27 JUNE 1987, Page 58

THE SPECIATOR

Index for January - June 1987 Subjects and Titles

L) LETTER A) LEADING ARTICLE LL) LIFE AND LETTERS

N) NOTE ) POEM (PC) POLITICS

rI)W) PORTRAIT ILLUSTRATION A

Abortion: an unsuccessful suit to forbid the abortion of a foetus, 28 Feb 4(PW), 5(N), 7(D); the emotional and psychological aftermath of an abortion, 7 Mar 9(A), 14 Mar 30(L) Adams, Ansel: exhibition, 6 Jun 45(AR) Adams, Gerry: and the West Belfast election, 23 May 12(A) Advertising: It pays to advertise, but only if you have the right product, 21 Mar 21(A); Glenda Jackson in a Hanson Trust commercial, 28 Mar 7(D); a financial advertisement in the Independent, 6 Jun 5(N); Aims of Industry advertisements boring 13 Jun 28(L); advertisers' extravagant prose, 27 Jun 52(C45 Affair of State, An, Phillip Knightley and Caroline Kennedy, 30 May 26(R), 13 Jun 28, 20 Jun 22(L) Afghanistan: snags in the Russian-backed amnesty proposals, 24 JanA) 4(PW), 11(A); foreign journalists easily duped, 31 Jan 12

Afric(a: Not as black as it's painted, 31 Jan 13(A); its cultural condition prevents economic expansion, 31 Jan 13(A); Wil- fred Thesiger's travels, 9 May 33(R); see also individual countries

Aftermath of abortion, The, 7 Mar 9(A) Agnelli, Giovanni, 14 Feb 49(A) Agriculture: 'total agriculture' no longer necessary, 10 Jan 9(A); the Government announces reforms, 14 Feb 5(N); see also Land Aida (Luxor), 16 May 36(AR)

AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) the Government's anti-Aids campaign, 3 Jan 21(L), 14 Mar 5(LA); Aids in the courts in 1987?, 10 Jan 7(D); the Government's Aids pamphlet goes to pensioners, 24 Jan 40(A); now a voting issue, 7 Feb 8(AV); spreading among priests as well as the general public in the US, 14 Feb 16(A); as a story motif, 21 Feb 41(A); now the topic in Ncw York, 21 Feb 42(A); not a major hazard outside the 'high risk' group, 7 Mar 8(AV), 14 Mar 5(LA), 21 Mar 20(A); a share boom triggered off, 7 Mar 8(AV), 25(CS); a television campaign, 7 Mar 45(AR); moral questions raised by Aids, 14 Mar 5(LA), 28 Mar 26(L); the risk to heterosexuals examined, 21 Mar 20(A); Aids in a TV serial, 21 Mar 42(AR); public - and political - attitudes to Aids, 28 Mar 17(A); its spread now leading homosexuals to modify their sexual habits, 28 Mar 17(A); churchmen on Aids, 4 Apr 27(A); its effect on sexual morality and family life, 4 Apr 27(A); the Army's free issue of condoms as a preventative measure, 18 Apr 20(A), 2 May 20, 9 May 28, 16 May 22(L); 23 May 8(AV)

Aircraft industry: GEC's Nimrod dropped in favour of Boeing's Awacs, 3 Jan 6(PC) Airships: their advantages, 20 Jan 15(A); use as surveillance craft and radar platforms, 20 Jun 15(A) Airship takes off, The, 20 Jun 15(A) Air travel: Aer Lingus and Ryanair fares, 3 Jan 13(A); British Airways and its share floatation, 7 Feb 23, 14 Feb 30(CS); Swissair praised, 14 Mar 44(A); a fracas on a transatlantic 747, 28 Mar 41(A); 18 Apr 24(L); Joan Collins creates a scene at Heathrow, 18 Apr 7(D), 24(L)

Alcohol: see DRINK

Alexander, Tania, A Little of All These: An Estonian Childhood, 25 Apr 31(R) Alice in Wonderland (Lyric, Hammersmith), 10 Jan 30(AR) All aboard the good ship Confute, 31 Jan 24(E) All anarchists nowadays, 25 Apr 23(A) Allegri Divehi (ballet), 24 Jan 37(AR) Allen, Walter, Ger Out Early, 3 Jan 27(R)

ALLIANCE, THE LIBERAUSDP

a weekend rally, 31 Jan 6(PC), 7 Feb 8(AV); its hopes and prospects, 31 Jan 6(PC); a serious threat to the Conservatives in southern England, 7 Feb 8(AV); a decline in support, 7 Feb 8(AV); its immediate aim to replace Labour as the main opposition, 11 Apr 5(LA); warnings by Labour and Conserva- tive canvassers against voting for the Alliance, 18 Apr 6(PC); a victory in Lewisham, 18 Apr 7(D); Shirley Williams contests the Cambridge constituency, 9 May 8(A), 30 May 11, 6 Jun 11(A); 9 May 20(A); its best hope lies not in electoral victory but in a Tory success, 23 May 5(LA); its general election programme and campaign, 23 May 6(PC), 9(A); speculations on post-election possibilities, 23 May 9(A); Mrs Steel's election diary, 6 Jun 7(D); there must be a merger of the two parties, 20 Jun 8(A) Alliance: win by losing, 23 May 5(LA)

A ARTICLE

A THE ARTS

A ANOTHER VOICE

CO COMPETTTION CS) CITY AND SUBURBAN

DIARY THE ECONOMY

R BOOK REVIEW X MISCELLANEOUS

Alliance takes over, The, 11 Apr 5(LA)

All2 quiet on the Western Front in the great trade war, 25 Apr 1(E )

All the world's a book, 27 Jun 21(A) Alternative voices, 23 May 54 (LL) America: see individual countries America's Cup races, the, 31 Jan 39(A), 13 Jun 40(R) American won't buy it, 4 Apr 5(LA) Amis, Kingsley: which is his best book?, 7 Feb 33(LL); on the present failure of the Church of England, 18 Apr 25(A), 25 Apr 22(L) Amis, Martin, Einstein's Monsters, 2 May 31(R), 9 May 6(PC) Amritsar massacre of 1919, the, 18 Apr 14(A) Amsterdam, restaurants in, 31 Jan 48(A) Anderson, Digby, (ed.) A Diet of Reason, 3 Jan 25(R) Anderton, James: his relationship with God, 24 Jan 5(N), 31 Jan 25(L) . . . and in Venice, 21 Mar 18(A) And remember, voting Alliance may let in the Alliance, 18 Apr 6(PC) . . . and the case for, 10 Jan 16(A)

Angola: the civil war, 21 Mar 35(R); Jonas Savimbi, 21 Mar 35(R)

Animals: epitaphs for pets, 31 Jan 50(C0); killer turtles in the Thames, 21 Feb 22(A); hare-coursing defended, 28 Feb 22(A); animal burials, 21 Mar 43(A); used for medical purposes, 11 Apr 51(A) Another day of life, Ryszard KapukinIci, 21 Mar 35(R) Another voice, 3 Jan 8, 10 Jan 8, 17 Jan 8, 24 Jan 8, 31 Jan 8, 7 Feb 8, 14 Feb 8, 21 Feb 8, 28 Feb 8, 7 Mar 8, 14 Mar 8, 21 Mar 7,28 Mar 8,4 Apr 10, 11 Apr 8, 18 Apr 8, 25 Apr 7, 2 May 8, 16 May 7, 23 May 8, 30 May 8, 6 Jun 8, 13 Jun 8, 27 Jun 8(AV) Answering machines, 24 Jan 7(D) Apologies: to Celia Hammond, 4 Apr 25(L); to the Countess of Dudley, 20 Jun 13(X) Apraxine, Pierre, Photographs from the Collection of the Gilman Paper Company (plates by Richard Benson), 3 Jan 25(R) April the twenty-third, 2 May 35(LL) Arab states of the Gulf, the, 2 May 34(R) Archer, Lucy, Raymond Erith: Architect, 28 Mar 29 (R)

ARCHITECTURE

Philip Tilden, Feb 36(AR); Soane and the Dulwich art gallery, 21 Feb 39(AR); controversy over the RIBA's Drawings Collection, 28 Feb 19(A); F.R. Yerbury's photographs of architecture, 7 Mar 44(AR); Le Corbusier and his influence in Britain, 14 Mar 38(AR); Donald Trump's ambitious building schemes in New York, 28 Mar 13(A); two architects: Raymond Erith and Quinlan Terry, 28 Mar 29(R), 11 Apr 22(L); two archives of architectural drawings threatened with sale and dispersal, 4 Apr 41(AR), 18 Apr 23(L); the Turner Gallery at the Tate, 11 Apr 45(AR); Venturi's design for the National Gallery extension, 25 Apr 34(AR); the insensitive modernisation of London's Underground stations, 13 Jun 18(A); the work of H.S. Goodhart-Rendel, 20 Jun 45(AR); the Royal Opera House's redevelopment scheme examined, 27 Jun 13(A); Peter Palumbo's Mansion House project turned down, 27 Jun 25(CS) Arcimboldo, Giuseppe: his paintings, 30 May 30(R) Arcimboldo Effect, The, (ed.) Pontus Mitten, 30 May 30(R) Ariadne auf Naxos (Covent Garden), 14 Mar 39(AR) Arm-lock on prices, An, 21 Max 10(A) Arms and the man, 18 Apr 32(LL) Arms: the dangers from their manufacture and supply, 11 Apr 23(A), 9 May 27, 30 May 21(L); 18 Apr 32(LL)

Army and armed forces, the: Pnnce Edward resigns from the Royal Marines, 17 Jan 7(D), 16(A); Max Hastings recalls his humiliating failure as a soldier, 17 Jan 16(A); cuts in defence spending lower army morale and contribute to premature retirements, 14 Mar 20(A); the free issue of condoms and other measures against Aids in the armed forces, 18 Apr 20(A)

A); 2 May 20, 9 May 28, 16 May 22(L); Joining up, 9 May 29(

ART

artists' exhibitions: Ansel Adarris, 6 Jun 45, Barry Atherton, 9 May 46, Frank Auerbach, 17 Jan 30, Hugh Buchanan, 25 Apr 35, Le Corbusier, 14 Mar 38, Lovis Corinth, 7 Feb 38, Tony Cragg, 18 Apr 36, Alan Davie, 31 Jan 35, Richard Deacon, 18 Apr 36, Janes Fairgrieve, 7 Mar 42, Rainer Felting, 7 Feb 38, Terry Frost, 31 Jan 35, Naum Gabo, 21 Feb 37, Ilya Glazunov,

28 Mar 40, H.S. Goodhart-Rendel, 20 Jun 45, Patrick Heron, 14 Mar 41, William Kentridge, 9 May 46, Karol Korab, 7 Mar 42, Charles Hodge Mackie, 25 Apr 35, Victor Newsome, 14 Mar 41, Winifred Nicholson, 13 Jun 47, Mervyn Peake, 14 Feb 44, Virginia Powell, 28 Feb 38, Bertram Pnestman, 16 May 39, Eric Ravilious, 28 Feb 28, Paula Rego, 21 Mar 39, Mark Rothko, 27 Jun 42, Michael Salaman, 4 Apr 43, Rupert Shephard, 28 Feb 38, Keith Vaughan, 4 Apr 42, Edward Wilkins Waite, 16 May 39, Karl Weschke, 7 Feb 38, Frans Widerberg, 9 May 46(AR) Rodchenko and constructivism, 3 Jan 24(R); 'modernism' yielding to traditional values?, 3 Jan 31(AR); VAT on works of art?, 10 Jan 29(AR): E.H.Gombrich on Renaissance

artists, 17 Jan 26(R); British Art in the 20th Century, 24 Jan 34(AR), 14 Feb 43(LL), 4 Apr 42(AR); the Salon des Refuses, JS 24 Jan 34 AR); eleven modern artists in the great tradition, 7 Feb 34(R. ; the intrusion of politics into art, 14 Feb 43(LL);

the 15th ohn Moores exhibition, 14 Feb 46(AR); State of the Art (exhibition), 14 Feb 46(AR); John Hoyland wins the Athena art award, 21 Feb 37 (AR); controversy over the RIBA's Drawings Collection, 28 Feb 19(A); death of Andy Warhol, 28 Feb 42(A), 7 Mar 42(AR); 19th-century popular art, 7 Mar 38(R); contemporary British art on tour in Iron Curtain countries, 21 Mar 39(AR); Malevich, 28 Mar 40(AR); the opening of the Turner Gallery at the Tate, 4 Apr 7(D), 11 Apr 45(AR); two archives of architectural drawings threatened with sale and dispersal, 4 Apr 41(AR), 18 Apr 23(L); Non-Romantic Painters, 4 Apr 42(AR); books on Turner, 11 Apr 33(R); the secret partnership of Bernard Berenson and Joseph Duveen, 11 Apr 41(R); Venturi's design for the National Gallery extension 25 Apr 34(AR); novel methods of portraying landscape. 25 Apr 35(AR); Joan Min5, 2 May 32(R); the Belgian Lummists, 2 May 40(AR); British Impressionism, 2 May 40(AR); buying paintings for pleasure, 16 May 39(AR); British 20th-century painters, 16 May 39(AR); TSWA3D sculptures, 23 May 56(AR); a plea for the rationalising of London's art collections, 23 May 59(AR); the disposition of the Turner bequest, 23 May 59(AR); Arcimbol- do's paintings, 30 May 30(R); neo-Romantic British painters,

30 May 33(AR); Greek icons and frescoes, 30 May -34(AR);

oriental art in the sale rooms, 30 May 40(AR); a collection of naive commemorative art in Provence, 6 Jun 48(AR); the Spectator's colour reproductions, 13 Jun 27, 20 Jun 22(L); essays on Klee, 13 Jun 39(R); a biography of Bernard Berenson, 13 Jun 42(R); a biography of Paul Nash, 20 Jun 25(R); the Royal Academy summer exhibition, 20 Jun

43(AR.); Lucian Freud's selection of National Gallery paint-

ings, 27 Jun 42(AR) Arts, the: and EEC directive on VAT, 10 Jan 29(AR) Arts diaries, monthly, 30 May 43, 27 Jun 45(X) Ascherson, Neal, The Struggles for Poland, 20 Jun 23(R) Asian immigrants: the strains of life in Britain and racial harassment, 25 Apr 8(A), 2 May 19(L) Aslet, Clive, Quinlan Terry: The Revival of Architecture, 28 Mar 29(R) As You Like It: an amateur performance, 20 Jun 32(LL) At a statue of Hamilton, 13 Jun 41(P) Atherton, Barry: exhibition, 9 May 46(AR) Atoning for Guildford, 14 Feb 5(LA) At war with the twentieth century, 17 Jan 9(A) Atwood, Margaret, Bluebeard's Egg, 6 Jun 37(R) Auction sales: the Duchess of Windsor's jewels sold, 11 Apr 7(D); the popularity of oriental art, 30 May 40(AR); a charity auction at Christie's, 13 Jun 51(A) Auden, W.H.: as seen by A.L.Rowse, 4 Apr 35(R) Auerbach, Frank: exhibition, 17 Jan 30(AR) Auletta, Ken, Greed and Glory on Wall Street, 28 Mar 24(CS) Aunts, a child's view of, 17 Jan 7(D) Aurelius, Marcus: a biography, 4 Apr 37(R) Austen, Jane: a critical study, 17 Jan 27(R.)

AUSTRALIA

the transportation system, 17 Jan 24(R); why some Austra- lians wear hats, 24 Jan 21(L); Rupert Murdoch's bid for the Melbourne Herald, 7 Feb 15(A); recommended Australian wines, 7 Feb 43, 4 Apr 51, 30 May 53(A ); Sir Robert Menzies and the second world war, 14 Feb 37(R); the British Government's appeal against the Peter Wright judgment dismissed, 21 Mar 4(PW); a general election announced, 6 Jun 8(AV); Bob Hawke interviewed by John Pilger, 6 Jun 8(AV), 27 Jun 26(L) Authority; the basis of proper authority, 25 Apr 23(A); its recent undermining and erosion and how It can be restored, 25 Apr 23(A) Authors: their receipts from Public Lending Right, 24 Jan 7(D); at the PEN conference, 13 Jun 15(A); their right to express their political opinions, 27 Jun 18(A.) Autobiography I907-1937: Journey East, Journey West, Mircea Eliade, 25 Apr 32(R)

B

Babies: the 'Baby M' surrogate motherhood case in the US, 11 Apr 9(A)

Back to school, 16 May 23(A) Bad Times, 21 Mar 27(A) Baker, Kenneth: the teachers' quarrel with him over pay and conditions, 25 Apr 5(LA); his children's education, 2 May 5 (N); not to close small rural schools, 9 May 5(LA) Bakker, Jim: blackmailed over a sex scandal, 28 Mar 11(A); his financial greed, 23 May 7(D) Balancing act, The, 9 May 15(A)

Baldwin, Stanley: a biography, 14 Mar 32(R) Baldwin, Roy Jenkins, 14 Mar 32(R) Ballad of Bethnal Green, The, 31 Jan 17(A) Ballads: The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green', 31 Jan 17(A) Ballet: see Dance and ballet Bank of England, the: the Governor on fraud, 31 Jan 23(CS); should be freed from political control, 27 Jun 9(A) Etorics

an SIB requirement on life assurance and unit trusts chal- lenged, 7 Feb 23, 28 Mar 24(CS); their role in an international- ised City, 14 Feb 27(A); the popularity of cash dispensers, 21 Mar 6(D); Sir Kit McMahon's shake-up of the Midland Bank, 2 May 18(CS); Morgan Grenfell's compliance officer's promo- tion, 2 May 18(CS); Citycorp's writing-down of loans as a solution of the third-world debt problem, 30 May 19(CS), 6 Jun 31(E)

Barbie, Klaus: on trial for crimes against humanity, 23 May 16(A) Barbie leaves the box, 23 May 16(A) Barbiere di Siviglia, II, (Covent Garden), 20 Jun 44(AR) Barker, George: his collected poems, 20 Jun 31(R) Baroque 'n' Roll, Brigid Brophy, 21 Feb 34(R) Bayley, John, The Order of Battle at Trafalgar, 13 Jun 36(R) BBC, THE

cold feet after the Panorama libel case?, 10 Jan 7(D); a film about the Zircon spp satellite causes a security panic, 31 Jan 4, 7 Feb 4(PW)„ 6(PC); Alasdair Milne resigns as director-general, 7 Feb 4(PW, 5(LA , 21(A); its Glasgow office raided by the police, 7 Feb 4(P , 5(N), 14 Feb 43(LL); the qualities needed in Alasdair Mi e's successor, 7 Feb 5(LA), 21(A); the Governors must now govern, 7 Feb 21rai); Lord Reith and his letters in the Radio Times, 21 Feb 19 A); breaches its own rules, 21 Feb 24(A); recent scan s. including the suppression of Ian Curteis's Falklands play, 21 Feb 24(A); Michael Checkland appointed director-general, 7 Mar 7(D) 25(CS), 14 Mar 23(A); what prospects of reform?, 7 Mar 25(CS)

BBC, The: getting under control?, 14 Mar 23(A) Bears, 6 Jun 39(R) Beastliest in the realm, The, 23 May 13(A) Beauman, Sally, Destiny, 16 May 28(1) Beckett, Samuel, 21 Mar 32(R) Beer, varieties of, 20 Jun 42(A), 27 June 26(L) Before Prince Edward, 17 Jan 16(A) Belle Epoque, La, 28 Feb 34(P) Bence-Jones, Mark, Twilight of the Ascendancy, 24 Jan 28(R) Benjamin Disraeli, Letters: 1838-1841, (ed.) M. G. Weibe and others, 13 Jun 35(R) Benn, Tony, 13 June 27(L) Benson, Stella: a biography, 9 May 36(R)

Bentley, James, A Guide to Tuscany 18 Apr 34(R) Berengaria: Enigmatic Queen of England, Mairin Mitchell, 7 Mar 37(R)

Berenson, Bernard: his association with Joseph Duveen, 11 Apr 41(R); a monumental biography, 13 Jun 42(R) Berlin: a short visit, 17 Jan 34(A); youth riots in both East and West Berlin, 20 Jun 10(A) Bernard Berenson: The Making of a Legend, Ernest Samuels, 13 Jun 42(R) Bernhard, Thomas, Wittgenstein's Nephew (trans. Ewald Osers), 7 Feb 35(R) Best, Clare, and Caroline Boisset, Leaves from the Garden, 20 Jun 24(R) Bethnal Green, the blind beggar of, 31 Jan 17(A) Better, if not best, 4 Apr 39(I.1.) Better than a bishop, 14 Feb 20(A) Bevan, Aneurin: a political biography, 4 Apr 32(R) Beware media triumphalism, 14 Feb 21(A) Biffen, John: 6 Jun 6(PC); dismissed by Mrs Thatcher, 20 Jun 5(LA), 6(D) Big Lie which threatens to clean up the world, The, 7 Mar 8(AV) Big vegetables play at numbers while the war clouds gather, 11 Apr 20(E) Bird of Time, The: The Science and Politics of Nature Conserva- tion, N. W. Moore, 4 Apr 38(R) Birley, Anthony, Marcus Aurelius: A Biography, 4 Apr 37(R) Birmingham: the immigrant population, 30 May 13(A); decline under a Labour council, 30 May 13(A) Birth control: sterilisation of a 17-year-old girl authorised, 21 Mar 5(LA) Birthday poem, a, 20 Jun 51(CO) Black spot, 9 May 5(N) Blakiston, Georgiana, (ed.) Letters of Conrad Russell 1897-1947, 30 May 24(R) Bleeding Sergeant looks ahead with foreboding, A, 27 Jun 8(AV) Blood on their Hands, Richard Cottrell, 21 Mar 35(R) Bloodstained whitewash, 18 Apr 14(A) Blow, Detmar: his architectural drawings, 4 Apr 42(AR) Bluebeard's Egg, Margaret Atwood, 6 Jun 37(R)

Blues in the Night (Donmar Warehouse), 27 Jun 46(AR) Blundering Into Disaster, Robert McNamara, 6 Jun 43(R) Boat Race, the Oxford and Cambridge, 25 Apr 59(CO) Boheme, La: Opera North, Leeds, 3 Jan 31(AR); Covent

Garden 20 Jun 44(AR) Boisset, Caroline, and are Best, Leaves from the Garden, 20 Jun 24(R) Bolshie bishop fights the bottle, The, 4 Apr 10(AV) Bonus of Laughter, The, Alan Pryce-Jones, 14 Feb 38(R) Booker, Christopher: not pro-Soviet, 11 Apr 22(L); on Russia 18 Apr 8(AV) Booxs reviews of a book supposedly by Mrs Thatcher, 10 Jan 35(C0); authors' receipts from Public Lending Right, 24 Jan 7(D); extracts from 'last year's silliest titles', 7 Feb 44(CO); a selection of paperbacks, 14 Feb 42, 28 Mar 30, 16 May 34 public libraries cut expenditure on books, 14 Mar 35 spring books, 11 Apr 27-43(R); the internationalising of book publishing, 27 Jun 21(A), 48(AR); takeovers and mergers in publishing, 27 Jun 21(A) Bopha! (Cottesloe), 17 an 31(AR) Boredom, 10 Jan 27(LL) Borgia, Cesare, 20 Jun 22(L) Boswell: a further volume of his diary, 28 Feb 29(R) Boswell: The English Experiment, Irma S. Lustig and Frederick A. Pottle, 28 Feb 29(R) Boulton, J. T., W. Roberts and E. Mansfield, (ed.) The Letters of D. H. Lawrence: Vol. IV, 1921-1924, 23 May 51(R) Bouquet, 4 Apr 33(P) Bowles, E. A.: the 'Crocus King', 21 Feb 40(A) Boxing: boxers' nicknames, 14 Mar 45(A) Boycott a Japanese, win a Porsche - not the City's kind of competition, 11 Apr 19(CS) Boyolyobbo, 13 Jun 5(N) Boy Soldier (film), 14 Feb 46 (AR) Braces, 3 Jan 7(D) Bradbury, Malcolm, No, Not Bloomsbury, 16 May 27(R) Bradford: the city today, 27 Jun 15(A); its Asian population, 27 Jun 15(A) Bradley, John Lewis, and Ian Ousby, (ed.) The Correspondence of John Ruskin and Charles Eliot Norton, 16 May 29(R) Brains down the drain, 18 Apr 12(A) Brave new Brum, 30 May 13(A) Brazil: defaults on its foreign debts, 28 Feb 26(E) Breakfasting out, 24 Jan 7(D) Break Guinness up - management by merger is not good for you, 17 Jan 21(CS) Brenan, Gerald: an obituary, 31 Jan 20(A) Brendon, Piers, Ike: The Life and Times of Dwight D. Eisenhower, 10 Jan 21(R) Brent schools: the DoE's report, 2 May 8(AV) Brian, Havergal: his journalistic writings, 7 Feb 37(AR) Bridgland, Fred, Jonas Savimbi, 21 Mar 35(R) Burrniri Britain a divided nation with a North/South Labour/ Conservative split, 24 Jan 6(PC); the 'special relationship' with the US, 31 Jan 27(R); the perennial theme of Britain's decline, 14 Feb 9(A); a Spectator poll on Britain's decline, 14 Feb 14(A); fascism in Britain, 21 Feb 28(R); letters of a traveller in Britain, 28 Mar 34(R); Celtic Britain, 11 Apr 42(R); the illusion of 'One Nation', 25 Apr 7(AV); the strains of life in Britain for Asian immigrants, 25 Apr 8(A), 2 May 19(L); 'Britain's ethnic community', 25 Apr 22(L); the North-South political divide, 20 Jun 5(N); see also ENGLAND

Brita(CS) in is the world's biggest loser from a kamikaze war, 4 Apr

24 British Airways and its share flotation, 7 Feb 23, 14 Feb 30(CS) British Airways, middle-class equivalent of the frostbite fiver, 7 Feb 23(CS) British Telecom: see Telephones Broch, Hermann: a biography, 20 Jun 30(R) Broch, Hermann, The Spell, 20 Jun 30(R) Brooks, David, (ed.) The Destruction of Lord Rosebery: From the Diary of Sir Edward Hamilton 1894-95, 9 May 36(R) Brophy, Brigid, Baroque 'n' Roll, 21 Feb 34(R) Brown, Jane, Laming Roper and his Gardens, 20 Jun 24(R) Brown, Nicholas: shadow Solicitor-General, 14 Feb 8(A Browne, John: constituency reactions to his divorce, 6 Jun 16(A) Browned off by scandal, 6 Jun 16(A) BTR and hlkington: a case to be heard in the public interest, 3 Jun 19(CS) Buchanan, Hugh: exhibition, 25 Apr 35(AR) Budberg, Moura, 25 Apr 31(R) BUDGET, THE the tinting of Bullet Days, 14 Feb 30(CS); budget specula- tions, 14 Feb 33 ); the budget's influence on pre-election public opinion, Feb 6(PC); two contrasting budget prog- rammes, 14 Mar 26(E); the encouraging financial situation, 14 Mar 27 (CS); a Chancellor's budget refreshment, 14 Mar 27(CS); Nigel Lawson's Budget examined, 21 Mar 4(PW), 8, 10, 11(A); see also Taxation Budgeting in a season of euphoria, 14 Feb 33(E) Building regulations, new, 17 Jan 8(ANO, 24 Jan 21(L) Bull, Hedley, and William Lewis, (ed.) The Special Relationship, 31 Jan 27(R) Burdened with Cyprus: The British Connection, John Reddaway, 7 Feb 28(R) Burgess, Anthony: an autobiography, 28 Feb 30(R) Burgess, Anthony, Little Wilson and Big God, 28 Feb 30(R) Burglary: neighbourhood watch schemes, 21 Mar 6(D) Burial customs, 21 Mar 43(A) Burkhardt, F., and S. Smith, (ed.) The Correspondence of Charles Darwin: Vol. II, 183743, 11 Apr 40(R) Business could do better, 14 Mar 47(A) Business Expansion Scheme fund, an unsumecsful, 30 May 17(CS) Busoni, Ferruccio, Selected Letters (ed. and trans. Antony Beaumont), 30 May 31(R) Butler, R. A.: a biography, 14 Mar 31(R); parallels to his failure to become prime minister, 21 Mar 6(D) Byatt, A. S., Sugar and Other Stories, 11 Apr 35(R)

C

Cadogan, Mary, Richinal Crompton: The Woman Behind William, 10 Jan 26(R) Cairo: the noise, the heat and the overcrowding, 11 Apr 12(A) Calculators, pocket, 24 Jan 7(D) Calendar, the: fixing the date of Easter, 18 Apr 7(D) Callaghan, James: his disastrous political decisions, 21 Mar 6(D); his autobiography, 18 Apr 27(R) Callaghan, James, Time and Chance, 18 Apr 27(R) Calvocoressi, Peter, Time for Peace, 2 May 33(R) Cambodia: the Khmer Rouge regime, 17 Jan 28(R) Cambodian Witness, Someth May (ed. and intro. James Fen- ton), 17 Jan 28(R) Cambridge: the parliamentary constituency and the candidates' prospects and campaign, 9 May 8, 30 May 11, 6 June 11(A), 13 Jun 28(L); a poll of voting intentions, 9 May 9, 30 May 11, 6 Jun 12(A) Cambridge University: its new - and inferior - admission procedure for undergraduates, 31 Jan 7(D), 7 Feb 26(L); Henry Chadwick to be Master of Peterhouse, 14 Feb 20(A) Campbell, John, Nye Bevan and the Mirage of British Socialism, 4 Apr 32(R) Canada, 9 May 40(R) Can Shirley win in Cambridge?, 9 May 8(A) Canterbury, the Archbishop of: follows the Anglican via media, 21 Feb 5(LA) Captain Vinegar's Commission, Philip Glazebrook, 20 Jun 26(R) Captive Lion, A: The Life of Marina Tsvetayeva, Elaine Feinstein, 7 Mar 39(R)

Carlyle, Janet Welsh: her married life with Thomas Carlyle, 31 Jan 31(R)

Carmen (Glyndebourne), 6 Jun 46(AR) Carter, Jimmy: buttonholed by Taki, 13 Jun 50(A) Case of the former chairman reaches its conclusion, The, 28 Feb 25(CS) Cash dispensers, 21 Mar 6(D) Cash on delivery, 11 Apr 9(A) Castro, Fidel: a biography, 27 Jun 33(R) Cats: castrating cats, 14 Mar 7(D), 4 Apr 25(L); meat-eaters, 4 Apr 48(A); a cat story, 6 Jun 39(R)

Cau;ht out, 21 Feb 35(LL)

Celtic Britain, Charles Thomas, 11 Apr 42(R)

Cendrars, Blaise,Dan Yack (trans. Nma Rooter), 24 Jan 31(R) Censorship, Index on: a sharply-attacked article by Noam Chomsky, 21 Mar 12(A), 4 Apr 26, 2 May 19(L)

Chadwick, the Revd Dr Henry: a profile on his becoming Master of Peterhouse, 14 Feb 20(A) Champagne and prisoners, 13 Jun 15(A)

Changes that poverty will bring to the City, The, 14 Feb 27(A) Channels and Tunnels, Nicholas Henderson, 28 Feb 31(R) Channel Tunnel, the: the Eurotunnel scheme in financial and

political trouble, 21 Feb 15(A); Sir Kit McMahon joins the board, 28 Feb 25(CS); the Channel Tunnel Group and the winning of the travel contract, 28 Feb 31(R) Chapman, Ann: her murder in 1971 in Greece, 21 Mar 35(R) Charities: the Duchess of Windsor's jewel sale proceeds to go to the Pasteur Institute, 11 Apr 7(D); a charity auction at Christie's, 13 Jun 51(A); convenants, 20 Jun 22(L) Charlton, William, Tatiana Mallinson and Robert Oakeshott, The Christian Response to Industrial Capitalism, 7 Feb 29(R) Chariots come to the rescue of Labour's defence policy, 30 May 6(PC) Checkland, Michael; appointed director-general of the BBC, 7 Mar 7(D), 25(CS), 14 Mar 23(A) Chekhov, Anton: a biography, 11 Apr 31(R) Chekhov, Henri Troyat (trans. Michael Heim), 11 Apr 31(R) CHESS

