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America must decide
The SpectatorVor the Past eight years Lebanon has been a testimony to the human capacity for violence, destructiveness and cruelty, and to the human capacity for survival. To us who watch...
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Political commentary
The SpectatorDr Owen's model Charles Moore Salford In his 'keynote' speech to the Social 1. Democrats on Monday Dr David Owen invited them to 'look to the future'. Said like that, it did...
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Notebook
The SpectatorI n a letter to the Spectator this week ( page 19) Sir Stephen Spender announces that he has withdrawn an article he has writ- ten for the Literary Review because of a Piece...
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The SpectatorUK Eire Surface mail Air moil inunihs: 05.50 IRE17.75 E15.50 £24.50 One year: 01.00 1R05.50 .07.00 Cheques to be made payable to the Spectator and sent to Subscriptions...
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Another voice
The SpectatorThe wrong idea Auberon Waugh 1\To doubt the Ionian island of Cephalonia, or Kefallinia as the ig- norant Greeks insist on calling it, was a sen- sible place for Common Market...
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Russia's Vietnam?
The SpectatorFred Bridgland W ith world attention in Africa focused on the struggle for Chad, the biggest nattle yet in the more important eight-year war for the southern African state of...
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Reagan's restraint
The SpectatorNicholas von Hoffman Washington or the past seven days the way for a ,anY publican in America to get himself -11"` th e name of his bar on television was to lake his two or...
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A man of violence
The SpectatorRichard West T he high points of the career of Johannes Balthazer Vorster included imprisonment in 1942 for his position in the Ossewabrandwag (or 'Ox-wagon Fire Guard), a...
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_Who needs jokes?
The SpectatorT imothy Garton Ash What is the difference between commu- nists- and Christians? Christians believeinlife after death; communists in Posthumo us rehabilitation. and capitalism?...
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Pyrrhic victory
The SpectatorOlivia O'Leary Dublin T w°years ago Provisional Sinn Fein, the apologists for the IRA, sewed a phrase into Irish political hackery when they boasted in Dublin that they could...
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The vanity of Mr Scargill
The SpectatorPeter Paterson T hroughout last week's Trades Union 1 Congress the cameras and the reporters of the media circus were in pursuit of miners' president Arthur Scargill who was...
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A typical Englishman
The SpectatorRoy Kerridge 'M y dear fellow, you should always begin a story with a fragment of con- versation. That's the advice I always give to young writers.' This story begins in the...
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In the City
The SpectatorUsurers lack friends Jock Bruce-Gardyne I do not know whether Nigel Lawson and his mandarins are hard at work on a brand-new tax for the banks in next year's Budget but 1...
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Broadcasting
The SpectatorPublic sector mandarinism Paul Johnson J eremy Isaacs, the mogul of Channel Four, was finally obliged to come clean during a public debate at the Edinburgh TV festival....
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Letters
The SpectatorThe stubble's for burning Sir: I am somewhat irritated by Richard Ingrams and P.J. Kavanagh, who litl y , e both recently had a moan about stubble burning when it is quite...
One hundred years ago
The SpectatorBurglars are taking so kindly to the knife and the revolver that even the police are startled. Within the past fort- night, four or five cases have occurred in which interrupted...
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Crying wolf?
The SpectatorSir: Brian Sewell's article 'The tale of Anne Killigrew' (27 August) is full of sound and fury, but not of facts. The picture was offered under the private treaty arrange- ments...
Moles in industry
The SpectatorSir: Christopher Hitchens must be congratulated on his dexterity in writing an article on Trotskyists in industry (3 September) without ever dealing with the fact that they are...
Colespeak
The SpectatorSir: I am amazed at the continued onslaught on John Cole's speech. I love it; it is so unlike our local brand of north Somerset dialect, which, void of consonants, slurps out in...
Wrong Anderson
The Spectatorl ast As Elizabeth Jennings so aptly wrote in l ast week's Spectator, 'Anyone who gains Pre stige or notoriety today is constantly questioned about the more persorAl parts of...
Frivolous fancy
The SpectatorSir: I wonder why the gifted Jeffrey Bernard has suddenly become a target for cruel attack? He does not set out, does he, to report facts? He doesn't expect us to believe him....
An affront to decency
The SpectatorS, ir: On reading Paul Johnson's comments p la the spectator (3 September) on Roald ahl's article about Israel which appeared in the LiterarY Review, I at once telephoned the...
How did it go off course?
The SpectatorSir: Mr Nicholas von Hoffman and Mr Murray Sayle appear to disagree on how the , Pat h of Korean Air Lines Flight 007 was determined (10 September). Mr Sayle says that the path...
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Books
The SpectatorManners makyth man Jo Grimond The Diary of Hugh Gaitskell 1945-56 Edited with an introduction by Philip M. Williams . (Jonathan Cape £25) opened this diary with misgiving....
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Dreams and guesswork
The SpectatorAnthony Storr Consciousness Regained; Chapters in the Development of Mind Nicholas Humphrey (Oxford University Press £12.95) icholas Humphrey is an experimental P s Ychologist...
