14 AUGUST 1993

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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK

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There's nothing I can do for you. I suggest you fly to Bosnia and we'll try to get John Major interested in you. M r John Major, the Prime Minister, proposed a revival of his...

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The Spectator, 56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL Telephone: 071-405

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1706; Telex 27124; Fax 071-242 0603 THE FACTS OF LIFE N ot so long ago, the British press and the British establishment were filled with contempt for the Anglican church. The...

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POLITICS

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Hunt the future leader: a harmless little party game SIMON HEFFER A t least two of the politicians to have held the office of Employment Secretary in the last ten years would,...

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DIARY

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VICKI WOODS T wo weeks buried in la France profonde among fields full of sunflowers has left me fat and sleepy and almost cured of my addiction. I can take or leave most of the...

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ANOTHER VOICE

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When harassment is better seen as an issue of privacy AUBER ON WAUGH P erhaps it is because she has a face of sweetness and serenity, almost a rare, elfin beauty, as revealed...

Classified — page 38

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GUILTY WHEN PROVED INNOCENT

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Alasdair Palmer reports on the refusal of social workers to allow a blameless man to live with and care for his children Dr Kellogg's list, with its comically solemn reliance...

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Mind your language

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I SUPPOSE we all give ourselves away by our choice of vocabulary and, as it were, 'emotional register'. Thus it was that, when I listened to the wireless extracts of Lady...

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If symptoms

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persist.. . I AM unsure where patients get their medical misinformation from, but it must in part be from each other. One can scarcely travel half a mile on a bus or a train...

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LIVING IT UP IN TRIPOLI

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Charles Glass explains why the Libyans have never had it so good Tripoli THE MALTESE shipping clerk, handing me a ticket for the Tripoli ferry, asked, `Well, do you think they...

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THE CASH FOUNTAINS OF VERSAILLES

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Niall Ferguson argues that Germany in bearing the cost of European union is still paying reparations THE 1 ERMATH of the ERM's col- lapse recalls Humpty Dumpty. All M. Delors'...

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A SUMMER OF DISCONTENT

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Simon Courtauld reports on an upsurge of anti-British feeling in usually placid Gibraltar Gibraltar IN 1980, when I was last here, staff at the Gibraltar Chronicle called a...

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AND ANOTHER THING

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Is the life of the Independent moving aggressively to its close? PAUL JOHNSON T he tortuous logic, or lack of it, which middle-class progressives bring to the scrutiny of...

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CITY AND SUBURBAN

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Unhorsing Treasury knights and Bank grandees Nicholas Davenport, City radical CHRISTOPHER FILDES N icholas Davenport liked to call him- self a City radical. The stress, Roy...

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The better half

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Sir: Naim Sullivan writes that my use of the phrase 'minorities like women' is incorrect because 'women comprise exactly half the population' (Letters, 7 August). This is...

When the going was good

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Sir: In the course of suggesting that all our post-war ills stem from Attlee's Labour government and the Beveridge reforms, Simon Heffer has some nice things to say about us...

LETTERS A joke too far

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Sir: I used to think that Sir Alfred Sherman was just a figuie of fun when he dabbled in Balkan affairs. There are indeed some touches of the familiar comic figure in his last...

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BOOKS

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Supplying a needed poet James Buchan THE ERN MALLEY AFFAIR by Michael Heyward Faber, f15.99, pp. 284 L iterary hoaxes succeed because people want them to. Eighteenth-century...

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Getting the point

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Christopher Howse THE SPECTATOR BOOK OF EPIGRAMS edited by Dhiren Bhagat Pan, f5.99, pp. 266 I n our impatient age it is time for the epigram to make a comeback, but as Sir...

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A man as a sometime thing

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Albert Read HARASSMENT by Patrick Skene Catling Bloomsbury, £13.99, pp. 280 T he sensationally good-looking Michael Saques is a young man set adrift in a woman's world. All the...

The hair and fingernails of the corpse

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Peregrine Hodson T he rot probably set in with Homer. The Odyssey has faults that still plague the genre of travel writing: a threadbare plot of departure, tribulation and...