Florencio Campomanes re-elected Fide president, 3 Jan 37(A); a Grandmaster Association, 3 Jan 37, 23 May 67(A); Specimen wins the run-off for the British championship, 3 Jan 37, 10 Jan 35(A); the stronf OHRA tournament in Brussels won by Kasparov, 10 Jan 35 A); the Hastings tournament , 10 Jan 35, 17 Jan 36, 24 Jan 43(A); the Wijk aan Zee tournament, 31 Jan 50, 7 Feb 44,14 Feb 52, 21 Feb 45(A); the joint victory of Short and Korchnoi at Wijk aan Zee, 31 Jan 50, 7 Feb 44, 14 Feb 52(A); the Kasparov-Short speed chess match, 21 Feb 45, 28 Feb 45, 7 Mar 52,14 Mar 52, 21 Mar 46, 28 Mar 44, 4 Apr 52(A); a Kasparov simul against the Hamburg Club, 21 Feb 45(A); Nigel Short's successes, including Reykjavik, 28 Feb 45, 7 Mar 52, 14 Mar 52(A); Specimen and Rear qualify in the British Zonal, 28 Feb 45, 7 Mar 52(A); Karpov wins the Candidates' super-final against Sokolov, 21 Mar 45, 28 Mar 44, 4 Apr 52(A); Kasparov wins the chess journalists' Oscar, 21 Mar 46(A); the SWIFT tournament, 28 Mar 44, 11 Apr 52, 18 Apr 44, 25 Apr 59, 2 May 44(A); great tournaments of the past: St Petersburg 1895-6, 28 Mar 44, St Petersburg 1914, II Apr 52, New York 1924, 18 Apr 59, New York 1927, 16 May 44, London, 1899, 13 Jun 53, Bled 1931, 20 Jun 51, AVRO 1938, 27 Jun 52(A); BBC 2's coverage of the OHRA tournament, 4 Apr 52(A); John Speelman's tournament success at Beersheva, 18 Apr 44(A); three chess coffee-houses in London, 9 May 52(A); the bids for the Kasparov-Karpov match, 16 May 44, 30 May 51(A); Kasparov beats the Swiss Olympic team in a simul- taneous display, 16 May 44(A); the Grandmaster Association asserts itself, 23 May 67(A); a dispute over the Asian Zonal tournament, 23 May 67(A); Korchnoi in the Beersheva and Euwe Memorial tournaments, 30 May 51(A); some Nimzo- witsch games, 6 Jun 53(A); Alekhine, 20 Jun 51(A)

Chesterton, G.K.: articles on, 7 Feb 34(R) Child abuse, 2 May 5(N)

Children: Richmal Crompton and the 'William' books, 10 Jan 26hicR) un; a remedy for dehydration caused by diarrhoea, 28 Mar 27 L); -Milmsh verse, 18 Apr 44(CO); sexual abuse of c dren, 2 May 7(D), 16 May 22(L); children and gardening, 20 Jun 46(A)

China: early Chinese inventions, 3 Jan 23(R); student demon- strations for democracy and freedom, 10 Jan 13(A); the BBC's Nick Ross in China, 14 Feb 48(AR) China: Land of Discovery, Robert K.K.Temple, 3 Jan 23(R) Chivalry, the High Court of, 24 Jan 30(R), 7 Feb 26(L) Chomsky, Noam: an article critical of the US over the Arab-Israeli struggle, 21 Mar 12(A); not a 'samizdat writer', 11 Apr 22, 25 Apr 22, 2 May 19(L) Choose Freedom: The Future for Democratic Socialism, Roy Hattersley, 14 Feb 41(R) CHRISTIANITY AND THE CHURCH two versions of the Ten Commandments, 3 Jan 21(L); the

Chief Constable of Greater Manchester and his relationship

with God, 24 Jan 5(N), 31 Jan 25 the Church's teaching on prophecies, 24 Jan 5(N), 31 Jan 25 ); the Christian response to industrial capitalism, 7 Feb 29( ); an Oxfordshire church school endangered, 14 Feb 36(L); the ordination of women and the danger of schism, 21 Feb 5 (LA), 7 Mar 4(PW); `dirty tricks' tactics used against the Bishop of London, 7 Mar 5(N); the ordination of divorced men rims counter to Christ's teaching, 7 Mar 26, 14 Mar 31)(L); two central questions about Christianity, 7 Mar 26(L); John Tavener's sacred music, 7 Mar 43 AR); divorced laity and the sacraments, 21 Mar 24, 28 Mar 27 .11.); the Bishop of Bath and Wells on alcohol abuse, 4 Apr 10(AV); St Paul on the subordination of woman to man, 4 Apr 27(A); St Simeon Stylites, 4 Apr 31(A), 16 May 22(L); Arnold Tonybee and the Christian faith, 11 Apr 34(R); fixing the date of Easter, 18 Apr 7(D); Thomas Aquinas's three categories of evil, 18 Apr 8(AV); the religious press and its preoccupations reviewed, 18 Apr 21(A); the Church - and its churches - as a suitable takeover target, 18 Apr 22(CS); Kingsley Antis on the present failure of the Church of England, 18 Apr 25(A), 25 A r 22(L); a bishop defends homosexual clergy, 23 May 8(AV); inner city bishops' support for Labour, 23 May 8(AV), 2200 Jun 22(L); a biography of Hewlett Johnson, the 'Red Dean', 6 Jun 40(A); church interference in politics on behalf of the Left, 13 Jun 10(A); orchestral music performed in cathedrals, 13 Jun 46(AR); see also Roman Catholic Church Christian Response to Industrial Capitalism, The, William Charlton, Tatiana Mallinson and Robert Oakeshott, 7 Feb 29(R)

Christmas: a festival season of lights, 3 Jan 7(D); Rupert Murdoch bans alcohol at Wapping over Christmas, 3 Jan 8(AV); a domestic Christmas, 10 Jan 33(A); a walk on Christmas Day, 17 Jan 29(LL) Christopher Homm, C. H. Sisson, 7 Feb 33(LL) Churchill, Sir Winston: relations with Sir Robert Menzies, 14 Feb 37(R) Cinema: see Friars Circumcision, 25 Apr 7(Ay) Cities: the problem of the inner cities, 20 Jun 8, 27 Jun 15(A) Citrus life, 4 Apr 14(A) City and suburban, 3 Jan 19, 10 Jan 19, 17 Jan 21, 31 Jan 23, 7 Feb 23,14 Feb 30, 28 Feb 25, 7 Mar 25, 14 Mar 27, 28 Mar 24, 4 Apr 24, 11 Apr 19, 18 Apr 22, 2 May 18, 9 May 25, 23 May 33, 30 May 19, 6 Jun 33, 13 Jun 25, 20 Jun 21, 27 Jun 25(CS) City cowboys chuckle to see the marshals shooting each other, 28 Mar 24(CS) Classical languages, the: their educational value, 27 Jun 19(A) Cleansing the Augean studios, 7 Feb 21(A) Climbing: stuck on a rock face, 9 May .50(A) Cloak, daggers and empty spaces, 9 May 20(A) Clore, Charles: a biography, 23 May 47(R) Clore: The Man and His Millions, David Clutterbuck and Marion Devine, 23 May 47(R) Close Quarters, William Golding, 13 Jun 40(R) Clothes: braces, 3 Jan 7(D)

Club 18-30 holiday, in Majorca, a, 13 Jun 29(A)

Clutterbuck, David, and Marion Devine, Clore: The Man and His Millions, 23 May 47(R) CND: has it really won the nuclear debate?, 9 May 6(PC) Coal-mining: Nottinghamshire miners and their pohtics, 23 May 10(A) Cobden, Richard: a biography, 2 May 34(R) Cockburn, Lord: extracts from his letters, 25 Apr 41(AV) Cocteau, Jean: his diaries, 1951-52, 18 Apr 33(R) Cold comfort, 17 Jan 5(N) Coleridge, S.T.: selected letters, 18 Apr 31(R) Collected Letters of Katherine Maru eld, The, (ed.) Vincent O'Sullivan and Margaret Scott, 28 Febe 31(R) Collected Poems, Adrian Henri, 6 Jun 41(R) College of Heralds, the, 24 Jan 30(R) Conte and See (film), 4 Apr 46(AR) Comeback, Dennis Connor, 13 Jun 40(R) Coming in to Land (Lyttelton), 17 Jan 31(AR) 'Commodities, trading in, 14 Feb 25(A) Common Market, the : see European Economic Community Common Ridings in the Border country, 6 Jun 7(D) Communism: a hostile biography of Marx, 10 Jan 22(R); revelations by a high-ranking Polish defector about Russian pressure on Poland, 13 Jun 14(A) Competition, 3 Jan 37, 10 Jan 35,17 Jan 36, 24 Jan 43, 31 Jan 50, 7 Feb 44, 14 Feb 52, 21 Feb 45, 28 Feb 45, 7 Mar 52, 14 Mar 52, 21 Mar 45, 28 Mar 44, 4 Apr 52,11 Apr 52,18 Apr 44, 25 Apr 59, 2 May 44, 9 May 52, 14 May 44, 23 May 67, 30 May 51, 6 Jun 53, 13 Jun 53, 21) Jun 51, 27 Jun 52(CO) Complete Lyrics of Lorenz Hart, The, (ed.) Robert Kimball and Dorothy Hart, 23 May 55(R J

Complete Notebooks of Henry James, The, (ed.) Leon Edel and Lyall Powers, 23 May 53(R)

Complete Prose of Marianne Moore, The, (ed.) Patricia C. Willis, 21 Feb 32(R) Compton Mackenzie: A Life, Andro Linklater, 30 May 29(R) Compulsory Punjabi, 24 Jan 13(A) Computers: pocket calculators, 24 Jan 7(D); the independent's computers, 20 Jun 6(D) Concordance to Proust, A, Frances Stern, 11 Apr 28(R) Condoms, 14 Feb 50(A), 21 Feb 27(L), 18 Apr 20(A), 2 May 20, 9 May 28, 16 May 22(L) Confessing doubt, 28 Mar 5(N) Confound the dons, 10 Jan 5(N) Conlon, D.J., (ecl.)G.K.Chesterton: A Half Century of Views, 7 Feb 34(R

Connolly, : Evelyn Wau s marginal comments on The Vniquiet Grave, 7 Mar 27(A ; 21 Mar 24(L)

Connor, Dennis, Comeback, 1 Jun 40(R) Conscientious objectors, 2 May 33(R) Conservation: the conservation movement, 4 Apr 38(R); con- servation societies, 25 Apr 56(A); the `Greens' as a political influence, 2 May 6(PC); protected harp seals threaten cod stocks, 2 May 13(A)

CONSERVATIVE PARTY AND GOVERNMENT, THE

the Government drops GEC's Nimrod in favour of Boeing's Awacs, 3 Jan 6(PC); at least one more Tory victory needed to get rid of the threat of socialism, 11) Jan 6(PC); Harold Macmillan's character and career assessed by Enoch Powell and Julian Amery, 10 Jan 15, 16(A); why it outdoes Labour in electoral appeal, 17 Jan 5(LA); attacked over City scandals and City regulation, 17 Jan 6(PC); its attitude to City scandals, 24 Jan 5(LA); an overall real increase in public expenditure under this Government, 24 Jan 8(AV); attitude to security and the press, 7 Feb 6(PC); financial liberalisation under the Conservatives, 14 Feb 24(A); opinion polls a dominating influence in picking a date for the general election, 28 Feb 6(PC); its policy and research teams, 28 Feb 9(A); election preparations, including the manifesto and the Campaign Guide, 28 Feb 9(A); relations between Central Office and the constituency associations, 28 Feb 10(A); an Essex MP's alleged homosexuality and racism, 14 Mar 14(A), 21 Mar 4(PW), 18 Apr 24(L); a biography of R. A. Butler, 14 Mar 31(R); a biography of Stanley Baldwin, 14 Mar 32(R); racism at the party's grass roots?, 21 Mar 24(L); a meeting of the Monday Club, 18 Apr 18(A); a continual decline in the Conservative vote in Scotland, 28 Apr 45(A); its strong hand for the election, 16 May 5(LA); retiring MPs and their would-be successors, 16 May 10(A); advice on tactical voting,

23 May 5(LA); its general election programme and campaign, 23 May 6(PC); its proposals for schools, 30 May 5(LA); its ed compared with Labour's, 6 Jun 5(LA); Mrs tr'ro carlegffirave's election diary, 13 June 7(D); the general

election won with a substantial majority, 20 June 4(PW); the new Cabinet, 20 Jun 4(PW), 7(A); the problem of the inner cities, 20 Jun 8(A); a fourth term not inevitable, 20 Jun 8(A);

the new Trade and Industry ministers, 20 Jun 21(CS); the Queen's Speah, 27 Jun 6(PC the attitude of Tory backben- chers, 27 Jun 26(L); see also THATCHER, MRS MARGARET, and individual ministers and members.

Conn mstipation, 28 Feb 44(A) Coo setting up `theme' dinner parties, 3 Jan 35(A); post- morteming dinner guests, 3 Jan 36(A); braised ox tongue and

spiced red cabbage, 17 Jan 35(A); re-ordering a kitchen, 24 Jan 44(A); ham with leeks and cream sauce, and cherries jubilee, 14 Feb 53(A); Jeffrey Bernard's chicken casserole, 7 Mar 46(A); aubergine recipes, 14 Mar 46(A); Arnold Bennett mousse, courgette pale and petits pots au chocolat, 11 Apr 51(A); couscous, 18 Apr 45(A); appetisers and hors d'oeuvre,

25 Apr 56(A); three summer soups, 9 May 53(A); simple meringues, 9 May 53(A); a case of food poisoning, 23 May 68(A); asparagus recipes, 6 June 54(A); using garlic, 6 Jun 54(A); see also FOOD Cooper, Diana: correspondence with Conrad Russell, 23 May 41(A), 30 May 24(R) Cooper, Duff: a notable St George's Day speech, 25 Apr 6(D) Cooper, Jeremy, Ruth, 3 Jan 26(R)

Cor ally, Tom: and the Profumo case, 9 May 48(A) Corbusier, Le: exhibition, 14 Mar 38(AR) Corinth, Lovis: exhibition, 7 Feb 38(AR) Cornwall: Gibbon's connections with, 25 Apr 14(A) Corporation scandals, 21 Feb 24(A) Correspondence of Charles Darwin, The: Vol. II, 1837-1843, (ed.) F. Burkhardt and S. Smith, 11 Apr 40(R) Correspondence of John Ruskin and Charles Eliot Norton, The, (ed.) John Lewis Bradley and Ian Ousby, 16 May 29(R) Cost fan tutte (Glyndebourne), 20 Jun 44(AR)

Cosmopolis, 2 May 28(P)Cost of listening: to other people's telephone conversations, The, 31 Jan 8(AV)

Cottrell, Richard, Blood on their Hands, 21 Mar 35(R) Counterlife, The, Philip Roth, 21 Mar 34(R) Counties: promotional literature, 11 Apr 52(CO)

COUNTRYSIDE, THE

a hunted fox, 3 Jan 7(D); 'total agriculture' no longer necessary, 10 Jan 9(A); strange deeds by the river, 10 Jan 32(A); why subsidise the countryside?, 17 Jan 7(D); the amenities of the countryside versus the advantages of the town, 17 Jan 7(D); an eventiess walk on Christmas Day, 17 Jan 29(LL); the Government announces reforms in agricul- ture, 14 Feb 5(N); the Yorkshire Dales Park, 21 Feb 27(L); nature's resilience, 21 Mar 36(LL); Dorset's threatened downland and heathland, 28 Mar 19(A); the nature conserva- tion movement, 4 Apr 38(R); the `Greens' as a political influence, 2 May b(PC); small rural schools not to be closed, 9 May 5(LA); rustic dialogues 30 May 51(C0); life in north- west Scotland, 27 Jun 7(D) Coup d'itat, Fiji -style, 23 May 17(A) Court in the act, 25 Apr 47(A) Crafts: pottery and textile exhibitions, 30 May 36(AR) Cragg, Tony: exhibition, 18 Apr 36(AR) Cranston, Maurice, Philosophers and Parnphkteers, 14 Mar 36(R) Cricket: David Gower heartened by letter-writers, 3 Jan 28 (LL); C.L.R. James on cricket, 10 Jan 24(R); a cricket anthology, 27 Jun 47(A) 38(R); the MCC's dominance lost to the TCCB, 27 Jun Cricket, C. L. R. James, 10 Jan 24(R) Crime: the Blakelock murder case, 28 Mar 4(PW), 5(N) Crimes of the Heart (film), 9 May 43(AR) Crisis to bloom in the spring, tra-la, had nothing to do with the case, The, 9 May 25 (CS) Critics: bad contemporary critics, 16 May 27(R) Crocodile Dundee (film), 3 Jan 30(AR) Crocuses, 21 Feb 40(A) Crompton, Richmal: two biographies, 10 Jan 26(R) Crucifixion of Neil, The, 4 Apr 23(A) Cuba: a study of Fidel Castro, 27 Jun 33(R) Cui bond?, 16 May 31(LL) Cyprus: the British connection, 7 Feb 28(R) Czechoslovakia: essays by Vaclav Havel, 21 Feb 29(R); Mr Gorbachev's visit, 18 Apr 9(A); persecution of Catholics, 18 Apr 10(A); human rights infringement, 18 Apr 10(A)

D

Daffodils and narcissi, 4 Apr 45(A) Daily Mirror: Cecil King's career, 25 Apr 19(A) Daley, Harry, This Small Cloud: A Personal Memoir, 28 Feb 32(R) Dalton, Hugh: his political diary 1918-1940 and 1945-60, 21 Feb 31(R) Damn relaxes: bless braces, 21 Mar 8(A) Dance and ballet: Sadler's Wells Royal Ballet's 40th anniversay season, 24 Jan 37(AR); the New York City Ballet's presenta- tions, 21 Feb 36(AR); Swan Lake, 21 Mar 37(AR) Danger of arms control, The, 21 Mar 16(A) Daniels, Anthony, Fool or Physician: The Memoirs of a Sceptical Doctor, 25 Apr 28(R) Danton's Death (Young Vic Studio), 21 Mar 38(AR) Dan Yack, Blaise Cendrars (trans. Nina Rootes), 24 Jan 31(R) Daphne (Opera North, Leeds), 9 May 44(R) Darwin, Charles: his correspondence 1837-43, 11 Apr 40(R) Dates: a wrong date, 10 Jan 20(L) Date which matters before the date of the general election, The, 28 Feb 6(PC) Daughters, acknowledged and disputed, 30 May 48(A) David Watt, 4 Apr 5(N) David Lloyd George, A Political Life: The Architect of Change, 1863-1912, Bentley Brinkerhoff Gilbert, 2 May 27(R) Davie, Alan: exhibition, 31 Jan 35(AR) Davie, Michael and Simon, (ed.) The Faber Book of Cricket, 27 Jun 38(R) Davies, Robertson, The Papers of Samuel Marchbanks, 9 May 40(R) Day, David, Menzies and Churchill at War, 14 Feb 37(R) Day they killed Kararni, The, 6 Jun 26(A) Deacon, Richard: exhibition, 18 Apr 36(AR) Deafness: sign language versus oral teaching, 13 Jun 38(R) Dearest Conrad . . . Darling Diana, 23 May 41(A) Death: funeral directors at their annual conference, 30 May 18(A); grieving over a death, 30 May 49(A) Death of a Soldier (film), 30 May 44(AR)

DEATHS

Harold Macmillan (Lord Stockton), 3 Jan 7(D), 10 Jan 4(PW), 15, 16(A); Andrey Tarkovsky, 10 Jan 28(AR); Desmond Williams, 24 Jan 19(A); Gerald Brenan, 31 Jan 20 A ; Andy Warhol, 28 Feb 42(A); Stephen Tennant, 14 Mar 22 A ; David Watt, 4 Apr opt), 7(D); Cecil King, 25 Apr 2719 3A..; 4K9ermeth Whitaker, 13 Inn 25(CS); Dennis Tip' Piper,

Death ungranted, 18 Apr 5(N)

Debts, paying (or not paying), 28 Feb 42(A) Decadence(Wyndhams), 14 Mar 40(AR) Decent and indecent, 14 Mar 5(LA) Decide for Sizewell, 31 Jan 5(LA)

Decline of Britain, The, 14 Feb 14(A)

DEFENCE

GEC's Nimrod aircraft dropped in favour of the Boeing. Awacs, 3 Jan 6(PC); the Zircon spy satellite, 31 Jan 4(PW), 7(D), 8(AV); cuts in defence spending lower service morale and contribute to premature retirements, 14 Mar 20(A); the danger of bargaining away Western nuclear weapons, 21 Mar 16(A); the West's position weakened if the zero option offer is now accepted, 9 May 6(PC); Labour's defence policy, 30 May 6(PC); Robert McNamara on nuclear planning and mutual deterrence, 6 Jun 43(R)

Defence of Europe, The, 18 Apr 5(LA) Dentists: the confessions of a dentist, 24 Jan 43(CO) Desert Bloom (film), 13 Jun 48(AR) Desmond Williams, 24 Jan 19(A) Despots of Islam, The, 27 Jun 27(A) Destiny, Sally Beauman, 16 May 28(R) Destruction of Lord Rosebery, The: From the Diary of Sir Edward Hamilton 1894-95, (ed.) David Brooks, 9 May 36(R) Detective Inspector Falkender and the Big Fat Spider strike back,

28 Mar b(PC)

Devine, Marion, and David Clutterbuck, Clore: The Man and His Millions, 23 May 47(R) Devolution: Conservative defeats in Scotland lead to renewed talk of devolution, 27 Jun 5(LA) Devolution's low road, 27 Jun 5(LA) Diary, 3 Jan 7, 10 Jan 7, 17 Jan 7, 24 Ian 7, 31 Jan 7, 7 Feb 7,14

Feb 7, 21 Feb 7, 28 Feb 7, 7 Mar 7, 14 Mar 7, 21 Mar 6, 28 Mar 7, 4 Apr 7, 11 Am 7, 18Ma Apr 7,25 Apr 6, 2 May 7, 9 May 7,16 May 6, 23 May 7, 30 y 7, 6 Jun 7, 13 Jun 7, 20 Jun 6, 27 Jun 7(D)

Diary of a Somebody (King's Head), 2 May 38(AR) Dictionary of National Biography, The, 3 Jan 7(D)

Diet of Reason, A, (ed.) Digby Anderson, 3 Jan 25(R) Dimbleby, David: unsuccessful candidate for post of BBC director-general, ener aI ,eMa 7(D DiplonacysxAmrcnprdonsuls, 17 Jan 23(R)' a British diplomat beaten up and abducted in Iran, 6 Jun 4(PW) Disabled, the: new building regulations for their benefit, 17 Jan 8(AV), 24 Jan 21(L)

Disapproval, subjects for, 3 Jan 34(A)

DisastW)ers: the c p

D) capsizing of the Herald of Free Enterprise, 14 Mar 4(P, , 1 Disraeli: his letters 1838-1841, 13 Jun 35(R) Ditching the Contras, 7 Mar 11(A) Divorce: the Church and divorced clergy and laymen, 7 Mar 26, 14 Mar 30, 21 Mar 24, 28 Mar 27(L) Doctors: Dr Pauline Cutting's heroism in Lebanon, 18 Apr

7(D); a doctor's memoirs, 25 Apr 28 (R) Doctor's dilemma, The, 6 Jun 18(A) un Dogs: two lost dogs, 17 J 34(A ; a labrador's 'miraculous' recovery from arthritis, 11 Apr 1 (A) Dogs, 28 Mar 34(P) Domingo, Placido: in Otello, 24 Jan 18r), 36(AR)

Jan Domingo - free for some, 24 J 18(A) Dona and Her Son (film), 27Jun 46(AR)

Donald, David Herbert, Look Homeward: A Life of Thomas Wolfe, 25 Apr 26(R) Don't Ask the Price, Marcus Sieff, 23 May 47(R) Dorril, Stephen, and Anthony Summers, HonerraP, 30 May 26(R) Dorset: its endangered - and dwindling - downland and heathland, 28 Mar 19(A) Dostoievsky: the years 1860-65, 13 Jun 37(R) Down's Syndrome, 7 Mar 7(D) Down the Tube, 13 Jun 18(A) Drabble, Margaret, The Radiant Way, 2 May 29(R) Drawing bad blood, 28 Feb 19(A)

DRINK

a ban on alcohol in Fortess Wapping over Christmas, 3 Jan 8(AV); the Nottingham chief constable's breathalysing cam- paign against motorists, 10 Jan 8(AV); a poetry competition, 14 Feb 12(X); the Bishop of Bath and Wells on alcohol abuse, 4 Apr 10(AV); 2 May 20(L); a 'yuppified' City bar, 30 May 19(CS); diseases due to alcohol, 20 Jun 41(A); beer and its varieties, 20 Jun 42(A), 27 Jun 26(L) Drugs: the Oxford drugs case, 3 Jan 28(LL), 33(A) Dr Worrall picks a quarrel, 14 Mar 12(A) Dudley, the Countess of: successfully sues the Literary Review for libel, 11 Apr 8(AV), 18 Apr 23, 25 Apr 22, 2 May 20(L), 16 May 7(AV); an apolop, 20 Jun 13(X) Duggan, C. J. H., M. I. Finley and D. Mack Smith, A History of Sicily, 7 Mar 35(R) Dulwich College art gallery, 21 Feb 39(AR) Duped in Kabul, 31 Jan 12(A) Dustcart, working on a, 7 Feb 19(A) Duveen, Lord: his association with Bernard Berenson, 11 Apr 4(R)

E

Easter: fixing the date of Easter, 18 Apr 7(D)

ECONOMIC

prospects for the coming year, 3 Jan 20(E); a consumer boom and strong business profits, 14 Feb 33(E); the US's overseas trade deficit could encourage protectionism, 21 Feb 9(A); the threatened trade war with Japan, 4 Apr 24(CS), 11 Apr 18(A), 19(CS21*,220(E); past economic summits and `G5' meetings, 11 Apr E); no marked escalation in the trade war with Japan, 25 Apr 1(E); reasons for the revived interest in the balance of trade figures, 9 May 15(A); some priorities for a third Thatcher term, 9 May 21(E); the Governor of the Bank of England on the problem of interest and exchange rates, 23 May 34(A); a Western economic summit in Venice, 6 Jun 31(E), 13 Jun 25(CS); inflationary pressures likely to return, 27 Jun 9(A); the spectacular credit boom, 27 Jun 9(A); see also FINANCIAL ma STOCK EXCHANGE AND THE CITY

Economy, The, 3 Jan 20, 17 Jan 19, 31 Jan 24,14 Feb 33, 28 Feb 26,14 Mar 26, 28 Mar 23, 11 Apr 20, 25 Apr 21, 9 May 21,23 May 34, 6 Jun 31, 20 Jun 19(E) Edel, Leon, and Lyall Powers, (e .) The Complete Notebooks of Henry James, 23 May 53(R) Eden, Anthony: 1956 preparations to attack Israel if necessary, 17 Jan 11(A)

EDUCATION AND SCHOOLS

a Muslim father's objection to his daughter learning to swim, 3 Jan 14(A), 17 Jan 22(L); a dispute over the future of an RC comprehensive school, 3 Jan 21(L), 13 Jun 11(A); teachers' advice on careers, 17 Jun 7(D); compulsory Punjabi in a Wolverhampton comprehensive school, 24 Jan 13(A); a school's declared aims, 24 Jan 13(A); the decline in state education, 31 Jan 76F); an Oxfordshire church school endangered, 14 Feb 3 ); a fictitious (and critical) report on state schools, 14 Mar 4 (A); the West German school system, 14 Max 49(A); the new GCSE exams and their effect on methods of selection, 14 Mar 50(A); history teaching for the GCSE examination, 4 Apr 15(A), 23 May 23(L); neglect of English grammar and syntax, 4 Apr 39(1L); the teachers' quarrel with Kenneth Baker over pay and conditions, 25 Apr 5(LA); the education provided by ILEA, 2 May 5(N); the Department of Education's report on Brent's schools, 2 May 8(AV); ISIS argues that survival of independent schools is a political party issue, 2 May 14(A), 16 May 22(L); small rural schools not to be closed, 9 May 4(15W), 5(LA); Cecil Parkinson talks to a grammar school audience, 16 May 23(A); schoolchildren studying Keats and the 'dominant culture', 23 May 54(LL): pupils mis-spellings , 23 May 67(CO); Conserva- tive and Labour proposals for schools compared, 30 May 5(LA); the Kingman Committee on English language teaching, 30 May 32(LL); the cane recommended for Anglo- Saxon schoolboys, 13 Jun 8(AV); the Catholic church condones leftist trends in church schools, 13 Jun 11(A); the value of Latin and Greek, 27 Jun 19(A)

Education special, 14 Mar 47-51(A) Edwards, Ruth Dudley, Victor Gollancz, 17 Jan 25(R) Edward Young, Harold Forster, 7 Feb 32(R) EEC, the: see European Economic Community Egg trick the, 10 Jan 7(D) Egypt: overcrowded Cairo, 11 Apr 12(A); her problems, including food production and the foreign debt, 11 Apr 12(A); a visit to Assiut, 11 Apr 13(A); a production of Afda at Luxor, 16 May 36(AR) Eighteenth Century, The, (ed.) L.S.Sutherland and L.G.Mitch- ell, 28 Mar 32(R) 84 Charing Cross Road (film), 11 Apr 48(AR) Einstein's Monsters, Martin Amis, 2 May 31(R), 9 May 6(PC) Eisenhower, David, Eisenhower: At War 1943-45, 10 Jan 21(R) Eisenhower, Dwight D.: two biographies, 10 Jan 21(R) Eisenhower: At War 194345, David Eisenhower, 10 Jan 21(R)

ELECTIONS AND By-ELECTIONS `the dirtiest election campaign for years' promised, 17 Jan 8(AV); the North/South divide as it affects election results, 24 Jan 6 (PC); an election address to an Irish electorate, 31 Jan 18(A), 7 Feb 26(L); the Greenwich by-election: the campaign, 21 Feb 6(PC), the SDP wins, 7 Mar 4(PW), 13(A); how to manage tactical voting successfully, 21 Feb 16(A); opinion polls' influence on the date of the election, 28 Feb 6(PC); why Labour lost at Greenwich, 7 Mar 13(A); the Newcastle-under- Lyme by-election, 7 Mar 13(A), 18 Apr 23(L); the Truro by-election campaign, 7 Mar 14(A); 'Truro held by the Liberals, 21 Mar 4(PW); speculation on the election date, 21 Mar 10(A), 28 Mar 7(D); the Campaign for Tactical Voting, 28 Mar 7(D); Labour and Conservative canvassers using the bogey of the Alliance, 18 Apr 6(PC); a fixed date for general elections?, 18 Apr 7(D); an Alliance victory in Lewisham, 18 Apr 7(D); the continued decline in the Conservative vote in Scotland, 25 Apr 45(A); the story of the reform and extension of the franchise, 2 May 21(A); using the vote today, 2 May 21(A), 9 May 27(L); a Spectator poll on attitudes to voting, 2 May 23(A); theparties' prospects in Leeds East, 2 May 9(A); a Labour candidate dropped, 9 May 4(PW), 5(N); the candidates' prospects and a poll of voting intentions in the Cambridge constituency, 9 May 8, 30 May 11, 6 June 11(A), 13 Jun 28(L); the run-up period to the election, 9 May 20(A); the issues in the general election, 16 May 5(LA), 9(PC); three genuine choices now offered to voters, 16 May 5(LA.); considerations in deciding the election date, 16 May 8(PC); opinion polls and the election, 16 May 8(PC); tactical voting and the 'hung Parliament' possibility, 16 May 12(A), 23 May 5(LA); TV programmes on the general election prospects, 16 May 40(AR); the election campaign under way, 23 May 4(PW), 6(PC), 30 May 4(PW), 9, 11, 13(A), 6 Jun 4(PW), 6(PC), 9, 11, 16, 18, 21(A), 49(AR); the Nottinghamshire and East Midland constituencies, 23 May 10(A); Gerry Adams's West Belfast constituency, 23 May 12(A); Why I shall vote Labour, 23 May 14(A), 30 May 21, 6 Jun 34, 13 Jun 27(L); stock exchange reactions, 23 May 34(CS); the campaign diaries of three candidates' wives, 30 May 7, 6 Jun 7, 13 Jun 7(D); a lunatic asylum's inmates on the election, 30 May 14(A); an election poll among political journalists, 30 May 15(A), 6 Jun 34(L); a competition to forecast the election result, 30 May 15(X), 5(N); election-time smears on politi- cians, 30 May 16(A); the City and the election, 30 May 19, 13 Jun 25(CS); the party election broadcasts, 30 May 46(AR); Conservative and Labour programmes compared, 6 Jun 5(LA); candidates' wives campaigning and canvassing, 6 Jun 7(D); Mrs Thatcher's electioneering, 6 Jun9(A); an election quiz, 6 Jun 14(X), and the answers, 6 Jun 29(X); well-known people say how they will vote, 6 Jun 17(A); the party leaders' characters as shown in press conferences, 6 Jun 21(A); TV coverage of the election campaipi, 6 Jun 49(AR); a depressing election campaign with the real issues evaded, 13 Jun 5(LA), 20 Jun 22(L); a Labour rally in the former Royal Agricultural Hall, 13 Jun 6(PC); the campaign as seen by an American journalist, 13 Jun 9(A); church interference on behalf of the 1.aft, 13 Jun 10(A); a badly fought and badly covered election, 13 Jun 12(A); the election fare and phone-ins on Radio 4, 13 Jun 44(AR); the Conservatives win the election with a substantial majority, 20 Jun 4(PW); reflections on the election outcome, 20 Jun 7(A); Enoch Powell defeated in South Down, 20 Jun 11(A); a Kensington lady's relief, 20 Jun 21(CS); the perverse electors of Caithness and Sutherland, 27 Jun 7(D); see also IRELAND