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A windbag and a miniaturist
The SpectatorPeter Levi Shame Salman Rushdie (Cape £7.95) The Imperial German Dinner Service David Hughes (Constable £6.50) SS alman Rushdie's last book won him fame and fortune. This new...
Love and magic
The SpectatorAngela Huth I n Perfect Happiness Penelope Lively concerns herself with the subject of loss' This, so often in the past, has proved a dangerous subject, particularly in the...
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Jewish saga
The SpectatorFrancis King Brothers w hereas most present-day English novelists chirp and twitter from under domestic eaves, Bernice Rubens tends to opt, with commendable bravery, for the...
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Mrs Cross
The SpectatorPeter Ackroyd Johnnie Cross Terence de Vere White (Gollancz £7.95) john Walter Cross married George E it° . 1 J just eight months before her death; ta r his Life of George...
Mrs Ward
The SpectatorNorman Vance Helbeck of Bannisdale Mrs Humphry Ward, edited and introduced by Brian Worthington (Penguin £2.95) t is time we started reading Mrs Humphry Ward again. Penguin...
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Clerihews
The SpectatorChristopher Hawtree Other People's Clerihews Chosen by Gavin Ewart (Oxford University Press £5.95) T t has long been received wisdom that the best Clerihews were written by...
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Arts
The SpectatorEssential viewing Giles Gordon Crime and Punishment (Lyric, Hammersmith) Moliere (RSC: The Pit) The Shelter (Lyric Studio, Hammersmith) Senseless (ICA) Y uri Lyubimov's...
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Music
The SpectatorIdeally Peter Phillips S ome would say that Witold Lutoslawski was the most influential composer in Europe at the moment. Many would say that he was the most popular living...
Cinema
The SpectatorThe odd couple Peter Ackroyd Return Engagement (15 ', Screen on the Green, Islington) T his is something of an oddity: a film about an American pantomime horse, hi which the...
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Radio
The SpectatorImperfections Maureen Owen A ccused by Radio Northampton of wilful ignorance on the subject of what the BBC are doing for the unemployed, I sat glued to local radio for an...
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Television
The SpectatorMisplaced Richard Ingrams least one fairly welcome sight greeted I. In e on Monday this week, to wit Sue ips — te5' reading the Nine O'Clock News on 13C1 instead of the...
High life
The SpectatorWonderland Taki Mykonos T is the randiest place east of Fire 1 Island. The spirit of the ancient gods of Olympus — a terribly sexy bunch who did nothing but eat, drink, dish...
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Low life
The SpectatorTankful Jeffrey Bernard The low life isn't always that low. Some- ' times it's q uite cosy down here in the g utter and if you had been with me in Paris last Sunday you too...
Postscript
The SpectatorTaff's caffs P. J. Kavanagh We were g iven a rare opportunitY to,S o ° c` for a day or two on our own, a 11 .,„, rather than a family, to one of our fa vourn," parts of...
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Competition
The SpectatorNo. 1287: Rats! Set by Jaspistos: Boswell tells us that James Grainger (1721?-66) in the first draft of his poem Sugar-Cane began a paragraph, 'Now, Muse, let's sing of rats '...
No. 1284: The winners
The SpectatorReport by Jaspistos: Competitors were ask- ed for a piece of plausible and entertaining prose in which the names of 15 birds are hidden, as `coot' is in 'rococo ottoman'....
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Special offer
The SpectatorSpectator Wine Club Auberon Waugh brussels sprouts in any civilised country. well spent. T know nothing about Spanish wine and seem to me to represent Spanish value for The...
ORDER FORM SPECTATOR WINE CLUB
The Spectator14a Chatham Row, Wa!cot Street, Bath PRODUCT PRICE NO. OF VALUE INC. VAT CASES I. Rivarey White 1981 12 bots. 31.20 2. Muga Red 1976 12 bots. 36.24 3. Cerro-Anon Reserve 1973...
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Crossword 625
The SpectatorA p r i ze Opened Oil often pounds will be awarded for the first correct solution 3 October. Entries to: Crossword 625, The Spectator, 11) "Rlity Street, London WC1N 21,L....
Solution to 622: Midshipmen , c. noun Ea . O in ,arrT
The SpectatorP__A T_O A OD 0 ail R en e man 0 p P pa iii c kor omen on . A a . Emma nand G Amp Drumm ii. o ii u MEMO al Jo Di 00 II T A iIJctaIA1naE " non ri A OnanonnISed...
Chess
The SpectatorBehold behemoth Raymond Keene W hile I was at Niksic it was amusing to ,, listen to the verdicts of some of Gary un Ika.sgarov's competitors: 'He doesn't l ders (and weak...
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Portrait of the week
The SpectatorT he Social Democratic Party, meeting in Salford, decided that, at least for the time being, a merger with the Liberals was undesirable. Dr David Owen, the party's leader, said...
Books Wanted
The SpectatorWORTH ESTES: 'Hall Jackson' & 'The Purple Foxglove'. (University Press of New England). J. K. ,Aronson, 7 Pound Close, Yarnton, Oxford. STRANGER AND BROTHER: Life of C. P. Snow...