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Portrait of the week
The SpectatorA party of refugees from the Falklands arrived at Gatwick Airport. They reported that the Argentinian forces were so hungry that they had been reduced , to begging for food from...
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Political commentary
The SpectatorMr Pym goes to Washington Ferdinand Mount Fr he globe feels global again. 8,000 miles I is still a lot of ocean. Or is it 7,000? Both figures are bandied. Time equals distance...
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Notebook
The SpectatorI have tended in the past to regard with some envy the stars of television like Michael Parkinson and Russell Harty. It is not their fame that I have envied, because nobody in...
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Goodbye, Sinai
The SpectatorGerda Cohen Shaun-et-Sheikh W hen things sound really serious in Israel, on the brink of war for in- stance, I telephone my in-laws and ask, `Has Bukovich been called up?' If...
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The nastiest place
The SpectatorGerald Kaufman T he last time I saw Sinai, I had a kosher meal there. Kosher meals are now being withdrawn from that contentious penin- sula, as part of the Camp David peace...
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The new revolt of Islam
The SpectatorGeoffrey Wheatcroft A t dawn last Thursday Lieutenant Khaled Islambouli was shot in Cairo. Four of his co-conspirators were either shot or hanged for the assassination of...
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Pax Americana
The SpectatorNicholas von Hoffman Washington T hat portion of the country which takes an interest in foreign affairs has been watching television pictures of our prolix Secretary of State...
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New Year in Thailand
The SpectatorRichard West Bangkok T his is my first experience of the Thai New Year, or Songkran feast, when everyone splashes water on everyone else; in the cafe where I am writing this,...
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Profile
The SpectatorA poet for our time Roy Kerridge T inton Kwesi Johnson is the winner of a la Cecil Day Lewis Fellowship, and has been described as 'the foremost young West Indian poet' and...
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On being a British Jew
The SpectatorAnthony Blond `Sir, why do people dislike the Jews?' `Because, Blond, they killed Christ.' F orty years on such an exchange would be unlikely in any schoolroom in the world,...
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Drinking-up time
The SpectatorByron Rogers T he Welsh will vote this year on whether their pubs are to open on Sundays. The outcome will be of great interest to the tourist trade. But some believe a way of...
One hundred years ago
The SpectatorThe trial of Roderick Edward MacLean for high treason, for firing a pistol at the Queen, on March 2nd last, at Windsor, took place before the Lord Chief Justice and Mr Baron...
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Bad news for godwits
The SpectatorAlastair Best F armers and landowners need not fear: the steady conversion of the British countryside into one vast food-producing factory floor can proceed unchecked. As many...
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The press
The SpectatorHopalong Sitafence Paul Johnson O dd to think that only a few weeks ago Margaret Thatcher was secretly ar- ranging for Ronald Reagan to address both Houses of Parliament in...
In the City
The SpectatorMarking time Tony Rudd A s the fleet continues to steam south- wards towards the Falklands the markets seem to have suspended judgment. They are engaged in a reflective pause...
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Aid for Hungary?
The SpectatorSir: Timothy Garton Ash argues (10 APril ) that Hungary should be offered fresh Western finance, while Poland, Romani a and the Soviet Union should not. He seems to be...
Letters
The SpectatorThe strategy of Graf Spee Sir: According to your 'Argies, go home' (10 April), Admiral Count Spee, the Com - mander of the German East Asian Squadron in November 1914, while...
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Tito in Academe
The SpectatorSir: We are all right: Djilas fill, though he overstates his case, as is pardonable in one so much younger than the rest of us (13 March), Djilas pere, Sir Fitzroy Maclean, whom...
The case of Alger Hiss
The SpectatorSir: Mr Peter Paterson (10 April) describes Alger Hiss as another Dreyfus, i.e. a man falsely accused of treason. He describes Whittaker Chambers, who provided the Principal but...
Health on the West Bank
The SpectatorSir: Being a researcher interested in health care and having just returned from the West Bank, I believe Gerda Cohen (10 April) totally fails to appreciate the dire state of...
Gay Tories
The SpectatorSir: I read with interest your cartoon, 'I wish someone would support me — I'm a right-wing gay' in the Spectator (3 April). Sadly it is true that a large majority of Con-...
Down the Warren
The SpectatorSir: Being a devoted fan both of the cinema and the Spectator I feel obliged to write and tell you of Mr Ackroyd's mistake in his Vic- tor/Victoria review (10 April), the...
A lie about Washington?
