13 NOVEMBER 1976

Page 1

Enoch in Wonderland

The Spectator

Mr Enoch Powell has so frequently been ahead of other Politicians in his understanding of the problems and Perils that Britain has faced, that we must give more careful...

Page 3

The Week

The Spectator

Although it was two MPs lighter after last week's by-elections, the Government scraped through its critical divisions in the House of Commons. The contentious Bills which had...

Page 4

Political Commentary

The Spectator

Mrs Thatcher's poodle? John Grigg Last week's by-election results were certainly very good for the Conservatives, as they could hardly fail to be at a time of almost...

Page 5

Notebook

The Spectator

For those still determined to shut their ears to . 1 he roar of Britain's approaching economic Niagara', it has been another bad week. The discovery that the Government is going...

Page 6

Fraud at the polls

The Spectator

An easy majority of the electorate, however, voted for nobody. How agreeable life would be if in some proportionally representative system of the future the abstainers could be...

Page 7

Twilight of the Doctor

The Spectator

Patrick Cosgrave The extraordinary influence enjoyed by Dr Henry Kissinger •during his eight years of high office (first as presidential adviser on national security, then as...

Page 8

Sedition on the television

The Spectator

Charles Foley Los Angeles California's leading think-tank, the Rand Corporation, is in the course of making a wide-ranging study of international terrorism, and some of its...

Page 9

Apartheid starts to crack

The Spectator

Ian Waller Visiting South Africa arouses deeply conflicting emotions. The sybariatic pleasures of the warm sea and a relaxed life under the sun. Anger at the cruel and...

Page 10

Coalition must be the answer

The Spectator

Anthony Nutting Even more alarming and depressing than the latest decline of the pound is the unthinking haste with which our political leaders have dismissed Mr Harold...

Page 11

Calling a spade a spade

The Spectator

Richard West The Manchester Guardian, although a liberal and tolerant newspaper, used always to name the race of those who came up in court. It was a 'Jew pedlar', in February...

In defence of the guillotine

The Spectator

Eric Moonman Visitors to the Strangers' Gallery of the House of Commons can be forgiven if, in the recent 'guillotine' debates, they believed the Opposition assertions that the...

Page 13

Nanny in a National Park

The Spectator

Antonia Martin The Brecon Beacons, one of the most beautiful wild landscapes in Wales, is well on the way to acquiring the title of 'the London foothills'. A recent survey has...

Page 14

Books and Records Wanted

The Spectator

THE VOYAGES AND CRUISES OF COMMODORE WALKER edited by R. E. Vaughan in the Seafarers Library published by Cassell in 1928. Write : Spectator Box 716. THE COLLECTED POEMS OF...

Racing

The Spectator

Bad tips Jeffrey Bernard Impersonating God is a tricky business. Last week's tips were simply flushed away. sometimes think, when the game is reallY bad that is, that the...

Page 16

In the City

The Spectator

Sterling balances the key Nicholas Davenport AsIwrite, the Governor of the Bank of England, the mild-mannered Gordon Richard son, will be discussing with his fellow central...

Page 17

Mr Short and Mr Callaghan

The Spectator

Sir: The report by Richard West in your issue of 30 October of a comment I am alleged to have made about the Prime Minister is inaccurate and, one must assume, maliciously so,...

Litter louts

The Spectator

Sir: The simplest way to ensure that people don't throw litter abo.ut is to affix litter bins to every bus stop and every other lamp-post, Which are emptied by the dustbin men...

Mary

The Spectator

Sir: Auberon Waugh's remarks on the Virgm (9 October) deserve some comment. Let Me add that I am not a Catholic. He quotes a remark in a book which repeats the familiar C...

Crime on high

The Spectator

Sir: May I be one to congratulate John Grigg on his forthright and courageous article headed: 'Crime in high places'? He left out another of the political villains responsible...

The PR humbug

The Spectator

Sir: Mr Brian Stevens, Assistant Secretary to the Institution of Professional Civil Servants, would make a better case for PR if he had some small knowledge of the English...

Educational policy

The Spectator

Sir: Many teachers and others will have agreed with T. E. B. Howarth's devastating comments on the great educational debate. It is certainly ironical that it should have been...

