25 NOVEMBER 1978

Page 3

Interests of the State

The Spectator

Almost no one emerges with credit from the trial under the Official Secrets Act of Messrs Aubrey,' Berry and Campbell (ABC), which ended a week ago. Whatever may he thought of...

Page 4

Political commentary

The Spectator

The Messina illusion Ferdinand Mount In dealing with the Continentals, Mr Callaghan used to remind us, we are defending 'the language of Chaucer and Milton.' So far as...

Page 5

Notebook

The Spectator

I t is not the first time that a tiny country c ourtroom has been the setting for exciting events. A colleague who was there recalls the confusion eight years ago when the W I ,...

Page 6

Another voice

The Spectator

The swing, the swing Auberon Waugh On Wednesday of this week Dr Edward Norman, who has been Dean of Peterhouse, Cambridge, since 1971, celebrated his fortieth birthday, in the...

Page 7

Elegy for Rhodesian whites

The Spectator

Richard West Inyanga, Eastern Rhodesia What might be described as Rhodesian culture shows signs of an elegiac mood.— of mournful regret for the white.way of life. Even before...

Page 8

The celluloid scandal

The Spectator

Bart Mills Johannesburg Independent film producers are always looking for new, and preferably gullible, backers. Even governments can sometimes be duped by speculators from...

Page 9

The battle over sovereignty

The Spectator

Sam White With six months still to go before voting day, the election campaign for the first directly elected European Parliament is already in full swing in France. Contrary...

Page 10

Wrecking the Shah's dream

The Spectator

Roger Cooper Although the current absence of bulletins from Iran is seen in some quarters as a sign that the patient is recovering from a critical illness, it is much more...

Page 11

Discontent on the Spanish Right

The Spectator

David Gilmour Madrid A few weeks ago in Salamanca an unknown man slaughtered three fighting bulls the night before they were due to appear in the ring. The incident produced an...

Page 12

Human rights and foreign policy

The Spectator

Patrick Cosgrave The release of Mr Sharygin after a decade in Russian prison camps raises again the question of the correct attitude of the West to Soviet inhumanity. Most...

Page 13

Cults and the death wish

The Spectator

Christopher Booker The natural response to something so horri fYing and bizarre as the act of mass-suicide which engulfed an obscure Californian sect in the jungle of Guyana...

Page 14

The press

The Spectator

Parochialism Patrick Marnham The controversy over the merits of the TV series Holocaust, and the bitter dispute between the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Anti-Nazi...

Page 15

In the City

The Spectator

Fears of recession Nicholas Davenport In less than a week the Government produced figures which indicated that the sharp 21 per cent jump in Bank rate was unnecessary and...

A hundred years ago

The Spectator

The Paris correspondent of the Times forwards a curious list of the names circulated in 1848 from the Central Police Office of Berlin as those of men politically dangerous and...

Page 16

War criminals

The Spectator

Sir: Mr Patrick Cosgrave, in his review (18 November), contrasts the moral defieiencies of the Nazi leaders with the courage of the Resistance leaders: but how certain can he be...

Comment on comment

The Spectator

Sir: I have recently subscribed to the Spectator, hoping to find reasoned and unemotional critiques of the political scene and other matters of interest. For this reason, I am...

The great republic

The Spectator

Sir: Richard Ingrams was my hero unt il read his remarks about America. His ignur ance and bigotry are matched only by n t Y own before my recent first visit there. 1 10 ' ever,...

Daylight saving

The Spectator

Sir: Mr Hodgson (Letters, 18 Novembe r) asks why we do not reschedule our day hY shifting the clocks three hours back. would result in sunset at lunchtime in W u , winter and...

Page 17

Things of the past'

The Spectator

sir: It is amusin g to watch the contortions of that section , of journalistic opinion that hopes against all odds that peace will not Come to the Middle East and that Israel...

Speak up, Mrs T

The Spectator

Sir: The opinion polls g ive Labour a 5 percent lead over the Conservatives. There is also heightened criticism of the Conservative leadership. Can one besurprised? The writer...

