, as she came through the door, that she was going to kill herself, and it was none of my busi- ness why. `Am I permitted, then, to enquire how?'...
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DEMOCRACY, SYRIAN STYLE
The SpectatorCharles Glass finds that President Assad has his own way of mobilising popular support Damascus IT RAINED here on Monday, a steady drizzle that drenched thousands of posters...
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THE MAKING OF A PRESIDENT
The SpectatorBoris Johnson explains how Jacques Delors has breathed power into a political vacuum Brussels JACQUES DELORS was drawing a pic- ture. Unprecedented! While Mr Wim Kok, the...
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THE EARS OF A CROATIAN COLONEL
The SpectatorAlec Russell listens to an ambassador's self-serving tales of the Yugoslav war Dubrovnik BY THE Renaissance balustrades of Zadar, like an Italian grandee holding court,...
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BRAVE NEW NATION, SAME OLD RULERS
The SpectatorNoel Malcolm despairs of the prospects for the independent Ukraine, with no change at the top Kiev IT WOULD be nice to report that there was dancing in the streets when the...
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AND ANOTHER THING
The SpectatorTime to stop chattering about Aids PAUL JOHNSON O ne good rule in contemporary life is: never believe anything you read about Aids. It is just conceivable that it may be 100...
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. . . all is clear
The SpectatorI COLLECT forms of words which mean their opposite: 'It gives me no pleasure to say this', 'With great respect' or 'I am bound to say'. The business equivalent is `Pending...
Saving the Queen
The SpectatorTHE Treasury claims a small Euro-mone- tary triumph: the sovereign's head can remain on notes and coins. Decus et tuta- men, as the inscription on the rim of the pound coin puts...
Compete? No, cohere
The SpectatorCOHESION funds? You willl shortly be invited to subscribe to them. Well, not exactly invited. These are the funds that will be payable in European countries which would...
CITY AND SUBURBAN
The SpectatorThose who won't learn from money's history may be condemned to repeat it CHRISTOPHER FILDES T he Prime Minister approaches the Maastricht summit like an experienced drinker...
The Maxwell questions.. .
The SpectatorSO MUCH for the Maxwell boys taking charge. The banks had taken charges, and now they have taken control. The tough and experienced John Melbourn of Nation- al Westminster is...
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Sir: Neil Lyndon does not, to my mind, adequately explain
The Spectatorthe confusion in the minds of both the Government and the electorate. The Catholic 'minority' is only minor in the sense that it was deliberately hacked away from the vast...
Britons never shall be
The SpectatorSir: With Croatia in mind, we in this coun - try need to find a dissuasive name for a fed- eral Europe. I would suggest Euroslavia. Irfon Roberts Priory Wall House, 3 Cockshut...
Puffs and fags
The SpectatorSir: Well done Digby Anderson for defend- ing commercial free speech (Torn before lager', 16 November). I agreed with all of it. Martyn Harris's reply (Television, 23 November)...
Wolf's clothing
The SpectatorSir: Here in what you would call the Frozen North, we have learned something about dressing for cold weather. Simon Courtauld ('Fur better or worse', 23 November) should be told...
This little piggy
The SpectatorSir: In answer to Wynn Wheldon's letter (30 November), the Gallimard translation of Animal Farm — La Republique des Ani- maux — of 1964 renames Napoleon as Cesar in the text....
LETTERS Cloud in the west
The SpectatorSir: I am sure I was not the only reader to be flabbergasted by the crudeness and inac- curacy of Mr Lyndon's tirade on Ulster CA disarming question', 30 November). The...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorFighting against obscurity Colin Welch THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: THE FIFTIES edited by David Holloway Simon & Schuster, £20, pp. 192 W ith Gore Vidal Bill Buckley has, or had, a...
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Young love revealed at last
The SpectatorFrances Partridge SONG OF LOVE: THE LE I ERS OF RUPERT BROOKE AND NOEL OLIVIER, 1909-1915 edited by Pippa Harris Bloomsbury, £1799, pp. 302 hen Rupert Brooke succumbed to...
The Beast to Beauty
The SpectatorI know how long it's been, Beauty, alone. I know by how the orchard's overgrown, By generations of increasingly Multi-coloured starlings, and by me. Not by my face, which stays...
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SPECTATOR OR
The SpectatorSPECIAL OFFER "Why have we had to wait 20 years for this book? Like the glorious, festering piles of stone he draws, John Glashan is a great national monument that should be...
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Making a good impressionist
The SpectatorJohn McEwen IMPRESSIONISM: THE PAINTERS AND THE PAINTINGS by Bernard Denvir Studio Editions, £29.95, pp. 424 A s a former head of the Department of Art History at Ravensbourne...
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Murder most enjoyable
The SpectatorHarriet Waugh I t is particularly heartening to be able to welcome Simon Shaw's Bloody Instructions (Gollancz, £13.99). His first novel, Murder out of Tune, was a stunning...
King's College Chapel
The SpectatorCambridge. October sunshine. In my own Autumnalty I hobbled down to King's To stare at its chapel's energies in stone Spread overhead in counter-balancings Of flippancy and...