Electoral appeal of striving to be a nation once again, The, 24 Jan 6(PC) Eliade, Mircea: A History of Religious Ideas, 25 Apr 32(R); Ordeal by Labyrinth: Conversations With Claude-Henri Roc- quet, 25 Apr 32(R); Autobiography 1907-1937: Journey East, Journey West, 25 Apr 32(R); The Forbidden Forest, 25 Apr 32(R) Ellmann, Richard, Wilde, Yeats, Joyce and Beckett Four Dubliners, 21 Mar 32(R)

Emblems, 25 Apr Emperor, The (Royal Court Upstairs), 28 Mar 36(AR) Empire State (film), 20 Jun 46(AR)

Empress Taytu and Menelik II: Ethiopia 1883-1910, Chris Prouty, 25 Apr 29(R) Enchanter, The, Vladimir Nabokov, 31 Jan 28(R) End to selection, An, 14 Mar 50(A)

ENGLAND

Augustan England, 10 Jan 23(R); Sacheverell Sitwell's writ- ings on, 17 Jan 28(R); the historic North-South divide, 24 Jan 6(PC), 23 May II, 13(A); a social history of the English, 28 Mar 31(R); Englishness, 25 Apr 33(LL); Taine on the English, 13 Jun 8(AV); 13 Jun 8(AV); the stubborn resistance to culture of the English, 13 Jun 8(AV); 'Young England' in the 19th century, 13 Jun 35(R); see also BiurAcs

English, The: A Social History, Christopher Hibberi, 28 Mar 31(R)

ENGLISH LANGUAGE

the expression 'no problem', 3 Jan 21(L); the English language under assault, 24 Jan 33(LL); `pilgering', 31 Jan 25, 7 Feb 26, 28 Feb 28, 4 Apr 26, 30 May 21(L); command of English, especially, by footballers, 31 Jan 32(LL); a conversation in monosyllables and polysyllables, 21 Mar 45(C0); growing illiteracy and the failure to teach grammar and syntax, 4 Apr 39(LL); 'tohu bohu', 25 Apr 22(L); truncated or abbreviated words, 2 May 44(C0); words beginning with 'bar-', 9 May 52(C0); grammar and its teaching, 16 May 31(LL); pupils' mis-spellings, 23 May 67(CO); the Kingman Committee on the English language, 30 May 32(LL); telephone language, 13 Jun 43(LL); listening to Shakespeare's words, 20 Jun 32(LL)

English literature, the Oxford illustrated history of, 16 May 33(R)

EnigmR)a: The Life of Knot Hamsun, Robert Ferguson, 18 Apr 28(

Enigma of Arrival, The, V. S. Naipaul, 14 Mar 37(R) Enoch's nightmare, 13 Jun 5(N) Entertaining in Style, Prue Leith and Polly Tyler, 3 Jan 35, 7 Feb 41(A), 21 Mar 25(L) Epitaphs for pets, 31 Jan 50(CO) Erith, Raymond: a biography, 28 Mar 29(R) 'Escaping the poetryness', 28 Feb 36(LL) Estonia, 25 Apr 31(R) E. Sylvia Pankhurst: Portrait of a Radical, Patricia W. Romero, 21 Mar 31(R) Ethiopia: foreign aid misused to finance the forced collectivisa- tion and resettlement of peasant farmers, 7 Feb 13(A); Menelik II and his empress, 25 Apr 29(R) Ettinger, Elzbieta, Rosa Luxemburg: A Life, 9 May 37(R) European Convention on Human Rights, the, 14 Feb 8(AV European Economic Community, the: a directive on VAT, 10 Jan 29(AR); an Ulster Unionist MEP joins the (extremist) European Right, 24 Jan 5(N); why Britain is right to oppose increased expenditure on research and development in tech- nology, 18 Apr 13(A); Ireland to hold a referendum on the Single European Act, 25 Apr 17(A) European Monetary System, the: adjustment of exchange rates in the EMS, 17 Jan 19(E); the British attitude still officially unchanged, 28 Mar 23(E); now is the time to join, 20 Jun 19(E); Professor Goodhart on the EMS, 20 Jun 19(E) Evans, Stuart, Seasonal Tribal Feasts, 28 Feb 35(R) Everyman Book of Theatrical Anecdotes, The, (ed.) Donald Sinden, 9 May 40(R) Evil: Thomas Aquinas's three categories of evil, 18 Apr 8(AV) Exchange rates governed by the Fourth Protocol, 28 Mar 23(E) Explosive justice, 10 Jan 5(LA)

F

Faber, Richard, Young England, 13 Jun 35(R) Faber Book of Cricket, The, (ed.) Michael and Simon Davie, 27 Jun 38(R) Fairgrieve, James: exhibition, 7 Mar 42(AR) Falklands Islands, the: the Franks report on the Argentinian invasion re-examined, 4 Apr 11(A); the Foreign Office as culprit, 4 Apr 11(A) Fall of Enoch, The, 20 Jun 11(A) Fascism in Britain: A History, 1918-1985, Richard Thurlow, 21 Feb 28(R) Fatal Inversion, A, Barbara Vine, 28 Mar 33(R) Fatal Shore, The, Robert Hughes, 17 Jan 24(R) Fatherland (film), 4 Apr 46(AR) Fawning upon 011ie, 13 Jun 13(A) February in Glos., 14 Feb 40(P) Feeding the Japanese, 11 Apr 11(A) Feinstein, Elaine: A Captive Lion: The Life of Marina Tsve- tayeva, 7 Mar 39(R); (trans.) Selected Poems of Marina Tsvetayeva, 7 Mar 39(R) Ferguson, Robert, Enigma: The Life of Knut Hanuun, 18 Apr 28(R) Ferry disaster, the cross-Channel, 14 Mar 4(PW), 7(D), 13(A) Festivals: music festivals and their themes, 30 May 43(AR); the Bath festival, 30 May 43(AR) Fetting, Rainer: exhibition, 7 Feb 38(AR) Fidel Castro: A Critical Portrait, Tad Smile, 27 Jun 33(R) Field, Andrew, VN: The Life and Art of Vladimir Nabokov, 16 May 30(R) Fiji: a military coup d'etat, 23 May 4(PW), 17(A), 13 Jun 4(PW), 27(L) Faais death of Andrey Tarkovsky 10 Jan 28(AR); the Spectator's

reviewer leaves, 7 Mar 7(D:laar film critic's reflections after

seven years of reviewing, 7 41(AR); Pauline ICael's film criticism, 4 Apr 33(R); Oliver Stone, director of Platoon, 18 Apr 41(A); the war correspondent as film hero, 2 May 36(AR); interviews with film stars and other film people, 16 May 32(R); film stars' husbands who tell, 23 May 63(A); see also individual film titles

FINANCIAL

floating currencies and the Bretton Woods system, 17 Jan 19(E); exchange rate adjustments in the EMS, 17 Jan 19(E); the juggernaut of increased public expenditure rolls on under both parties, 24 Jan 8(AV); the Group of Five and exchange rate management, 31 Jan 24(E); the vital importance of financial services to a nation's economy, 14 Feb 23(A); a drawback of mutual societies, 14 Feb 30(CS); the finance ministers' meeting in Paris, 28 Feb 26, 28 Mar 23, 11 Apr 20(E); a secret agreement to accept target exchange rates, 28 Mar 23, 11 Apr 20(E); Britain and the European Monetary System, 28 Mar 23, 20 Jun 19(E); Scotland's financial sector, 25 Apr 52(A); Please May I pay more tax? 9 May 18(A); three conditions for the Chancellor to stay on, 9 May 21(E); no financial crisis likely, 9 May 25 (CS); Governor Leigh- Pemberton on interest and exchange rates in his Mais Lecture, 23 May 34(A); some financial tycoons, 23 May 47(R); Citicorp's writing-off of loans could be a solution to the third-world debt repayment problem, 30 May 19(CS), 6 Jun 31(E); an unsuccessful Business Expansion Scheme fund, 30 May 19(CS); public spending an electoral issue, 13 Jun 5(LA);

the spectacular credit boom, 27 Jun 9(A); see also BANKS, STocK EXCHANGE and Taxation Financial special, 14 Feb 23-33, 23 May 25-39(A) Fine Arts special, 30 May 33-42 (AR) Finley, M. D. Mack Smith and C. J. H Duggan, A History of Sicily, 7 Mar 35(R) First the good news, then the bad news for Nigel and Tigger, 20 Jun 21(CS) Fishing: the Lofotens' cod fishing threatened by harp seals, 2 May 13(A); a strange bait for crabs, 23 May 7(D) Fixing City limits to takeovers, 24 Jan 9(A) Floating currencies need not cause a sinking feeling, 17 Jan 19(E) Florence: a guide-book, 18 Apr 34(R) Florence Explored, Rupert Scott, 18 Apr 34(R) Flu: an attack of flu, 7 Feb 41(A); catching flu, 14 Mar 45(A) Fly, The (film), 28 Feb 41(AR) Folk Poet Poem, 21 Mar 31(P) FOOD food reasonableness and food faddishness, 3 Jan 25(R); a book on entertaining in style, 3 Jan 35, 7 Feb 41(A), 21 Mar 25,28 Mar 27(L); breakfasting out, 24 Jan 7(D); personal likes and dislikes, 28 Mar 43(A); a case of food poisoning, 23 May 68(A); kippers, 13 Jun 50(A), 20 Jun 22(L)s the disappearance of the workman's caf6, 13 Jun 51(A); picnic hampers, 20 Jun 37(A); 'slow' food to shut up talkers, 27 Jun 51(A); see also COOKING, RESTAURANTS AND WINE Food and wine special, 20 Jun 33-42(A) Fooling the West with glasnost, 18 Apr 9(A) Fool or Physician: The Memoirs of a Sceptical Doctor, Anthony Daniels, 25 Apr 28(R) Football, association: Spurs v. Arsenal on Match of the Day Live, 10 Jan 31(AR), 17 Jan 22(L); footballers' command of language, 31 Jan 32(LL); David Bulstrode's plan to merge Fulham with Queen's Park Rangers, 7 Mar 7(D); the success of Luton Town's membership scheme and banning of visiting team supporters, 7 Mar 19(A); why clubs cannot succeed as businesses, 7 Mar 25(CS); the Littlewoods Cup final on TV, 11 Apr 48(AR) Forbes, Alastair: a libel action by the Countess of Dudley, 11 Apr 8(AV), 18 ppr 23, 25 Apr 22, 2 May 20(L) Forbidden Forest, The, Mircea Eliade, 25 Apr 32(R) Foreign aid: misused by recipient governments, 7 Feb 13(A) Forget about his faither, 25 Apr 52(A) Forget the cash, feel the quality, 20 Jun 16(A) For Melody, 4 Apr 33(P) Forms, dislike of filling in, 14 Feb 50(A) Forster, Harold, Edward Young, 7 Feb 32) Forte, Lord: an autobiography, 23 May 47(R) Forte, Charles, Forte, 23 May 47(R) Forte, Charles Forte, 23 May 47(R) Fourth Protocol, The, 28 Mar 37(AR) Fox, a hunted, 3 Jan 7(D) FRANCE student demonstrations force withdrawal of the government's university reform Bill, 3 Jan 9(A); a rail strike, 3 Jan 9(A); candidates for the presidency, 3 Jan 9(A); the post-Liberation purge, 3 Jan 22(R); political theorists of the Enlightenment, 14 Mar 36(R); mugged in Paris, 21 Mar 17(A); attitude to immigrants, 21 Mar 17(A); the trial of Klaus Barbie, 23 May 16(A); a collection of naive commemorative paintings in Provence, 6 Jun 48(AR) Frank Joseph,. The Stir of Liberation, 13 Jun 37(R)

Frank, Katherine, A Voyager Out: The Life of Mary Kingsley, 11

Apr 29(R) Frank Harris, Hugh Kingsmill, 21 Mar 33(R) Fraser, Robert, (ed.) George Barker: Collected Poem.t, 20 Jun 31(R) Free Speech, 24 Jan 14, 31 Jan 13, 7 Feb 19,14 Feb 24, 21 Feb 18, 28 Feb 18, 7 Mar 15, 14 Mar 13, 21 Mar 29, 28 Mar 17, 4 Apr 19, 11 Apr 13, 18 Apr 18, 2 May 11, 9 May 30, 16 May 24, 23 May 11(X) French reaction, 3 Jan 9(A) Freud, Lucian: his selection of National Gallery paintings, 27 Jun 42(AR) Friendly societies: a drawback of mutual societies, 14 Feb

Aden A CSden to the Gulf: Personal Diaries 1956-1966, Margaret Lane, 2 May 34(R)

From hare to eternity, 28 Feb 22(R) From hell to the Potteries, 4 Apr 18(A) From the sad story of Wapping a new Resolution is born, 3 Jan 8(A

FromieV)rs of Paradise, The: A Study of Monks and Monasteries, Peter Levi, 25 Apr 30(R), 9 May 38 LL)

Frost, Terry: exhibition, 31 Jan 35(AR) Funeral directors at their annual conference, 30 May 18(A) Furcular, 10 Jan 25(P) Furniture: exhibition of modern furniture, 11 Apr 49(AR) Further insight into the world of people in wigs, 11 Apr 8(AV) Further Particulars: Consequences of an Edwardian Boyhood, C. H. Rolph, 24 Jan 32(R)

G

Gabo, Naum: exhibition, 21 Feb 37(AR)

Gage, John, J. W. M. Turner: A Wonderful Range of Mind, 11 Apr 33(R)

Games; a game played with the DNB, 3 Jan 7(D) GARDENING shade-tolerant space-filling plants, 10 Jan 31(A); the effects of the severe weather, 31 Jan 37(A); The Glory of the Garden (RHS exhibition), 31 Jan 37(A); E. A. Bowles, the 'Crocus King', 21 Feb 40(A); traditional and standardised botanical nomenclature, 28 Mar 39(A); daffodils and narcissi, 4 Apr 45(A); rhododendrons, 25 Apr 36(A); growing wild flowers in gardens, 23 May 58(A); how to 'improve' a garden, 13 Jun 53(C0); books on gardens, 20 Jun 24(R); children and gardening, 20 Jun 46(A); the Italian garden at the V&A criticised, 27 Jun 44(A) Garden of Eden, The, Ernest Hemingway, 21 Feb 30(R) Garden of the Villa Mollini, The, Rose Tremain, 6 Jun 37(R) Gargling with Jelly, Brian Patten, 6 Jun 41(R) Gautier, Judith: a biography, 7 Mar 34(R) Geor§ Barker: Collected Poems, (ed.) Robert Fraser, 20 Jun 31 ) Ger Brenan, 31 Jan 20(A)

Germany: upper-class Germans and the Nazi treatment of Jews, 10 Jan 2 L); relations between East and West Germany on Berlin's 7 Oth anniversary, 20 Jun 10(A)

Germany, East: attitude to Gorbachev-Thatcher talks, 4 Apr 6(PC); relations with West Germany, 20 Jun 10(A) Germany, West: a visit to Berlin, 17 Jan 34(A); the schools system examined, 14 Mar 49(A); relations with East Ger- many, 20 Jun 10(A) Gerry Adams for Parliament, 23 May 12(A)

Get Out Early, Walter Allen, 3 Jan 27(R)7 Getting ready for the Patch: term, 20 Jun (A)

Getz, William, Sam Patch: A Ballad of a Jumping Mart, 6 Jun 39(R) Gibbon, Edward: his connections with Cornwall, 25 Apr 14(A) Gibbon and Cornwall, 25 Apr 14(A)

Gilbert, Bentley Brinkerhoff, David Lloyd George, A Political Life: The Architect of Change, 1863-1912, 2 May 27(R) Gilmore's Law finds the rate reformers up to their rumps in

alligators, J

gators, 27 Jun 25(CS)

Give renting house-room, 28 Mar 5(LA) Giving in to flesh traders, 31 Jan 11(A) Giving News, 10 Jan 25(P) Giving the pension funds a kick in the bottom line, 7 Mar 25(CS) G. K. Chesterton: A Half Century of Views, (ed.) D. J. Conlon, 7 Feb 34(R) Glass, Charles: kidnapped in Beirut, 27 Jun 4(PW), 11(A) Glazebrook, Philip, Captain Vinegar's Commission, 20 Jun 26(R) Glazunov, Ilya: exhibition, 28 Mar 40(AR) Glendinning, Victoria, Rebecca West: A Life, 18 Apr 34(R) Godforsaken, 18 Apr 25(A) Goethe in Dilemma, 31 Jan 31(P) Golden Oriole, The: Childhood, Family and Friends in India, Raleigh Trevelyan, 6 Jun 37(R) Golding, William, Close Quarters, 13 Jim 40(R) Goldsmith, Sir James: a biography, 23 May 47(R) Gollancz, Victor: a biography, 17 Jan 2.5(R); the Left Book Club, 24 Jan 21(L) Gombrich, E. H., New Light on Old Matters, 17 Jan 26(R) Gondolas for seven and a giant photo-call, 6 Jun 31(E) Goodbye to the money market's master of kindness and caviare, 13 Jun 25(CS) Good grief, 14 Mar 13(A) Goodhart-Rendel, H. S.: exhibition, 20 Jan 45(AR) GORBACHEV, MIKHAIL in an increasingly difficult situation, 3 Jan 12(A); his reform programme meeting considerable opposition, 21 Feb 13(A); his offer on medium-range nuclear weapons merely a return to a 'zero option' position, 7 Mar 5(LA) 6(PC), 21 Mar 16(A); Moscow talks with Mrs Thatcher, 28 Mar 8(AV), 4 Apr 4(PW), 6(PC), 11 Apr 6(PC); his reforms are only changes and improvements in the existing authoritarian system to make it more palatable, 28 Mar 9(A); considers Russia a European power, 11 Apr 6(PC); 'concessions' over arms control, 18 Apr 5(LA); visits Czechoslovakia, 18 Apr 9(A); glasnost's aim to strengthen socialism, 18 Apr 9(A); see also RUSSIA Gorbachev's gamble, 3 Jan 12(A) Gorbachev's very small earthquake, 28 Mar 9(A) Gorbachev's zero option, 7 Mar 5(LA) Gordimer, Nadine, A Sport of Nature, 4 Apr 37(R) Gossip, 'unverified', 3 Jan 7(D) Gothic (film), 14 Mar 42(AR) Gould, Bryan: a profile, 21 Feb 17(A), 28 Feb 28(L) Graffiti written in dust, 25 Apr 6(D) Grandma in Winter, 14 Feb 40(P) Grant, Joy, Stella Benson, 9 May 36(R) Grass, Gunther, The Rat, 27 Jun 37(R) Greece: an Athenian brothel, 7 Mar 46(A); the mystery of Ann Chapman's murder, 21 Mar 35(R); Greek icons and frescoes, 30 May 34(AR) Greed and Glory on Wall Street, Ken Auletta, 28 Mar 24(CS) Green, Sir Peter: the inquiry into his underwriting dealings, 28 Feb 25, 11 Apr 19(CS) Green, Richard, The 'Sissy Boy Syndrome' and the Development of Homosexuality, 7 Feb 31(R) Green, Belts and their development, 10 Jan 9(A) Greene, Graham: at the International Peace Forum in Moscow, 21 Feb 4(PW), 5(N), 28 Feb 28(L); attitude to Russia, 18 Apr 8(AV) Greene-horn, 21 Feb 5(N) Green Ray, The (film), 21 Mar 41(R) Greenwich by-election, the: the candidates' prospects, 21 Feb 6(PC); the SDP wins, 7 Mar 4(PW), 13(A) Grene, David, (trans.) The History of Herodotus, 27 Jun 34(R) Grimond, Jo: portraits by Patrick Heron, 14 Mar 41(AR) Gstaad: the skiing and the social life, 14 Mar 44, 21 Mar 42(A) Guardian, the: superb articles on the election, 20 Jun 16(A) Guide to Tuscany, A, James Bentley, 18 Apr 34(R) Guildford too, 31 Jan 5(N)

Guinness: the DTI inquiry. into the Guinness takeover of Distillers and its recussions, 10 Jan 4(PW), 19(CS), 17 Jan

6(PC), 24 Jan 4(P 5(LA),9(A), 31 Jan 4(PW); Ernest Saunders sacked, 1 'Jan 21(CS); the company should be broken up, 17 Jan 21(CS); further Guinness casualties, 24 Jan 4(PW), 9(A)

H

Haines, Jo: on leader-writing, 6 Jun 19(A) Hairy Ape, The (Lyttelton), 23 May 62(AR) Hall, Fawn: her evidence to the Irangate inquiry, 13 Jun 13(A) Hail, Richard, My Life with Tiny: A Biography of Tiny Rowland, 2 May 28(R), 9 May 27(L) Halpern, Sir Ralph: involved with a topless teenage model, 31 Jan 7(D), 23(CS); his business difficulties, 31 Jan 23(CS) Hamilton, Sir Edward: on Lord Rosebery's premiership, 9 May Hamm 36(Ro) nd, Celia: her work with cats, 14 Mar 7(D), 4 Apr 25(L) Hamsun, Knut: a biography, 18 Apr 28(R) Hare-coursing defended, 28 Feb 22(A)

Harewood, The Earl of, (ed.) Kobbe's Complete Opera Book, 14 Mar 34(R)

Harris, Frank: a biography, 21 Mar 33(R) Hart, Dorothy, and Robert Kimball, (ed.) The Complete Lyrics of Lorenz Hart, 23 May 55(R) Hart, Gary: novelist and would-be presidential candidate, 25 Apr 11(A); his candidature destroyed by his womanising, 9 May 4(PW), 7(D), 16 May 41, 30 May 16(A) Hart, Lorenz: his complete lyrics, 23 May 55(R) Has CND really won the nuclear debate after all?, 9 May 6(PC) Hastings, Max: recalls his humiliating failure as a soldier, 17 Jan 16(A) Hats: why some Australians wear hats, 24 Jan 21(L) Hattersley, Roy: his theory of socialism, 14 Feb 41(R); a newspaper allegation, 30 May 16(A); the 'Yorkshire Brezh- nev', 6 Jun 8(AV) Hattersley, Roy, Choose Freedom: The Future for Democratic Socialism, 14 Feb 41(R) Haunted by Shirley Williams and her truckload of dead albatros- ses, 2 May 8(AV) Havel, Vaclav: a collection of essays, 21 Feb 29(A) Havers, Sir Michael: his involvement in the Zircon security affair, 7 Feb 6(PC) Having Dreamt the Heart, 7 Mar 39(P) Haw Lantern, The, Seamus Heaney, 2'7 Jun 35(R) Healey, Denis: on President Reagan, 4 Apr 5(LA), 13(A) Health: see MEDICAL. Heaney, Seamus, The Haw Lantern, 27 Jun 35(R) Heart of the Country, The, Fay Weldon, 14 Feb 42(R) Helfer, Doris: her election diary, 30 May 7(D) Hellman, Lillian, 14 Feb 47(AR) Hemingway, Ernest The Garden of Eden, 21 Feb 30(R) Henderson, Nicholson, Channels and Tunnels, 28 Feb 31(R) Henri, Adrian, Collected Poems, 6 Jun 41(R) Henry IV, Part I (Old Vic), 28 Mar 36(AR) Henry IV, Part H (Old Vic), 28 Mar 36(AR) Henry V (Old Vic), 28 Mar 36(AR) Heraldry: Sir Anthony Wagner on the College of Heralds, 24 Jan 30(R); the High Court of Chivalry, 24 Jan 30(R), 7 Feb 26(L

Here co)

mes the bard, 11 Apr 44(LL) Her illness, 25 Apr 52(P) Hermann Broch, Paul Michael Liitzeler, 20 Jun 30(R) Herodotus: his History, 27 Jun 34(R) Heron, Patrick: exhibition, 14 Mar 21(AR) Heseltine, Michael: an anecdote, 28 Feb 7(D); 14 Mar 6(PC) Heseltine, Michael, Where There's a Will, 14 Mar 6(PC) Heseltine rejects a short dash to freedom, 14 Mar 6(PC) Hihbert, Christopher, The English: A Social History, 28 Mar 31(R) High life, 3 Jan 33, 10 Jan 32, 17 Jan 33, 24 Jan 40, 31 Jan 38, 7 Feb 40, 14 Feb 49, 21 Feb 41, 28 Feb 42, 7 Mar 46, 14 Mar 44, 21 Mar 42, 28 Mar 41, 4 Apr 47,11 Apr 49,18 Apr 41, 25 Apr 39, 2 May 41, 9 May 48, 16 Ma 1, 23 May 63, 30 May 48, 6 im

J 50, 20 Jun 48, 27 Jun 49(A) High Society (Victoria Palace), 7 Mar 45(R)

Hill, Susan, The Lighting of the Lamps, 28 Feb 33(R) Hinde, Wendy, Richard Cobden: A Victorian Outsider, 2 May 34(R)

Historian's Conscience, An, Christian B. Per, 11 Apr 34(R) History, the new way of teaching, 4 Apr 15(Ape), 23 May 23(L) History of Herodotus, The, (trans.) David Grene, 27 Jun 34(R) History of Religious Ideas, A, Mircea Eliade, 25 Apr 32(R) History of Sicily, A, M. I. Finley, D. Mack Smith and C. J. H. Duggan, 7 Mar 35(R)

History of the Jews, A, Paul Johnson, 28 Mar 28(R) History of the University of Oxford, The: Volume 5, The Eighteenth Century, (ed.) L. S. Sutherland and L. G. Mitchell, 28 Mar 32(R) Holiday (Old Vic), 7 Feb 38(AR) Holidays: journalists who write about holidays criticised, 31 Jan 41(A); advice on South Africa, 31 Jan 42(A); New Orleans, 31 Jan 4.4(A); advice on Spain, 31 Jan 46(A); a Club 18-30 holiday in Majorca, 13 Jun 29(A) Hollis, Sir Roger: was he a Russian spy?, 21 Mar 30(R), 2 May 19, 23 May 23(L) Holmes, Geoffrey, Politics, Religion and Society in England, 1679-1742, 10 Jan 23(R) Holy fools and useful idiots, 13 Jun 10(A) Holy Man, 25 Apr 27(P) Holy Nicaragua!, 18 Apr 21(A) Holzer, Baby Jane, 28 Feb 42(A), 21 Mar 24(L) HOME AND HOUSEHOLD a domestic Christmas, 10 Jan 33(A); council officials' silly questions about burst pipes, 24 Jan 41(A); re-ordering a kitchen, 24 Jan 44(A); tidying up and clearing out junk, 21 Feb 42(A); a history of an uninspiring domestic object, 21 Feb 45(C0); neighbourhood watch schemes, 21 Mar 6(D); the Ideal Home Exhibition, 21 Mar 40(AR); going through a pile of papers and letters, 28 Mar 42(A); modern furniture, 11 Apr 49(AR); sweeping, dusting and tidying up, 25 Apr 40(A)• moving out of a flat, 9 May 49(A); a move to Islington, 16 May 41(A); a swarm of teenagers, 16 May 42(A); a bulletin from

the home front, 6 Jun 51(A); a leaking roof, 20 Jun 49(A) Home life, 3 Jan 34,10 Jan 33, 17 Jan 34, 24 Jan 41, 31 Jan 4(1, 7 Feb 41, 14 Feb 50, 21 Feb 42, 28 Feb 43, 7 Mar 47, 14 Mar 45, 21 Mar 43, 28 Mar 42, 4 Apr 48, 11 Apr 50, 18 Apr 42, 25 Apr 40, 2 May 42, 9 May 50, 16 May 42, 23 May 65, 30 May 49, 6 Jun 51, 13 Jun 51, 20 Jun 49, 27 Jun 50(A)

Homer for sex lessons, 27 Jun 19(A) Homer's Iliad, sex in, 27 Jun 19(A)

HOMOSEXUALS

the 'sissy boy' syndrome and homosexuality, 7 Feb 31(R); a homosexual politician's memoir, 28 Feb 32(R); Aids confined overwhelmingly to homosexuals, 7 Mar 8(AV), 14 Mar 5(LA), 21 Mar 20(A); the moral issue, 14 Mar 5(LA) 28 Max 26(L); an Essex JO accused, 14 Mar 14(A), 21 Mar 4(PW), 18 Apr 24(L); the consequences of the Sexual Offences Act 1967, 28 Max 26(L); homosexuals now modifying their sexual habits in the face of Aids, 28 Mar 17(A); a bishop defends homosexual clergy, 23 May 8(A'V) Honey trap, Anthony Summers rind Stephen Dared, 30 May 26)

Hook, Philip, and Mark Poltimore, Popular 19th,Century Painting, 7 Mar 38(R)

Hope essays to speak, 21 Mar 36(LL) Horses and horse-racing: a certain loser, 7 Feb 7(D); an Irish mare put down, 28 Feb 7(D); on-course betting tax abolished, 21 Mar 11(A); flat racing starts again, 28 Mar 42(A); the Grand National, 11 Apr 50(A) Hospitals: living in an iron lung, 23 May 21(A); much more expenditure, more nurses, but fewer beds, 30 May 8(AV); see also National Health Service Hostage-taking: how it works, 7 Feb 9(A) Hotels: Ettington Park Hotel, 7 Mar 25(CS); visitors turned out of a Moroccan Hotel, 2 May 7(D); a Frith Street hotel, 13 Jun 50(A); see also REsraultabrrs Hound of Traitors, The, 2 May 15(A) House of Bernardo Alba, The (Globe), 24 Jan 38(AR) Houses, historic and notable: the National Trust and its country house scheme, 18 Apr 35(AR) Housing: the high cost of housing, especially for young people, 21 Mar 7(AV), 18 Apr 23(L); the Ideal Home exhibition, 21 Mar 40(AR); waiting for a flat, 21 Mar 42(A); need for a new housing law to replace the Rent Acts and free the private housing sector, 28 Mar 5(LA); house prices rising by nearly 20 per cent, 2 May 18(CS) How a docqul of takeover bankers could get in on the Act, 14 Feb 30(CS) Howard, Anthony, RAB: The Life of R.A.Buder, 14 Mar 31(R) Howard, Richard, (trans.) Past Tense (Le Passe DES): The Diaries of Jean Cocteau, VoLl, 1951-1952, 18 Apr 33(R) How far can you go against Tories and the City?, 17 Jan 6(PC) How far have we sunk?, 14 Feb 9(A) How I am gointg to vote, 6 Jun 17(A) How Lord Birkenhead saved the Heralds, Anthony Wagner, 24 Jan 30(R) How the Alliance could gain at the expense of its friends, 31 Jan 6PC)

How( the EEC ruins research, 18 Apr 13(A)

How the rediscovery of Europe can cause a slight head cold, 11 Apr 6(PC) How to be taken for a ride in a taxi-driver's market, 23 May 33(CS) How to indulge in the unBritish activity of investing in cocoa or gold, 14 Feb 25(A)

How to live with the two-party state juggernaut, 24 Jan 8(AV) How universal suffrage can atone for its dismal past, 2 May 21(A) Hughes, Robert, The Fatal Shore, 17 Jan 24(R)

Hughes, Robert, The Red Dean, 6 Jun 40(R) Hulten, Pontus, (ed.) The Arcimboldo Effect, 30 May 30(R) Human rights, the European Convention on: an unsuccessful parliamentary Bill, 14 Feb 8(AV) Hundred years ago, One, 3 Jan 11, 10 Jan 17, 17 Jan 13, 24 Jan 17, 7 Feb 12, 14 Feb 17, 21 Feb 19, 28 Feb 14, 7 Mar 31, 21 Mar 9, 28 Mar 10, 4 Apr 20, 18 Apr 10, 25 Apr 13, 2 May 16, 23 May 19, 6 Jun 15, 13 Jun 32, 20 Jun 10, 27 Jun 30(X) Hunter, Ian, Nothing to Repent: The Life of Hesketh Pearson, 31 Jan 26(R) Hurd, Douglas: and the Guildford bombing case, 14 Feb 5(PA)

