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The Anglo-Israeli row
The SpectatorThe Anglo-Israeli row Never since British withdrawal from Palestine and the foundation of the Jewish State in 1948 have Anglo-Israeli relations been at such a low ebb. Israeli...
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Got up by the Prime Minister
The SpectatorPolitical commentary Got up by the Prime Minister Ferdinand Mount At around this stage in the summer term, we -at the Machiavelli Memorial College of Political Science ('Old...
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Notebook
The SpectatorNotebook I wrote last week about my visit to nAmerica, but not of my return to these shores. One should not, of course, attach too much importance to one's own dreary...
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Lord Gowrie's future
The SpectatorAnother voice Lord Gowrie's future Auberon Waugh Reviewing Raymond Asquith's Life and Letters (edited by John Joiliffe, Collins £10.95) fora Sunday newspaperlast week, I was...
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A ham for all seasons
The SpectatorA ham for all seasons Henry Fairlie 14"ashington 'Samson slew the Philistines'. The words are Clear enough in his text. But Mr Reagan reads them out as 'Simpson slew the...
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Thatcherism in Detroit
The SpectatorThatcherism in Detroit George Gale Detroit Neat blue-blazered New Yorkers, breakfasting on vitamin pills and muesli, knock Up against brash Californians in flowered trousers...
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From Berlin to Moscow
The SpectatorFrom Berlin to Moscow Edward Marston East Berlin Peace was the leitmotif of the 1936 Olympic Games. In London, the President of the German Organising Committee described them...
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The Daradoxes of John Paul
The SpectatorThe Daradoxes of John Paul Peter Hebblethwaite Rome So, ignoring diplomatic advice and trusting his own strategic judgment, Pope John Paul WI went to Brazil for a 12-day...
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An insubstantial pageant
The SpectatorAn insubstantial pageant MMMIM Alistair Horne Quem oy The ancient DC-4 skips in at 50 feet above the waves all two hundred miles from Taipei. Apart from myself and a couple...
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The unkindest cut
The SpectatorThe unkindest cut Geraldine Norman Hardly anybody has asked why the National Gallery thought fit to spend £2.3 million of taxpayers' money on buying a vast Rubens oil Painting...
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The golden city
The SpectatorThe golden city Richard West Winchester The average visitor to one of our ancient cathedrals is moved to exclaim in wonder on how such building was done without the...
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New wine in the chalice
The SpectatorNew wine in the chalice Jillian Robertson Few people would dare to offer a sweet and sticky wine to their friends. But such wines are among the most frequently sipped and...
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Cock and hen story
The SpectatorCock and hen story Sir: Nobody else seems to have commented upon it, so may 1, for amateurs of the migrating joke, point out that the original of the charming story told by...
The Resident Consultant
The SpectatorThe Resident Consultant Sir: Benny Green's prose style is so dazzling one has to shade one's eyes a bit, but so far as I can make out he claims (5 July) that the first Sherlock...
His Last Bow
The SpectatorLetters His Last Bow Sir: In calling his article about the 50th anniversary of Arthur Conan Dovle's death 'The final problem' (5 July) Benny Green has been more apt than he...
[Sir: In accusing Mr Booker of tarnishing his...]
The SpectatorSir: In accusing Mr Booker of tarnishing hbs reputation, isn't Diana Bazalgette (Letters 1 2 July) falling into the error of suppOS1i'g that a journalists's proper function is...
[Sir: The language of some of your con-...]
The SpectatorSir: The language of some of your co"' trib~utors to this important discusSi° (Christopher Booker, 21 June, Gordofl Wilson, 28 June, Monica Furlong and others, including David...
[Sir: Monica Furlong is being unusually coy...]
The SpectatorThe new liturgy Sir: Monica Furlong is bcing unusually coy in writing (Letters, 12 July) that she has been 'a moderately faithful Anglican for 3() years', for this draws a...
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Diarists
The SpectatorDiarists Sir: I am preparing a study of Victorian diarists, and would be grateful for any information, letters, memorabilia, photographs or other material relating to the Revd...
