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Mirror, Mirror, up the wall
The SpectatorJournalists are more adept than most at accusing others of hypocrisy. Commentators and leader-writers have not hesitated to criticise employers and unions for reaching wage...
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Political Commentary
The SpectatorThe uncaring English Ferdinand Mount The significance of the government's unexpected defeat on Clause One of the Scotland Bill must not be underestimated. The long-term...
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Notebook
The SpectatorLast Sunday, while waiting to watch the historic television broadcast from Jerusalem, I started to read George Ward's account of the Grunwick confrontation in the Sunday...
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Another voice
The SpectatorLady Pembroke's baby Auberon Waugh Everybody of good will in Britain will have rejoiced to learn last week, through the good offices of Mr Nigel Dempster, that the Countess of...
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An irreversible act
The SpectatorEdward Mortimer Jerusalem Many people in Israel, in Egypt and elsewhere will be grateful to President Sadat for his astonishing unilateral gesture in going to Israel. But if...
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Sadat, television hero
The SpectatorNicholas von Hoffman Washington Official Washington did not like it when it really got through that Anwar Sadat was using CBS's Walter Cronkite to talk to Menachem Begin. As...
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Electioneering in Natal
The SpectatorRichard West Pietermaritzburg In the last, unfinished Wodehouse novel (Sunset at Blandings, Chatto and Windus, £3.95) Sir Galahad Threepwood excuses himself from a game of...
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Setbacks for Fraser
The SpectatorDavid McNicoll Sydney 'Oh God, not again!' This was the universal reaction when Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser announced a new election for 10 December. The Liberal, Labour and...
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An odd couple
The SpectatorCharles Foley Santa Monica One of the more curious turns in the American political circus is the Tom and Jane Show. It stars those famous Vietnam veterans Tom Hayden and Jane...
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Sir Walter Mitty
The SpectatorChristopher Booker After ploughing through Andy Roth's somewhat laborious demi-biography*, I fear we all have to face up to the undeniable tact that Harold Wilson, Knight of...
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Underestimating Mr Benn
The SpectatorJohn Biffen British politics have become increasingly unpredictable over the past generation. It now seems scarcely conceivable that the post-war Attlee administration did not...
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The firemen's hopeless case?
The SpectatorPeter Paterson 'Toot your horn if you support us,' reads the sign chalked on a board outside our local fire station, and I duly salute the huddled pickets standing waif-like in...
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The real SS
The SpectatorPatrick Cosg rave Mr Jonathan Guinness, readers may recall, once rejoiced in the political nickname, 'razor blades'. This was not because he had ever betrayed any marked...
A private life
The SpectatorAngela Huth 'Know thyself? If I knew myself, I'd run away,' said Goethe. So should I; and it was not to get to know myself that I went to Norfolk last week, though there were...
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High life
The SpectatorWinners all Taki It was election time last week. The birthplace of democracy held a general election, the International Bachelors Society elected the ten most exciting women...
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In the City
The SpectatorBuy gilts! Nicholas Davenport The City decided — rightly I think — that markets had been playing things a little too coolly. Equity shares have given up their gains and the...
Mr Begin's record
The SpectatorSir: 'I cannot quite understand why the strong distaste remains' is the most significant remark of Patrick O'Donovan in his article Memories of Begin (19 November), for that...
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Armorial bearings
The SpectatorSir: Peter Bauer (12 November) is surely right in his contention that the main differences between English and continental patterns of class distinction arise from the fact that...
Who rules?
The SpectatorSir: How would it be if instead of repeating over and over again 'the Tories were brought down by the miners' (Jim Higgins, 12 November) and nonsense about living 'under a trade...
Forest of Dean
The SpectatorSir: Mr Brian Cave's concern for the Forest of Dean (Letters 29 October) does nn t absolve him from checking the facts. The Ministry of Agriculture has nO responsibility,...
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Books
The SpectatorMuch ado about something Raymond Carr Guernica, Guernica Herbert R. SouthWorth (California UP 215) Some events in history acquire a symbolic Significance out of all proportion...
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Ambivalent
The SpectatorFrancis King Angela Thirkell: Portrait of a Lady Novelist Margot Strickland (Duckworth £5.95) On the first occasion that I met Angela Thirkell, she complained at length to me...
Body and soul
The SpectatorMary Kenny Baby and Child Penelope Leach (Michael Joseph £6.95) A Child is Born Lennart Nilsson (Faber & Faber £2.95) Parenthood is a skill that is learned. In most tribes, it...
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Individuals
The SpectatorGeoffrey Wheatcroft The War Lords A. J. P. Taylor (Hamish Hamilton £5.95) Mr Taylor's new book consists of the transeripts of six lectures on the national leaders of the second...
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Bang bang
The SpectatorJohn Gribbin The First Three Minutes Steven Weinberg (Deutsch -£4.50) The Cosmic Frontiers of General Relativity William J. Kaufmann (Little, Brown: Boston $6.95) The...
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The trap
The SpectatorPeter Ackroyd Tornado Pratt Paul Ableman (Gollanoz £4.95) People always want to discover 'the truth' about things; but if they were to find it, what would they do with it? The...
Beyond reality
The SpectatorBenny Green The Book of Nonsense Edited by Paul Jennings (Macdonald 6.95) In marshalling the chronicles of nonsense it is as well for the anthologist to know exactly what he is...
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Art books and arts
The SpectatorEnglish painters, British art Bryan Robertson The Century of Change: British Painting since 1900 Richard Shone (Phaidon 12.95) Most people agree that painting in England since...
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Sweetsmelling
The SpectatorHelen Smith Sweetness and Light: The 'Queen Anne' Movement in Architecture Mark Girouard (OUP £15) The slightly frivolous sounding 'Sweetness and Light' of the title, coming...
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Art
The SpectatorAbstraction John McEwen The show of Jan Dibbets's recent photographic studies at Hester van Royen (till 10 December) is very small indeed, consisting of three new works and...
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Opera
The SpectatorLohengrin and bear it Rodney Milnes Lohengrin (Covent Garden) Eugene One& (Kent Opera) The Marriage of Figaro (WNO) Most performances of Lohengrin are either badly staged,...
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Theatre
The SpectatorDeathly hate of the sexes Ted Whitehead The Father (Greenwich) Antony and Cleopatra (Old Vic) In Sweden in the 1860s a young couple v■talk in the birchwoods. They're in love...
Cinema
The SpectatorBalance Clancy &gal Before Hindsight (The Other Cinema) Next to ectoplasm, 'journalistic balance' is probably the most invisible of elements. Personally I have never seen it,...
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Television
The SpectatorContentious Richard Ingrams 1 am expecting any day now to receive the accolade of 'Defender of the Faith' from the Vatican, not that I really deserve it. It just seems to mc...
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End piece
The SpectatorBookbound Jeffrey Bernard One of my favourite cartoons of all time was a John Glashan one which appeared in Private Eye some five years ago. The drawing was almost irrelevant...