I

Ignatieff, Michael, The Russian Album, 23 May 50(R) The Life and Times of Dwight D.Eisenhower, Piers Brendon, 10 Jan 21(R) I Love the Laurel Green, 24 Jan 32(P) Image of Mr Kinnock, The, 17 Jan 18(A) Immigrants: muggings in France by immigrants 21 Mar 17(A); the strains of life in Britain for Asian immigrants, 25 Apr 8(A), 2 May 19(L) Impotence, 7 Feb 40(A) In an English country dustcart, 7 Feb 19(A) Independent, the: already a succeass, 3 Jan 18(A); its objectivity, 10 Jan 20 (L); its circulation, 14 Mar 30(L); publishes extracts from Peter Wright's memoirs, 2 May 4(PW), 5(LA); a financial adverisement, 6 Jun 5(N); its computer keyboards, 20 Jun 6(D); now well established, 20 Jun 16(A) Index on Censorship: an article by Noam Chomsky critical of the US press rouses bitter opposition, 21 Mar 12(A), 4 Apr 26, 2 May 19(L) India: a conversation with a tea stall proprietor, 10 Jan 14(A); two reports compared - on the Amntsar massacre in 1919 and on the 1984 massacre of Sikhs after the assassination of Mrs Gandhi, 18 Apr 14(A); the Trevelyan family in India, 6 Jun 37(R) Industry: the Christian attitude to industrial capitalism, 7 Feb 29(R); the interests of the City and heavy industry interre- lated, 14 Feb 23(A); industrial re-growth not dependent on greater funding of scientific research, 28 Mar 15(A), 4 Apr 25(L); why Britain is right to oppose increased EEC expendi- ture on research and development in technology, 18 Apr 13(A) Inflation; the danger of its return, 27 Jun 19(A) Inner city of dreadful night, 27 Jun 15 A) In pursuit of the Japanese, 25 Apr 33 ) Inspector Calls, An (Westminster), May 45(AR) Inspector Lavardin (film), 10 Jan 29(AR) Intellectual dinosaurs, 27 Jun 12(A)

Interior Landscaper: A Life of Paul Nash, James King, 20 Jun

In 25R)

nh(e shed, 3 Jan 25(P) Iran: the US's sale of arms to Iran in the attempt to secure the release of hostages ("Irangmel, 7 Feb 9, 28 Feb 11(A), 7 Mar 4(PW), 11(A), 16 May gPW), 13(A) 23 May 7(D), 13 Jun 13(A); the war with Iraq, 30 May 17(,p); a British diplomat beaten up and abducted, 6 Jun 4(PW); the rise of the ayatollahs, 27 Jun 27(A) irangate: see Iran and UNITED STATES

Iraq: the missile arrack on USS Stark, 30 May 17(A)

IRELAND

Aer Lingus and Ryanair, 3 Jan 13(A); the economy - and domestic politics - in a poor state, 3 Jan 13(A); the decline of the Anglo-Irish Ascendancy, 24 Jan 28(R); Stan Gebler Davies's election address and his unsuccessful candidature for the Dail, 31 Jan 18(A), 7 Feb 7(D), 26(L), 14 Feb 7, 21 Feb 7(D), 28 Feb 4(PW), 7(D); an Irish journalist's interviewing technique, 7 Feb 7(D); 'the most beautiful constituency in Western Europe', 7 Feb 7(D); Charles Haughey's charm, 14 Feb 7(D); the question of a united Ireland, 14 Feb 7(D); the transferable vote, 21 Feb 7, 28 Feb 7(D); the 'IV debate between Haughey and FitzGerald, 21 Feb 7(D); the right to life of a human foetus, 28 Feb 7(D); the textbook cure for the economy, 28 Feb 25(CS); four Dubliners - Wilde, Yeats, Joyce and Beckett, 21 Mar 32(FG; reflections while walking in Southern Ireland, 28 Mar 35(LL); constitutional questions raised by the Anglo-Irish Agreement and the Single European Act, 25 Apr 17(A)

IRELAND, NORTHERN

wrongful convictions alleged in the Birmingham and Guild- ford bomb trials, 10 Jan 5(LA), 17 Jan 22(L), 31 Jan 5(N); a Home Office memorandum on the Guildford bomb case, 14 Feb 5(LA); the system of law and government 'a di.sgrace', 14 Feb 7(D); limitations of freedom, 21 Feb 27(L); the fimeral of an IRA terrorist, 18 Apr 15(A); a false parallel drawn between Northern Ireland and South Africa, 18 Apr 15(A); the validity of the Anglo-Irish Agreement challenged in the Dublin High Court, 25 Apr 17(A); Northern Ireland's landed gently, 9 May 13(A); why vote in Ulster?, 9 May 27(L); Gerry Adams's West Belfast constituency, 23 May 12(A); John Stalker and his RUC investigation, 6 Jun 36(R)

Ireland not for sale, 3 Jan 13(A) Isaacson, Walter, and Evan Thomas, The Wise Men, 17 Jan 23(R) Is Ireland legal?, 25 Apr 17(A) Is it?, 6 Jun 5(N) Islam: the Muslim attitude to girls and women, 3 Jan 14(A), 17 Jan 22(L); the development of Islamic fundamentalism and the political power of the clergy, 27 Jun 27(A) Israel: preparations by Britain at time of Suez to attack Israel if she attacked Jordan, 17 Jan 11(A); involvement in supply of arms to Iran, 7 Feb 12(A); an anti-Israel article by Noam Chomsky, 21 Mar 12(A), 4 Apr 26, 2 May 19(L) Italian Gardens, Georgina Mason, 20 Jun 24(R)

Italy: Giovanni Agnelli, 14 Feb 49(A); two books on Sicily and Sicilians, 7 Mar 35(R); Aldo Moro's letters from captivity , 14 Mar 33(R); guides to Florence and Tuscany, 18 Apr 34(R); the Vinitaly wine festival in Verona, 23 May 69(A); recom- mended Italian wines, 20 Jun 38(A)

It Can't be Happiness, 23 May 55(P)

J

Jackson, H. J., (ed.) Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Selected Letters, 18 Apr 31(R) Jaguar Smile, The: A Nicaraguan Journey, Salzman Rushdie, 7 Feb 27(R) James, C. L. R., Cricket, 10 Jan 24(R( James, Henry: his complete notebooks, 23 May 51(R) Jane Austen, Tony Tanner, 17 Jan 27(R) Jane Welsh Carlyle, Virginia Surtees, 31 Jan 31(R)

JAPAN

danger of an economic and financial war with the US and Britain, 4 Apr 24,11 Apr 18(A), 19(cs), 20(E), 9 May 11(1; British participation m the stock exchange, 4 Apr '24(06 Japanese purchases of US Treasury bonds, 4 Apr 24(CS Nissan in Britain, 4 Apr 24(CS); a British trade minister's visit, 11 Apr 4(PW), 5(N); a businessman tries to sell to:Japan, 11 Apr 11(A); British press correspondents, 11 Apr 18(A), 16 May 22(L); overtaking the US as the world's leading economy, 11 Apr 18(A); the world ill-informed about Japan, 11 Apr 18(A); Mr Toyoo Ghoten, finance minister, 11 Apr 19(CS); the US imposes 100 per cent duty on some Japanese goods, 25 Apr 21(E); understanding the Japanese, 25 Apr 33(LL); Mr Nakasone visits the US, 9 May 11(A); the huge trade surplus, 9 May 11(A); the build-up towards rearma- ment, 9 May 12(A) Jenkins, Peter: and action by the Labour Party and the NUJ against Murdoch journalists, 7 Mar 18(A), 14 Mar 7(D),

8(AV); his contract with the Sunday Times, 7 Mar 18(A), 21

Mar 25(L) Jenkins, Roy, Baldwin, 14 Mar 32(R) Jenkin's Ear (Royal Court), 20 Jun 44(AR) Jewellery: the Duchess of Windsor's jewels, 11 Apr 7(D), 18 Apr 42(A); favourite ornaments, 18 Apr 42(A) Jews: 10 Jan 20(L); a history of the Jews, 28 Mar 28(R)

J. M. W. Turner: A Wonderful Range of Mind, John Gage, 11

Apr 33(R) Joan Miro: Selected Writings and Interviews, (ed.) Margit Rowell, 2 May 32(R) Johnson, Dr Hewlett: a biography, 6 Jun 40(R) Johnson, Paul, A History of the Jews, 28 Mar 28(R) Joining up, 9 May 29(A) Jonas, Savimbi, Fred Bridgland, 21 Mar 35(R) Jonson, Ben: a masque by, 21 Mar 36(LL) Jordan: Britain's commitment to Jordan at the time of the Suez crisis, 17 Jan 11(A) Jottings of a Genius, Dennis Peck, 31 Jan 30(R)

JOURNALISTS

foreign journalists easily duped in Afghanistan, 31 Jan 12(A); travel journalists critias.ed, 31 Jan 41(A); a productive interviewing technique, 7 Feb 7(D); the new theory that a journalist is above the law, 14 Feb 21(A); a biography of Ed Marrow, 28 Feb 34(R); the Labour Party ban on Murdoch journalists and its Lifting, 7 Mar 18(A), 14 Mar 721.3), 8(AV); other journalists' silence about the ban, 7 Mar 18(A), 14 Mar 7(D), 8(AV); freelance journalists' income tax, Max 7(D); death of David Watt, 4 Apr 5(N), 7(D); journalists' Downing Street posts, 4 Apr 7(D); the war correspondent as film hero,

2 May 36(AR); an election poll among political journalists, 30 May 15(A), 6 Jun 34(L); two leader writers, 6 Jun 19(A), 13

Jun 27(L); Charles Glass kidnapped in Beirut, 27 Jun 4(PW),

11(A) Joyce, James, 21 Mar 32(R) JR of the Cape, The, 18 Apr 11(A) Judith Gautier, Joanna Richardson, 7 Mar 34(R) Juries: Leave the jury alone, 24 Jan 17(A) Just - Richmal, Kay Williams, 10 Jan 26(R)

K

Kael, Pauline, Taking It All In, 4 Apr 33(R) Kapukinski, Ryszard, Another Day of Life, 21 Mar 35(R) Kaufman, Gerald: Labour's 'Manchurian chief of secret police', 6 Jun 8(AV) Kavanagh, P. J., Presences: New and Selected Poems, 14 Mar 36(R) Kennedy, Caroline, and Phillip Knightley, An Affair of State, 30 May 26(R) Kentridge, William: exhibition, 9 May 46(AR) Khan-Magomedov, Selim 0., Rodchenko: The Complete Works, 3 Jan 24(R) Kidnapping of Charles Glass, The, 27 Jun 11(A) Killer turtles in the Thames, 21 Feb 22(A) Kilroy-Silk, Robert: and the egg trick, 10 Jan 7(D) Kimball, Robert, and Doroth Hart, (ed.) The Complete Lyrics of Lorenz Hart, 23 May 55(R) King, Cecil: 25 Apr 6(D); his Fleet Street career, 25 Apr 19(A); an MI5 agent?, 2 May 5(LA) King, James, Interior Landscapes: A Life of Paul Nash, 20 Jun 2(R) King Charming (Players' Theatre), 10 Jan 30(AR)

King(AR) Goes Forth to France, The (Covent Garden), 11 Apr

46 King Ron comes to Runnymede, 14 Mar 9 A)

Kingsley, Mazy: a biography, 11 Apr 29(R

Kingsmill, Hugh, Frank Harris, 21 Mar 33 R)

KINNOCK, NEIL

complains of the way he is treated by the c6S, 17 Jan 18(A); addiction to synonyms, 14 Feb 36(L ; Glenys Kinnock attacked by Edwina Currie, 21 Feb 5( ), 28 Feb 8(AV), 23(A); attacked as unfit to be Leader of the Opposition, 28 Feb 4(Pw), 5041. 6(PC); his personality examined, 28 Feb 5(LA), 14 Mar 30(L); a leaked letter about the 'loony Left', 14 Mar 5(N); the publicity for his trips to the US, 21 Mar 21(A); the failure of his trip to Washington, 4 Apr 4(PW), 5(LA),

), 7(D), 13,23(A); attitude to press and television, 4 Apr

7 ); his leadership of the Labour Party, 11, Apr 15(A); his past and present advisers, 11 A r 16(A); a Teddy boy, 18 Apr 19(A)- lacks the knack of han • g the press, 2 May 17(A); a threat from the unions 16 May 11(A); 'trustworthy and responsible', 23 May 14(A). 13 Jun 27(L); his election campaign, 30 May 6(PC); a weekend campaigning in Wales, 30 May 9(A); his style at press conferences, 6 Jun 21(A); his presentation of himself, 13 Jun 5(LA), 5(N), his Chariots of Fire 'IV election broadcast, 13 Jun 9(A); a 'Welsh Ramsay MacDonald', 13 Jun 12(A); Labour - c'rst cool, 20 Jun 12(A); see also LABOUR PARTY

Kinnock's personality, 28 Feb 5(LA) Kinnock's queer ambassadorship, 4 Apr 13(A) Kiss Me Kate (Old Vic), 30 May 45(AR) Klee, Paul: essays on, 13 Jun 39(R) 1Cnid,htley, Phillip, and Caroline Kennedy, An Affair of State, 30 KobY, John, Will Talk, 16 May 32(R) Kobbe's Complete Opera Book, (ed.) The Earl of Halewood, 14 Mar 34(R) Koch, Ed, 24 Jan 40(A) Koop, Dr Everett: a prophet of doom about Aids, 7 Mar 8(AV) Korab, Karl: exhibition, 7 Mar 42(AR)

Kowalke, Kim, (ed.) A New Orpheus: Essays on Kurt Weill, 7 Mar 36(R)

L

Labour - c'est moi, 20 Jun 12(A) Labour cuts its own throat, 7 Mar 13(A)

LABOUR PARIY, me to concentrate on employment in the general election cam- pang!, 17 Jan 5(LA); why it lags behind the Conservatives in electoral appeal, 17 Jan 5(LA); promises to spend £6 billion on the North-East and Scotland, 17 Jan 8(AV) ; proposals for the party's Scottish conference, 17 Jan 14(A); beal govern- ment reform proposed along hard Left lines, 14 Feb 6(PC); a profile of Bryan Gould, 21 Feb 17(A); 28 Feb 28(L); Hugh Dalton's political diary, 21 Feb 31(R); a red rose as its symbol, 28 Feb 8(AV); faction-fighting largely to blame for the Greenwich by-election defeat, 7 Mar 13(A); the ban on Murdoch journalists and its lifting, 7 Mar 18(A), 14 Mar 7(D), 8(AV); a leaked letter about the 'loony Left', 14 Mar 5(N); a biography of Aneurin Bevan, 4 Apr 32(AR); the growth of black (and other) 'sections', 18 Apr 18(A); James Callaghan's autobiography, 18 Apr 27(R); how not to win back its former supporters, 25 Apr 5109; the Left hesitant and inarticulate and looking to the Greens for salvation, 2 May 6(PC); Sharon Atkin dropped as parliamentary candidate for attacking the party, 9 May 4(rolt,D, 5(N); its leaders, from Hardie to 'Cannock, 9 May 34(R); the unions' undue influence, 16 May 11(A); its general election programme and campaign, 23 May 6(PC); inner city bishops' support for Labour, 23 May 8(AV), 20 Jun 22(L); Why I shall vote Labour, 23 May 14(A), 30 May 21, 6 Jun 34, 13 Jun 27(L); its proposals for schools, 30 May 5(LA); its defence policy, 30 May 6(PC); Mrs Hefferrs election diary, 30 May 7(D); its election campaign irresponsi- ble, lightweight and evasive, 6 Jun 5(LA); an election rally in the former Royal Auicultural Hall, 13 Jun 6(PC); leftist pop groups, 13 Jun 48(AR); difficulties confronting the leadership, 20 Jun 8(A); Neil Kinnock's dominance over both party and policies, 20 Jun 12(A); Scottish socialism and why Scots vote Labour, 20 Jun 14(A); see also KINNOCK, Nam, and individual members

Labour Party's new social contract with the 'loony' Left, The, 14 Feb 6(PC) Labour People: Leaders and Lieutenants, Hardie to Kinnock, Kenneth 01. Morgan, 9 May 34(R) Labour's anti-activist, 21 Feb 17(A) Labour's election news jitters, 2 May 17(A) Labour's losing streak, 17 Jan 5(LA) Labour third, 25 Apr 5(N)

Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk (Coliseum), 6 Jun 46(AR) Lambton, Antony: his signature as "Lambton', 24 Jan 21(L) Lanchner, Carolyn, Paul- Klee, 13 Jun 39(R)

Land: outdated British attitudes to land and its use, 10 Jan 9(A); Green Belts and 'development', 10 Jan 9(A); state forestry, 0 Jan 10(A)•, a Land Reform programme put forward, 10 Jan 12(A), 17 Jan 22(L); the Government announces reforms for the countryside, 14 Feb 5(N) Lane, Harlan, When the Mind Hears, 13 Jun 38(R) Lanning Roper and his Gardens, Jane Brown, 20 Jun 24(R) Lanzarote: a freebie trip, 25 Apr 39(A) Larrain, Raymundo de, 17 Jan 33(A) Last gasp, 23 May 21(A) Last morning in Al Hamra, 24 Jan 23(A) Last night, 21 Feb 32(P) Last o Bloomsbury, The, 21 Feb 20(A)

Last Romantics, The, Caroline Seebohm, 23 May 50(R) Latin America: see individual countries

Laval, Pierre, 3 Jan 22(R) Law and prophet, 24 Jan 5(N) Lawless, Gerry, 7 Feb 7(D) Lawrence, D. H.: his letters 1921-24, 23 May 51(R)

LAWSON,NEGEL

considering cutting the top rate of income tax?, 10 Jan 19(CS); and the tuning of BudDt Day, 14 Feb 30(CS); budget possibilities, 14 Feb 33 ); speculations on his budget's contents, 14 Mar 26(E), (CS); his budget examined, 21 Mar 4(PW), 8, 10, 11(A); his budget speech, 21 Mar 8(A); attitude to the sterling exchange rate, 28 Mar 23(E); three conditions for staying on as Chancellor, 9 May 21(E); interviewed in his constituency, 6 Jun 33(CS); his contribution to the election victory, 20 Jun 19(E), 21(CS); the policy choice before him, 20 Jun 19(E), 21(CS); his shift from 'broad' money to `narrow' money, 27 Jun 9(A)

Layfield report on the Sizewell B reactor, 31 Jan 4(PW), 5(LA), 7 Feb 26, 14 Feb 36(L) Leading the BBC, 7 Feb 5(LA) Leaves from the Garden, Clare Best and Caroline Boisset, 20 Jun 24(R) Leave the jury alone, 24 Jan 17(A)

LEBANON

Terry Waite kidnapped, 31 Jan 4(PW), 7 Feb 9(A); a growing consensus in the US in favour of military action over the hostages taken in Lebanon, 31 Jan 11(A); the taking of hostages and the negotiations for their release, 7 Feb 9(A); Dr Pauline Cutting's heroism, 18 Apr 7(D); Beirut's uneasy peace under Syrian occupation, 25 Apr 10(A); reactions to the

assassination of prime minister Rashid Karami, 6 Jun 26(A); Charles Glass kidnapped in Beirut, 27 Jun 4(PW), 11(A) Leeds East: the Liberals' position examined, 2 May 9(A) Left Behind: Journeys into British Politics, David Selboume, 7 Mar 33(R) Left looksfor a way through the woods, The, 2 May 6(PC) Left-wing friends for Rupert, 31 Jan 22(A)

LEGAL

wrongful convictions alleged in the Birmingham and Guild- ford bomb trials, 10 Jan 5(LA), 17 Jan 22(L),gh 31 Jan 5(N), 14 Feb 5(LA), 7 Mar 7(D); the Conlon case, 17 Jan 22(L); Leave the jury alone, 24 Jan 17(A); the legal aspects of the Zircon security affair, 7 Feb 6(PC); the Home Office memorandum on the Guildford pub bombings, 14 Feb 5(LA); 'punishment

freaks' demand heavier sentences, 14 Feb 8, 21 Feb 8(AV); sentences in a rape case, 14 Feb 8(AV); a suggestion that only women judges should hear rape cases, 21 Feb 8(AV); an unsuccessful suit to forbid an abortion, 28 Feb 4(PW), 5(N) 7(D); need for reform of housing law, 28 Mar 5(LA); the confessions in the Blakelock murder case, 28 Mar 5(N); see also Libel Lehrer, Tom: quoted, 27 Jun 26(L) Leith, Prue, and Polly Tyler, Entertaining in Style, 3 Jan 35, 7 Feb 41(A), 21 Mar 25(L) Lennon, John: a plagiarist, 31 Jan 251L) Lennon, John, Skywriting by Word o Mouth, 10 Jan 24(R) Leonard, Dr Graham: see London,Bishop of Lessore, Helen, A Partial Testament, 7 Feb 34(R) Letter pressed, 14 Mar 5(N)

Letters: from readers, 28 Feb 43(A); danstrous letter-boxes, 11 Apr 7(0); thank-you letters, 6 Jun 53 (3)

Letters of Conrad Russell 1897-1947, (ed. Georgians Blakiston, 30 May 24(R) Letters of D. 11. Lawrence, The: Vol. IV, 1921-1924, (ed.) W. Roberts, J. T. Boulton and E. Mansfield, 23 May 51(R) Levi, Peter, The Frontiers of Paradise: A Study of Monks and Monasteries, 25 Apr 30(R), 9 May 38(LL) Levi, Primo, The Wrench (trans. William Weaver), 9 May 39(R) Lewis, William, and Hedley Bull, (ed.) The Special Relationship, 31 Jan 27(R)

Libel: the Countess of Dudley succesfully sues the Literary Review for libel, 11 Apr 8(AV), 18 Apr 23, 25 Apr 22, 2 May 20(L.),_16 May 7(AV); an apology, 20 Jun I3(X) Liberal Party, the: the Truro by-election, 7 Mar 14(A); Truro held, 21 Mar 4(PW); the Liberals' prospects in general and in Leeds East in particular, 2 May 9(A); a new biography of Lloyd George, 2 May 27(R); see also A LLIA NCH

Libraries: public library expenditure on books cut, 14 Mar 35(LL)

Life and letters, 3 Jan 28,10 Jan 27,17 Jan 29, 24 Jan 33, 31 Jan 32, 7 Feb 33, 14 Feb 43, 21 Feb 35, 28 Feb 36, 7 Mar 40, 14 Mar 35, 21 Mar 36, 28 Mar 34,4 Apr 39,11 Apr44, 18 Apr 32, 25 Apr 33, 2 May 35, 9 May 38, 16May 31, 23-May 54, 30 May 32, 6 Jun 44, 13 Jun 43, 20 Jun 32, 27 Jun 41(LL)

Life of My Choke, The, Wilfred Thesiger, 9 May 33(R)

Life with Alan, A: The Diary of A. J. P. Taylor's Wife Eva, from 1978 to 1985, Eva Haraazti Taylor, 27 Jun 38(R)

Lighting of the Lamps, The, Susan Hill, 28 Feb 33(R) Lillian (Fortune), 14 Feb 47(AR) Linklater, Andro, Compton Mackenzie: A Life, 30 May 29(R) Literary Review, the: successfully sued 'for libel by the Countess of Dudley, 11 Apr 8(AV), 18 Apr 23, 25 Apr 22, 2 May 20(L); 16 May 7(AV) Little of All These, A: An Estonian Childhood, Tania Alexander, 25 Apr 31(R) Little Wilson and Big God, Anthony Burgess, 28 Feb 30(R) Live issue, 28 Feb 5(N) Lively, Penelope, Moon Tiger, 23 May 48(R) Lloyd George, David: a new biography, 2 May 27(R) Lloyd's of London: the Neill report and the need for radical reform, 31 Jan 23(CS); the inquiry into the conduct of Sir Peter Green, 28 Feb 25, 11 Apr 19(CS) Lona', GovErtivmEtfr possible changes under a future To z government, 10 Jan 6(PC); working on a dustcart, 7 Feb 19 A); Labour's proposed reforms follow generally hard Left lines, 14 Feb 6(PC); a planning application rejected in advance, 7 Mar 7(D); councils selling and leasing back of assets, 18 Apr 5(N); the Liberals' prospects in local elections, 2 May 9(A); the problem of 'inner cities', 20 Jun 8, 27 Jun 15(A); rates to be replaced by a community charge, 27 Jun 25(CS) Lofoten Islands: harp seals that prey on cod, 2 May 13(A)

LONDON

a tour of London's sewers, 3 Jan 16(A); London's poor and homeless, 10 Jan 20(L); the battle between the Evening Standard and the London Daily News, 28 Feb 7(D), 7 Mar 22(A); what a London evening newspapers needs to succeed, 7 ar 22(A); a new Metropolitan Police Commissioner appointed, 7 Max 7(D); a report on Brent's schools, 2 May 8(AV); three chess coffee-houses, 9 May 52(A); insensitive modernisation destroying the character and good design of London's Underground stations, 13 Jun 18(A); the Royal Opera House's redevelopment scheme 27 Jun 13(A)

London, the Bishop of: his opposition to the ordination of women, 7 Mar 5(N) London belongs to - whom?, 7 Mar 22(A) London Daily News: its challenge to the Evening Standard, 28 Feb 7(0), 7 Mar 22(A); a progress report, 20 Jun 16(A), 27 Jun 26(L) London Dialogues, The, Tiresias, 24 Jan 27(R) Look Homeward: A Life of Thomas Wolfe, David Herbert Donald, 25 Apr 26(R) Lord Morpeth's charge, 14 Mar 20(A) Lords, House of: new 'working' peers created, 21 Feb 5(N) Lord Weinstock: not the kind of businessman Mrs Thatcher prefers, 3 Jan 6(PC) Lottman, Herbert R., The People's Anger: Justice and Revenge in Past-Liberation France, 3 Jan 22(R) Low life, 3 Jan 34, 10 Jan 32, 17 Jan 34, 24 Jan 40, 31 Jan 39, 7 Feb 40,14 Feb 49, 21 Feb 42, 28 Feb 42, 7 Mar 46, 14 Mar 45, 21 Mar 42, 28 Mar 42, Apr 47, 11 Apr 50, 25 Apr 39, May 41, 9 May 49, 16 May 41, 23 May 64, 30 May 48, 13 Jun 50, 20 Jun 48, 27 Jun 49(A) Luce, Margaret, From Aden to the Gulf: Personal Diaries 1956-1966, 2 May 34(R) Luny, Jean-Baptiste: his career, 21 Feb 38(AR) Lustig, Irma S., and Frederick A. Pottle, Boswell: The English Experiment, 28 Feb 29(R) Luton Town's solution to football violence, 7 Mar 19(A) Ldtzeler, Paul Michael, Hermann Broch, 20 Jun 30(R) Luxemburg, Rosa: a biography, 9 May 37(R)

M

Mabbott, John, Oxford Memories, 7 Feb 30(R) Macdonald, Dwight, 16 May 27(R), 23 May 23(L) McGough, Roger, Melting into the Foreground, 6 Jun 41(R) Mackenzie, Compton: a biography, 30 May 29(R)

Mackie, Charles Hodge: exhibition, 25 Apr 35(AR)

Mack Smith, D., M. I. Finley and C. J. H. Duggan, A History of Sicily, 7 Mar 35(R) McMahon, Sir Kit: joins the Eurotunnel board, 28 Feb 25(CS); his shake-up of the Midland Bank, 2 May 18(CS) Macmillan, Harold: see Stockton, Lord Macmillan: the case against . . ., 10 Jan 15(A) McNamara, Robert, Blundering Into Disaster, 6 Jun 43(R) McNeice, Louis: 18 Apr 32(LL); his critical essays, 9 May 38(LL), 13 Jun 27(L) MacNeice, Louis; 18 Apr 32(LL); his critical eassays, 9 May 38(LL), 13 Jun 27(L) Mad people, 27 Jun 50(A) Maggie's results, 14 Mar 35(LL) Maggie's yobboes, 23 May 10(A) Magpies, 2 May 42(A) Major, John: Chief Secretary to the Treasury, 20 Jun 21(CS) Majorca: a Club 18-30 holiday, 13 Jun 29(A Making of the Black Working Class in ritain, The, Ron Ramdin, 24 Jan 33(R) Making sense of Gorbachev, 21 Feb 13(A) Malaysia: a caning for drinking a bottle of stout, 7 Mar 12(A); increasing pressure to bring Muslim and non-Muslim under Islamic law, 7 Mar 12(A) Mallinson, Tatiana, William Charlton and Robert Oakeshott, The Christian Response to Industrial Capitalism, 7 Feb 29(R) Man behind martial law, The, 13 Jun 14(A)

Man2(dela, Nelson: Time to free Mandela, 2 May 12(A), 16 May

2L) Manhattan '45, Jan Morris, 20 Jun 27(R) Manon (Covent Garden), 20 Jun 44(AR) Mansfield, E., W. Roberts and J. T. Boulton, (ed.) The Letters of D. H. Lawrence: Vol. IV, 1921-1924, 23 May 51(R) Mansfield, Katherine: her collected letters 1918-19, 28 Feb 31(R) Marcus Aurelius: A Biograph, Anthony Birley, 4 Apr 37(R) Marriages, friends', 20 Jun 6 D) Marx, Karl: a hostile biograp y, 10 Jan 22(R) Marya: A Life, Joyce Carol Oates, 10 Jan 26(12) Masson, Georgina, Italian Gardens, 20 Jun 24(R) May, Someth, Cambodian Witness (ed. and intro, James Fenton), 17 Jan 28(R)

MEDICAL

Taki's pleurisy, 31 Jan 38(A); an attack of flu, 7 Feb 41, 14 Mar 45(A); Brig d Brophy's multiple sclerosis, 21 Feb 34(R); constipation, 28 Feb 44(A); Down's Syndrome children, 7 Mar 7(D); sterilisation of a 17-year-old girl authorised, 21 Mar 5(LA); disease scares that peter out, 28 Max 7(D); a remedy for dehydration from diarrhoea, 28 Mar 27(L), a Russian dissident committed to a British mental hospital, 4 Apr 18(A); coronary heart disease among Asians in Britain, 2 May 19(L); disease due to alcohol, 20 Jun 41(A); The Oxford Dktionary of Medicine, 20 Jun 41(A); see also Ams and National Health Service Melting into the Foreground, Roger McGough, 6 Jun 41(R) Memory, loss of, 31 Jan 40(A) Menelik II, Emperor of Ethiopia, 25 Apr 29(R) Mental health: a lunatic asylum's inmates on the election, 30 May 14(A); visit to an asylum, 27 Jun 50(A) Menzies, Sir Robert: and the second world war, 14 Feb 37(R) Menzies and Churchill at War, David Day, 14 Feb 37(R) Merchant of Venice, The (Stratford-on-Avon), 9 May 42(AR) Merry Wives of Windsor, The (Barbican), 7 Feb 38(AR) Meters disowned, 18 Apr 5(N) Milk bottles, 21 Feb 45(CO) Milne, A. A.: un-Milnish verses, 18 Apr 44(CO) Milne, Alasdair: resigns as director-general of the BBC, 7 Feb 4(PW), 5(LA), 21(A), 14 Feb 43(LL) Minford, Professor Patrick: on financial reforms, 28 Mar 26(L) Miracle of Marcus, The, 11 Apr 17(A) Mira, Joan: selected writings and interviews, 2 May 32(R) Mitchell, L. G., and L. S. Sutherland, (ed.) The History of the University of Oxford: Volume 5, The Eighteenth Century, 28 Mar 32(R) Mitchell, Mairin, Berengaria: Enigmatic Queen of England, 7 Mar 37(R) Mnemonic verses, 14 Mar 52(CO) Molehunt, Nigel West, 21 Mar 30(R) Monks and monasteries, 25 Apr 30(R), 9 May 38(LL) Monopolies Commission, the: and takeover bids, 24 Jan 9(A) Moon Tiger, Penelope Lively, 23 May 48(R) Moore, Marianne: her complete prose, 21 Feb 32(R) Moore, N. W., The Bird of Time: The Science and Politics of Nature Conservation, 4 Apr 38(R) Moorehead, Caroline, Troublesome People, 2 May 33(R) Morgan, Kenneth 0., Labour People: Leaders and Lieutenants, Hardie to Kinnock, 9 May 34(11.) Morning's at Seven, 16 May 29(P) Moro, Aldo: his letters from captivity, 14 Mar 33(R)

Moro Affair and the Mystery of Majorana, The, Leonardo Sciascia, 14 Mar 33(R)

Morocco: guests turned out of a hotel for a royal lunch, 2 May 7(D) Morpeth, Lord: resigns from the army, 14 Mar 20(A) Morris, Jan, Manhattan '45, 20 Jun 27(R) Mortimer, Edward, Roosevelt's Children: Tomorrow's Leaders and Their World, 30 May 25(R) Motor industry: Austin Rover's unhappy history and future prospects, 14 Feb 17(A) Motoring: the Nottingham chief constable's breathalysing cam- paign against motonsts, 10 Jan 8(AV); a car driven into a pub,