Temps perdu
The SpectatorTemps perdu Sir; In his nostalgic piece 'Temps perdu' (28 June), Taki evoked his own memories, and those of Fitzgerald, Hemingway and Thomas Wolfe, that Paris is an unchanging...
Poisoned eggs
The SpectatorPoisoned eggs Sir: In the article by Mr Patrick Marnham in your issue of 5 July it is stated that beef cattle are fed antibiotics to promote growth and that this is...
the claims of E.P. Thompson
The Spectatorthe claims of E.P. Thompson Sir: What was Paul Barker's long review of the Marxist E.P. Thompson doing in my SPectator (5 July)? I spend my working day surrounded by people who...
Waldorf and Princess Marie
The SpectatorWaldorf and Princess Marie Sir: Mr Christopher Sykes (Letters, 5 July) is quite right to rebuke me for not having more searchingly refreshed my recollection of his...
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The Oxford Companion to Law David M. Walker
The SpectatorLaw books A genuine legal smell John Mortimer The Oxford Companion to Law David M. Walker (Oxford £17.50) How should vou use this new Oxford Comnpanion to Law? The...
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Constitutional Fundamentals H.W.R. Wade
The SpectatorFine fellow Alan Watkins Constitutional Fundamentals H.W.R. Wade (Stevens £6.35, £3.35) 'Miss Hamlyn was a spinster. Her father Wvas a solicitor. He practised in Torquay,...
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On Justice J.R. Lucass
The SpectatorDoing justice Geoffrey Marshall On Justice J.R. Lucass (Oxford £1 0) Justice has, at one time and another. been scepticallv treated by both reformers and reactionaries....
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A Few Green Leaves Barbara Pym
The SpectatorFiction Fairly excellent woman Francis King A Few Green Leaves Barbara Pym (Mac- tillan 5.95) Novelists who have the panicky sensation that they are being buried alive, as...
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The Portage to San Christabal A.H. George Steiner
The SpectatorHitler a la Dr Steiner Hans Keller The Portage to San Christabal A.H. George Steiner (in Granta Cambridge, Vol. 1, No. 2 £1.50) 'Granta has been the arts magazine of...
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A Mercenary Calling Martin Walker
The SpectatorLiberal? Magtig! l Richard West A Mercenary Calling Martin Walker (Gra- nada £5.95) Some of the most enlightening books about Africa have been works of fiction, in which are...
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Being There
The SpectatorArts Film as literature Peter Ackroyd Being There (AA' Odeon, St Martin's Lane) Being There, Hal Ashbv's latest film, would not pass the Middle Test, although 'Getting To...
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Poet
The SpectatorArt Poet John McEwen TO celebrate the publication of Andrew Causey's catalogue raisonni of the works of Paul Nash, Blond Fine Art Ltd are showing Paintings and prints by the...
Sweeney Todd (Drury Lane) The Strongest Man in the World (Round House)
The SpectatorTheatre Puzzling Peter Jenkins Sweeney Todd (Drury Lane) The Strongest Man in the World (Round House) One of the Sitwells, it must have been Osbert, said that the reason why...
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Old scores
The SpectatorTelevision Old scores Richard Ingrams 'The Proms flourish again', says the cover of this week's Radio Times, 'full coverage on BBC TV and Radio', and inside the magazine Mr...
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Four fast men
The SpectatorCricket Four fast men Alan Gibson Except for the unfortunate batsmen. Test cricket can be a confoundedly dull game when you have four fast bowlers pounding away at 1 5 overs...
Exploited
The SpectatorHigh life Exploited Taki Copenhagen The greatest event in the history of mankind is taking place here this week. Well, perhaps the most important since Jimmy Carter changed...
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Touched
The SpectatorPostscript Touched Patrick Marnham The lack of a phrase meaning the opposite of the Midas-touch, which is a considerable lack, need be felt no longer now that Sir Harold...
Grass
The SpectatorLow life Grass Jeffrey Bernard There are some things you don't expect to find in the country and a copper's nark is one of them. Trust my luck though, I've unearthed one. The...