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Portrait of the week
The SpectatorT he trend of falling interest rates in America, confirmed by the influential economist Mr Henry Kaufman, prompted the biggest one-day rise in share prices ever recorded on Wall...
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Political commentary
The SpectatorWhy Labour may revive Teddy Taylor rr here are few active politicians who can .1 remember a time when the Conser- vative Party was so popular with the voters and when the...
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Notebook
The SpectatorT he house in which I have lived for a number of years in a friendly part of Wales is up for sale (very cheap). The shortest poem written by Christopher Logue was addressed to...
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Mr Begin's grand design
The SpectatorChristopher Hitchens C lever scientists have been able to recon- struct the whole frame and fabric of a dinosaur from the study of one surviving bone or mandible. There is...
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By boat to Beirut
The SpectatorRichard West Larnaca, Cyprus A soon as Beirut airport was closed by the invasion of the Israeli army, the Lebanese discovered another means of travelling to and from the...
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Islands of death
The SpectatorAnthony Mockler T here is in existence a photograph, that will appeal to those who savour the irony of such things, showing Ted Rowlands at the Seychelles constitutional...
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Pyrrhic victory for Reagan
The SpectatorNicholas von Hoffman Washington B y tradition August is a month for pranks and small outbursts of madness. It is sometimes attributed to the heat on the prairies which makes...
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Armenian aspirations
The SpectatorRoger Cooper S ince 1975, some 21 Turkish diplomats, including family members, have been assassinated by members of ASALA, the acronym of the Armenian Secret Army for the...
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The cowboy image
The SpectatorRoy Kerridge P eterborough is not a favourite city of mine, and as I arrived in a hot, stuffy Bank Holiday coach I looked out of the window appalled at the crowds of surly ruf-...
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Sobering thoughts
The SpectatorColin Brewer A cohol, as Jeffrey Bernard and Auberon Waugh enjoy telling us, is a wonderful invention and many citizens, in- cluding me, get a lot of innocent if expen- sive...
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The press
The SpectatorDoubts about Tebbit Paul Johnson T he SDP leadership would be well advised, in shaping their policy on the unions, to pay particular attention to the woes of Fleet Street....
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In the City
The SpectatorUp and away Tony Rudd T his is the first time since the war that people in the City have been making very considerable sums indeed while those in industry and commerce have...
One hundred years ago
The SpectatorOne of the most frightful massacres which Ireland has yet witnessed was reported here this day week as having happened in the county of Galway, on the night of Thursday week....
In John Chancellor's article last week on antiquarian booksellers the
The Spectatorfigure '800' was unfortunately omitted from the sentence: `Book dealers have got it into their heads that there are in the whole world no more than 800 collectors of rare books.'
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Letters
The SpectatorPeace and human rights Sir: How does Mr Garton Ash know that not 'a single "unofficial person" from END' went to Warsaw during Solidarity' s overground period (21 August)? This...
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Sir: Patrick Desmond's thoughtless article, ' 'The propaganda of the
The Spectatordeed' (14 August) does not vindicate Simon Courtauld's argu- Ment in the same issue that `to criticise Mr Begin's Israel is not to be anti-semitic'. On the contrary, the...
The climbing runner
The SpectatorSir: I appreciate there may be more world- shattering events than the present discus- sion about the derivation of runner-beans. Simon Courtauld wrote (Notebook, 7 August) that...
Third world feminists
The SpectatorSir: Your article by Richard West attemp- ting to convince us of the great `content- ment' of third world women (who, he seems to presume, have no feminists among their great...
Compton Mackenzie
The SpectatorSir: I have been commissioned by Chatto & Windus Ltd to write a biography of the late Sir Compton Mackenzie who, amongst other things, contributed the column Sidelight to your...
Don't ask a policeman
The SpectatorSir: Simon Courtauld's item on Marie Lloyd and 'If you want to know the time ... ' (Notebook, 14 August) sprang to mind when I was covering the High Court case concerning Sean...
Small point
The SpectatorSir: In his review of the film Death Vengeance, a vigilante epic, your film critic writes (14 August): 'Chicago itself broods over the film like some doomed shanty town, wide...
Mr Begin's Israel
The SpectatorSir: It is good that the Spectator's columns contain forthright condemnation of Menachem Begin, and that Simon Court- auld (Notebook, 14 August) is so careful to distance...
