4 OCTOBER 1980

Page 3

Not fit to rule

The Spectator

Not fit to rule The Labour Party has gone left with astonishing speed and with very little notice being taken. Attention has instead been focussed on its internal...

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The slide goes on and on

The Spectator

Political commentary The slide goes on and on Ferdinand Mount Alackpool The star this vear? We need look no furthei than Mr Douglas Knott. unemployed toolmaker from Dorset....

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Notebook

The Spectator

Notebook Blackp ool 'It is a fraud what is told in newspapers every day about the Left I would like journalists who write and broadcasters who broadcast to tell the truth.' Mr...

Page 6

Home thoughts from abroad

The Spectator

Another voice Home thoughts from abroad Auberon Waugh Istatibid As I write. Conservative delegates will he busy polishing their shoes and brushing their dinner jackets in...

Page 7

Why Carter may still win

The Spectator

Why Carter may still win Henry Fairlie Wash/in1gtonZ President Carter is running a poor camnpaign. This pudding has no themes as Churchill once said. lie darts after Ronald...

Page 8

Reagan's rash flirtation

The Spectator

Reagan's rash flirtation Nicholas von Hoffman Was/hin gtlon The experience has been excruciating for the national leadership of whatever party. A large war is taking place a...

Page 9

Plumbing the depths

The Spectator

Plumbing the depths Tim Garton Ash Mulinich Remember the Reichstag fire'? Just a week before the German election the fire was a gift to the far-right candidate from Munich....

Page 10

Rumour and false report

The Spectator

Rumour and false report Karan Thapar New Delhi Though there is no paucity of 'news' coming out of Afghanistan. there is scarcity of accurate information. This is not...

Page 12

The quiet unemployed

The Spectator

The quiet unemployed John Morgan On 27 September, The Di1ncs offered a page of advice to those about to be made redundant from their work. Officially, the unemployment figures...

Page 14

Where the Tories have failed

The Spectator

Where the Tories have failed Jo Grimond British public authoritics. from ( ahinct to quango. from rrilnlstrv to local ofticials. nlowN norni'alkl' m c me mess of anI'thing...

Page 17

The ways of union committees

The Spectator

The ways of union committees Peter Paterson Any hope that the trade unions, in a reincarnation of the great triumvirate of Deakin, Lawther and Williamson - who told the Labour...

Page 18

Across the Morecambe sands

The Spectator

Across the Morecambe sands A.J.P. Taylor A../. 1. avlxorhlas l)e(''l rtIi.iitlt. fZ (itr ranada tviciolsw, fr L/ncah(Ir1ir tOImiws where he(, Spent hiS child/h)ood anl (Youth...

Page 19

Question and comment

The Spectator

Question and comment lzi-. Sir Thp A. i orNtb~ (27 Ci P~.aragraiph incI you Arteb( iii!I \1(l' ° tot 11 11 ix isilll. ilo ci' Is 'I.S Wi f the ml''rk its usal. I wOe'e ;,I...

Adolescence

The Spectator

Adolescence Sir: The unfortuiate and unhappy Shiva NaipaIul does get into some distressing situations when hie tramvels ( Victim of Ramadan', 13 September) Off hie goes to...

Unhelpful

The Spectator

Unhelpful Sir: I should like to take issue with Peter Ackrovd over the distorted image lhe gives of Greenland and her people in his article 'Three davs in Greenland' in vour...

Native words

The Spectator

Native words Sir: I usulKl! en joy IPeter Ackro\d's Srticlcs and was therefore disappointed to read Iin 'Three days in Greenland' (13 September) the wold 'inouits. Three...

The second face of power

The Spectator

Letters The second face of power S1r: As ralikll andl file 111membe-)cr of thec Labohn-r Part\, I hvleC the1C I-oope's LIIlCI'Ia'Cbl e hUt alsoIs ll iia nother scelse, pvI e d...

Muddled monetarists

The Spectator

Muddled monetarists Sir: The estimable Tony Rudd's article has ftlrther imilcd the misused coinage of the W'r'd 'i111rietanrism;' - anl abbreviated term of abuLIse adolpted b!...