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Recreational Leave

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They have come back. The next lot is in, Landing at the port. Soon they will be here, Some a little bit drunk, some a lot drunk, With their money, their condoms, their loud pink...

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Rumbling in the jungle

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Harriet Waugh STRANGE GODS by John Cornwell Simon & Schuster, f14.99, pp. 262 J ohn Cornwell is probably best known for A Thief in the Night and Earth to Earth, but he is also...

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Rightly detained, but for too long

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John Grigg IN THE HIGHEST DEGREE ODIOUS by A. W. Brian Simpson Clarendon, £35, pp. 464 A t the beginning of the second world war emergency legislation was passed, empowering...

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A good man but not a great one

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Evelyn Joll COUTTS LINDSAY 1824-1913 by Virginia Surtees Michael Russell, £15.95, pp. 213 C outts Lindsay, we learn from this most admirable biography, was born with many...

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ARTS

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Heritage Unravelling a taste for monarchs Palace 5 .00 a.m. I arrive at Buckingham Palace to find a small queue. 5.30 a.m. The queue is tidied up by the police. We are asked...

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Mu s ic

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Ticklish predicament Peter Phillips I t is a commonplace, as we all know, to hear that the BBC is lowering its standards. So far as I can make out this process is gradual and...

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Edinburgh Festival

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Fingers crossed Rupert Christiansen I nevitably, last year's Edinburgh Festival was a dodgy, patchy, skin-of-its-teeth busi- ness. The programme assembled by Brian McMaster in...

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Exhibitions

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Balthus (Musee des Beaux-Arts, Lausanne, till 29 August) Potent pubescents Giles Auty I t seems odd to me that I have not had an earlier chance to write about the impor- tant...

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Dance

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Prague Festival Ballet (Palace of Culture, Prague) Repetitive exposure Sophie Constanti T he beauty of Prague, a breathtaking panorama when viewed from the terraces of the...

Martyn Harris is on holiday.

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Theatre

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Here (Donmar Warehouse) Time of my life (Vaudeville) Extra time Sheridan Morley A t the Donmar Warehouse, Michael Frayn's Here is essentially about time and space: it has all...

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High life

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Guess the f-word Taki Gstaad L ady Thatcher, her daughter and Sir Denis have arrived without fanfare in Gstaad, staying in John Latsis's digs. The same John Latsis in whose...

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Long life

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Time to show off Nigel Nicolson Since then I have probably spent more hours watching television and listening to radio than I have spent reading books. While I am slightly...

Jeffrey Bernard is unwell.

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eg

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Devil take the hind-1 L.40 174 Linit. THE HEARTS and taste-buds of all game- lovers will be tingling with anticipation this week, for it is glorious grouse time again. I do...

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CHESS

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c>01: 0 ©40 SPAIN'S FINES! CAVA SPAIN'S FINEST CAVA Memory Lane Raymond Keene GARRY KASPAROV often states that the most important skill for top-class chess is a powerful...

- 001MMONDs•

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COMPETITION Country matters Jaspistos IN COMPETITION NO. 1791 you were invited to follow in Max Beerbohm's foot- steps and express a hearty dislike of some traditional...

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w. & J.

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GRAHAM'S PORT J W. & J. GRAHAM PORT CROSSWORD A first prize of £20 and a bottle of Graham's Malvedos 1979 Vintage Port for the first correct solution opened on 31 August,...

No. 1794: Rum retelling

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You are invited to retell the plot of any well-known work of literature in the metre of Hiawatha (maximum 16 lines). Entries to 'Competition No. 1794' by 26 August.

Solution to 1119: Circus Circuit lights(horses) start at radials 1,

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9, 15, 22, 27, 33, 38, with RING- MASTER round the centre. Dictionary prizes are sent out by the 'Post-a-Book' service.

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SPECTATOR SPORT

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Getting the message Frank Keating THE SINGLE shot rang out around elevenses on Monday morning. It came from the neat study of a bijou town house in a trim West London suburb....

YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED

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Q. I have taken a lodge in Scotland for two weeks and am having 20 or so people to stay. Given that the forecast for sporting activities is unfavourable, what can I do to...