Postcodes

The Spectator

Sir: The answer to Timothy Dufford's q uestion (Letters 4 November) is yes: letters will be delivered just as q uickly whether the postcode is in capitals or lower case...

By rail

The Spectator

Sir: I am compilin g an antholo g y of railway journeys in trains of all kinds (transcontinental, private, royal and presidential, prisoner of war and troop, branch line etc),...

Page 18

Books

The Spectator

The state of the fiction Paul Ableman The Sea, The Sea Iris Murdoch (Chatto & Windus £5.50): Winner of the 1978 Booker Prize for Fiction The short-list for-the Prize also...

Page 19

Opium of scientists

The Spectator

Andrew Boyle The Visible College Gary Werskey (Allen Lane 210.00) 'One man's socialism is the next man's heresy', runs the old saw. Among radical scientists in...

Page 20

Guided tour

The Spectator

Alan Watkins The Politics of Imperfection Anthony Quinton (Faber £5.95) The new President of Trinity College, Oxford, has written a modest little book. The unkind might say, as...

Page 21

ennery

The Spectator

John O'Sullivan T s ° Ily Senn: A Critical Biography Russell e wls (Associated Business Press 0. 50 ) Mr Tony Benn occupies a prominent place in the imagination of the English...

Miniaturist

The Spectator

Benny Green Essays E. B. White (Harper and Row 0.95) Letters of E. B. White Edited by Dorothy Lobrana Guth (Harper and Row E8.95) When it comes to disarming a critic, there is...

Page 22

Enigmatic

The Spectator

Patrick Cosg rave Ultra Goes to War: The Secret Story Ronald Lewin (Hutchinson £6.95) 'Ultra' (from ultra-secret) was the codename given during the last. war to the...

Page 23

C rack - up Richard Shone Scott and Ernest: The Fitzgerald uge!ningway Friendship Matthew

The Spectator

J. Bruccoil (Bodley Head £6.95) Er nest Hemingway and his world Anthony Burgess (Thames & Hudson 450) :,Before the Flowers of Friendship Faded l'r!enciship Faded'. Gertrude...

Page 24

Arts

The Spectator

The whole truth Peter Jenkins Betrayal (Lyttelton) I used to suspect that the Pinter technique consisted in writing a play and then tearing up every other page of it in order...

Radio

The Spectator

Breaking-up Mary Kenny The coming changes on the BBC racli° wavelengths (23 November) really a re extremely significant; their signifie aric , n e might be pondered by those...

Page 25

Cinema

The Spectator

Off guard Ted Whitehead Hitler — A Career (Classic, Oxford Street) in The Forest (London Film Festival) The Third Front (London Film Festival) As great men go, Hitler went,...

Page 26

Opera

The Spectator

Naughty North Rodney Milnes Samson et Delft; Dido and Aeneas & Les MameIles de Tinesias (Leeds) The two opening productions of the new English National Opera North constituted...

Dance

The Spectator

Pot-pourri Jan Murray Now that contemporary dance has reachedd the decade mark in this country it seern e appropriate, even necessary, to organise a showcase festival for all...

Page 27

Television

The Spectator

Having fun Richard Ingrams Earlier this year! remarked in a typical fit of spite and sourness that it was not to be wondered at that the BBC considered Leonard Bernstein's...

Page 28

High life

The Spectator

Hit job Taki New York Mortimer's is a brick-lined, black-panelled imitation mahogany American type of pub that looks like the inside of a fireplace. It is also the trendiest...

Low life

The Spectator

New leaves Jeffrey Bernard One of the most common phrases in country usage is the frequently uttered, 'You must come and have a drink with us ode evening this week.' It is...

Page 29

L ast word

The Spectator

News values Geoffrey Wheatcroft The 8.00 am news on Radio 4 last Friday — one of the last days when one could locate it On medium wave — led with the football .story: London...