The SpectatorSir: For those of us who have not sat op- posite Mr Alastair Forbes at a dinner party, his review of All the President's Kin (17 April) was our first opportunity to read his...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorRab's last words John Grigg L ord Butler of Saffron Walden (herein- after Rab) was, as everyone agrees, a man of rare intelligence and fascination. He brought to politics, in...
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Indispensable
The SpectatorPhilip Warner Alanbrooke David Fraser (Collins £12.95) T his excellent book begins with the chronicle of a day in Alanbrooke's life in 1944. He was 60. Work started when he...
Faux pas
The SpectatorArthur Marshall French False Friends C. W. E. Kirk-Greene ( Routledge & Kegan Paul £7.95) French False Friends C. W. E. Kirk-Greene ( Routledge & Kegan Paul £7.95) T hose of us...
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Complete Rooke
The SpectatorTerence de Vere White Burne-Jones Talking His conversations 1 895-98, preserved by his studio assistant Thomas Rooke, edited by Mary Lago (John Murray £12.50) T his is an odd...
Darkness
The SpectatorAnthony Storr Koestler lain Hamilton (Seeker & Warburg £12) ne day, some earnest seeker after a doctorate will catalogue the contribu- tions made to English life and culture...
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April showers
The SpectatorAnthony Blond Au Revoir Monsieur Bonjour T last saw her, I was going to say in 'public, but as that and her private life are indistinguishable, and now more so, I had better...
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Proper Daddy
The SpectatorJames Neidpath Heydrich: The Pursuit of Total Power Gunther Deschner (Orbis f10) C hristabel Bielenberg, visiting the Oranienberg concentration camp where her husband was...
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El Dorado
The SpectatorFrancis King The Voyage of the Destiny Robert NYC (Hamish Hamilton, £8.50) I n February 1618, Sir Walter Ralegh , ageing and ailing, was aboard his flagship the Destiny,...
Books Wanted
The SpectatorADELAIDE WEINBERG: 'John Elliot Cairnes and The American Civil War', (Kingswood Press). D. F. McCormack, 79 Waterland Road, Dublin 4. REV. A. W. FLETCHER: 'Eckington; The Story...
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Old stones
The SpectatorNaomi Mitchison Megalithomania John Michell (Thames & Hudson £8.50) J ohn Michell is a very cunning author. First you think this is a delightful picture book with a bit of...
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Foreign fare
The SpectatorJohn McEwen A culture foreign to one's own can be just as foreign in its pictures as in its writings, that is one lesson to be drawn from some of the more prominent shows of...
ARTS
The SpectatorThat old-fashioned feeling Peter Ackroyd The Grass Is Singing ('A', selected cinemas) D oris Lessing's novel, from which The Grass Is Singing has been adapted, opens with a...
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Television
The SpectatorTeam-work Richard Ingrams A s the weeks pass I become more more convinced that the way out of Ow economic mess is for the Governmen t ,f hand the BBC over to private...
Theatre
The SpectatorHome thoughts Mark Amory Not Quite Jerusalem (Royal Court) Bring Me Sunshine, Bring Me Smiles (Shaw) Not in Front of the Audience (Drury Lane) N ot Quite Jerusalem is...
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Low life
The SpectatorLong-distance Jeffrey Bernard T f one needed proof of the stupidity of 'Americans beyond the democratic elec- tion of both Mr Carter and Mr Reagan then surely Heaven's Union,...
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No. 1212: The winners
The SpectatorJaspistos reports: Competitors were asked for a poem to suit Tennyson's title for one of his: 'Supposed Confessions of a Second- rate Mind Not in Unity with Itself. Carelessly...
Co mpe titio n
The SpectatorNo. 1215: Funny faces Set by Charles Seaton: A new hazard for public personalities is that they may be chosen as the subject of the drawing in 'Bir- thdays Today' in The Times....
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Crossword 554
The SpectatorA prize of ten pounds will be awarded for the first correct solution opened on 10 May. Entries to: Crossword 554, The Spectator, 56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL. a im NM...
Solution to 551: Strange
The Spectator1111M110001.1,11 IIMI 61 wpm Eire l i d115 R II ErMEM Op R L E T T IR:186V1 Ler.] or rig A N oaL E r I id r rE 1 1._ 0114JIIIII ri 11TEillrEgail FREE-1,0m R E ifil...
Chess
The SpectatorFestival Raymond Keene T here is still well over a week left to see a team of world class Grandmasters plus c hampion Anatoly Karpov in action at the Phillips and Drew Kings...