7 JANUARY 1989

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PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK

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T he year-long wrangle between Britain and Kuwait over the Kuwait Investment Office's 21 per cent stake in British Pet- roleum was resolved to both government's satisfaction...

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rIHE

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SPECTATOR The Spectator, 56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL Telephone 01-405 1706; Telex 27124; Fax 242 0603 DOCTORS AT SEA A t a time when career prospects for doctors have...

THE spEcrAToR

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SUBSCRIBE TODAY - Save 15% on the Cover Price! RATES 12 Months 6 Months UK 0 £49.50 0 £26.00 Europe (airmail) CI £60.50 0 £31.00 USA Airspeed CI US $99 0 US$50 Rest of Airmail...

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POLITICS

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Green thoughts in a blue shade NOEL MALCOLM W ill 1989 be the year of the Greens, or rather, of the greening of the major political parties in Britain? I doubt it. `Green'...

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DIARY

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ANTHONY HOWARD C learing out your desk is a thoroughly therapeutic experience. The end of a seven-year stint at the Observer meant I had to do it last week — and I kept thinking...

Posy Simmonds's calendar will appear later this month.

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ANOTHER VOICE

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Tramps and vagrants have nothing to do with the housing problem AUBERON WAUGH M y first job, after the army and a brief spell at Oxford, was as a researcher for Queen...

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WHY JAPAN HIDES ITS GUILT

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The Mayor of Nagasaki is receiving death threats for questioning the Emperor's role during the war. Ian Buruma investigates the different attitudes to war guilt of Japan and...

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AN AFRICAN IN AMERICA

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SOUSA JAMBA WHILE in Africa I had always associated Atlanta with three things: Andrew Young, the killing of black children and an advert for a skin-bleaching cream, Clear Tone,...

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A CHECK TO THE BOUNTY HUNTERS

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K. L. Billingsley investigates fiscal terror in America California IN BRITAIN the Charter 88 movement is demanding a Bill of Rights to counter what it sees as the autocracy of...

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THE ONE-LEGGED PARACHUTIST

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Patrick Leigh Fermor remembers `Andrew Kennedy', who died last month THE waning of last year was further darkened by the death of Andrew Ken- nedy. He died in Munich on 1...

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FLOPS, WRITS AND `CENSORSHIP'

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The media: Paul Johnson looks back at the last year and forward into 1989 THE past year has been a rich and varied One for the British media, with many pluses and some...

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THE ECONOMY

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The soothsayers hedge their bets JOCK BRUCE-GARDYNE But the great man was notably un- abashed. Mother Nature, it seemed, had let him down — unseasonable droughts had played...

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Undercover work

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MY pioneer work on the City's•undercover geography has been enriched by Keith Cordwell of Lowndes Lambert, who tells me of a wet-weather route from Tower Hill station to Lloyd's...

The uses of power

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I AM old enough to have gone to the very first press conference of Hambros Bank. `Are you going into unit trusts, Mr Ham- bro?"Well, yes, we do plan to start some.' `Why, Mr...

CITY AND SUBURBAN

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A scaring trip by Fraser Nash through the Home-buying Counties CHRISTOPHER FILDES M y cousin once owned a 1934 Fraser Nash of which he said that the engine would do 80 m.p.h....

Hands off our tax haven

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I LEARN from the Wall Street Journal, which learned it from the Inland Revenue, which probably wrote to me but knows that I dare not open the envelope, that Britain is refusing...

A knight at the club

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FOR the man who has everything: a knighthood for Evelyn de Rothschild. It is the last in a tradition that honours the retiring chairman of the City's most exclu- sive club, the...

Classifieds — page 38

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LETTERS Black propaganda

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Sir: The spectacular collapse of the egg industry leads me to suppose that if there had been an abundance of eggs in Ger- many during the last war the late Sefton Delmer, the...

Secrets

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Sir: It may be instructive that the only legislative example offered by Anthony Barnett ('Why Britain is no democracy', 17 December) to support his Charter 88 de- mand for a...

Divine afflatus

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Sir: Of course Jeffrey Bernard (Low life, 10 December) is right that Mozart would have made a fart sound divine. I don't know that he ever tried, but Osmin's low D, sustained...

Innuendo

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Sir: We four members of the governing body were most distressed to see your newspaper (`Witch-hunters sabotaged' by Mark Almond, 17 December) publish mis- leading comments about...

Soviet repatriations

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Sir: I entirely agree with Lord Ports- mouth's regret (Letters, 17 December) that successive British Governments have failed to hold any inquiry into the repatria- tions of...

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BOOKS

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As great as he said he was Gavin Stamp MANY MASKS: A LIFE OF FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT by Brendan Gill Heinemann, f20, pp.544 A rchitects, on the whole, are a pretty dull lot. They...

