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THE WALL
The SpectatorT RE barbed wire is coming down in Berlin and the bricks are going up in its place; so much for Communist talk of 'temporary' measures on the sector borders. Meanwhile, though...
PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorBy ANTHONY HADEN-GUEST Ton theft of the Goya Wellington from a commanding position in the National Gallery spotlights for British benefit the emergence of a new international...
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Through the Brandenburg Looking-Glass
The SpectatorFrom SARAH CAINHAM Bunn.' HE four-power status of Berlin has been dead .i. for sonic years. Its burial took place, long after the demise, on Sunday, August 13. The testament of...
After the Ex p ulsion The, leaders of the TUC have clearly
The Spectatordecided, 1 and not before time, that their years of shameful inactivity in the face of the Com- munists' control of the Electrical Trades Union must be clearly seen to be over....
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The Lucrative Mystery
The SpectatorBy PETER FORSTER IN a sense, Independent 7 elevision came into being because Mrs. Ernest Bevin wanted to spend a weekend at Brighton. The wife of the then Foreign Secretary...
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Russia and the West under Lenin and Stalin. By George
The SpectatorF. Kennan. (Hutchinson, 40s.) that anyone claiming the right to influence our opinions should nourish ignorance or delusion about one of the most important factors—Soviet...