23 May 64(A); wheel-clamping in London, 27 Jun 6(PC) Mount, Ferdinand, The Selkirk Strip, 14 Feb 40(R) Mr Kinnock goes to ground, 30 May 9(A) Mr Kinnock's office politics, 11 Apr 15 A) Mr Lawson's secret inflation, 27 Jun 9( ) Mr Leigh-Pemberton's embarrassment of riches, 23 May 34(R) Mrs Thatcher, Mr Gorbachev and the people in between, 4 Apr 6(PC)

MURDOCH, RUPERT

bans alcohol at Wapping over Christmas, 3 Jan 8(AV); increased profitability, but not quality of his newspapers, 3 Jan 18(A); his Wapping triumph largely due to the folly of union leadership, 31 Jan 22(A); his bid for control of the Melbourne Herald, 7 Feb 15(A); the print unions accept defeat over Wapping, 14 Feb 4(PW); the Labour Party ban on Murdoch journalists lifted, 7 Mar 18(A); is his media empire getting too big?, 28 Mar 22(A) Murdoch plays Monopoly, 7 Feb 15(A) Murrow: His Life and Times, A. M. Sperber, 28 Feb 34(R) Museums: Sir Roy Strong resigns as director of the Victoria and Albert Museum, 7 Feb 16(A); the V & A past and present, 7 Feb 16(A); the Italian garden at the V & A criticised, 27 Jun 44(A)

Music AND OPERA

La Bohtme, 3 Jan 31, 20 Jun 44(AR); Otello, 24 Jan 18(A), 36(AR), 14 Feb 36, 21 Feb 27(L); Karajan's New Year Strauss concert, 24 Jan 38(AR); Der Rosenkavalier, 31 Jan 33(AR); Havergal Brian's musical journalism, 7 Feb 37(AR); Tosca, 14 Feb 45(AR), 11 Apr 7(D), 25 Apr 22, 9 May 28(L); Lully's career, 21 Feb 38(AR); Norma, 28 Feb 37(AR); Margaret Price's singing, 28 Feb 37(AR); essays on Kurt Weill, 7 Mar 31R)); the early seculansation of church music, 7 Mar 43 AR); John Tavener's sacred music, 7 Mar 43(AR); recent British musicals, 7 Mar 45(AR); Kobbe's Complete Opera Book, 14 Mar 34(R); Ariadne auf Naxos, 14 Mar 39(AR); a musical analogy with cleaning and restoring pictures, 28 Mar 38 AR); a lost hoard of early music manuscripts, 4 Apr 44 AR ; The King Goes Forth to France and Silbersee, 11 Apr 46 AR ; wedding and other non-penitential ceremonial music, 18 Apr 38(AR); Beethoven's piano sonatas on BBC2, 25 Apr 6(D); Simon Boccanegra and The Trojans, 25 Apr 36(AR); music and mathematics, 2 May 39(AR); Daphne and The Stone Guest, 9 May 44(AR); the production of Aida at Luxor, 16 May 36(AR); Busoni's letters, 30 May 31(R); festivals, including the Bath Festival, and their themes, 30 May 43(AR); La Traviata, Carmen and Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk, 6 Jun 46(AR); the Midland Bank's promenade operas at Covent Garden, 13 Jun 25(CS); the London Festival Orchestra's tour of cathedrals, 13 Jun 46(AR); Cosi fan tune, Marron and Il barbiere di Siviglia, 20 Jun 44(AR); The Royal Opera House's redevelopment scheme, 27 Jun 13(A); proposed changes at the Royal Academy of Music, 27 Jun 43(AR); see also Pop music Muslims in the swim, 3 Jan 14(A) My afternoon with Harvey, 18 Apr 18(A) My brother's tragic sense, 24 Jan 22(A) My cup of tea, 10 Jan 14(A) My life with Tiny: A Biography of Tiny Rowland, Richard Hall, 2 May 28(R), 9 May 27(L) My Sister in This House (Hampstead), 6 Jun 46(AR)

N

Nabokov, Vladimir: Nabokov invoked, 10 Jan 32(A); his life and art, 16 May 30(R)

Nobokov, Vladimir, The Enchanter, 31 Jan 28(R)

Naipaul, Shiva: his brother's memorial address, 24 Jan 22(A); the Shiva Naipaul prize awarded, 24 Jan 23(X); the winning article, 24 Jan 23(A); the Shiva Naipaul memorial prize announced, 23 May 22(X)

Naipaul, V. S., The Enigma of Arrival, 14 Mar 37(R) Nairn in Darkness and Light, David Thomson, 27 Jun 39(R) Name of the Rose, The (film), 31 Jan 34(R)

Names: remembering (and forgetting) names, 10 Jan 7(D); solecisms over names of titled people, 25 Apr 6, 2 May 7(D), 20(L), 9 May 28(L); a suspect name, 25 Apr 22(L); some extraordinary American names, 16 May 6(D) Nash, Paul: a biography, 20 Jun 25(R) National Health Service: ever-increasing expenditure, 24 Jan 8(AV); much increased expenditure results in more nurses and fewer beds, 30 May 8(AV); argued over in the election campaign, 13 Jun 5(LA) National Trust and its country house scheme, the, 18 Apr 35(AR)

NUJ, the: hounds members working at Wapping, 31 Jan 22(A) Need for a lack of style in politics, The, 6 Jun 6(PC) Neill report, the, 31 Jan 23(CS) Netherlands, the: eating in Amsterdam, 31 Jan 48(A) New age of editors, A, 3 Jan 18(A) New blue chips, 16 May 10(A)

Newcastle-under-Lyme by-election, the: Mrs Llin Golding on

the conduct of the campaign, 7 Mar 13(A), 18 Apr 23(L) New Light on Old Masters, E. H. Gombnch, 17 Jan 26(A) New Orleans: as seen by a visitor, 31 Jan 44(A) New Orpheus, A; Essays on Kurt Weill, (ed.) Kim Kowalke, 7 Mar 36(R) New Oxford Book of Victorian Verse, The, (ed.) Christopher Ricks, 27 Jun 40(R)

Newsome, Victor: exhibition, 14 Mar 41(AR)

New song of the land, The, 10 Jan 9(A) News on Sunday: a strug: for control, 10 Jan 18(A); pm-launch publicity, 21 Mar 21(A. ; its first issue examined, 2 May 17(A);

its survival unlikely, Jun 16(A)

New Statesman, the: publishes information about the Zircon spy

satellite, 31 Jan 4(PW), 7(D), 8(AV), 7 Feb 5(N), 6(PC); its

offices raided by the police, 7 Feb 5(N)

New Year, the: poems sti greeting, 3 Jan 37(CO) New York: British shows on Broadway, 16 May 38(AR); New York restaurants, 16 May 45(A); New York in 1945, 20 Jun 27(R)

New Yorker, the: a new editor appointed, 24 Jan 4(PW), 20(A);

the end of an era?, 24 Jan 20(A)

t.

Nicaragua: visited by Salmon Rushdie, 7 Feb 27(R); the life and true character of Augusto Sandino, 28 Feb 12(.A); what the Tower re7rt reveals about arms supplies to e Contras, 7 Mar 11(A ; the Contras' prospects, 7 Mar 11(A) Nicholson, inifred: exhibition, 13 Jun 47(AR)

Nigel Lawson's Budget for the hustings, 14 Mar 26(E) Nigel wins the racecourse vote, 21 Mar 11(A)

1986: the year's events summarised, 3 Jan 4(X)

No asylum from politics, 30 May 14(A) No Liberal conscience, 7 Mar 14(A) No, Not Bloomsbury, Malcolm Bradbury 16 May 27(R) Norma (Covent Garden), 28 Feb 37(AR)

North, Oliver: and the Contra supply operation, 16 May 13(A); his secretary's evidence to the 'tailgate inquiry, 13 Jun 13(A)

Northern Irish landed gentry, 9 May 13(A)

Norton, Charles Eliot: Correspondence with Ruskin, 16 May 29(R) Norway: a biography of Knut Hamsun, 18 Apr 28(R)

Not as black as it's painted, 31 Jan 13(A) Not enough children, 14 Mar 49(A) Nothing to Repent: The Life of Hesketh Pearson, Ian Hunter, 31

Jan 26(R)

Not quite Soweto, 18 Apr 15(A) Nottinyghamshire: its mining community and their politics, 23

Ma 10(A)

Novel candidate, A, 25 Apr 11(A) Now we can bring back the cane for Anglo-Saxon schoolboys, 13,

Jun 8(AV) NUCLEAR WEAPONS

the Layfield report recommends the building of the Sizewell B reactor, 31 Jan 4(PW), 5(LA), 7 Feb 26, 14 Feb 36(L); Mr Gorbachev's offer on medium-range nuclear weapons merely a return to the 'zero option' position, 7 Mar 5(LA), 6(PC), 21 Mar 16(A); the danger of bargaining away Western nuclear weapons, 21 Mar 16(A); US-Russian arms control negotia- tions continue, 18 Apr 5(LA), 25 Apr 4(PW); 'concessions' by Mr Gorbachev over arms control, 18 Apr 5(LA); Has CND really won the nuclear debate after all?, 9 May 6(PC); Robert McNamara on nuclear planning and mutual deterrence, 6 Jun 43(R); a remark by Enoch Powell, 13 Jun 5(N)

NUJ, the: 3 Jan 8(AV); its action against Murdoch journalists, 7 Max 18(A), 14 Mar 8(AV)

Nye Bevan and the Mirage of British Socialism, John Campbell, 4 Apr 32(R) Oalceshott, Robert, William Charlton and Tatiana Mallinson, The Christian Response to Industrial Capitalism, '7 Feb 29(R) Oates, Joyce Carol, Marya: A Life, 10 Jan 26(R) Observer, the, 2 May 28(R), 9 May 27(L) O'Connor, Garry, (ed.) Olivier: In Celebration, 18 Apr 30(R) Odds against an Afghan peace, 24 Jan 11(A)

Oedipus, 10 Jan 20(L) Official Secrets Act: the all-embracing Section 2, 7 Feb 6(PC); see also SECURITY

Old people: their plight in severe weather, 17 Jan 5(N); 'We've put her in a home', 31 Jan 9(A); old people in residential homes, 31 Jan 9(A); suicide by the old, 9 May 28(L); a pensioner mugged for his criminal injury compensation money, 27 Jun 8(AV) Olivier, Laurence: a festschrift for his 80th birthday, 18 Apr 30R) Olivi(er: In Celebration, (ed.) Garry O'Connor, 18 Apr 30(R) Omens, 2 May 42(A) Onan, 21 Mar 25, 28 Mar 27(L) On a painting by Patrick Swift, 11 Apr 42(P) Oni: Stalin's Polish Puppets, Teresa Toranska (trans. Agnieszka

Kolakowska, intro. Harry Willetts), 11 Apr 27(R)

On Persephone's Island, Mary Taylor Simeti, 7 Mar 35(R) On Scanning Page Three, 10 Jan 26(P)

Opera, see Music AND OPERA Opinion polls: see Polls

Ordeal by Labyrinth: Conversations With Claude-Henri Racquet,

Mircea Eliade (trans. Derek Coltman), 25 Apr 32(R) Order of Battle at Trafalgar, The, John Bayley, 13 Jun 36(R)

O rose thou art sick! The invisible worm in Labour's election

plans, 28 Feb 8(AV)

Orton, Joe, 23 May 60(AR)

O'Sullivan, Vincent, and Margaret Scott, The Collected Letters of Katherine Mansfield, 28 Feb 31(R) Otello (Covent Garden), 24 Jan 18(A), 36(AR), 14 Feb 36, 21 Feb 27, 28 Feb 28(L) Ousbv, Ian, and John Lewis Bradley, (ed.) The Correspondence of John Ruskin and Charles Eliot Norton, 16 May 29(R) Out of sight, out of mind, 25 Apr 8(A) Owen, Dr David: and the Alliance's prospects, 31 Jan 6(PC); ambition for power unlikely, to be realised, 6 Jun 18(A); at press conferences, 6 Jun 21(A); see also ALLIANCE Oxford Illustrated History of English Literature, The, (al.) Pat Rogers, 16 May 33(R) Oxford Memories, John Mabbott, 7 Feb 30(R) Oxford takes sides, 28 Feb 16(A)

Oxford University: Mrs Thatcher as candidate for the Chancel- lorship?, 10 Jan 5(N); a don's memories, 7 Feb 30(R); the Chancellorship through the centuries, 14 Feb 18(A); the contest for the Chancellorship, 28 Feb 16(A), 7 Mar 703); Ruskin College as a 'socialist seminary', 7 Mar 19(A), 33(R), 21 Mar 24(L); the university in the 18th century, 28 Mar 32(R)

P

Pacifism and conscientious objectors, 2 May 33(R) Palumbo, Peter: his Mansion House project turned down, 27 Jun 25(CS) Pankhurst, Sylvia: a biography, 21 Mar 31(R) Paperbacks, a selection of recent, 14 Feb 42, 28 Mar 30, 16 May 34(X)

PapersR) of Samuel Marchbanks, The, Robertson Davies, 9 May 40(

Parkinson Cecil: interviewed during a trip to Portsmouth, 16 May 23(A); appointed Energy minister, 20 Jun 21(CS) Parliament: a Bill to incorporate the European Convention on Human Rights into British law founders, 14 Feb 8(AV)' a fixed term for parliaments? 18 Apr 7(D); the apathy of the

zmitisocen palartis. ELECTIONS, 2 May 6(PC); Queen's Speech, 27 Jun Partial Testament, A, Helen Lessore, 7 Feb 34(R)

Parties, wine-and-cheese and other, 2 May 41(A)

Partnership, The: The Secret Association of Bernard Berenson

and Joseph Duveen, Colin Simpson, 11 Apr 41(R)

Partridge, Frances: her lifelong dislike of convention, 21 Feb 20(A)

Passionate transitory, The, 10 Jan 27(LL) Past caring, 4 Apr 15(A)

Tense (Le Passé D i): The Diaries of Jean Cocteau, Vol.

,i I, 1951-1952, (trans.) *chard Howard, 18 Apr 33(R) Patten, Brian, Gargling with Jelly, 6 Jun 41(R) Paul Klee, Carolyn Lanchner, 13 Jun 39(R)

Payne, Mrs Cynthia: and her 'house of Cyn', 14 Feb 4(PW),

Paying back the old bill, 28 Feb 17(A) 7(D), 49(A); an Observer feature article, 21 Mar 5(N)

5(N)

Payneful, 21 Mar Pealce, Mervyn: visit to war-shattered Germany, 14 Feb 44(AR);

a retrospective exhibition, 14 Feb 44(AR) 26(R)

Dennis, Jottings o a Genius, 31 Jan 30(R) Pearson, Hesketh: a biography, 31 Jan

Peck,

PPEeeNr :gcorordeup're2n1ce Feb at Lugano 13 Jun 15(A); the Writers in Prison Pe?nynlinttforiaceion1 g3 Aun, (Barbican), 3 Jan 29(AR)

Pensions: a warning to the pension funds, '7 Mar 25(C5)

People's Anger, The: Justice and Revenge in Post-Liberation

France, Herbert R. Lottman, 3 Jan 22(R) People Wilt Talk, John Kobal, 16 May 32(R) Peper, Christian B., An Historian's Conscience, 11 Apr 34(R)

Performance art, 9 Ma 41(AR)

Personal Services (film), 18 Apr 39(AR) Persuading the British, 13 Jun 9(A) Pestilence in the presbytery, 14 Feb 16(A)

50(CO) Cranston, 14 Mar

PPhetaosveoprsheeerspitaanpdhs pfoarmap,w3e1leJean.,,

36(R)

Photographs from the Collection of the Gilman Paper Company,

Pierre Apraxine (plates by Richard Benson), 3 Jan 25(R) Photography: the Gilman Paper Company's collection of photo- graphs, 3 Jan 25(R); F. R. Yerbury's architectural photogra- phy, 7 Mar 44(AR); the Royal Family's interest inphotogra- phy 1842-1910, 4 Apr 40(AR); Ansel Adams (exhibition), 6 achievement at London Transport, 13 Jun 18(A)

2d0AJ,un(A3p7(A110)),

11 Apr 47(AR)

picJinnFr4a5nk(ARhis) PiecnPilger, John: resigns from News on Sunday, 10 Jan 18(A);

'pilgering' 31 Jan 25, 7 Feb 26, 28 Feb 28, 4 Apr 26, 30 May

ceic ohfamMyPeksin,

21(L); interviews Bob Hawke, 6 Jun 8(AV), 27 Jun 26(L)

Pimlott, Ben, (ed.) The Political Diary of Hugh' Dalton, 1918-40, Pincher, Chapman: a profile, 2 May 15(A) 1945-60, 21 Feb 31(R)

Piper, Dennis 'Pip': death, 27 Jun 49(A) Pitt, the younger, 21 Feb 27(L)

Place names, foreign, 11 Apr 7(D)

25(L)

Plagiarism by John Lennon, 31 Jan Planning the dirtiest election campaign for many years, 17 Jan

8(AV)

Platoon (film), 18 Apr 41(A), 16 May 35(AR) Please may I pay more tax?, 9 May 18(A) Poems 1956-1986, James Simmons, 9 May 35(R) Poem, 28 Feb 35(P) Poet Auden, The: A Personal Memoir, A. L. Rowse, 4 Apr

35(R)

Poetic pains, 7 Feb 17(A) poetry today, 7 Feb 17(A); poetry as agitprop, 7 Feb 17(A);

POETRY

the Spectator's poems, 14 Feb 36(L); writers who escape the poetryness of poetry' 28 Feb 36(LL); now a peripheral interest?, 7 Mar 40(LL)' a Polishpoet, 7 Mar 40(LL); poems wing given rhymes, 28 Mar 44(C0); a poet on poetry reacfings, _11 Apr 44(LL); schoolchildren studying Keats, 23 May 54(LL); Victorian poetry, 27 Jun 40(R)

Poland: Stalin's Polish puppets, 11 Apr 27(R); revelations by a hi -ranking defector, 13 Jun 14(A); the Pope's visit, 20 Jun W), 9(A); its struggles since 1918, 20 Jun 23(R)

Poles are dodgy, but so is the Labour vote, The, 21 Feb 6(PC) POLICE, THE at a CID party, 3 Jan 34(A); the Nottingham chief constable's breathalysing campaign over Christmas, 10 Jan 8(AV); the chief constable of Greater Manchester on his relationship with God, 24 Jan 5(N), 31 Jan 25(L); C. H. Rolph's career, 24 Jan 32(R); the New Statesman offices and the BBC's Glasgow

office raided, 7 Feb 4(PW), 5(N), 6(PC), 14 Feb 43(LL); the disadvantages of an independent police complaints authority, 28 Feb 17(A); a homosexual policeman's memoir, 28 Feb 32(R); Peter Imbert appointed Metropolitan Police Commis- sioner, 7 Mar 7(D); the obtaining of confessions in the Blakelock murder case, 28 Mar 5(N); John Stalker and his suspension, 6 Jun 36(R) Poliomyelitis: living in an iron lung, 23 May 21(A) Political Diary of Hugh Dalton, 1918-40, 1945-60, The, (ed.) Ben Pimlott, 21 Feb 31(R) Politics, 3 Jan 6, 10 Jan 6, 17 Jan 6, 24 Jan 6, 31 Jan 6, 7 Feb 6, 14 Feb 6, 21 Feb 6, 28 Feb 6, 7 Mar 6, 14 Mar 6, 28 Mar 6, 4 Apr 6, 11 Apr 6, 18 Apr 6, 2 May 6, 9 May 6, 23 May 6, 30 May 6, 6 Jun 6, 13 Jun 6, 27 Jun 6(PC) Politics and cadences, 27 Jun 41(LL) Pourms AND PounctANs

Enoch Powell and Julian Amery on Harold Macmillan, 10 Jan 15, 16(A); the intrusion of politics into art, 14 Feb 43(LL); Edwina Currie attacks Glenys Kinnock, 21 Feb 5(N), 28 Feb 8(AV), 23(A); a profile of Bryan Gould, 21 Feb 17(A), 28 Feb 28(L); Hugh Dalton's political diary, 21 Feb 31(R21; the influence of personality on politics, 28 Feb 5(LA ; the

publicising and harassing of politicians' families, Feb 23(A); a biography of R. A. Butler, 14 Mar 31(R); a biography of Stanley Baldwin, 14 Mar 32(R); political theorists of the French Enlightenment, 14 Mar 36(R); the parties' attitude to Aids, 28 Mar 17(A); a political biography of Aneurin Bevan, 4 Apr 32(R); the dangers of canvassing and delivering leaflets, 11 Apr 7(D); James Callaghan's auto- biography, 18 Apr 27(R); the independent schools a party issue, 2 May 14(A), 16 May 22(L); a Spectator poll on attitudes to voting, 2 May 23(A); a new biography of Lloyd George, 2 May 27(R); the political stability since 1979, 9 May 20(A); Lord ltosebery's premiership, 9 May 36(R); Cecil Parkinson interviewed, 16 May 23(A); politicians' commit- ment to internationalism and world order now much dimi- nished, 23 May 19(A), 30 May 25(R); the party leaders on TV as family people, 23 May 63(AR); the morality of Conserva- tive and Labour principle and practice, 6 Jun 5(LA); the personalities and styles of the party leaders, 6 Jun 6(PC): Nigel Lawson interviewed, 6 Jun 33(CS); the 'Disraeli Project', 13 Jun 35(R); the North-South political divide, 20 Jun 5(N); 'caring' politicians, 20 Jun 6(D), 22(L); the question of devolution revived, 27 Jun 5(LA); authors' right to express their political opinions, 27 Jun 18(A); see also Parliament Politics of Aids, The, 28 Mar 17(A) Politics of the classroom, The, 2 May 14(A) Politics, Religion and Society in England, 1679-1742, Geoffrey Holmes, 10 Jan 23(R) Polling the pundits, 30 May 15(A) Polls, opinion: Spectator polls on Britain's decline and prospects, 14 Feb 14(A), and on attitudes to voting, 2 May 23(A); a dominating influence in picking a date for the general electron, 28 Feb 6(PC); opinion polls on the election prospects of the parties and their candidates, 9 May 9(A), 16 May 8(PC), 30 May 11(A), 6 Jun 4(PW), 11(A); an election poll among political journalists, 30 May 15(A), 6 Jun 34(L) Poltimore, Mark, and Philip Hook, Popular 19th-Century Painting, 7 Mar 38(R) Pope John Paul 11: visits Poland, 20 Jun 4(PW), 9(A) Pop music: a Lancing College pop group, 17 Jan 7(D) Country and Western, 14 Mar 44(AR); rock singers, especially Julian Cope, 11 Apr 48(AR); Fleetwood Mac, Colourfield, Danny Wilson and Microdisney, 16 May 39(AR); the decline of Red Wedge, 13 Jun 48(AR); youth non m East and West Berlin, 20 Jun 10(A) Popular 19th-Century Painting, Philip Hook and Mark Polti- more, 7 Mar 38(R) Pornography, Andrea Dworkin, 31 Jan 39(A) PORTRAIT DRAWINGS Frank Auerbach, 17 Jan 30, Klaus Barbie, 23 May 16, Aneurin Bevan, 4 Apr 32, James Boswell, 28 Feb 29, Gerald Brenan, 31 Jan 20, John Browne, 6 Jun 16, Anthony Burgess, 28 Feb 30, R. A. Butler, 14 Mar 31, James Callaghan, 1B Apr 27, Lord Carrington, 4 Apr 11, Fidel Castro, 27 jun 33, Lady Diana Cooper, 23 May 41, Henry Chadwick, 14 Feb 20, Placido Domingo (as Mello), 24 Jan 18, Fyodor Dostoievsky, 13 Jan 37, President Eisenhower, 10 Jan 21, Judith Gautier, 7 May 34, Victor Gollancz, 17 Jan 25, Sir James Goldsmith, 23 May 47, Mikhail Gorbachev, 28 Mar I, Bryan Gould, 21 Feb 17, Fawn Hall, 13 Jun 13, Frank Harris, 21 Mar 33, Roy Hattersley, 14 Feb 41, Denis Healey, 2 May 9, Ernest Hemingway, 21 Feb 30, Neil Kinnock, 11 Apr 15, 20 Jun 12, Pierre Laval, 3 Jan 22, Nigel Lawson, 21 Mar 8, David Lloyd George, 2 May 27, Harold Macmillan, 10 Jan 15, Marianne Moore, 21 Feb 33, Rupert Murdoch, 7 Feb 15, Vladimir Nabokov, 16 May 30, Shiva Naipaul, 24 Jan 22, Oliver North, 16 May 13, Laurence Olivier, 15 Apr 30, David Owen, 6 Jun 18, Cecil Parkinson, 16 May 23, Frances Partridge, 21 Feb 20, Hesketh Pearson, 31 Jan 26, Chapman Pincher, 2 May 15, Pope John Paul II, 20 Jun 9, Harvey Proctor, 14 Mar 14, Alan Pryce-Jones, 14 Feb 38, Selman Rushdie, 7 Feb 27, Conrad Russell, 23 May 41, Augusto Sandino, 28 Feb 12, John Stalker, 6 Jun 36, Lord Stockton, 10 Jan 15, Andrey Tarkovsky, 10 Jan 28, Margaret Thatcher, 6 Jun 1. Wilfred Thesiger, 4 May 33, Terry Waite, 7 Feb 12, Evelyn Waugh7 Mar 27, Desmond Williams, 24 Jan 19, Thomas Wolfe, Apr 26(1

Portrai)

t of the week, 10 Jan 4, 1'7 Jan 4, 24 Jan 4, 31 Jan 4, 7 Feb 4, 14 Feb 4, 21 Feb 4, 28 Feb 4, 7 Mar 4, 14 Mar 4, 21 Mar 4, 28 Mar 4, 4 Apr 4, 11 Apr 4, 18 Apr 4, 25 Apr 4, 2 May 4, 9 May 4, 16 May 4, 23 May 4, 30 May 4, 6 Jun 4,13 Jun 4, 20 Jun 4, 27 Jun 4(PW) Portrait of the year, 3 Jan 4(X) Portugal: Auberon Waugh visits the Douro valley, 27 Jun 8(AV) Positive Cynic, The, 20 Jun 25(P) Postage stamps: would privatised stamps still show the monarch's head?, 10 Jan 7(D) Post Office; sub-post offices forced to close, 10 Jan 19(CS) Pottery exhibitions, 30 May 36(AR) Pottle, Frederick A., and Irma S. Lustig, Boswell: The English Experiment, 28 Feb 29(R) Potts, Paul: and self-revelation, 6 Jun 44(LL) Potts and embarrassment, 6 Jun 44(LL) Poverty: Londons' poor and homeless, 10 Jan 20(L) Powell, Cecilia, Turner in the South: Rome, Naples, Florence, 11 Apr 33(R) Powell, Enoch: on the nuclear nightmare, 13 Jan 5(N); defeated in the general election, 20 Jun 11(A) Powell, Virginia: exhibition, 28 Feb 38(AR) Power of Engiands's Ralak, The, 6 Jun 9(A) Powers, Lyall, and Leon Edel, (ed.) The Complete Notebooks of Henry James, 23 May 53(R) Praise (or dispraise), perverse, 28 Feb 45(CO) Prejudice of Aids, The, 21 Mar 20(A) Presences: New and Selected Poems, P. J. Kavanagh, 14 Mar 36(R) Preserving Hardy's heath, 28 Mar 19(A) PaEss,TRE less and less serious news on front pages, 3 Jan 7(D); the press in 1986 and prospects for 1987, 3 Jan 18(A); what the workers want in their newspapers, 10 Jan 18(A); Neil Kinnock's relations with the press, 17 Jan 18(A), 4 Apr 7(D), 2 May 17, 6 Jun 21(A); the print unions weakened and impoverished by intransigence towards Murdoch, 31 Jan 22(A); the London Daily News and the revived Evening News, 28 Feb 7(D); the battle between the Evening Standard and the London Daily News for the London evening market, 7 Mar 22(A); the decline of the Times and its loss of authority, 21 Mar 27(A), 28 Mar 26(L ; Rupert Murdoch's worldwide media empire, 28 Mar 22(A ; the coverage of Neil Kinnock's trip to America, 4 A r 23(A ; the full text of speeches no longer printed, 11 Apr 7 ); British correspondents in Japan, 11 Apr 18(A); 16 May (L); the religious press reviewed, 18 Apr 21(A); Cecil King's career, 25 Apr 19(A); the Periodical Publishers Association awards, 2 May 7(110), 9 May 28(L); News on Sunday's first issue, 2 May 17(A); the press on tactical voting and a hung parliament, 16 May 12(A); the popular press on Spain, 16 May 15(A); election-time smears on politicians, 30 May 16(A); leader writers of the Mirror and the Sun interviewed, 6 Jun 19(A), 13 Jun 27(L); the party leaders at press conferences, 6 Jun 21(A); a balance sheet of the newspaper revolution, 20 Jun 16(A); see also JOURNALISTS and individual newspapers and magazines Prick Up Your Ears (film), 23 May 60(AR) Priestcraft, 7 Mar 5(N) Priestman, Bertram: exhibition, 16 May 39(AR) Prince Edward: resigns from the Royal Marines, 17 Jan 7(D), 16(A), Prince Margaret: at the Ideal Home Exhibition, 21 Mar 40(AR) Prince of Wales, the: a model of impartiality, 25 Apr 7(AV) Princess of Wales, the: alleged flirting, 27 Jun 49(A) Prisons: Taki in Pentooville, 6 Jun 50(A) Privatisation: arguments against it rebutted, 27 Jun 6(PC) Problem of housing the brightest and the best, The, 21 Mar 7(AV) Proctor, Harvey: his at led homosexuality and racism, 14 Mar 14(A), 21 Mar 4(P , 18 Apr 24(L); at a Monday Club meeting, 18 Apr 18(A Professional men, arrogant and self-righteous, 7 Mar 47(A) Professor Goodhart's sermon to the happy couple, 20 Jun 19(E) Profiles: Henry Chadwick, 14 Feb 20(A); Bryan Gould, 21 Feb 17(A), 28 Feb 28(L); Chapman Pincher, 2 May 15(A) Profumo case, the: 9 May 48(A); books on, 30 May 26(R), 13 Jun 28, 20 Jun 22(L) Promise,. The, 18 Apr 29(P) Prophecies: the Church's teaching on, 24 Jan 5(N), 31 Jan 25(L) Prospect more inviting than Labour's moral nullity, A, 13 Jun 6(PC)

Proust, Marcel: parallels with other authors, 11 Apr 28(R) Prouty, Chris, Empress Taytu and Menelik II: Ethiopia 1883- 1910, 25 Apr 29 )

Proverbs disprov 17 Jan 36(CO) Pryce-Jones, Alan: his memoirs, 14 Feb 38(R) Pryce-Jones, Alan, The Bonus of Laughter, 14 Feb 38(R) Public Lending Right: authors' receipts from, 24 Jan 7(D) Publishing: a biography of Victor Gollancz, 17 Jan 25(R) Pubs: Norman, of the Coach and Horses, 17 Jan 34(A); a car driven into a pub, 23 May 64(A) Puckler-Muskau, Prince, Puckler's Progress (trans. Flora Bren- nan), 28 Mar 34(R) Puckler's Progress, Prince Puckler-Muskau (trans. Flora Bren- nan), 28 Mar 34(R) 'Push off, Pedro', 16 May 15(A) Quaint, bossy or edgy, 6 Jun 21(A) Queen Elizabeth II: the royal household and officers of state in Scotland, 25 Apr 47(A) Queening it, 21 Feb 5(N) Questions from LSE students, 21 Feb 42(A) Queue-jumping, 20 Jun 6(D) Quick, fhp response to the errors of Walkero-Heathism, A, 25 Apr 7(AV) Quinlan Terry: The Revivial of Architecture, Clive Aslet, 28 Mar 29(R) Quinn, Sally, Regrets Only, 16 May 28(R) Quis castrabit ipsos castratos?, 14 Feb 8(AV) Quiz, an election: 6 Jun 14(X); the answers, 6 Jun 29(X) Quotations for the age, 7 Mar 26, 21 Mar 25(L)

R

RAB: The Life of R. A. Butler, Anthony Howard, 14 Mar 31(R) RACE RELATIONS a Muslim father's objection to his daughter learning to swim, 3 Jan 14(A), 17 Jan 22(L); compulsory Punjabi in a Wolverhampton comprehensive school, 24 Jan 13(A); the black working class in Britain, 24 Jan 33(R), 7 Feb 26(1.); racism defined, 31 Jan 25(L); an Essex MP accused of racism, 14 Mar 14(A); is there grassroots Tory racism?, 21 Mar 24(L); Labour's holack sections, 18 Apr 18(A); 'Britain's ethnic community', 25 Apr 22(L); harassment of Asian immigrants, 25 Apr 8(A); a Labour candidate dropped for calling the party racist, 9 May 4(PW), 5(N); Birmingham's immigrant popula- tion, 30 May 13(A) Racing: see Horses and horse-racing Radiant Way, The, Margaret Drabble, 2 May 29(R) RADIO