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Depraved emperors of a great empire

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Philip Mansel BYZANTIUM: THE EARLY CENTURIES by John Julius Norwich Viking, £16.95, pp. 408 W hat figures are more evocative than the four porphyry tetrarchs on the corner of...

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Reconciling the old with the new

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Piers Paul Read THE BOOK OF GOD by Gabriel Josipovici Yale, f18.95, pp.350 F or some time I have been curious to know what some perceptive and agnostic critic would make of the...

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Spoiled by his good companions

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J. L. Carr J. B. PRIESTLEY by Vincent Brome Hamish Hamilton, £16.95, pp. 512 J ohn Priestley (he awarded himself the B for Boynton) lived most of his childhood and youth...

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Two vanished worlds

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Christopher Clapham THE TWO ZIONS: REMINISCENCES OF JERUSALEM AND ETHIOPIA by Edward Ullendorff OUP, L19.50, pp. 238 ETHIOPIA ENGRAVED edited by Richard Pankhurst and Leila...

Next week Ferdinand Mount on Whitehall Enoch Powell on heraldry

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The fat owl still an acceptable hoot

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Paul Webb FRANK RICHARDS: THE CHAP BEHIND THE CHUMS by Mary Cadogan Viking, f14.95, pp.258 I n the March 1940 edition of Horizon, George Orwell's attack on boys' comics...

The postman cometh

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Francis King EUGENE O'NEILL: SELECTED LETTERS edited by Travis Bogard and Jackson R. Bryer Yak, f19.95, pp.601 E ugene O'Neill was an extraordinary literary phenomenon: a...

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ARTS

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Theatre Jolly good show Christopher Edwards The Sleeping Beauty in the Wood (Duchess) I n the Christmas issue I recommended, sight unseen, the Players' Theatre annual...

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Cinema

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The Dressmaker ('15', Odeon Haymarket) Liverpool lass Hilary Mantel T his is Liverpool in 1944; Nellie, the dressmaker of the title, lives surrounded by her dead mother's...

Sale-rooms

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Now is the time. . . Peter Watson calls on the auction houses to use some of their present bonanza to save the nation's heritage N ineteen eighty-eight was the year when both...

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Art

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Critics at bay Giles Auty W hile attending a sermonless and somewhat dour service over Christmas, I had occasion to recall the most wonderfully misdirected sermon I ever...

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hIU ID A/

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A ;357 A monthly selection of forthcoming events recommended by The Spectator's regular critics MUSIC BBC Boulez retrospective, Barbican, 15-19 January. Each evening there...

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Opera

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Semele (Covent Garden) Endless pleasure Rodney Milnes I can't remember when I last enjoyed myself so enormously at Covent Garden, so much so that I must stop singing, dancing...

Television

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Looking on the bright side Zenga Longmore W e may not have enjoyed the telly this Christmas', I was told by a wise and trusted friend, tut at least the kiddies did. Glued to...

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High life

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Sobering up Taki New York I don't know about you, but I badly need a rest from the holidays. The nights be- tween Christmas and the New Year are known to be dangerous to one's...

Low life

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Norman defrosts Jeffrey Bernard W ell, it wasn't a bad Christmas real- ly. Only two saucepans were burned and the men who came to dinner brought me a lovely slice of Mozart...

Wendy Cope is away.

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Home life

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Solving the priest shortage Alice Thomas Ellis We called at a nearby presbytery and the door was opened by a lay helper since the priest was out. Then we went to another one...

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Number 17 Sloane Street

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IN honour of the New Year I decided to go to a new restaurant, and one with its chef from the new world. Should I really have expected anything other than new dis- appointments?...

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COMPETITION

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The best intentions Jaspistos I n Competition No. 1555 you were asked for a poem about New Year's resolutions. In this very building I have just over- heard one person say to...

CHESS

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Sweet charity Raymond Keene A t the 1987 World Chess Federation Cohgress in Seville the Spanish Interna- tional Master, Dr Ricardo Calvo, was declared persona non grata by...

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Solution to 888: Stirring M 'IN O ' O D S ' CF1 • 111■31 7 S

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' A'PEDNT " EGRALLIY N LI Er AGTI AIDE E CITiv L I N , %UGC I N A HI ALA S B %TOOL RONE S E N S N E W ALY 1-10SANNA L EINEREDGER l tVET '7 A 2 fIRIE DIInMI Xb A L 0 0 D TI L...

CROSSWORD 890: A toi by Doc

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A first prize of £20 and two further prizes of £10 for the first three correct solutions opened on 23 January. Entries to: Crossword 890, The Spectator, 56 Doughty Street,...

No. 1558: Grave situation

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The modern churchyard is usually unsight- ly and untidy. You are invited to write an `Elegy on a Country Churchyard' in the metre of Gray's famous poem (maximum 16 lines)....

Competition entries

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To enable competitors to economise on postage, entries for one or more weeks of the competition and crossword may be posted together under one cover ad- dressed 'Competition...