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THE SCOOPER POOPERS
The SpectatorTHE SCOOPER POOPERS Bill Hagerty on tabloid hacks who sell their own paper's exclusives; but he says it's still unusual DESPITE what I, as editor, thought was maximum...
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IN DEFENCE OF THE AMERICAN WOMAN
The SpectatorIN DEFENCE OF THE AMERICAN WOMAN Cosima von Bulow admits that her compatriots have emasculated their menfolk - but insists it is only temporary AS ONE of Britain's many...
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[Sir: I agree wholeheartedly with Digby...]
The SpectatorSir: I agree wholeheartedly with Digby I Anderson that the English people are an impatient bunch. I, for one, could not wait to finish his article. Please, no more 'buffet car'...
Delaying delight
The SpectatorDelaying delight Sir: Digby Anderson is right to point out ('Christmas comes but once a week', 2 December) that many delinquents have an 'inability to defer gratification'....
Invasion of privacy
The SpectatorInvasion of privacy Sir: With reference to the Princess of Wales's interview, your leading article (25 November) was fair and objective, but I take exception to two of the...
Letter
The SpectatorL E T T E R S All rather rum Sir: I was rather surprised (though after some of your earlier range-finding shots from the editorial chair I suppose one should be surprised by...
[Sir: Frank Johnson's outrageous anti-Di...]
The SpectatorSir: Frank Johnson's outrageous anti-Di I piece (Leader, 25 November) must have been written with the sole intention of swelling your post-bag. Well, you're not catching me out...
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[Sir: I understood Goering kept it (cyanide)...]
The SpectatorSir: I understood Goering kept it (cyanide) in his commodious navel. If so, it could have heen there for some time undetected. Dr Ross Watkin Pigeonhouse Cottage, Rectory...
Price war
The SpectatorPrice war Sir: Some of the more illustrious men's outfitters who place regular advertisements with The Spectator will find little cheer in the fact that, having received a fat...
Deja vu
The SpectatorDej'avu Sir: Your article comparing the Princess of Wales with Catherine the Great is a reminder of other past similarities ('Diana: weakness up in arms', 2 December). In 1682...
Funny peculiar
The SpectatorFunny peculiar Sir: David Starkey implies that a central argument in my recent book, Virtually Normal, is that homosexuality is genetic ('Tis in ourselves that we are hetero or...
Storage problem
The SpectatorStorage problem Sir: John Kinsman (Letters, 2 December) is wise to disbelieve the 'explanation' that Goering's fatal dose of cyanide was stored by him, throughout a full year...
[Sir: Surely Goering stuffed his cyanide cap-...]
The SpectatorSir: Surely Goering stuffed his cyanide cap- sule up his rectum every morning? To swallow it even with a 'protective lining' and try lto recover it when it came out would have...
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An orgy of Byronism
The SpectatorAn orgy of Byronism William Scammell HIGH LIFE IN VERDOPOLIS by Charlotte Bronte The British Libraty, £12.95, pp. 103 I have had a curious packet confided to me, containing...
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Space holidays and better sex
The SpectatorSpace holidays and better sex John Michell THE NEXT 500 YEARS: LIFE IN THE COMING MILLENNIUM by Adrian Berry Headline, £16.99, pp. 338 Looking from my window at the...
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A writer and her work
The SpectatorA writer and her work Julian Mitchell IVY: THE LIFE OF IVY COMPTON-BURNETT by Hilary Spurling Richard Cohen Books, £30, pp. 621 I first met Ivy Compton-Burnett in 1962, when...
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Funny Christmas books
The SpectatorFunny Christmas books Richard Ingrams No one ever sold anything like as many funny books at Christmas time as the late Carl Giles with his succession of cartoon annuals. So it...
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The west yet glimmers
The SpectatorThe west yet glimmers Philip Marsden STONES OF ARAN: LABYRINTH by Tim Robinson Lilliput Press, 4 Rosemount Terrace, Arbour Hill, Dublin 7, £20, pp. 502 Each year, the...
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Scandal in Sloane Square
The SpectatorART S Scandal in Sloane Square Nigel Reynolds on how the Royal Court Theatre plans to spend its Lottery windfall H-low often does dear old Sloane Square feature in the Top...
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Theatre
The SpectatorTheatre Break of Day (Royal Court) Hysteria (Duke of York's) So what? Sheridan Morley V V e drama critics are an ungrateful lot: we complain, with some justification, that,...
Cinema
The SpectatorCinema In the Bleak Midwinter (15, selected cinemas) The American President (12, selected cinemas) Back to basics Mark Steyn . believe in a place called Hope,' said Bill...
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Opera and vocal records
The SpectatorOpera and vocal records Playing safe Rupert Christiansen N ot a vintage year, but there were a few nice surprises among the dross. Philips deserves a special accolade for its...
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Salerooms
The SpectatorSalerooms All I want for Christmas ... Alistair McAlpine F licking idly through Christie's catalogue of their New York sale '100 Years of the Cinema' (11 December), I began...
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Television
The SpectatorTelevision Mmm's the word James Delingpole Ts the season to knock Delia. But I'm not going to. Not her culinary legacy, anyway. She may be a frump; she may have an annoyingly...
Motoring
The SpectatorMotoring Counting the cost of love Alan Judd JLong ago, when Exchange & Mart introduced the category called Collectors' Cars, I felt I was being done. I bought old cars...
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The turf
The SpectatorThe turf Quality will out Robin Oakley T he first time I met Graham Bradley, one of the most stylish and durable of National Hunt jockeys, was at Newbury two or three years...
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SPECTATOR SPORT
The SpectatorSPECTATOR SPORT Atherton Unbound Simon Barnes 'YOU MEAN they play for five days and it's a tie? 'No, it's a draw.''But you play for five days and you still don't have a...