John Timpson and Brian Redhead in Today, 17 Jan 32, 11 Apr 46(AR); Gerald Priestland contrasted with Malcolm Billings, 17 Jan 32(AR); Radio Pyongyang, 17 Jan 33(AR); Nick Ross's phone-in programme and his descriptions of everyday life in China, 14 Feb 48(AR); The Archers, 14 Feb 50(A), and their family ramifications, 11 Apr 47(AR); the improvement in Feedback, 14 Mar 42(AR); a Letter from Russia programme suggested, 14 Mar 42(AR); Irina Ratushinskaya interviewed, 14 Mar43(AR); the show-trial of Bukharin in 1938, 14 Mar 43(AR); recording 'feature segments' in the US, 4 Apr 14(A); the nuisance of personal stereos, 11 Apr 22(L); Timpson- Redhead and other pairs of clones, 11 Apr 46(AR); Radio 3 and its post of Controller, 9 May 47(AR); Mr Gorbachev in Romania, 13 Jun 44(AR); the election fare and phone-ins on Radio 4, 13 Jun 44(AR); see also BBC

Raeburn, Michael, (ed.) Sacheverell Sitwell's England, 17 Jan 28(R) Railways: a rail strike in France, 3 Jan 9(A); 'no change even for telephones', 24 Jan 7(D); the Ribblebead viaduct, 31 Jan 25, 21 Feb 27(L); insensitive modernisation destroying the charac- ter and good design of London's Underground stations, 12 Jun 18(A)

RamBrildinain, , R24an oniTh33e(Rilaking of the Black Working Class in Rape: agitation for heavier sentences, 14 Feb 8, 21 Feb 8(AV); a suggestion ess(tiovn)that only women judges should hear rape cases, 21 F Rare Ben, 14 Feb 43(LL)

Rat, The, Gunther Grass, 27 Jun 37(R) Rates:CS ) proposed replacement by a community charge, 27 Jan 25( Ratushinskaya, Irina: interviewed, 14 Mar 42(AR) Ravilious, Eric: exhibition, 28 Feb 38(AR)

Raymond Erirh: Architect, Lucy Archer, 28 Mar 29(R) REAGAN, PRESIDENT RONALD

his luck in the past, 3 Jan 10(A); still time for him to mend his fences with the American public, 3 Jan 10(A); no new Irangate evidence emerging to damage him, 17 Jan 13(A); his role in The Santa Fe Trail, 24 Jan 21(L); his changed account of Wingate, 28 Feb 11(A); chief of staff Donald Regan the main offender in the Trangate affair, 28 Feb 11(A), and resigns, 7 Mar 4(PW), 14 Mar 9(A); criticised in the Tower report, 7 Mar 4(PW); accepts responsibility for Irangate, 14 Mar 4(PW); Howard Baker appointed Chief of Staff, 7 Mar 4(PW), 14 Mar 11(A); has failed in his attempt to dominate and by-pass Congress, 14 Mar 9(A); forced to part with his closest advisers, 14 Mar 9(A); his meeting with Neil Kinnock, 4 Apr 4(PW), 5(LA), 7(D), 13, 23(A); his responsibility for Irangate, 23 May 7(D); see also UNITED STATES Reagan changes his story 28 Feb 11(A) Reagan out of control, 3 Jan 10(A) Reagan pulls back, 17 Jan 13(A) Reasons why more nurses and doctors mean poorer health care, The, 30 May 8(AV) Rebecca West: A Life, Victoria Glendinning, 18 Apr 34(R) Recantation, 23 May 65(A) Red Cross: the International Red Cross taken over by anti- Western delegates, 7 Feb 14(A) Reddaway, John, Burdened with Cyprus: The British Connec- tion, 7 Feb 28(R) Red Dean, The, Robert Hughes, 6 Jun 40(R) Red hot in Cairo, 11 Apr 12.(A) Red Prussian, The: The Life and Legend of Karl Marx, Leopold Schwarzschild, 10 Jan 22(R) Refuge from the Yorkshire Brezhnev and his Manchurian henchman, A, 6 Jun 8(AV) Regime that kills Ethiopians, The, 7 Feb 13(A) Rego, Paula: exhibition, 21 Mar 39(AR) Regrets Only, Sally Quinn, 16 May 28(R)

Reid, Jimmy: on wip rn Scots vote Labour, 20 Jun 14(A) Reincarnated Sheriff of Nottingham awaits the return of Robin (AV)the Radio Times, 21 Feb 19(A) ReHithoodLo, Thrde:, hilsOlet an letters in

25 Apr 30(R), 9 May 38(LL);

omn ki 1 e ss a, n2d1Feb al s9t(eAde s Rfleeiliteodni:nms a history. of religious ideas, 25 Apr 32(R) Remembering the ram, 24 Jan 33(LL)

Rendell, Ruth, Talking to Strangers, 23 May 49(R)

Reporting to the DPPs pending tray does no justice at Guinness,

into Guinness, 10 Jan 4(PW), 19(CS 17 Jan

R E II:, toe Jan ns .n,11 19(CS) y) ETC

6(PC), 24 Jan 4(PW), 5(LA), 6(PC), 9(A), 31 Jan 4( ; the Layfield report recommends building the Sizewell B reactor, 31 Jan 4(P , 5(LA), 7 Feb 26,14 Feb 36(L); the Neill report on Lloyd's o London, 31 Jan 23(CS); the Tower report on the US arms deal with Iran, 28 Feb 11(A), 7 Mar 4(PW), 11(A); Lloyd's of London's inquiry into Sir Peter Green's conduct, 28 Feb 25, 11 Apr 19(CS); the Franks report on the Falklands

invasion, 4 Apr 11(A); two reports compared - those on the Amritsar massacre in 1919 and the 1984 massacre of Sikhs after the assassination of Mrs Gandhi, 18 Apr 14(A); the Department of Education's report on Brent's schools, 2 May 8(AV) Requiem for rugby men, 4 Apr 19(A) Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui, The (Queen's), 18 Apr 39(AR) RESTAURANTS

restaurants assessed: Amsterdam's restaurants, 31 Jan 48e); La Bastide, 7 Feb 42(A); Gorky Park, 21 Feb 43(A); TheBlue Elephant, 7 Mar 50(A); Orso, 4 Apr 49(A); London couscous houses, 18 Apr 45(A); Harvey's, 2 May 45(A); New York restaurants, 16 May .45(A); Monsieur Thompson's, 30 May 52(A); favourite foreign restaurants, 20 Jun 33(A)

Retaliation in the Gulf, 30 May 17(A) Reviewers criticised, 11 Apr 22, 9 May 27(L) Rhododendrons, 25 Apr 36(A) Rhopalic verses, 4 Apr 52( CO) Ribblehead viaduct, the, 31 Jan 25, 21 Feb 27(L) Richard II (Barbican), 23 May 62(AR) Richard Cobden: A Victorian Outsider, Wendy Hinde, 2 May 34(R) Richardson, Joanna, Judith Gautier, 7 Mar 34(R) Richmal Crompton: The Woman Behind William, Mary Cado- gan, 10 Jan 26(R) Ricks, Christopher, (ed.) The New Oxford Book of Victorian Verse, 27 Jun 40(R) Right behind Harvey, 14 Mar 14(A) Right school, The, 30 May 5(LA) Rioting and Luton, 7 Mar 19(A) Robbed in Paris . . ., 21 Mar 17(A) Robbery: in Paris, 21 Mar 17(A), and in Venice, 21 Mar I8(A) Roberts, Philip, The Royal Court Theatre 1964-1972, 31 hill, 29(R) Roberts, W., J. T. Boulton and E. Mansfield, (ed.) The Letters of D. H. Lawrence: Vol. IV, 1921-1924, 23 May 51(R) Rock against the Wall, 20 Jun 10(A)

Rodchenko, Alexander: and constructivism, 3 Jan 24(R) Rodchenko: The Complete Works, Selim 0. Khan- Magomedov,3 Jan 24(R. Rodker, John: not a 'specialist in pornography', 28 Mar 27(L) Rogers, Pat, (ed.) The Oxford Illustrated History of English Literature, 16 May 33(R) Rolls (CS)-Royce: its share flotation, 2 May 18, 9 May 25, 23 May 34

Rolph, C. H. Further Particulars: Consequences of an Edwar- d= Boyhood, 24 Jan 32(R)

Roman Catholic Church, the: a dispute over the future of a North London RC comprehensive school, 3 Jan 21(L), 13 Jun 11(A); the spread of Aids among priests in the US, 14 Feb 16(A); the new Mass, 28 Mar 43(A); Catholics in Czechoslo- vakia, 18 Apr 10(A); its leftist interference in education, 13 Jun 11(A); the Pope visits Poland, 20 Jun 4(PW), 9(A)

Romero, Patricia W., E. Sylvia Pankhurst: Portrait of a Radical; 21 Mar 31(R) Roosevelt's Children: Tomorrow's World Leaders and Their World, Edward Mortimer, 30 May 25(R) Ropy voting tactics, 16 May 12(A) Rosa Luxemburg: A Life, Elzbreta Ettinger, 9 May 37(R) Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (Piccadilly), 27 Jun 46(AR) Rosenkavalier, Der (Covent Garden), 31 Jan 33(AR) Rosebery, Lord: his premiership, 9 May 36(R) Roth, Philip, The Counterlife, 21 Mar 34(R) Rothko, Mark: exhibition, 27 Jun 42(AR) Rothschild family, the: and the Final Solution, 21 Feb 27, 28 Feb(L) Rowell, Margit, (ed.) Joan Mira: Selected Writings and Inter- views, 2 May 32(R) Rowing: the Boat Race, 25 Apr 59(C0) Rowland, Roland ('Tiny'): a biography, 2 May 28(R), 9 May 27(L) Rowse, A. L., The Poet Auden: A Personal Memoir, 4 Apr 35(R)

Royal Academy summer exhibition, the, 20 Jun 43(AR) RoyalR) Court Theatre 1964-1972, The, Philip Roberts, 31 Jan 29 Roya(l Family and the monarchy, the: the monarch's head on postage stamps, 10 Jan 7(D); impertinent speculations about the Royal Family, 17 Jan 5(N); the Royal Family's interest in photography, 1842-1910, 4 Apr 40(AR); a biography of Queen Victoria, 25 Apr 29(R); the royal household and officers of state in Scotland, 25 Apr 47(A), 13 Jun 27(L)

Royal protection, 17 Jan 5(N) Rugby football: ugly scenes in the Wales v, England match, 14 Mar 7(D); Donald Trelford's requiem for rugby friends, 4 Apr 19(A) Rushdie, Salman: a verdict on Nicaragua, 7 Feb 27(R) Rushdie, Salman, The Jaguar Smile: A Nicaraguan Journey, 7 Feb 27(R) Rushton, William, 18 Apr 8(AV) Ruskin, John: correspondence with Charles Eliot Norton, 16 May 29(R) Ruskin College, Oxford: the case of David Selbourne, '7 Mar 19(A), 33(Ft); the college as a 'socialist seminary', 7 Max 33(R), 21 Mar 24(L) Russell, Conrad: correspondence with Diana Cooper, 23 May 41(A), 30 May 24(R); his letters 1897-1947, 30 May 24(R) RUSSIA

Dr Andrei Sakharov released from internal exile, 3 Jan 12(A); the freer climate encouraged by Gorbachev not universally supported, 3 Jan 12(A); Rodchenko and coostructivism, 3 Jan 24(R); the Afghanistan government's Russian-backed amnes- ty proposals, 24 Jan 4(PW), 11(A); Soviet youth not suppor- tive of the Afghan war, 24 Jan 12(A); Graham Greene at the International Peace Forum, 21 Feb 4(PW), 5(N), 28 Feb 28(L); a tentative experiment in democracy - a contested election, 21 Feb 7(0); Mr Gorbachev's further reforms meet

considerable opposition, 21 Feb 13(A); the release of political prisoners badly managed, 21 Feb 13(A); the show-trial of Bukharin in 1938, 14 Mar 43(AR); Mrs Thatcher's visit, 28 Mar 8(AV), 4 Apr 4(PW), 6(PC), 11 Apr 6(PC); Gorbachev's reforms are only changes and Improvements in the existing authoritarian system to make it more palatable, 28 Mar 9(A); Tsarist Russian bonds to be paid off, 28 Mar 24(CS); a released Russian dissident committed to a British mental hospital, 4 Apr 18(A); Tiflis now Tbilisi, 11 Apr 7(D); US-Russian arms control negotiations continue, 18 Apr 5(LA), 25 Apr 4(PW); judgments on Russia by Graham Greene and Christopher Booker, 18 Apr 8(AV); a family history, 23 May 50(R); a young West German lands a light airplane in RedSquare, 6 Jun 25(A); a shake-up of the armed forces, 6 Jun 25(A); Russian pressures on the Jaruzelski regime in Poland, 13 Jun 14(A) Russian Album, The, Michael Ignatieff, 23 May 50(R) Rust undermines the Red Army, 6 Jun 25(R) Ruth, Jeremy Cooper, 3 Jan 26(R) Rutherford, Edward, Sarum, 13 Jun 41(R)

S

Sacheverell Sinvell's England, (ed.) Michael Raebum, 17 Jan

28(R • Sacrifice, The (film), 17 Jan 31(AR)

St George's Day: a notable speech by Duff Cooper, 25 Apr 6(D) Salaman, Michael: exhibition, 4 Apr 43(AR) Sale rooms: see Auction sales Salisbury and its life, 13 Jun 41(R) Sam Patch: A Ballad of a Jumping Man, William Getz, 6 Jun 39(R) Samuels, Edward, Bernard Berenson: The Making of a Legend, 13 Jun 42(R) Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Selected Letters, (ed.) H. J. Jackson, 18 Apr 31(R) Sandelson, Neville: and the Cambridge election campaign, 13 Jun 28(L) Sandino, Augusto: his life and true character, 28 Feb 12(A) Sarum, Edward Rutherford, 13 Jun 41(R) Sassoon, Siegfried, 14 Feb 47(AR) Saudi Arabia: life as seen by an expatriate wife, 24 Jan 23(A); the condition of women, 24 Jan 23(A); King Fand dines in Guildhall, 11 Apr 19(CS) Savagery of Sandino, The, 28 Feb 12(A) Savimbr, Jonas: a biopaphy, 21 Mar 35(R)

Sayers, Dorothy L., 4 Apr 7(D)

Scannell, Vernon, (ed.) Sporting Literature: An Anthology, 11 Apr 39(R) School for Wives (Lyttelton), 7 Feb 38(AR) Schwarzschild, Leopold, The Red Prussian: The Life and Legend of Karl Marx, 10 Jan 22(R) Sciascia, Leonardo, The Moro Affair and the Mystery of Majorana, 14 Mar 33(R)

Science: early Chinese inventions, 3 Jan 23(R)• is research money for research tightly contra led, 18 Apr 12(A); why Apr 2-50): in the US adequately financed?, 28 Mar 15(A), 4 A

Britain is right to oppose increased EEC expenditure on research and development in technology , 18 Apr 13(A) Science dons protest too much, 28 Mar 15(A) Setrruom Labour holds a majority of parliamentary seats, but no power or patronage, 17 Jan 14(A);iabour's proposals for its Scottish conference, 17 Jan 14(A); art exhibitions in Edinburgh, 25 Apr 35(AR); Scottish special, 25 Apr 41-55(A) Lord Cock- burn's letters, 25 Apr 41(A); the continued decline in the Conservative vote, 25 Apr 45(A); the royal household and officers of state, 25 Apr 47(A.), 13 Jun 27(L); the financial sector, 25 Apr 52(A); the practice of Common Ridings, 6 Jun 7(D); Scottish socialism and why Scots vote for Labour, 20 Jun 14(A); the question of devolution revived, 27 Jun 5(LA); life in Strathnaver, Sutherland, 27 Jun 7(D); the 19th-century clearances, 27 Jun 7(D); the perverse electors of Caithness and Sutherland, 27 Jun 7(D); Nairn, 27 Jun 39(R) Scott, Margaret, and Vincent O'Sullivan, The Collected Letters of Katherine Mansfield, 28 Feb 31(R) Scott, Rupert, Florence Explored, 18 Apr 34(R) Scottish Labour begs for scraps, 17 Jan 14(A) Scottish special, 25 Apr 41-55(A) Sculpture: exhibitions, 18 Apr 36(AR); 'FSWA3D's sculpture on site, 23 May 56(AR) Seals: predators on cod, 2 May 13(A) Seasonal Tribal Feasts, Stuart Evans, 28 Feb 35(R) Season of Goodwill, 3 Jan 28(LL) Second battle of Covent Garden, The, 27 Jun 13(A)

Sec2ret7 of a popular Budget, The - collect more tax, 14 Mar (CS)

Secret People, The, 31 Jan 32(LL) Secret service, the: see Szcoarry

SECURITY, SPYLNO AND ImmuimEric-E information about the Zircon spy satellite revealed in the New Statesman, 31 Jan 4(PW), 7(D), 8(AV); the police raid the New Statesman and the BBC's Glasgow office, 7 Feb 4(PW), 5(N), 6(PC), 14 Feb 43(LL); the Attorney-General and the o ration of the Official Secrets Act, 7 Feb 6(PC); British Goverment's appeal against the Peter Wright judgment dismissed, 21 Mar 4(PW); the attempts of a section of MI5 to undermine the Wilson government, 21 Mar 6(D), 28 Mar

6(PC), 2 May 5(LA), 16 May 17(A); hunting for 'moles', 21 Mar 30(R); were it Roger Hollis and Graham Mitchell moles?, 21 Mar 30(R), 4 Apr 25, 2 May 19, 23 May 23(L); Igor Gouzenko and an interview, 21 Mar 30(R), 2 May 19(L); extracts from Peter Wright's book on MI5 published in the Independent, 2 May 5(LA); Chapman Pincher's spy revela- tions, 2 May 15(A); the Profumo case and Stephen Ward, 9 May 48(A), 30 May 26(R); MI5's watch on Mrs Simpson, 16 May 16(A); MI5's good work in the past, 16 May 16(A); need for a Freedom of Information Act and a revision of the Official Secrets Act, 16 May 17(A) Seebohm, Caroline, The Last Romantics, 23 May 50(R) Selbourne, David, Left Behind: Journeys into British Politics, 7 Mar 33(R) Selected Letters, Ferruccio Busoni (ed. and trans. Antony Beaumont), 30 May 31(R) Selected Poems of Marina Tsvetayeva, (trans.) Elaine Feinstein, 7 Mar 39(R) Self-pity expressed in books, 6 Jun Selkirk Strip, The, Ferdinand Mount, 40(9.) Selling the unsaleable, 21 Mar 12(A) Senseless censors, 21 Mar 12(A) Serbs never give in, 9 May 12(A) Serious Money (Royal Court), 11 Apr 47(AR) Seven thousand Syrians, 25 Apr 10(A) Sewer rats, 3 Jan 16(A) Sewers: a tour of London's sewers, 3 Jan 16(A) SEX Sr Ralph Halpern involved with a topless teenage model, 31

Jan 7(13); impotence in Avon and Somerset, 7 Feb 40(st ;

Cynthia Payne and her 'house of Cyn', 14 Feb 4(PW), 7 , 49(A), 21 Mar 5(N); condoms, 14 Feb 50(A), 21 Feb 27(L 8 Apr M(A), 2 May 20, 9 May 28, 16 May 22(L); Aids virtually no threat to ordinary heterosexuals, 7 Mar 8(AV); an Athenian brothel, 7 Mar 46(A); Christians now defensive about sexual morality, 4 Apr 27(A); the armed forces' measures against Aids, 18 Apr 20(A); 9 May 28(L); a sex therapist on breakfast TV, 18 Apr 41(AR); sexual abuse of children, 2 May 7(D), 16 May 220.4; a Club 18-30 holiday, 13 Jun 29(A) Sex and sin, 4 Apr 27(A) Sheep, a neighbour's, 2 Max 35(LL) She's Gotta Have It (film), 21 Mar 41(AR) Shephard, Rupert: exhibition, 28 Feb 38(AR) Ships: a cross-Channel ferry capsizes with great loss of life, 14

Mar 4(PW), 7(D), 13(A); sunken ships as symbolising eras, 14 Mar 7(D) a reporter among the bereaved in Zeebrugge, 14

Mar 1 (A); travel on transatlantic liners, 4 Apr 47(A) Shirley slips back, 30 May 11(A) Shops: a wine shop unwilling to deliver, 17 Jan 7(D) Should writers think?, 27 Jun 18(A) Shultz, George: a tiger tattoo, 10 Jan 19(CS) Sicily: two books on Sicily and Sicilians, 7 Mar 35(R) Sieff, Marcus: his autobiography Don't Ask the Price, 23 May 47(R) Siegfried Sassoon (Apollo), 14 Feb 47(AR) Silbersee (Camden Festival), 11 Apr 46(AR) Simeon Stylites, Saint, 4 Apr 31(A), 16 May 22(L) Simeti, Mary Taylor, On Persephone's Island, 7 Mar 35(R) Simmons, James, Poems 1956-1986, 9 May 35(R) Simon Boccanegra (Coliseum), 25 Apr 36(AR) Simplicity of not getting more than you bargained for, The, 23 May 6(PC

Simpson, Co)

hn, The Partnership: The Secret Association of Bernard Berenson and Joseph Duveen, 11 Apr 41(R)

Sinden, Donald, (ed.) The Everyman Book of Theatrical Anecdotes, 9 May 40(R)

Single European Act, the, 25 Apr 17(A) Sinking money in the Tunnel, 21 Feb 15(A) Sisson, C. H., Christopher Homm, 7 Feb 33(LL) `Sissy Boy Syndrome' and the Development of Homosexuality, The, Richard Green, 7 Feb 31(R) Sitwell, Sacheverell: an anthology of his writings on England, 17 Jan 28(R) Six Characters in Search of an Author (Olivier), 4 Apr 43(AR) Sizewell B reactor recommended, the, 31 Jan 4(PW), 5(LA), 7 Feb 26(L) Skiing and social life in Gstaad, 14 Mar 44, 21 Mar 42(A) Skywriting by Word of Mouth, John Lennon, 10 Jan 24(R) Slanging the spouse, 28 Feb 23(A) Slow-motion Cuba and the dangers that follow it, A, 7 Mar 6(PC) Small Family Business, A, (Olivier), 13 Jun 46(AR) Smith, Adam: quoted, 11 Apr 5(N) Smith, S., and F. Burkhardt, (ed.) The Correspondence of Charles Darwin: Vol. II, 1837-1843, 11 Apr 40(R) Smith, Sydney: on the US, 27 Jun 41(1.L) Smoking: the smoking 'scare', 7 Mar $(AV) Soane, Sir John: and the Dulwich art gallery, 21 Feb 39(AR) Social Democratic Party, the: wins Greenwich by-election, 7 Mar 4(PW); see also ALLIANCE Social history of the English, a, 28 Mar 31(R) Social security and welfare: London's poor and homeless, 10 Jan

); special severe weather payments, 17 Jan 5(N); the DHSS and old people in residential homes, 31 Jan 9(A); Mrs Thatcher's Britain depends on a strong Welfare State, 14 Mar 7(D); changes in entitlement to maternity and death grants, 18 Apr 5(N) SoctEre LIFE Taki's new year resolutions for Mr Justice Otton, Andreas Papandreou, Amy Carter, Yossi Sarid, Nancy Reagan and Princess Michael, 23 Jan 33(A); Carolina Herrera and Nell's, 10 Jan 32(A); Raymundo de Larrain, 17 Jan 33(A); Giovanni Agnelli, 14 Feb 49(A); John Zographos, 7 Mar 46(A); the skiing and social life in Gstaad, 14 liar 44, 21 Mar 42(A)' the Warhol memorial service, 11 Apr 49(A); Tom Corbally's career, 9 May 48(A); uncongenial-fellow-guests at parties, 30 May 48(A); Jimmy Carter buttonholed by Taki, 13 Jun 50(A); Sir James Goldsmith's party at Cliveden, 20 Jun 48(A), 27 Jun 26(L); the Princess of Wales and Philip Dunne, 27 Jun 49(A) Soft and hard, 7 Mar 40(LL) Solidarity with the Pope, 20 Jun 9(A) Solitude, 13 Jun 42(P) Some chance for a Chancellor, 14 Feb 18(A) Some conditions for renewal of the tenancy at No II, 9 May 21(E) Something odd in China, 10 Jan 13(A) Some useful tips for those intending to visit Moscow, 28 Mar 8(AV) Song, 28 Feb 35(P) Song of the Married Woman, 3 Jan 27(P)

Sotrrti AFRICA

the Afrikaners' stand against the world, 17 Jan 9(A), 24 Jan 21(L); their allies, 17 Jan 9(A); Afrikaner wit, 17 Jan 9(A); holiday advice on South Africa, 31 Jan 42(A); Chief Buthetezi on the Zulus and their objectives, 28 Feb 28(L); Dr Denis Worrall's election camp, against the government as an independent, 14 Mar 4(P , 12(A); Time to free Mandela, 2 MF, 12(A); Nelson Mande a's record, 2 May 12(A), 16 May 22 ); the suicide of cabinet minister John Wiley, 18 Apr 11 A); a false parallel drawn between South Africa and Northern Ireland, 18 Apr 15(A)

Spain: recommended Spanish wines, 10 Jan 34(A); death of Gerald Brenan, 31 Jan 20(A); advice on holidaying in Spain, 31 Jan 46(A); a wave of strikes and increased union agitation, 16 May 15(A); a congress of artists and intellectuals in Valencia, 27 Jun 12(A) Sparg, Marion, 23 May 23(L) Spark, Muriel: her short stories, 18 Apr 29(R) Spark, Ronald: on leader-writing, 6 Jun 19(A)

Special Relationship, The, (ed.) William Lewis and Hedley Bull, 31 Jan 27(R) 'SPECTATOR', THE Arsenal supporters and the Spectator, 17 Jan 22(L); the Shiva Naipaul memorial fund and annual award, 24 Jan 23, 23 May 22(X); letters from readers, 24 Jan 46(A); what would a police raid on the Spectator unearth?, 31 Jan 7(D); a new section in the Spectator, 7 Mar 7(D); the film critic leaves, 7 Mar 7(D); telephone breakdowns, 21 Mar 5, 16 May 5(X); death of David Watt, 4 Apr 5(N), 7(D), 18 Apr 23(L); its latest circulation figures, 2 Mafy (X); a Highly Commended award, 2 May 7(D), 9 May 28 ); the deputy editor leaves, 2 May 7(D); the SpectatorlSun Telegraph Young Writer awards, 9 May 29(A); its colour reproductions, 13 Jun 27, 20 Jun 22(L); no Jeffrey Bernard article, 13 Jun 28(1.); a tennis victory over the Sunday Telegraph, 20 Jun 6(D), 27 Jun 49(A) Spectator- Cambridge poll, The, 30 May 11(A) Spectator polls: on Bntain's decline and propects, 14 Feb (A); on attitudes to voting, 2 May 23(A); on voting intentions in Cambridge, 9 May 9, 30 May 11, 6 Jun 11(A) Spectator twin-town treasure hunt, The: announced, 31 Jan 7(D); the clues, 7 Feb 25, 14 Feb 35, 21 Feb 26, 28 Feb 27, 7 Mar 32, 14 Mar 29,21 Mar 26, 28 Mar 25(X); the answers and winners, 16 May 18(A)

Speeches; no longer printed in full, 11 Apr 7(D)

Spell, The, Hermann 13roch, 20 Jun 30(R) Sperber, A.M., Murrow: His Life and Times, 28 Feb 34(R) SPlitting the Church, 21 Feb 5(LA) Spookhouse (Hampstead), 2 May 38(AR)

Sport: a sporting event described by a writer of an earlier time, 7 Mar 52(C0); an anthology of sporting literature, 11 Apr 39(R); see also individual sports

Sporting Literature: An Anthology, (ed.) Vernon Scannell, 11 Apr 39(R) Sport of Nature, A, Nadine Gordimer, 4 Apr 37(R) Spy magazine, 25 Apr 39(A)

Stalker, John: his Northern Ireland investigation and his suspension, 6 Jun 36(R)

Stalker: The Search for the Truth, Peter Taylor, 6 Jun 36(R) Standard, the London Evening: the battle with the London Daily News, 28 Feb 7(D), 7 Mar 22(A); its recent improve-

ment, 20 Jun 16(A)

Stately dame in flux, A, 24 Jun 20(A)

Steel, Mrs: her election diary, 6 Jun 7(D)

Stella Benson, Joy Grant, 9 May 36(R) Stephen Tennant, 14 Mar 22(A) Sterile debate, The, 21 Mar 5(LA) Sterilisation of a 17-year-old girl authorised, 21 Mar 5(I.A) Stern, Frances, A Concordance to Proust, 11 Apr 28(R) Still waiting for the return of the private shareholder, 23 May

25(A)

Stir of Liberation, The, Joseph Frank, 13 Jun 37(R) Stirring _the torpid voter, 30 May 16(A) STOCK EXCHANGE AND THE CITY, THE BTR's £1,200 million bid for Pilkington, 3 Jan 19(CS), the bid fails, 24 Jan 9(A); the Monopoly Commission's criteria, 3 Jan 19(CS); a licensed dealer in securities in trouble, 3 Jan 19(CS); a forecast for 1987 on takeovers and mergers, 3 Jan 19(CS); the past year's scandals, 3 Jun 20(E); an ICI merger recalled, 10 Jan 19(CS); the impact of high income tax rates on the City, 10 Jan 19(CS); the Government unjustifiably attacked over City scandals, 17 Jan 6(PC); regulation or self-regulation?, 17 6(PC); Jan 6 pq; the Government's attitude to City scandals, 24 Jan 5(LA ; the Monopolies Commission and dealing with takeov- er bi , 24 Jan 9(A); the Neill report on Lloyd's of London, 31 Jan 23(CS); a distinction drawn over fraud, 31 Jan 23 CS); the British Airways share flotation, 7 Feb 23, 14 Feb 30(CS); the International Tin Council's collapse, 7 Feb 23(CS); the e banks challenge the Securities and Investment Board's requirement over life assurance and unit trusts, 7 Feb 23 Mar, 28 Mar 24(CS); the merger epidemic on its way out?, 7 Feb 23(CS); Financial special, 14 Feb 22-33, 23 May 25-39(A) the City's function as important as that of manufacturing industry, 14 Feb 23(A); trading in commodities, 14 Feb 25(A); changes consequent upon the growth and internationalisation of the City, 14 Feb 27(A); the takeover game, 14 Feb 30(CS); a drawback of mutual societies, 14 Feb 30(CS); Lloyd's of London's inquiry into the conduct of Sir Peter Green, 28 Feb 25(CS); the 'Three Is' for staff guidance, 28 Feb 25(CS); the Aids campaign triggers off a selective share boom, 7 Mar 8(AV), 25(CS); a warning to the pension funds, 7 Mar 25(CS); private investors still penalised, 14 Mar 27(CS); a firm that exploits clients through the futures markets, 28 Mar 24(CS); Russian bonds to be paid off, 28 Mar 24(CS); the decay of a US banking firm, 28-Mar 24(CS); the dangers of a financial services war with Japan, 4 Apr 24, 11 Apr 19(CS); British participation in the Tokyo stock exchange, 4 Apr 24(CS); the City's opposition to a trade war with Japan, 11 Apr 19(CS); a shakeout in the market, 11 Apr 19(10W.. ; King Fand dines in Guildhall, 11 Apr 19(CS); the Church of England - and its churches - considered as a suitable takeover target, 18 Apr 22(CSI: attempted restraints on the issue of new shares, 2 May 18 CS , 9 May 25(CS), 30 May 21, 6 Jun 34, 20 Jun 22(L); the Rolls- oyce share flotation, 2 May 18, 9 May 25, 23 May 34(CS); stagging of the privatisation issues, 9 May 25(CS); 'unauthorised' trading, 914ay 25(CS); how to encourage the private shareholder, 23 May 25(A); brokers now fending off inconvenient new customers, 23 May 27(A), 33(CS); share shops and 'over the counter' dealers, 23 May 27(A), 33(CS brokers overwhelmed by paperwork, 23 May 29(A), 34 CS ; unpredictable market reaction to elections, 23 May 34(CS); the City and the election, 30 May 19, 13 Jun 25(CS); an unsuccessful Business Expansion Scheme fund, 30 May 19(CS); a 'yuppified' bar, 30 May 191CS); Kenneth Whitaker, of Gerrard and National, 13 Jun 25 CS) the election's effect on share prices, 13 Jun 25(CS); e biggest swindlers go scot-free, 27 Jun 25(CS); Peter Palumbo's Mansion House project turned down, 27 Jun 25(CS); see also Works, FINANCIAL and Guinness