Page 20

Interpreting history

The Spectator

Interpreting history Sir It is difficult to determine whcther Eric Petcrlade (I etters 1 3 Septcmbcr) is qucst i"ning the eCXtCet of thc H oloCaust or that it took place at...

Little letter

The Spectator

Little letter Sir: It may have been due to at printer s error that Alexander Chancellor's reference to a Portuguese Jew (Notebook, 20 Septemnber) appeared with a lower case...

The common touch

The Spectator

The common touch Sir: In the Spectator of 13 September I was surprised to find Taki (whorm I understand to he a Greek gentleman as well as the self-stvled 'world's foremost...

Page 21

Invention and prediction

The Spectator

Books Invention and prediction Graham Greene This is the third oJ four neuw EssaYs bY (Graham1 Greene which we, are p;ublishing. Th71e belong to a series of autobiographical...

Page 22

Pacifism in Britain 1914-45 Martin Ceadel Humanity in Warfare Geoffrey Best

The Spectator

Rights and wrongs of war John Keegan Pacifism in Britain 1914-45 Martin Ceadel (Oxford £12.50) Humanity in Warfare Geoffrey Best (Weidenfeld £15) Latin tags. once snmall...

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The Age of Stonehenge Colin Burgess The Enigma of Stonehenge John Fowles and Barry Brukoff

The Spectator

Prehistorical Eric Christiansen The Age of Stonehenge Colin Burgess Wuent £12). The Enigma of Stonehenge John Fowles and Barry Brukoff (Cape £6.95) I i~toi ! 15,hcCalc it...

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Nothing To Declare: The Political Corruptions of John Poulson Michael Gillard and Martin Tomkinson

The Spectator

The lessons of Poulson Richard West Nothing To Declare: The Political Corruptions of John Poulson Michael Gillard and Martin Tomkinson (John Calder £12.95) The authors are...

Page 25

Arthur C. Clarke's Mysterious World How to Get Your Book Published Gerald Sparrow

The Spectator

Mysteries Jeffrey Bernard Arthur C. Clarke's Mysterious World (Collins £8.95) How to Get Your Book Published Gerald Sparrow (Bachman & Turner £5.50) According to Arthur...

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A Short Time to Live Mervyn Jones

The Spectator

Island story l Paul Ableman A Short Time to Live Mervyn Jones (Deutsch £6.50) Eighteen months ago, John Updike's 11h Coup was published in England. Like the work under...

Page 27

World of Cookham

The Spectator

Arts World of Cookham JOhn McEwen I W'lCty-oynoe years after his dleatl and at quarter Of at ceniturv after the last nil jorsurvev of his work. Stalley Spencer recCIVes tile...

Page 28

Cosl fan tutte

The Spectator

Opera Bunkum Rodney Milnes Cosl tan tutte (Coliseum) What on earth are we to do about Cosi fan tutte? By 'we' I mean producers, designers, conductors, singers and, most...

Don Giovanni

The Spectator

Cinema Sound and fury Peter Ackroyd Don Giovanni ('A' Academy, Oxford Street) The faces of the singers are pale and smooth: when thev stride through tile streets of...

Page 29

Duet for One (Duke of York's) Pal Joey (Albery) Colette (Comedy)

The Spectator

Theatre Artists Peter Jenkins Duet for One (Duke of York's) Pal Joey (Albery) Colette (Comedy) Ambiguity is the playwright's prerog-a.tive. A newspaper article on the...

Page 30

Poseurs

The Spectator

High life Poseurs Taki Mv first reaction to seeing his name on the cover of the book (Private Pictures Cape £8.50) was what's a nice man like Anthony Burgess doing in such...

Not noble

The Spectator

Cricket Not noble Alan Gibson The echoes of the Centenary Test continue to rumble through the correspondence columns. I had better say at once that I was not there. but those...

Page 31

Absurd

The Spectator

Postscript Absurd Patrick Marnham Fresh heights of public absurdity were scaled this week with the announcement from Hollvwood that the actress Vanessa Redgrave had been made...

Teach-in

The Spectator

Low life Teach-in Jeffrey Bernard Last Saturday I took my ten-vear-old daughter to Ascot Races. It was the first title I had seen her for nine months, for one reason and...