Page 18

Sir: Most of Mr Howarth's article on the Great Education

The Spectator

Debate seems entirely sound and well worth saying, but there is one area where he uses the original argument of the comprehensive lobby and gets an extremely important point...

Look at Germany

The Spectator

Sir: The American general who called Britain's defence forces pathetic should take a good look at West Germany. They have one of the smallest navies in Europe and no nuclear...

Angola's war

The Spectator

Sir: I feel that I must reply to Xan Smiley's 'Angola's forgotten war' (16 October), which contained sev.eral serious errors of fact. Firstly, there is no evidence that 'UNITA...

Spectator 13 November 1976 any of the.other Angolan leaders. But

The Spectator

when it comes to results the inescapable fact IS that, after the departure of the Portuguese , UNITA-held areas in Angola simply ceased to work. Portuguese landlords, who fin'...

Discrimination

The Spectator

Sir: Race Relations Acts and regulatitin s appear to be a one-way affair, witness the frequent accommodation advertisemen ts specifying 'Indians only', 'West Indian s only'. 1...

Immigrants

The Spectator

Sir : Mr Enoch Powell tells us that Britain' s indigenous population is being replaced h)". African and Asian stock at the rate 01 110,000 a year. As an Englishwoman wh ° loves...

Page 19

Books

The Spectator

A family at war Lord Lambton Unity Mitford: A Quest David PryceJones (Weidenfeld and Nicolson E6.50) Every now and again an author conceives he has made a great discovery...

Page 20

Treason of the clerks

The Spectator

Paul Fussell Scoundrel Time Lillian Hellman (Macmillan £4.95) This memoir-apologia by a famous victim of the McCarthy 'Communist' witch-hunt of the 'fifties re-opened numerous...

Books and Records Wanted

The Spectator

CRANFORD, Good copy ill. by Hugh Thomson. Macmill ° & Co (1891 reprinted 1892-5). Tel : 01-228 7247, GIDEON Crime novels, Lady Morland, Thornton-le' e ' Yorkshire. LA MARE AU...

Page 21

Not waving but drowning

The Spectator

Dennis Hackett Walking on the Water Hugh Cudlipp (Bodley Head £5.95) What Hugh Said and What Hugh Did have long been part of the currency of gossip in Fleet Street. The cigar,...

Page 22

Speak up!

The Spectator

Lord Hailsham Mr Speaker, Sir Selwyn Lloyd (Jonathan Cape £4.95) Both Houses of Parliament have their Speakers. The Speaker of the House of Lords is the Lord Chancellor. Since...

Page 23

Clowning

The Spectator

Nick Totton Slapstick Kurt Vonnegut (Jonathan Cape E3.50) A Sea-Grape Tree Rosamond Lehmann (Collins £3.50) A new Kurt Vonnegut novel is an occasion for intense but somehow...

Page 24

Ah • • .

The Spectator

Benny Green Love Letters: An Anthology Chosen by Antonia Fraser (Weidenfeld and Nicolson £4.95) There are three large impediments to an effective anthology of love letters....

Page 25

Arts

The Spectator

The luxury of the real thing Bryan Robertson PruneIla Clough's paintings have the same distant but true relationship with urban realities as the imaginatively eccentric...

Page 26

Opera 1

The Spectator

Einstein on the beach Barbara M. Reise For more than a week in October, the Opera Comique in Paris was the site of an amazing event : the avant-garde opera Einstein on the...

Opera 2

The Spectator

Humping Rodney Milnes The germ of Alberto Ginastera's Bomarzo is the famous Park of Monsters near Viterbo , which inspired the composer's Argentinia n compatriot and eventual...

Page 27

Cinema

The Spectator

White legacy Clancy Sigal No white man would have dared to make Xala (Phoenix, AA certificate). At first glance, it confirms everything you've ever heard (or said) about the...

Page 28

Art

The Spectator

Lost impetus John McEwen One of the troubles with art today is that there has never been a time when artists were better informed about art and, consequently, more...

Page 29

Theatre

The Spectator

Pleasure isle Ted Whitehead Rum an Coca-Cola (Royal Court) The Artful Widow (Greenwich) Recently I went to hear a steel band, expecting some lively ethnic music, and it was a...

Television

The Spectator

Old times Richard Ingrams The obsequiousness with which artists are treated by television, on which I commented recently, is particularly ridiculous in the case of the makers...