Stockton, Lord (Harold Macmillan): recollections of him, 3 Jan 7(D); assessments by Enoch Powell, 10 Jan 15(A), and Julian Amery, 10 Jan 16(A)

Stone, Oliver: his film Platoon, 18 Apr 41(A) Stone Guest, The, (Coliseum), 9 May 44(AR) Stories of Muriel Spark, The, 18 Apr 29(11.) Stray, A. N. Wilson, 6 Jun 39(R) Stretching the imagination, 30 May 32(LL)

Strikes: a French rail strike, 3 Jan 9(A) Strong, Sir Roy; resigns as director of the Victoria and Albert Museum, 7 Feb 16(A)

Struggles for Poland, The, Neal AscnersOn, 20 Jun 23(R) Students: Chinese students demonstrate for democracy and freedom, 10 Jan 13(A)

Suez: the reason for Britain's secret preparations to attack Israel, 17 Jan 11(A)

Suez: the secret plan, 17 Jan 11(A) Sugar and Other Stories, A. S. Byatt, 11 Apr 35(R)

Suicide by the old, 9 May 28(L)

Summers, Anthony, and Stephen Dorril, Honeytrap, 30 May 26(R) Summons to Memphis, A, Peter Taylor, 16 May 34(R) Sun and sex, 13 Jun 29(A) Sunday Times, the: Peter Jenkins's contract, 7 May 18(A), 21 Mar 25(L); its resurgence, 21 Mar 21(A) Superstitions: about nuclear power and Britain as a secretive society, 14 Feb 21(A) Surplus acres, 14 Feb 5(N)

Surrogacy: the legal and moral issues, 21 Mar 5(LA); the 'Baby

M' surrogate motherhood case in the US, 11 Apr 9(A) Surtees, Virginia, Jane Welsh Carlyle, 31 Jan 31(R) Sutherland, L, S. and L. G. Mitchell, (ed.) The History of the University of Oxford: Volume 5, The Eighteenth Century, 28

Mar 32(R)

Swan Lake (ballet), 21 Mar 37(AR) Swimming: a Muslim father objects to his daughter learning to swim, 3 Jan 14(A), 17 Jan 2J(L)

Switzerland: Swissair praised, 14 Mar 44(A); skiing and society life in Gstaad, 14 Mar 44, 21 Mar 42(A); Hemingway on Switzerland 4 Apr 26(L)

Szulc, Tad, Fidel Castro:. A Critical Portrait, 27 Jun 33(R)

T

Tactics of the polling booth, The, 2 May 23(A) Tailors: Savile Row's future in danger, 6 Jun 50(A)

Thine: quoted on the English, 13 Jun13(AV)

Take me to your leader writer, 6 Jun 19(A) Taking hold of tactics, 21 Feb 1 A Taking in the washing, 9 May 38(LL) Taking It All In, Pauline Kael, 4 Apr 33(R) Talking morals, 6 Jun 5(LA) Talking to Strangers, Ruth Rendell, 23 May 49(R) Tanner, Tony, Jane Austen, 17 Jan 27(R)

Tarkovksy, Audrey: a critical assessment, 10 Jan 28(AR) Tattoos: George Shultz's tiger tattoo, 10 Jan 19(CS) Tavener, John: his sacred music, 7 Mar 43(AR) Taxation: the Chancellor considering cutting the top rate of income tax, 10 Jan 19(CS); a warning to the pension funds, 7 Mar 25(CS); a reform of capital gains tax?, 14 Mar 27(CS); inconsistent tax treatment of actors and freelance journalists,

28 Mar 7(D); Please may I pay more tax?, 9 May 18(A); see

also BUDGET

Taxpayers' bone for Rover, 14 Feb 17(A)

Taylor, A. J. P. his wife's diary 1978-1985, 27 Jun 38(R)

Taylor, Eva Haraszti, A Life with Alan: The Diary of A. J. P. Taylor's Wife Eva, from 1978-1985, 27 Jun 38(R) Taylor, Peter, Stalker: The Search for the Truth, 6 Jun 36(R) Taylor, Peter, A Summons to Memphis, 16 May 34(R) Tea: a conversation with a tea stall 'proprietor, 10 Jan 14(A) Teachers: the teachers' quarrel with Kenneth Baker over pay and conditions, 25 Apr 5(LA); see also EDUCATION Teachaching Lloyd's of London to see itself as others see it, 31 Jan 10) Tebbit, Norman: a fabricated quotation in the Guardian, 17 Jan 18(A), 24 Jan 21(L) Telegraph Sunday Magazine, the, 21 Feb35(LL) Telephones: answering machines, 24 Jan 7(D); `no change given for telephones', 24 Jan 7(D); fed up with the telephone, 28 Feb 43(A); breakdowns at the Spectator and elsewhere, 21

Mar 5, 18 Apr 24(L), 16 May 5(X), 30 May 21, 6 Jun 34(L); British Telecom's sh.ortcomings, 27 Jun 26(L); a teacher of telephone language, 13 Jun 43(LL) TELEVISION

a convert to EastEnders, 3 Jan 32(AR); Murder at the vicarage, 3 Jan 32(AR); a film about Ronnie Biggs not to be shown, 10 Jan 7(D); Match of the Day Live a disappointment, 10 Jan 31(AR); some favourite programmes: Bergerac, 17 Jan 33(AR), and Cagney and Lacey, 17 Jan 33, 21 Mar 41(AR); World Darts and the play Blunt, 17 Jan 33(AR); darts on TV,

24 Jan 39(AR); weatherman Ian McCaskill, 24 Jan 39(AR); a BBC film about the Zircon spy satellite banned, 31 an 4, 7

Feb 4(PViO, 5(N); This is Your Life as presented by the BBC and now MV, 31 Jan 37(AR); Coxswain Derek Scott in This Is Your Life, 31 Jan 37(AR); Jeffrey Bernard in Arena, 31 Jan

37LAR); patronising quiz and game show presenters, 7 Feb

39 AR); some US TV programmes, 7 Feb 40(A); a security le in Rumpole of the Bailey, 14 Feb 43(LL); The Variety Club Awards, Surprise, Surprise, Mastermind and Fax, 14 Feb 48(AR); Northanger Abbey mishandled, 21 Feb 41(AR); Blue Peter and One Man and his Dog, 28 Feb 41(AR); a fire at the BBC Television Centre, 7 Mar 45(AR); The Aids Debate, 7 Mar 45(AR); a programme on the London Undergavund, 7 Mar 45(AR); Hank Wangford's An A to Z of C and W, 14 Mar 44(AR); Intimate Contact, 21 Mar 42(AR); Weekend World criticised, 28 Mar 7(D), 11 Apr 22(L); Thinking Aloud about death, 28 Mar 40(AR); South of Watford on the future of

Battersea Power Station, 28 Mar 40(AR); Alastair Burnet's

sore throat, 4 Apr 46(AR); L.4 Law, 4 Apr 46, 16 May 40(AR); A New Girl, 4 Apr 46(AR); Julian Cope in Late Night in Concert, 11 Apr 48(AR); football on TV, 11 Apr

48(AR); Lord Peter Wimsey re-created, 18 Apr 32(LL); the breakfast-time programmes, 18 Apr 40(AR); a sex therapist, 18 Apr 41(AR); news coverage at weekends criticised, 25 Apr

6(D); Beethoven's piano sonatas, 25 Apr 6(D); The Waugh Trilogy, 25 Apr 6(D), 38(AR); a hard-up couple interviewed on Good Morning, Brimin, 25 Apr 38(AR); Sutton Hoo, Call My Bluff, Van Tan Tethers and The Sky at Night, 2 May 40(AR); Network 7 - a show for the young, 9 May 48(AR); Weekend World on voter volatility, 16 May 40(AR); The Media Show on 'The New Man', 23 May 63(.AR); theparty leaders as family people, 23 May 63(AR); Election Brief and

the party election broadcasts, 30 May 46(AR); the coverage of

the election campaign, 6 Jun 49(AR); Neil Kinnock's Chariots of Fire election broadcast, 13 Jun 9(A); Porterhouse Blue, 13 Jun 49(AR); Dartmoor - The Threatened Wilderness, 13 Jun 49(AR); The Search for the Marcos Millions, 13 Jun 30(AR); Disappearing World on Basque shepherds, 20 Jun 47(AR); Paul Heiney in In at the Deep End, 20 Jun 47(AR); The Secret File on Citizen K and Spitting Image Election Special, 20 Jun 47(AR); The Birthday Party, Big Bang in the Book World and Postman Pat, 27 Jun 48(AR) Temple, Robert K. K., China: Land of Discovery, 3 Jan 23(R) Tenby: visits to Caldey Island, 21 Mar 6(D)

Tennant, Stephen: an obituary, 14 Mar 22(A)

Tennis: the Ecuadorian Zuleta, 31 Jan 39(A); the Spectator's victory over the Sunday Telegraph, 20 Jun 6(D), 27 Jun 49(A) Terrible dilemma for the Church of England at the present moment of time, A, 23 May 8(AV)

TERRORISM wrongful convictions alleged in the Birmingham and Guild- ford bomb trials, 10 Jan 5(LA), 17 Jan 22(L), 31 Jan 5(N), 14 Feb 5(LA), 7 Mar 7(D); a growing consensus in the US in favour of military action over hostages, 31 Jan 11(A); a history of hostage-taking and negotiations in Lebanon, 7 Feb 9(A); the Home Office memorandum on the Guildford bomb case, 14 Feb 5(LA); Aldo Moro's capture and death at the hands of the Red Brigades, 14 Mar 33(R); an IRA terrorist's funeral, 18 Apr 15(A) Terry, Quinlan: a biography, 28 Mar 29(R), 11 Apr 22(L) Thames, the: killer turtles found, 21 Feb 22(A)

Thank you and goodbye, 13 Jun 43(LL)

Thank-you letters, 6 Jun 53(CO) THATCHER, MRS MARGARET should run for the Oxford chancellorship, 10 Jan 5(N); what would Britain be like after three, and possibly four, Thatcher

governments?, 10 Jan 6(PC); reviews of hook supposedly by

Mrs Thatcher, 10 Jan 35(C0); the harassing of Denis Thatcher, 28 Feb 23(A); her Britain depends on a strong Welfare State, 14 Mar 7(D); considered ungenerous to the needy, 14 Mar 35(LL); visits Russia and talks with Mr Gorbachev, 28 Mar 8(AV), 4 Apr 4(PW), 6(PC), 11 Apr 6(PC); by fighting for British interests has reduced anti- Europeantim in Britain, 11 Apr 6(PC); and European defence, 18 Apr 5(LA); some priorities for a third term of office, 9 May 21(E); her timing of the general election, 16 May 8(PC); her authoritarian arrogance, 23 May 14(A); her personality attacked, 6 Jun 6(PC); election campaigning accompanied by the media, 6 Jun 9(A); her bossy style at press conferences, 6 Jun 21(A); the Western economic summit in Venice, 6 Jun 31(E); dismissal of John Biffen, 20 Jun 5(LA); 6(D); still against joining the European Monet System, 20

Jun 19(E); Trog's Thatcher drawing, 20 Jun 22ary (L); see also

CONSERVATIVE PARTY

Thatcher's City politics, 24 Jan 5(LA) That's Life (ffim), 6 Jun 49(AR) That's You, 27 Jun 40(P) Theatre, the: the Royal Court Theatre 1964-1972, 31 Jan 29(R); recent British musicals, 7 Mar 45(AR); out-of-work actors able to drawn unemployment pay, 28 Mar 7(D); a festschrift for Laurence Olivier, 18 Apr 30(R); theatrical anecdotes, 9 May 40(R); British shows in New York, 16 May 38(AR); see also individual play titles Theiner, George: and an article by Noam Chomsky in Index on Censorship, 21 Mar 21(A), 4 Apr 26(L) Thesiger, Wilfred, The Life of My Choice, 9 May 33(R) _ Third attempt to rid Britain of socialism, The, 10 Jan 6(PC) This Small Cloud: A Personal Memoir, Harry Daley, 28 Feb 32(R) This Story of Yours (Hampstead), 21 Feb 39(AR) Thomas, Charles, Celtic Britain, 11 Apr 42(R) Thomas, Evan, and Walter Isaacson, The Wise Men, 17 Jan 23(R Thomso) n, David, Nairn in Darkness and Light, 27 Jun 39(R) Thrashed for a bottle of stout, 7 Mar 12(A) Three game wardens, seven hunters and a cow, 18 Apr 8(AV) Three Sisters (Albery), 13 Jun 46(AR) Throwing the inkpots, 25 Apr 5(LA) Thurlow, Richard, Fascism in Britain: A History, 1918-1985, 21

Feb 28(R) Tilden, Philip: his life and work, 7 Feb 36(AR)

Time and Chance, James Callaghan, 18 Apr 27(R) Time for Dudley to act like an earl and belt up, 16 May 7(AV) Time for Peace, Peter Calvocoressi, 2 May 33(R). Time for the scourge of City cartels to take on the oligarchs, 2 May

18(CS)

Times, the: a comment on the Oxford drugs case, 3 Jan 28(LL);

its recent history and its Loss of quality and authority, 21 Mar 27(A), 28 Mar 26(L)

Time to free Mandela, 2 May 12(A) Time to return to the fundamentals of democracy, 7 Feb 8(AV)

Tin: the International Tin Council's collapse, 7 Feb 23(06.)

Tindall, Gillian, To the City, 4 Apr 36(R) Tin legs and curlews, 28 Mar 35(LL) Tiresias, The London Dialogues, 24 Jan 27(R) Titles: incorrectly used, 25 Apr 6, 2 May 7(D), 20(L), 9 May 28(y: L )will will now survive, 3 Jan 18(A) Tommies' johnnies, 18 Apr 20(A) Too young to remember, 23 May 19(A) Topical Tip, 20 Jun 31(R) Toranska, Teresa, Oni: Stalin's Polish Puppets (trans. Agnieszka

Kolakowska, intro. Harry Willetts), 11 Apr 27(R)

Tories' battle plans, The, 28 Feb 9(A) Tories' necessary clever man finds his natural habitat, The, 6 Jun

33(CS)

Tories on the rocks, 25 Apr 45(A) Tories pull ahead, The, 6 Jun 11(A) Tory advantage, The, 16 May 5(LA) Tosca (Coliseum), 14 Feb 45(AR), 11 Apr 7(D), 25 Apr 22, 9

May 28(L)

To the City, Gillian Tindall, 4 Apr 36(R) Touchline, 2 May 28(P) Tourist Guide, The (Almeida), 18 Apr 39(AR) Tower, The, 30 May 30(P)

Tower report on the arms deal with Iran, the, 28 Feb 11(A), 7 Mar 4(PW), 11(A), 16 May 13(A) Tonybee, Arnold: and the Christian faith, 11 Apr 34(R) Tonybee, Polly, 21 Feb 42(A) Trade: the threatened trade war with Japan, 4 Apr 24(CS), 11 Apr 18(A), 19(CS), 20(E),_25 Apr 21(E); Michael Howard's

visit to Japan, 11 Apr 4(P V0, 5(N); a businessman tries to sell

to Japan, 11 Apr 11(A); the City's opposition to a trade war with Japan, 11 Apr 19(CS) Trade unions: for all practical purposes the print unions are now beaten, 3 Jan 18(A); unions weakened and impoverished by left-led opposition to Murdoch, 31 Jan 22(A); the print unions accept defeat at Wapping, 14 Feb 4(PW); the threat to Neil Kinnock, 16 May 11(A); their over-powerful influence in the Labour Party and weakened position elsewhere, 16 May 11(A)

Trade war, 11 Apr 5(N) Trade war fever, 21 Feb 9(A) Traitors in the Commons, The, 16 May 16(A)

Tramp with skis, a, 20 Jun 48(A

TRAVEL

travel articles, 31 Jan 41.48(A); traveljournalists criticised, 31 Jan 41(A); letters of a traveller in Britain, 28 Max 34(R); transatlantic liners, 4 Apr 47(A); guides to Florence and Tuscany, 18 Apr 34(R); a freebie on Lanzarote, 25 Apr 39(A); Wilfred Thesiger's life, 9 May 33(R); see also Holidays

Travel Pages, 3 Jan 27(P) Travel special, 31 Jan 4148(A) Traviata, La (Glyndebourne), 6 Jun 46(AR) Treason of the hacks, The, 7 Mar 18(A) Treasure hunt, the Sperator twin-town: 31 Jan 7(D), 7 Feb 25,14

Feb 35, 21 Feb 26, 28 Feb 27, 7 Mar 32, 14 Mar29, 21 Mar 26, 28 Mar 25(X); the answers and winners, 16 May 18(A)

Tremain, Rose, The Garden of the Villa Mollini, 6 Jun 37(R) Trevelyan, Raleigh, The Golden Oriole: Childhood, Family and Friends in India, 6 Jun 37(R) Trials and tribulation of a Top Writer, 14 Mar 8(AV) Tribune: subventions from Lord Beaverbrook, 18 Apr 23(L)

Triolets, reproachful, 16 May 44(CO)

Trojans, The (WNO, Bristol), 25 Apr 36(AR) Troublesome People, Caroline Moorehead, 2 May 33(R) Troyat, Henri, Chekhov trans. Michael Heim), 11 Apr 31(R) Truest the most feigning, 20 Jun 32(LL) True undertaking, The, 17 Jan 29(LL) Trump's stump, 28 Mar 13(A)

Truro by-election, the: the campaign, 7 Mar 14(A); seat held by the Liberals, 21 Mar 4(PW) Tsvetayeva, Marina: selected poems, 7 Mar 39(R); a biography, 7 Mar 39(R) Tunnel, the Channel: see Channel Tunnel

Turner, J. M. W.: the opening of the Turner Gallery at the Tate, 4 Apr 7(D), 11 Apr 45(AR); books on, 11 Apr 33(R) Turner in His Time, Andrew Wilton, 11 Apr 33(R) Turner in she South: Rome, Naples, Florence, Cecilia Powell, 11 Apr 33(R)

Turtles: snapper and alligator turtles in the Thames, 21 Feb 22A)

Tusca(ny: a guide-book, 18 Apr 34(R) Twelfth Night (Warehouse), 24 Jan 38(AR) Twilight of the Ascendancy, Mark Bence-Jones, 24 Jan 28(R) Two Poems, 4 Apr 35(P)

Tycoon: The Life of James Goldsmith, Geoffrey Wansell, 23 May 47(R)

Tyler, Polly, and Prue Leith, Entertaining in Style, 3 Jan 35, 7 Feb 41(A), 21 Mar 25(L)

U

Unbalanced ticket, The, 20 Jun 5(LA) Undubbable seals, 2 May 13(A) Under Fire (film), 2 May 36(AR)

Underground, London's: insensitive modernisation of stations, 13 Jun 18(A)

Undertakers in conference, 30 May 18(A) Unions against Kinnock 16 May 11(A) United Ireland, United Kingdom, 31 Jan 18(A) UNITED STATES the public's attitude to President Reagan, 3 Jan 10(A), 17 Jan 13(A); guilty tycoons, 10 Jan 20(1,); two biographies of Eisenhower, 10 Jan 21(R); six recent American proconsuls: Harriman, Acheson, McCoy, Lovett, Bohlen and Kerman, 17 Jan 23(R); change overdue but resisted at the New Yorker, 24 Jan 4(PW), 20(A); Ed Koch, mayor of New York, 24 Jan 40(A); corrupt New York top officials, 24 Jan 40(A); a growing consensus for military action over hostages, 31 an 11(A); the 'special relationship' with Britain, 31 Jan 27(R); Wild Honey fails on Broadway', 31 Jan 35(AR); New Orleans as seen by a visitor, 31 Jan 44(A); the story of negotiations for the release of hostages in Lebanon, 7 Feb 9(A); some Tv programmes, 7 Feb 40(A); the spread of Aids among priests as well as the general public, 14 Feb 16(A); the trade deficit may encourage not greater competitiveness but protectionism, 21 Feb 9(A); a visit to New York State and Virginia, 21 Feb 35(LL); Aids now the topic in New York, 21 Feb 42 A); ); the Tower report on the arms deal with Iran, 28 Feb 11(A , 7 Mar 4(PW), 11(A), 16 May 13(A); the federal financial eficit to be cut, 28 Feb 26(E); a biography of Ed Murrow, 28 Feb 34(R); Congress's historic struggle for power against the President, 14 Mar 9(A); a parallel with Hanoverian England,

14 Mar 9(A); attacked by Noam Chomsky for its Newspeak

about the Arab-Israeli conflict, 21 Mar 12(A), 4 Apr ce 26(LI,3 television evangelists' wealth and influence, 28 Mar 11(A ; evangelist Jim Bakker's misdemeanours, 28 Mar 11(A), May 7(D); Donald Trump's ambitious building schemes in New York, 28 Mar 13(A); the decline of Lehman Brothers, 28 Mar 24(CS); the failure of Neil Kinnock's visit, 4 Apr 4(PW), 5(LA), 6(PC), 7(D), 13, 23(A); recording 'feature segments' for radio, 4 Apr 14(A); the threatened trade war with Japan, 4 Apr 24(CS), 11 Apr 18(A), 19(CS), 20(E), 9 May 11(A); the 'Baby M' surrogate motherhood case, 11 Apr 9(A); Treasury Secretary James Baker at the 'GS' meetings, 11 Apr 20(E); US-Russian arms control negotiations continue, 18 Apr 5(LA), 25 Apr 4(PW); a traveller saved by a knowledge of American history, 18 Apr 7(D); US universities not the goldmines British academics imagine, 18 Apr 12(A); plenty of money for research, but usually tightly controlled, 18 Apr 12(A); Gary Hart's presidential ambitions ruined by his womanising, 25 Apr 11(A), 9 May 4(PW), 7(D) 16 May

i

41(A); the debunking Spy magazine, 25 Apr 39(A); imposes a 100 per cent duty on some Japanese imports, 25 Apr 21(E); Kurt Waldheim barred, 2 May 5(N); the White House correspondents' dinner, 2 May 41(A); Mr Nakasone's visit, 9 May 11(A)' the economic rivalry with Japan, 9 May 11(A); Congress's Iran ate hearings, 16 May 4(PW), 13(A), 23 May 7(D), 13 Jun 13(A); Americans' self-confidence, 16 May 6(D); three young women in the public eye, 16 May 6(D); some unusual names, 16 May 6(D); visitors to the homes of Thomas Jefferson and George Washington, 16 May 6(D); the Vietnam war, 16 May 35(AR); British shows on Broadway, 16 May 38(AR); New York restaurants, 16 May 45(A); Roosevelt's successors have lost interest in internationalism, 23 May 19(A), 30 May 25(R); official reactions to the attack on USS Stark, 30 May 17(A); the New York subway shooting by Bernhard Goetz, 6 Jun 28(A)' a journalist compares US and British election campaigns, 13 Jun 9(A); Fawn Hall's evidence to the congressional committee on hangate, 13 Jun 13(A); New York in 1945, 20 Jun 27(R); Alan Greenspan succeeds Paul Volcker at the US Federal Reserve Bank, 27 Jun 25(CS); Sydney Smith on the US, 27 Jun 41(LL); see also REAGAN, PRESIDENT RONALD Universities: is research adequately financed? 28 Mar 15(A), 4 Apr 25(L); reasons for the `brain drain', 28 Mar 16(A); British universities now state pensioners, 28 Mar 16(A); US universi- ties not the goldmines British academics imagine, 18 Apr 12(A) Unquiet Grave, The: Evelyn Waugh's marginal comments on the book and its author, 7 Mar 27(A) Untold Tokyo story, The, 11 Apr 18(A) Up the poll in the Holy of Holies: why the City gets election wrong, 30 May 19(CS) US justice, 2 May 5(N)

V

Vaclav Havel or Living in Truth, (ed.) Jan Vladislav, 21 Feb 29(R Valses ) nobles et sentimeruales (ballet), 24 Jan 37(AR) V & A, not OK, 7 Feb 16(A)

VAT: EEC proposals on works of art, 10 Jan 29(AR) Vaughan, Keith: exhibitions, 4 Apr 42(AR) Venice: an English visitor robbed, 21 Mar 18(A)

Vestal February, 7 Feb 28(P) Victor Gollancz, Ruth Dudley Edwards, 17 Jan 25(R) Victoria: Biography of a Queen, Stanley Weintraub, 25 Apr 29(R)

Victoria and Albert Museum, the: Sir Roy Strong resigns as director, 7 Feb 16(A); the Museum's history, 7 Feb 16(A); the Italian garden, 27 Jun 44(A)

Vietnam: Platoon a false picture of the Vietnam war, 16 May 35(AR) View from the Bridge, A, (Cottesloe), 21 Feb 39(AR) Village school, The, 9 May 5(LA) Vine, Barbara, A Fatal Inversion, 28 Mar 33(R) Violence: Luton Town's solution to football violence, 7 Mar 19(A); stabbings by muggers, 21 Mar 17(A); Bernhard Goetz's shooting of muggers on the New York subway, 6 Jun 28(A); a moment of violence recalled, 6 Jun 28(A); the problem of mugging, burglary and rape in Britain, 27 Jun 8(AV); a pensioner mugged for his criminal injuries com- pensation money, 27 Jun 8(AV) Vladislav, Jan, (ed.) Vaclav Havel or Living in Truth, 21 Feb 29(R) VN: The Life and Art of Vladimir Nabokov, Andrew Field, 16 May 30(R)

Voting: how to manage tactical voting successfully, 21 Feb 16(A); the Campaign for Tactical Voting, 28 Mar 7(D); the franchise in the past and todt 2 May 21(A); attitudes to voting, 2 May 23(A) 9 May 27 ); tactical voting and a hung parliament, 16 May 12(A, 23 May 5(LA)

Voyager Out, A: The Life of) Mary Kingsley, Katherine Frank, 11 Apr 29(R) Wagner, Anthony, How Lord Birkenhead Saved the Heralds, 24 Jan 30(R) Waistcoat,The, 28 Mar 34(P)

Waite, Edward Wilkins: exhibition 16 May 39(AR)

Waite, Terry: kidnapped, 31 Jan in 4(PW); the background to his

disappearance Lebanon, 7 Feb 9( ) Waldegrave, Caroline: her election diary, 13 Jun 7(D) Waldheim, Kurt: to be barred from visitor the US, 2 May 5(N)

Wales: holidays at Tenby and Aberystwyth 21 21 Mar 6(D) Walking backwards to Christmas, 7 Feb 33(LL) Walls of Glass (film), 24 Jan 35(AR) Wansell, Geoffrey, Tycoon: The Life of lames Goldsmith, 23

May 47(R) War: Menzies and Churchill in the second world war, 14 Feb

37(R); the dangers of world arms production and supply, 11

Apr 23(A), 9 May 27, 30 May 21(L, ; conscientious objection,

2 May )33(R); the war corespondent as film hero, 2 May

36(AR)

War business, The, 11 Apr 23(A)

Ward, Stephen: his involvement with MI5 and the Profumo case,

9 May 48(A), 30 May 26(R)

Warhol, Andy: recollections of, 28 Feb 42(A); 7 Mar 42(AR); a memorial service, 11 Apr 49(A)

Warm noggins and laughter in Edinburgh, 25 Apr 41(A) War Zone (film), 2 May 36(AR)

Watt, David: an obituary, 4 Apr 5(N), 7(D), 18 Apr 23(L); in an

iron lung in hospital, 23 May 2I(A)

Waugh, Auberon: and the word 'bum', 18 Apr 8(AV); and think, 2 May 20(L); an apology to the Countess of Dudley, 20 Jun 13(X)

Waugh, Evelyn: his marginal comments onCyril Connolly's The Unquiet Grave, 7 Mar 27(A); 21 Mar 24(L); 25 Apr 6(D); interviewed in The Waugh Trilogy (TV), 25 Apr 38(AR) Waugh drops the pilot, 7 Mar 27(A). 21 Mar 24(L)

Weapons: the dangers of world arms production, 11 Apr 23(A), 9 May 27, 30 May 21(L) Weather: arctic weather sweeps over Britain, 17 Jan 4(PW), 5(N); special severe weather payments, 17 Jan 5(N); frozen and burst pipes, 24 Jan 41(A); the severe weather in the garden, 31 km 37(A); a spring day, 2 May 35(LL)

Weibe, M. G., and others, (ed.) Benjamin Disraeli, Letters: 1838-1841, 13 Jun 35(11)

Weill, Kurt: essays on, 7 Mar 36(R) Weinstock, Lord: GEC's Nimrod dropped in favour of the Boeing Awacs, 3 Jan 6(PC)

Weintraub, Stanley, Victoria: Biography of a Queen, 25 Apr

29(R)

We know that he was naked, 28 Mar 11(A) Weldon, Fay, The Heart of the Country, 14 Feb 42(R)

Weschke, Karl: exhibition, 7 Feb 38(AR)

West, Nigel, Molehunt, 21 Mar 30(R)

West, Rebecca: a biography, 18 Apr 34(R)

'We've put her in a home', 31 Jan 9(A) What did they really talk about in Paris?, 28 Feb 26(E) What do the workers want?, 10 Jan 18(A)

What Holey Bucker and Ned Drongo are doing in church this

weekend, 18 Apr 22(CS) What is my Name? 6 Jun 43(P) What the boys in the backroom cost the citizen capitalist, 23 May

29(A)

What time has come?, 23 May 9(A)

What went unsaid, 13 Jun 5(LA) What went wrong for the man of modest means, 23 May 27(A) What will 11 June be remembered for?, 16 May 8(A) Wheel-clamp effect in the Government's programme of privatisa- tion, The, 27 Jun 6(PC) When a body meets a body, 30 May 18(A) When something snaps, 6 Jun 28(A) When the Mind Hears, Harlan Jane, 13 Jun 38(R) When the Mirror was King, 25 Apr 19(A) When the polling had to stop, 13 Jun 121A)

When the Wind Blows (film), 21 Feb 37 AR)

Where Rupert's sun never sets, 28 Mar (A) Where There's a Will, Michael Heseltine, 14 Mar 6(PC) While the Sun Shines, 21 Feb 34(P) Whistle Blower, The (film), 20 Jun 46(AR) Whitaker, Kenneth: an appreciation, 13 Jun 25(CS) Who helped Oliver North?, 16 May 13(A) Who let in the Argies?, 4 Apr 11(A) Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (Young Vic), 28 Feb 39(AR) Whose divide? 20 Jun 5(N) Why I shall vote Labour, 23 May 14(A)

Why rapists, at least, should be spared from female justice, 21 Feb

8(AV) Why Scots vote for Labour, 20 Jun 14(A) Why the City is not really at war with manufacturing industry, 14 Feb 23(A) Why the Liberals are not lunatics, 2 May 9(A) Why vote?, 2 May 21(A) Widerberg, Frans: exhibition, 9 May 46(AR) Wilde, Oscar, 21 Mar 32(R) Wilde, Yeats, Joyce and Beckett: Four Dubliners, Richard Ellmann, 21 Mar 32(R) Wild Honey: fails on Broadway, 31 Jan 35(AR) Williams, Desmond: an obituary, 24 Jan 19(A); Williams, Kay, Just - Richmal, 10 Jan 26(R) Williams, Mrs Shirley: contests the Cambridge constituency, 9 May 8, 30 May 11, 6 Jun 11(A), 13 Jun 28(L); her bossy manner, 6 Jun 16(A) Willis, Patricia C., (ed.) The Complete Prose of Marianne Moore, 21 Feb 32(R) Wilson, A. N., Stray, 6 Jun 39(R) Wilson, Harold: the attempts of a right-wing faction of MI5 to undermine him, 21 Mar 4(PW), 6(D), 28 Mar 6(PC), 2 May 4(PW), 5,(LA), 16 May 17(A) Wilton, Andrew, Turner in His Tune, 11 Apr 33(R) Windsor, the Duchess of: the sale of her jewels, 11 Apr 7(D) 18 Apr 42(A) WINE

Spectator Wine Club offers, 10 Jan 34, 7 Feb 43, 7 Mar 48(A), 14 Mar 46(X), 4 Apr 51, 2 May 46, 30 May 53, 20 Jun 38(A); recommended Spanish wines, 10 Jan 34(A); a wine store unwilling to deliver, 17 Jan 7(D); Ausonius's best wines of 1986, 31 Jan 49(A); a description of Julifnas, 7 Feb 23(CS); recommended Australian wines, 7 Feb 43, 4 Apr 51, 30 May 53(A); storing wine at home or with a wine merchant, 21 Feb 44(A); recommended southern Rhone wines, 7 Mar 48(A); the wines of south-west France, 21 Mar 44(A); the 1986 Bordeaux vintage, 18 Ar 46(A); the Vinitaly wine festival in Verona, 23 May 69(A ; the political parties' wine-selling campaigns, 13 Jun 54(A ; recommended Italian wines, 20 Jun 38(A); Auberon Waugh in the Douro valley, 27 Jun 8(AV) Wise, Men, The, Walter Isaacson and Evan Thomas, 17 Jan 23(R)