Frivolity
The SpectatorSir: Your coverage of the Falklands episode has cleared up one small point: whether you run a fairly responsible journal of the liber- tarian Right or a fairly entertaining...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorA prose Browning John Stewart Collis T o start with we can say at once that Mr Donald Thomas has here given us the Works as well as the Man. Too often in biography the work is...
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Grande dame
The SpectatorPeter Quennell O n 18 December, 1812, a new Russian ambassador, Count Christopher Lieven, presented his credentials at the Court of St James. Though loyal, conscien- tious and...
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Language barrier
The SpectatorTerence de Vere White Progress of Stories Laura Riding (Carcanet New Press £7.95) 1 — Nive in at the deep end: An island is all around an island. An island is all round the...
Realism
The SpectatorRichard Ingrams T recently observed in my so-called tele- vision column that A J. Wentworth, 14 ' F. Ellis's saga of a poor old Pre!, schoolmaster was one of the few 8 0 °'...
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Sound and fury
The SpectatorFrancis King B eware of any politician or clergyman who uses the word 'Nay'. Even more, beware of any writer who does so. In his In- t roduction to this collection of short...
Books Wanted
The SpectatorSEASIDE GARDENING by Mrs Kellaway. Write Box No: 253 SG. DANGEROUS SKIES (1954) by Air Com- modore A. E. Clouston. Box No 253SG. BOOKS BY Sir Richard Burton — good condi- tion....
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How red was my valley?
The SpectatorAlan Watkins T he story goes that in the days of the old South Wales Miners' Federation (before it became part of the National Union of Mineworkers) there was a discus- sion...
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Metaphorical
The SpectatorD. J. Taylor he experimental novel is stirring again, 1 and with a fiction list containing Josipovici, Maggie Gee and now this ex- traordinary first work by Sue Roe the...
Poetic justice
The SpectatorJames Knox The Scottish Reformation: Church and Society in sixteenth-century Scotland Ian B Cowan (Weidenfeld and Nicolson £11.95) I t is impossible to like John Knox. He was...
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The Quest
The SpectatorRichard Calvocoressi t has become almost a cliche of literary I history that English writers in the 1930s were attracted to one of two sharply con- trasting beliefs: Marxism...
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ARTS
The SpectatorAn overdue acknowledgment John McEwen A 1782 was the year of Cotman's birth and 1881 was the year of Palmer's death, in centennial recognition of these two events and thanks...
Theatre
The SpectatorAdieu Duncan Fallowell Hamlet (Warehouse) J onathan Miller has promised that this is to be his last work as a director of plays. He has three operas in the pipeline, then he...
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Cinema
The SpectatorSoft porn Peter Ackroyd Puberty Blues (`AA', selected cinemas) A ustralia has more male transvestites per head of population than any other country in the world; I mention...
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Records
The SpectatorLollipops Anthony Burgess Bernstein Halil/Mass/On the Waterfront (DG 2532 051) I was in Milan recently (to receive the Premio Branca, if anyone is interested) and in La Scala...
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Low life
The SpectatorUnsporting Jeffrey Bernard T York last week for the Gimcrac k Stakes. British Rail took me there an d they brought me back and they never ceas e to amaze me. If I was on the...
High life
The SpectatorTouche Taki Spetsai O h dear. Odysseus has finally been taken in by a geriatric Circe. After 30 years of carefully negotiating social obstacle courses and jet-set minefields,...
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C o mpetition
The SpectatorAnd there you sat, scribbling and crossing No. 1233: Improving the Bard Set by Jaspistos: "Shall I compare a sum- mer's day to you ... ?" Even Shakespeare must sometimes have...
No. 1230: The winners
The SpectatorJaspistos reports: Competitors were asked to supply part of an ode in which a bird is unenthusiastically addressing Man or a man. It all began with Chesterton's 'The Skylark...
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Solution to 569: Mixed doubles
The Spectator'A ,..E. c 3-1- 7 - 7777s... % 9 1 R j ..11 P E 77 A Z E ..T... I DI 01 1 1. 1 _ PillAlEIER 1 E-.§.1 . it E V FIlli L E. L IINIHrIP L A . IIM I L,4 c 1 4 8 A N EIR T L:,I T AI...
Crossword 572
The SpectatorA prize of ten pounds will be awarded for the first correct solution opened on 13 September. Entries to: Crossword 572, The Spec ator, 56 Doughty Street, London WCIN 2LL. The...
Chess
The SpectatorRound up Raymond Keene L ast week I promised news of the English assault on the Mexico Interzonal and the Junior World Championship in Den- mark. There is no lack of results...