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A diplomatic welcome
The SpectatorThe visit of Mr Menachem Begin, the Prime Minister of Israel, who is due in London on Sunday, provides a nice illustration of diplomatic and political convenience and interest...
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Political Commentary
The SpectatorFrom Lianmad with love Ferdinand Mount It is devolution-time in the little town of Llan mad, and all the members of the lulled and dumbfound town are listening With their eyes...
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Notebook
The SpectatorWhen I read Dick Crossman's revelations of life in Downing Street under the premiership of Harold Wilson, I recall an unhappy summer I spent in a house next to an ill-conducted...
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Another voice
The SpectatorLennon and Leninism Auberon Waugh The death, at some preposterous age, of Aleksey Grigorievich Stakhanov, champion Russian coalminer, provides the opportunity for a soft,...
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Fighting over Biko
The SpectatorRichard West Johannesburg The inquest at Pretoria into the death in detention of Steve Biko, the black political 'leader, is followed with special interest here in the eastern...
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Minority politics in Greece
The SpectatorC. M. Woodhouse Greek politics used to be notorious for their instability. Prime ministers came and went sometimes at the rate of three or four a year; parties sub-divided like...
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Memories of Begin
The SpectatorPatrick O'Donovan He was not a hero to his own people and to the British he was perhaps the most hated man in the world. He was once refused admission to this kingdom and now...
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Struggles in the Sahara
The SpectatorGeoffrey Furlonge One May morning some fifty years ago I stood on the summit of Jebel Toubkal, which at nearly 14,000 feet is the highest point of the Atlas range of Morocco....
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Carver's failure
The SpectatorPatrick Cosg rave What is going to happen in Rhodesia? Or, if that is too difficult a question, what is current British (and American) policy on that country in relation to...
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Bournemouth, but no belles
The SpectatorGeoffrey Wheatcroft On the Monday that nominations closed for the Bournemouth East by-election the two questions of the hour were, where was the New Britain candidate, and,...
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The menace of sociology
The SpectatorJonathan Benthall According to reports in The Times this week, the rate of applications for sociology courses in the universities has fallen. One distinguished sociologist,...
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Media mania
The SpectatorJohn Grigg No observer of contemporary Britain could fail to be struck by the almost symbiotic relationship between academics and the media. It all began, perhaps, with the BBC...
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In the City
The SpectatorCalling up Keynes Nicholas Davenport The City so far is takin g the crisis very coolly, refusin g to be alarmed at what seems to be a very alarmin g situation. Last week,...
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Mr Thorpe
The SpectatorSir: The distortions and false judgments in Auberon Waugh's article on Jeremy Thorpe (12 November) must be corrected. Mr Waugh's view that the press has been muzzled or afraid...
'Good life' in Ulster
The SpectatorSir: Desiree Hirst's admonitory lecture (5 November) summarises the objectives which, if only adopted by the Ulster Protestants and government, and patronised by Dr O'Brien,...
Class
The SpectatorSir: Certain passages in my article on Class (12 November) became casualties of last minute cuts, often unavoidable in the publication of a weekly newspaper. As a result of...
New New Yorkers
The SpectatorSir: John McEwen's comments on New York (5 November) were interesting, but contained a surprising error. 'The only foreigners you never see in New York are Indians and...
Abortion
The SpectatorSir: That well-known opponent of liberal abortion laws, J Alan Smith, writes (Letters, 22 October) 'The British Pregnancy Advis ory Service. . . seems to advise against...
Disclaimer
The SpectatorSir: I am deeply distressed by your pb ishing the paragraph by my friend Peregrine Worsthorne (Notebook, 29 -October) in corn' which he stated that I have 'little sym pathy for...
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Books
The SpectatorThe legacy of Rhodes Richard West A History of Rhodesia Robert Blake (Eyre Methuen, E12.50) It is rare indeed that a great historical subject finds a great historian, but...
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Social climber meets hustler
The SpectatorTaki Theodoracopubs Aristotle Onassis Nicholas Fraser, Philip Jacobson, Mark Ottaway and Lewis Chester (Weidenfeld and Nicolson £6.50) The dust-cover of the Sunday Times former...
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Reformer at large
The SpectatorKenneth Lindsay William Beveridge Jose Harris (OUP £9.50) Would this particular biography have been written if there had been no Beveridge Report, known to most countries of...
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Outrageous fraud
The SpectatorAdam Fergusson Devolution: The End of Britain? Tam Dalyell (Jonathan Cape £4.95; paperback £2.95) In all the sorry tale of how John the Baptist lost his head, the sorriest...
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Reel life
The SpectatorPeter Ackroyd A Scanner Darkly Philip K. Dick (Gollanci SZ3 . 50) The title gives nothing away; it is vaguely Biblical and vaguely Pauline, and suggests that life is not what...
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Tensions
The SpectatorBenny Green The Strange Ride of Rudyard Kipling Angus Wilson (Secker and Warburg; £6.90) The Kipling industry burgeons. In the recent past we have had books about him by Philip...
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Arts
The SpectatorDepression in the cinema Clancy Sigall Welcome to LA (Screen on tt.e Hill, Haverstock Hill) As a chronic filmgoer I am constantly confronted by the ugly face of capitalism in...
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Theatre
The SpectatorTrue story Ted Whitehead The Elephant Man (Hampstead) Lavender Blue (Cottesloe) Rock-a-Bye Beckett (Cockpit) His head is enormous, thick as a man's waist, with shapeless holes...
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Art
The SpectatorBoyle's law John Mc Ewen Last time I wrote about Mark Boyle here, I finished my review by suggesting that his reputation was justifiably high but not high enough. Now, two...
Television
The SpectatorBeastly Richard lngrams A howling gale whipped round my house, hail rattled at the window panes and a tiny fire flickered dismally in the grate as I switched on the television...
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ger End piece
The SpectatorWorld weary Jeffrey Bernard I thought it was typical, pathetic, obvious and bloody boring that the likes of Lord Longford should have chosen the Virgin Mary and her little lad...