Wittgenstein's Nephew, Thomas Bernhard (trans. Ewald Osers), 7 Feb 35(R) Wolfe, Thomas: a biography, 25 Apr 26(R) Woman seated on a bench . . . Tate Gallery - 4184, 21 Feb 34(P) WOMEN

the Muslin attitude to girls and women, 3 Jan 14(A), 17 Jan 22(L); the condition of women in Saudi Arabia, 24 Jan 23(A); Andrea Dworkin on pornography, 31 Jan 39(A); agitation for heavier sentences for rape, 14 Feb 8(AV); the ordination of women and the danger of church schism, 21 Feb 5(LA), 7 Mar 4(PW); a suggestion that only women judges should hear rape cases, 21 Feb 8(AV); the emotional and psychological aftermath of an abortion, 7 Mar 9(A), 14 Mar 30(L); a biography of Sylvia Pankhurst, 21 Mar 31(R); traditional Christian teaching on the relation between men and women undermined by feminism, 4 Apr 27(A), 11 Apr 22(L); a fan letter from a woman reader, 4 Apr 47(A); the `Baby M' surrogate motherhood case in the US, 11 Apr 9(A); indepen- dent women, 11 Apr 22(L); three young American women basking in publicity, 16 May 6(D); womanisers, 16 May 41(A); film stars' husbands who tell, 23 May 63(A)

Word from the Comet, A, 7 Feb 32(P) Word game, the, 9 May 52(CO) Words, 24 Jan 29(P) Words, The, 9 May 35(P) Wordsworth: sonnets modelled on 'Milton! thou shouldst be living at this how', 14 Feb 52(CO) Working Girls (film), 18 Apr 39(AR)

Worlds Apart, Gavin Young, 13 Jun 38(R)

Wrench, The, Primo Levi (trans. William Weaver), 9 May 39(R) Wright, Peter: British Government's appeal against the official secrets judgment dismissed, 21 Mar 4(PW); extracts from his book published in the Independent, 2 May 4(PW), 5(LA) Wright stuff, The, 2 May 5(LA) Wrongs and rights, 7 Feb 5(N) Wrong union, 24 Jan 5(N)

Y

Yachting: the 1983 America's Cup, 31 Jan 39(A); the 1986-87 America's Cup, 13 Jun 40(R) Year, Portrait of the, 3 Jan 4(X') Year that depends on Mr Lawson's timing, The, 3 Jan 20(E) Yeats, W. B., 21 Mar 32(R) Yen for rearmament, A, 9 May 11(A) Yerbury, F. R.: exhibition of architectural photographs, 7 Mar 4AR)

Yer4(ma (Cottesloe), 4 Apr 43(AR)

Yorkshire: unjustly maligned, 23 May 13(A), 6 Jun 34, 13 Jun 28(L) Young, Edward: a biography, 7 Feb 32(R) Young, Gavin, Worlds Apart, 13 Jun 38(R) Young England, Richard Faber, 13 Jun 35(R) Youle,ople: the high cost of housing for young people, 21 Mar 7(A , 18 Apr 23(L)

YoungRussia opu ow, 24 Jan 12(A)

Young Writer competition: the awards and a winning article, 9 May 29(A) Yugoslavia: economic problems and racial differences, 9 May 12(A)

z

Zagajewski, Adam: selected poems, 7 Mar 40(LL) Zircon and the length of the Attorney General's foot, 7 Feb 6(PC) Zircon spy satellite, the, 31 Jan 4(PW), 7(D), 8(AV) Zographos, John, 7 Mar 46(A) Ackroyd, Peter, 3 Jan 30, 10 Jan 29, 17 Jan 31, 24 Jan 35, 31 Jan 34, 14 Feb 46, 21 Feb 37, 28 Feb 41, 7 Mar 41(AR) Amery, Julian, MP, 10 Jan 16(A)

Amis, Kingsley, 18 Apr 25(A) Amory, Mark, 4 Apr 33(R)

Anderson, Digby, 3 Jan 36, 24 Jan 44, 31 Jan 41, 28 Feb 44, 14 Mar 47, 28 Mar 42, 25 Apr 56, 23 May 68, 27 .11111 51(A) Annan, Gabriele, 25 Apr 29(R)

Artley, Alexandra, 7 Mar 9, 21 Mar 18, 25 Apr 8, 6 Jun 9(A Ausonius, 31 Jan 49, 21 Feb 44, 21 Mar 44, 18 Apr 46, 23 May 69, 13 Jun 54(A)

Austin, David, 28 Mar 37, 4 Apr 46(AR)

Auty, Giles, 3 Jan 31, 17 Jan 30, 24 Jan 34, 31 Jan 35, 7 Feb 38, 21 Feb 37, 28 Feb 38, 7 Mar 42, 14 Mar 41, 28 Mar 40, 4 Apr 42, 11 Apr 45, 25 Apr 35, 2 May 40, 9 May 46, 16 May 39, 30 May 33, 6 Jun 48, 13 Jun 47, 20 Jun 43, 2'7 Jun 42(A)

Barker, Paul, 24 Jan 17(A), 2 May 33(R) Barnes, Fred, 13 Jun 9(A) Bassett, Richard, 18 Apr 9(A) Bayley, Professor John, 31 Jan 28, 14 Mar 36(R) Beaumarchais, Marie-Alice de, 18 Apr 33(R) Beaumont, Michael, 13 Jun 40(R) Becker, Jasper, 10 Jan 13(A) Beckett, Francis, 7 Mar 13, 11 Apr 15, 16 May 11(A) Bell, Alan, 17 Jan 28(R), 7 Mar 27(A), 28 Mar 32(R), 25 Apr 41(A), 27 Jun 39(R) Bensley, Connie, 28 Mar 34, 9 May 35(P) Berkman, Marcus, 16 May 39, 13 Jun 48(AR) Bernard, Bruce, 3 Jan 25(R) Bernard, Jeffrey, 3 Jan 34, 10Jan 32, 17 Jan 34, 24 Jan 40, 31 Jan 39, 7 Feb 40, 14 Feb 49, 21 Feb 42, 28 Feb 42, 7 Mar 46, 14

CONTRIBUTORS

Mar 45, 21 Mar 42, 28 Mar 42, 4 Apr 47,11 Apr 50, 25 Apr 39,

2 May 41, 9 May 49, 16 May 41, 23 May 64, 30 May 48, 13 Jun 50, 20 Jun 48, 27 Jun 49(A)

Bhagat, Dhiren, 18 Apr 14(A)

Bishop, Patrick, 25 Apr 10(A

Blackledge, Adrian, 10 Jan (P) Blake, Robert (Lord Blake), 7 Feb 30, 9 May 36, 13 Jun 35(R) Blond, Anthony, 13 Jun 38(R) Blow, Simon, 14 Mar 22(A), 4 Apr 40(AR)

Booker, Christopher, 14 Feb 9(A), 6 June 14(X)

Bostock, Peter, 21 Feb 34(P) Bowman, James, 14 Mar 50(A) Brookner, Anita, 10 Jan 26, 14 Feb 40, 21 Feb 34, 28 Feb 35,28 Mar 33, 4 Apr 36, 11 Apr 35, 18 Apr 29, 2 May 29, 16May 34, 23 May 50, 6 Jun 37, 20 Jun 26(R) Brown, Craig, 16 May 23(A) Bruce-Gardyne, Jock (Lord Bruce-Gardyne), 3 Jan 20, 17 Jan 19, 31 Jan 24, 14 Feb 33, 28 Feb 26, 14 Mar 26(E), 21 Mar 10(A), 28 Mar 23, 11 Apr 20, 25 Apr 21, 9 May 21,23 May 34, 6 Jun 31, 20 Jun 19(E) Buchan, Ursula, 10 Jan 31, 31 Jan 37, 21 Feb 40, 28 Max 39, 4

Apr 45, 2.5.Apr 36, 23 May 58, 20 Jun 46(A) Buckley, Christopher, 3 Jan 10(A)

Budget', Nicholas, MP, 24 Jan 13, 2 May 14(A) Cameron, Euan, 10 Jan 28(AR) Carr, J. L,. 31 Jan, 11 Apr 31, 23 May 53, 27 Jan 38(R) Can, Raymond, 28 Mar 31(R) Casey, John, 21 Mar 27(A) Catling, Patrick Skene, 10 Jan 24, 25 Apr 26, 2 May 32, 30 May 30(R) Causley, Charles, 28 Jan 32(P) Caws, Ian, 2 May 28(P) Chancellor, Alexander, 9 May 7, 16 May 7, 23 May 7(D) Chappell, Philip, 23 May 25(A) Charmley, John, 9 May 37, 30 May 25(R) Chisholm, Anne, 16 Ma y 28, 13 Jun 41(R) Christiansen, Rupert, 7 Mar 34, 14 Mar 34(R) Clarke, Roger, 9 May 40, 27 Jun 35(R) Clive, Lady M 7 Mar 38(R) Congdon, Tim, 14ary, Feb 23, V Jun 9(A) Cope, Wendy, 3 Jan 32, 10 Jan 31, 17 Jan 33, 24 Jan 39, 31 Jan V, 7 Feb 39, 14 Feb 48, 21 Feb 41, 7 Mar 45, 14 Mar 44, 21 Mar 41, 28 Mar 40,4 Apr 46, 11 Apr 48, 18 Apr 40, 25 Apr 38, 16 May 40, 23 May 63, 30 May 46, 6 Jun 49, 27 Jun 48(AR) Cram, David, 10 Jan 26, 20 Jun 31(P)

Crewe, Candida, 30 May 1%...p)

Cutup, Michael, 23 155 ) Curtis, S. E. G. (Simon , 3 an 27, 2 May 28(P) Cushman, Robert, 23 y 55(R) Daniels, Anthony, 31 Jan 13, 7 Feb 17, 11 Apr 12, 30 May 14(A), 6 Jun 40(R) Dannatt, Adrian, 9 May 41(AR) Davies, Stan Gebler, 3 an 13, 31 Jan 18(A), 7 Feb 7, 14 Feb 7, 21 Feb 7, 28 Feb 7(D), 14 Mar 13(A), 21 Mar 32(R), 25 Apr 17(A) Deacon, Richard, 21 Mar 30(R), 16 May 16(A) Deedes, William (Lord Deedes), 14 Mar 32(R) Dixon, Alan, 25 Apr 27(P) Doc, 10 Jan 36, 31 Jan 51, 21 Feb 46, 14 Mar 53, 4 Apr 53, 25 Apr 58, 16 May 43, 6 Jun 52, 27 Jun 53(X) Donaldson, Lady Frances, 9 May 36(R) Druid, 24 Jan 42(X) Dufault, Peter Kane, 13 Jun 41(P) Durk, Elspeth, 21 Feb 34, 27 Jun 40(P) Edwards, Christopher, 3 Jan 29, 10Jan 30,17 Jan 31, 24 Jan 38, 7 Feb 38, 14 Feb 47, 21 Feb 39, 28 Feb 39, 7 Mar 45,14 Mar 40, 21 Mar 38, 28 Mar 36, 4 Apr 43, 11 Apr 47, 18 Apr 39, 2 May 38, 9 May 42, 23 May 62, 30 May 45, 6 Jun 46, 13 Jun 46, 20 Jun 44, 27 Jun 46(AR) Ellis, Alice Thomas, 3 Jan 34,10 Jan 33,17 Jan 34, 24 Jan 41, 31 Jan 40, 7 Feb 41,14 Feb 50, 21 Feb 42, 28 Feb 43, 7 Mar 47,14 Mar 45, 21 Mar 43, 28 Mar 42, 4 Apr 48,11 Apr 50,18 Apr 42, 25 Apr 40, 2 May 42, 9 May 50, 16May 42, 23 May 65, 30 May 49, 6 Jun 51, 13 Jun 51, 20 Jun 49, 27 Jun 50(A) Evans-Pritchard, Ambrose, 17 Jan 13, 31 Jan 11, 14 Feb 16, 21 Feb 9, 28 Feb 11, 7 Mar 11, 21 Mar 16, 4 Apr 13, 18 Apr 12, 25 Apr 11, 9 May 11, 16 May 13, 30 May 17, 13 Jun 13(A) Byres, Harry, 31 Jan 46, 16 May 15, 27 Jun 12(A) Fabricius, Peter, 14 Mar 12r) Fallowell, Dncan, 7 Mar 35 R) Fades, Christopher, 3 Jan 1 , 10 Jan 19, 17 Jan 21(CS), 24 Jan 9(A), 31 Jan 23, 7 Feb 23, 14 Feb 30, 28 Feb 25, 7 Mar 25,14 Mar 27(CS), 21 Mar 11(A), 28 Mar 24, 4 Apr 24,11 Apr 19,18 Apr 22, 2 May 18, 9 May 25, 23 May 33, 30 May 19, 6 Jun 33, 13 Jun 25, 20 Jun 21, 27 Jun 25(CA) Forbes, Alastair, 14 Feb 38(R) Fry, Michael, 25 Apr 45(A) Fuller, Roy, 3 Jan 25(P) G., A. J. S., 3 Jan 4 (X), 31 Jan 4, 7 Mar 4, 21 Mar 4, 4 Apr Garland Nicholas, 6 Jun 28(A) Gibson, Alan, 27 Jun 47(A) Gilbey, Emma, 28 Mar 13(A)

Gilmour, Sir Jan, 7 Feb 28(R ja

Gimson, Andrew, 31 Jan 9(A. , 7 Feb 6, 14 Feb 6, 21 Feb 6, 28 Feb 6(PC) 14 Mar 14, 2 May 9, 30 May 9, 6 Jun 19, 13 Jun J 29(A), 20 Jun 6(D) Glass, Charles, 7 Feb 9, 21 Mar 12(A), 2 May 36(AR), 6 Jun 26(A) Glazebrook, Philip, 9 May 33(R) Glendinning, Victoria, 21 Mar 31(R) Griffin, Jasper, 4 Apr 37(R) Grigg, John, 11 Apr 7, 18 Apr 7, 25 Apr 6(D), 2 May 27(R) Grimond, Jo (Lord Grimond), 18 Apr 27(R) Grindea, Miron, 13 Jun 37(R) Grossart, Angus, 25 Apr 52(A) Halliday, Jon, 17 Jan 28(R) Hamilton, Edward, 10 Jan 21, 14 Feb 37(R) Hare, David, 23 May 14(A) Harris, Anthony, 14 Feb 27(A) Harris, Myles, 7 Feb 13, 20 Jun 41(A) Harrod, Tanya, 30 May 36(AR) Hastings, Max, 17 Jan 16(A) Haworth-Booth, Mark, 28 Feb 34(1') Heald, Tim, 7 Mar 19, 13 Jun 15(A) Heath-Stubbs, John, 7 Feb 28(P) Heifer, Doris, 30 May 7(D) Henderson, Sir Nicholas, 21 Feb 20(A) Hicks, Alistair, 10 Jan 29,14 Feb 46, 21 Mar 39, 18 Apr 36, 30 May 34(AR) Hills, Denis, 20 Jun 23(R) Hodgson, Francis, 6 Jun 45(AR) Hoggart, Simon, 28 Mar 11(A) Holden, Anthony, 28 Feb 34, 18 Apr 30(R) Home, William Douglas, 9 May 40(R) Honeyford, Ray, 3 Jan 14(A) Horovitz, Michael, 6 Jun 41(R) Howe, Peter, 13 Jun 42(P) Howse, Christopher, 20 Jun 42(A) Hughes-Onslow, James, 7 Feb 15(A), 28 Feb 33(R) Hutchins, Sheila, 3 Jan 25(R) Hutchinson, Mark, 28 Feb 35(P) Huth, Angela, 11 Apr 17(A) Ingrains, Richard, 7 Feb 34, 28 Feb 29(R) hens, Michael, 2 May 15(A) Jac, 3 Jan 38, 14 Feb 51, 7 Mar 51, 28 Mar 45,18 Apr 43, 9 May 51, 30 May 50, 20 June 50(X) Jaspistos, 3 Jan 37, 10 Jan 35, 17 Jan 36, 24 Jan 43, 31 Jan 50, 7 Feb 44, 14 Feb 52, 21 Feb 45, 2s Feb 45, 7 Mar 52, 14 Mar 52, 21 Mar 45,28 Mar 44, 4 Apr 52,11 Apr 52,18 Apr 44, 25 Apr 59, 2 May 44, 9 May 52, 16 May 44, 23 May 67, 30 May 51, 6 Jun 53, 13 Jun 53, 20 Jun 51, 27 Jun 52(CO) Jefford, A., 4 Apr 35(P) Jenkins, Peter, 7 Mar 18(A) Jenkins, Roy, M1', 17 Jan 23(R) Jenkins, Simon, 4 Apr 11(A) Jennings, Elizabeth, 4 Apr 33(P) Johnson, Frank, 24 Jan 18(A) Johnson, Paul, 3 Jan 18, 10 Jan 18, 17 Jan 18, 24 Jan 20, 31 Jan 22, 7 Feb 21, 14 Feb 21, 21 Feb 24, 28 Feb 23, 7 Mar 22, 14 Mar 23, 21 Mar 21, 28 Mar 22, 4 Apr 23,11 Apr 18,18 Apr 21, 25 Apr 19, 2 May 17, 9 May 20, 16 May 12, 30 May 16, 6 Jun 21, 13 Jun 12, 20 Jun 16, 27 Jun 21(A) loll, Evelyn, 11 Apr 33(R) Jolliffe, John, 7 Feb 29, 18 Apr 34(R) Josipovici, Gabriel, 18 Apr 28(R) Kavanagh, Julie, 24 Jan 37, 21 Feb 36, 21 Mar 37(AR) Kavanagh, P.J., 3 Jan 28, 10 Jan 27, 17 Jan 29, 24 Jan 33, 31 Jan 32, 7 Feb 33(LL), 14 Feb 40(P), 43(LL), 21 Feb 35, 28 Feb 36, 7 Mar 40, 14 Mar 35, 21 Mar 36, 28 Mar 34, 4 Apr 39, 11 Apr 44, 18 Apr 32, 25 Apr 33, 2 May 35, 9 May 38,16 May 31, 23 May 54, 30 May 32, 6 Jun 44, 13 Jun 43, 20 Jun 32, 27 Jun 41(LL) Kealey, Terence, 28 Mar 15, 18 Apr 13, 8 May 18(A) Kedourie, Professor Elie, 27 Jun 27(A) Keen, Lady Mary, 20 Jun 24(R), 27 Jun 44(AR) Keene, Raymond, 10 Jan 35, 17 Jan 36, 24 Jan 43, 31 Jan 50, 7 Feb 44, 14 Feb 52, 21 Feb 45, 28 Feb 45, 7 Mar 52,14 Mar 52, 21 Mar 45, 28 Mar 44, 4 Apr 52,11 Apr 52, 18 Apr 44, 25 Apr 59, 2 May 44, 16 May 44, 23 May 67, 30 May 51, 6 Jun 53, 13 Jun 53, 20 Jun 51, 2'7 Jun 52(A) Kennedy, Ludovic, 6 Jun 34(R) Kenny, Mary, 14 Mar 49(1 Kerridge, Roy, 24 Jan 33(R , 31 Jan 17, 18 Apr 18(A) King, Francis, 3 Jan 27, 17 Jan 27, 7 Feb 35, 14 Feb 42, 28 Feb 32, 14 Mar 37, 21 Mar 34, 4 Apr 37, 2 May 31, 9 May 39, 23 May 48, 13 Jun 40, 27 lane 37(R) Knox, James, 11 Apr 49C Knox, Oliver, 27 Jun 19 A) Kolakowski, Pczek, 28 9(A) Lawson, Nigella, 3 Jan 35, 31 Jan 48, 7 Feb 42, 21 Feb 43, 7 Mar 50, 4 Apr 49,18 Apr 45, 2 May 45, 16 May 45, 30 May 52, 20 Jun 37(A) Lerner, Laurence, 16 May 33, 6 Jun 43(R) Letwin, Shirley Robin, 14 Mar 36(R) Levey, Sir Michael, 23 May 51, 30 May 29(R) Levi, Peter, 3 Jan (D), 24 Jan 30(R), 28 Feb 41(AR), 7 Mar 39, 18 Apr 31(R), 2 May 40, 13 Jun 49, 20 Jun 47(AR), 27 Jun ) 40( Lewis, Jeremy, 31 Jan 26, 6 Jun 37(R) Lewis, Roger, 28 Feb 30, 16 May 30(R) Lieven, Anatol, 20 Jun 10(A) Links, LG., 11 Apr 41, 16 May 29(R) Lloyd, John, 20 Jun 14(A) Lloyd-Jones, Professor Hugh, 27 Jun 34(R) Longford, Elizabeth (Lady Longford), 28 Mar 34(R) Longmore, Zenga, 31 Jan 44(A), 14 Mar 42, 21 Mar 41(AR) • Laud, Elizabeth, 2 May 13(A) Lustig, Robin, 27 Jun 11(A) Lycett, Andrew, 25 Apr ) Lynton, Professor Norbert, 17 Jan 26, 13 Jun 39(R) M., R.J., 10 Jan 4, 17 Jan 4, 24 Jan 4(PW) McCabe, Jim, 7 Mar 39(P) MacCaig, Norman, 25 Apr 47, 52(P) McEwen, John, 20 Jun 25T) Mahon, Derek, 24 Jan 28(R) Malcolm, Noel, 17 Jan 32,14 Feb 48(AR), 7 Mar 36(R), 14 Mar 42, 11 Apr 46, 9 May 47(AR), 30 May 31(R), 13 Jun 44(AR). 20 Jun 15(A) Mantel, Hilary, 24 Jan 23(A), 21 Mar 35(R), 11 Apr 48,18 Appr 39, 9 May 43, 23 May 60, 30 May 44, 6 Jun 49, 13 Jun 48, 20 Jun 46, 27 Jun 46(AR) Marsden-Smedley, Philip, 25 Apr 29(R) Martin, Brian, 7 Feb 32, 28 Feb 31(R) Mass, 17 Jan 37, 7 Feb 45, 28 Feb 46, 21 Mar 46, 11 Apr 53, 2 May 43, 23 May 66, 13 Jun 52(X) Massie, Allan, 17 Jan 14(1 11 ) Masters, Brian, 23 May 47 ) Meyers, Jeffrey, 21 Feb 30 R) Milnes, Rodney, 3 Jan 31, 24 Jan 36, 31 Jan 33, 14 Feb 45, 28 Feb 37, 14 Mar 39, 11 Apr 46, 25 Apr 36, 9 May 44, 6 Jun 46.

20 Jun 44(AR) Mitchell, Andrew, 14 Feb 17 (A) Mole, John, 18 Apr 29(P) Montgomery-Massinberd, Hugh, 25 Apr 47, 9 May 13(A) Moore, Caroline, 7 Feb 25, 14 Feb 35, 21 Feb 26, 28 Feb 27, 7 Mar 32, 14 Mar 29, 21 Mar 26, 28 Mar 25(X), 16 May 18(A) Moore, Charles, 24 Jan 23(X), 31 Jan 7(D), 14 Feb 41(R), 7 Mar 7, 2 May 7(D), 21(A) Moore, N.W., 28 Mar 19(A) Moorehead, Caroline, 14 Mar 33, 25 Apr 31 (R) Morris, Jan, 27 Jan 24(R) Mortimer, Edward, 23 May 19(A) Mortimer, John, 27 Jun 18(A) Mount, Ferdinand, 10 Jan 9(A), 7 Mar 6,14 Mar 6(PC), 21 Mar 8(A), 28 Mar 6 (PC), 4 Apr 5(N), 6(PC), 11 Apr 6(PC), 25 Apr 23(A), 2 May 6, 9 May 6(PC), 16 May 8(A), 23 Ma6, 30

May 6, 6 Jun 6, 13 Jun 6(PC), 20 Jun 7(A), 27 Jun 6

Nahaylo, Bohdan, 3 Jan 12, 24 Jan 12, 21 Feb 13, 6 Jun 25(A) Naipaul, V.S., 24 Jan 22(A) Napier, Felicity, 4 Apr 33E) Nath, Kedar, 10 Jan 14(A Navrozov, Andrei, 3 Jan , 21 Feb 29, 23 May 50(R) Nicolson, Adam, 4 Apr 14(A) Norman, Alexander, 14 Mar 20, 18 Apr 20(A) Northedge, Richard, 23 May 27(A)

O'Connor, D.S., 9 May 29(A.). O'Keeffe, Dennis, 10 can 22(s)

Osman, Tony, 3 Jan 23(R) Oxford, Julian (Lord Oxford), 30 May 24(R) Parris, Matthew, 18 Apr 6(PC) Parsons, Sir Anthony, 2 May 34(R) Partridge, Frances, 24 Jan 32(R), 31 Jan 20(A), 27 Jun 38(R) Paterson, Jennifer, 17 Jan 35, 14 Feb 53,14 Mar 46,11 Apr 51, 9 May 53, 6 Jun 54(A) Phillips, Peter, 24 Jan 38, 7 Feb 37, 21 Feb 38, 7 Mar 43, 28 Mar 38, 4 Apr 44, 18 Apr 38, 2 May 39, 16 May 36, 30 May 43, 13 Jun 46, 27 Jun 43(AR) Pillai, M.G.G., 7 Mar 12(A) Pimlott, Ben, 11 Apr 40(12) Plowright, Joan, 31 Jan 29(R) Pocock, Tom, 14 Feb 44(AR) Powell, J. Enoch, MP, 10 Jan 15(A), 31 Jan 22, 14 Mar 31, 11 Apr 28, 2 May 34(R) Powers, Alan, 21 Feb 39(AR) Press, R.H., 28 Feb 35(P) Pryce-Jones, David, 20 Jun 30(R) Quennell, Peter, 31 Jan 31, 21 Mar 33(R) Quirke, Thomas, 4 Apr 18(A) Rae, Simon, 21 Feb 32(P) Read, Piers Paul, 4 Apr 27(A), 11 Apr 34(R) Reading, Peter, 10 Jan 25(P) Riddell, Peter, 3 Jan 6, 10Jan 6,17 Jan 6, 24 Jan 6, 31 Jan 6(PC) Ridland, John, 21 Mar 31(P) Robins, Jane, 14 Feb 25(A) Robinson, John Martin, 7 Feb 16(A), 18 Apr 35(AR) Robinson, Kenneth, 21 Feb 19(A), 21 Mar 40(AR) Robinson, Stephen, 18 Apr 15, 23 May 12, 20 Jun 11(A) Rogers, Byron, 11 Apr 39(R) Rose, Richard, 20 Jun 12(A) Ross, Alan, 10 Jan 24(R) Rowse, A.L., 14 Feb 18(A), 11 Apr 42(R), 25 Apr 14, 23 May

R 13(Aubinst)

ein, Hilary, 17 Jan 25(R) Ryan, Richard, 7 Feb 32(P) Saul, John Ralston, 11 Apr 23(A) Scamell, William, 21 Feb 32, 9 May 35, 13 Jun 36(R) Scannell, Vernon, 14 Feb 40(P) Scott, Rupert, 13 Jun 42(R) Sewell, Dennis, 21 Mar 35(R) Sexton, David, 4 Apr 35, 30 May 26(R) Seymour, Miranda, 24 Jan 31(R) Sharpe, Kevin, 10 Jan 23(R) Sikorski, Radek, 24 Jan 11, 13 Jun 14(A) Silver, Robert, 21 Feb 16(A), 6 Jun 43(R) Simmons, James, 20 Jun 25(P) Sisson, C.H., 24 Jan 29(P) Smith, Adrian, 23 May 17(A) Smith, thin Crichton, 3 Jan 27(P) Soames, Mary (Lady Soames), 27 Jun 7(D) Spalding, Frances, 7 Feb 34, 18 Apr 34(R) Spanier, David, 3 Jan 37, 9 May 52(A) Spence, Martin, 10 Jan 26(R) Spender, Sir Stephen, 20 Jun 27(R)

8

Stain , Gavin, 7 Feb 36(AR), 28 Feb 19(A), 7 Mar 44, 14 Mar 3 AR), 28 Mar 29(R), 4 Apr 41, 25 Apr 34(AR), 13 Jun 18 A), 20 Jun 45(AR), 27 Jun 13(A) Stan n, Michael, 28 Mar 34(P) Stanford, Derek, 31 Jan 31(L) Steel, Judy, 6 Jun 7(D) Stone, Norman, 11 Apr 27(R) Story, Anthony, 7 Feb 31(R) Sylvester, Alexander, 20 Jun 9(A) Sylvester, David, 16 May 32(R) T., M St J., 7 Feb 4, 14 Feb 4 21 Feb 4, 28 Feb 4, 14 Mar 4, 28 Mar 4, 11 Apr 4, 18 Apr 4,25 Apr 4, 2 May 4, 9 May 4, 16 May

4, 23 May 4, 30 May 4, 6 Jun 4, 13 Jun 4, 20 Jun 4, 27 Jun 4(PW1

Talu, 3 ran 33, 10 Jan 32, 17 Jan 33, 24 Jan 40, 31 Jan 38, 7 Feb 40, 14 Feb 49, 21 Feb 41, 28 Feb 42, 7 Mar 46, 14 Mar 44, 21 Mar 42, 28 Mar 41, 4 Apr 47,11 Apr 49,18 Apr 41, 25 Apr 39, 2 May 41, 9 May 48, 16 May 41, 23 May 63, 30 May 48, 6 Jun 50, 13 Jun 50, 20 Jun 48, 27 Jun 49(A) Temple, Robert, 25 Apr 32(R)

Thackara, John, 23 May 56(AR)

Thapar, Karan, 31 Jan 12(A) Thomas, Hugh (Lord Thomas), 27 Jun 33(R) Tomson, Ian, 3 Jan 16, 21 Feb 22(A) Trelford, Donald, 4 Apr 19(A), 2 May 28(R) Trend, Michael, 14 Feb 14, 21 Feb 15, 28 Feb 9, 21 Mar 20, 28 Mar 17, 4 Apr 15,11 Apr 11, 9 May 8,16 May 10,23 May 9, 30 May 11, 6 Tun 11, 18(A) Turl, Thomas, 28 Feb 16(A) Tyerrnan, Christopher, 7 Ma' 37(R) von Hoffman, Nicholas, 14 Mar 9, 11 Apr 9(A) Waddington, P.A.J., 28 Feb 17(A) Waldegrave, Caroline, 13 Jun 7(D) Waldegrave, William, 4 Apr 38, 6 Jun 39(R) Waller, Ian, 28 Feb 31(R) Walton, Elizabeth, 28 Feb 22(A) Waterhouse, Keith, 10 Jan 7, 17 Jan 7, 24 Jan 7(D) Watkins, Alan, 14 Mar 7,21 Mar 6,28 Mar 7,4 Apr 7(D), 32(R) Watson, Peter, 30 May 40(AR) Watt, David, 23 May 21(A) Waugh Auberon, 3 Jan 8, 10Jan 8(AV), 34(A), 17Jan 8, 24 Jan J 8, 31 an 8, 7 Feb 8(AV), 43(A), 14 Feb 8, 21 Feb 8, 28 Feb 8, 7 Mar 8(AV), 48(A), 14 Mar 8, 21 Mar 7, 28 Mar 8, 4 Apr 10(AV), 51(A), 11 Apr 8, 18 Apr 8, 25 Apr 7, 2 May 8(AV), 46(A), 16 May 7, 23 May 8, 30 May 8(AV), 53(A), 6 Jun 8,13 Jun 8(AV), 20 Jun 38(A.), 27 Jun 8(AV) Waugh, Harriet, 3 Jan 26, 73 May 49, 6 Jun 39(R) Welch, Colin, 3 Jan 22, 24 Jan 27, 7 Feb 27, 21 Feb 28,7 Mar 33, 28 Mar 28, 16 May 27(R) West, Richard, 17 Jan 9, 31 Jan 42, 28 Feb 12, 7 Mar 14, 21 Mar 17, 18 Apr 11, 2 May 12, 9 May 12(A), 16 May 35(AR), 23 May 10, 30 May 13, 6 Jun 16, 13 Jun 10, 27 Jun 15(A) Wheatcroft, Geoffrey, 11 Apr 29(R) White, Sam, 3 Jan 9, 23 May 16(A) Whittingliam, Selby, 23 May 59(AR) Whitworth, John, 16 May 29, 30 May 30(P) wthetta, David, 9 May 15(A) Williams, Harry, 25 Apr 30(R) Wolf, Matthew, 31 Jan 35, 16 May 38(AR) Worsthome, Peregrine, 24 Jan 19 A) Wright, David, 11 Apr 42(P), 13 un 38, 20 Jun 31(R) Zametica, John, 17 Jan 11(A), 21 Feb 31, 9 May 34(R) Zamoyski, Zygmant, 7 Feb 19(A)

Compiled by Charles Seaton and typeset by Saffron Graphics. Ltd. PRICE £6.00