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Almost top of the pops, word-famous
The SpectatorStephen Spender DYLAN THOMAS by George Tremlett Constable, £16.95, pp. 206 G . eorge Tremlett is the author of 17 biographies, most of them of rock stars (John Lennon, Marc...
More Books of the Year
The SpectatorT he most original book this year, is Autogeddon by Heathcote Williams (Cape, £12.99). Divided into two sections, and wonderfully illustrated, the first part is the title piece,...
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And this little pig had too much to drink
The SpectatorKeith Waterhouse THROUGH A GLASS DARKLY: THE LIFE OF PATRICK HAMILTON by Nigel Jones Scribners, £18.95, pp. 408 o reads Patrick Hamilton these Wh days? J.B. Priestley wrote of...
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SPECTATOR
The SpectatorDIARY 1992 £10 Plain £11 Initialled The Spectator 1992 Diary, bound in soft red leather, will shortly be available. Laid out with a whole week to view, the diary is 5" x 3"....
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A selection of recent cookery books
The SpectatorJennifer Paterson A rabella Boxer's Book of English Food (Hodder & Stoughton, £17.99, pp. 270) is a very welcome arrival in the midst of mostly foreign cuisine books. The...
The Househusband Away on Poetry Business
The SpectatorIt's the first morning off for an age, With no one to please but my shadow: I could watch a pink morning uncage And smoke a cigar at the window, Be that middle-aged poet at...
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ARTS
The SpectatorM usic What about Arnold? David Mellor feels it is time one of our great contemporary composers received his due milestone marked by concerts in London and elsewhere and an...
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Exhibitions
The SpectatorGericault 1791-1824 (Grand Palais, Paris, till 6 January) Greater than the myth Elizabeth Mortimer `A sad dialogue took place, around 1823, at the door of the Bal de...
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Pop music
The SpectatorRhythms divine Marcus Berkmann A fter the best and most over-rated books of the year, the best and most over- rated albums. It has not been a bad year for new rock records,...
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Dance
The SpectatorAn individual voice Deirdre McMahon E ver since he joined the Royal Ballet in 1979 , Jonathan Burrows has occupied a rather singular position within the compa- 11 Y. Besides...
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Television
The SpectatorBottom of the class Martyn Harris T he first episode of Class Rule (BBC 2, 9.50 p.m., Tuesday) last week got off to a sluggish start, with a string of politicians predictably...
Theatre
The SpectatorThe Madness of George III (Lyttelton) Purple passages Christopher Edwards A an Bennett's skilfully constructed and interesting new play is set in the years 1788-1789. This...
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High life
The SpectatorBarbarians at the gates Taki I New York f memory serves, the West Palm Beach courthouse lies six rugby fields away from the Kennedy House on Ocean Boulevard. I once spent a...
Low life
The SpectatorHome, sweet home Jeffrey Bernard F rom where I am sitting, facing south and from right to left, I can see the Regen t Palace Hotel, the Swiss Centre, the Odeon Leicester...
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New life
The SpectatorBrought to book Zenga Longmore I don't know what's come over public libraries these days,' my sister Boko remarked. 'All the shops, especially those selling food, are staying...
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Beguiling Burgundy
The SpectatorI WAS trying to think up some nice pink dishes for Gaudete Sunday, mid-Advent Sunday, one of the only two times in the year when the priests' vestments are pink with pleasure. I...
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CHESS
The SpectatorGMA RIP Raymond Keene T he Grandmasters Association, of which so much had been hoped as an organiser of top-class tournaments and as a counter-weight to Fide in world chess...
OILIVAS REG iat
The Spectator12 YEAR OLD SCOTCH WHISKY COMPETITION xlVAS REGAV (2 YEAR Down Memory Lane Jaspistos I n Competition No. 1705 you were pre- sented with the given opening lines of the third...
Competition entries
The SpectatorTo enable competitors to economise on postage, entries for one or more weeks of the competition and crossword may: be posted together under one cover addressed 'Competition...
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No. 1708: Hooker Prize II
The SpectatorThis prize was recently awarded by a self-appointed panel of female judges for the most outstanding example of 'male chauvinist writing' in fiction. Neil Lyndon in The Spectator...
Solution to 1035. Showery IA ° 2 NniencundarEccida co EMICI o rACCE
The SpectatorA K MEC EOM R T CEIDIEEM e 0 L I Mr A E E irEEME EICIIUME a CMCia AEI OrICIMEI ElerEce a ye Ling Elm A WE N E Dori ope LEIL1 D erElEiME EICIE13 Et N D L" oicEig I...
CROSSWORD
The SpectatorA first prize of £20 and two further prizes of £10 (or, for UK solvers, a copy of Chambers English Dictionary — ring the word 'Dictionary') for the first three correct solutions...
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SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorPerfect chemistry Frank Keating IN DAVID'S gurgling Colemanspeak it is reallyquiteremarkable' that a diverting lit- tle quiz has become the most consistently Popular programme...
YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
The SpectatorQ. I work in London for an American- owned private intelligence agency. I have been personally responsible for uncovering s m'ne of the most highly publicised financial c...