6 MARCH 1976

Page 1

Onwards the nanny state

The Spectator

lain Macleod used to speak of the 'nanny state'. There could be no better illustration of what he meant by the phrase than the measure passed by the House of Commons last...

Page 3

The Week

The Spectator

Alexander Solzhenitsyn appeared on television to declare that the West was on the 'verge of collapse'. Under the influence of this intoxicating rhetoric, Lord GeorgeBrown stood...

Page 4

Political Commentary

The Spectator

Tories and the unions Patrick Cosgrave In considering the Conservative Party's latest opening to the trade unions one old rule should be remembered—that nothing is party...

Page 5

Notebook

The Spectator

It is poignant and ironic that Alexander olzhenitsyn's powerful warning of a sudden and imminent fall' of the West should have led so instantly and directly to the collapse of...

Page 7

Another voice

The Spectator

Free Albert Thorogood Auberon Waugh Ladies I meet in London sometimes say What a convenient thing it must be for ine to have as many opportunities for airing my social...

Page 8

Democracy and the CIA

The Spectator

Michael Ledeen Rome Scandals are nothing new to Italy, but Italians have clearly been shaken by the source of the latest accusations to rock their political world. The members...

Page 9

Sunny Vietnam

The Spectator

Richard West Nostalgia stabbed at me as I read the news item that South Vietnam is hoping for 10,000 foreign tourists this year and that Saigon itself is the main tourist...

Page 10

Is Israel racist?

The Spectator

Patrick Marnham The press has unaccountably overlooked the news about Jim Baatright, the American basketball professional. Baatright is now allowed to play for Makabi of Tel...

Page 12

Can Ford Win?

The Spectator

Henry Fairlie Washington Ho! Hum! Here we go again! Another American presidential election! And immediately the blood begins to race in one's veins. Every four years, as the...

Page 13

The Thoughts of Col Gaddafi

The Spectator

Peter Hebblethwaite Libya is a country which has a vast territory, a small population (2,700,000) and considerable wealth from carefully husbanded oil. It is also blessed with...

Page 14

Belonging to Glasgow

The Spectator

Jim Higgins I must confess that I like Glasgow. I like the place despite its blackened air of unkempt squalor and despite the fact, according to my own subjective internal...

Page 15

Man of letters

The Spectator

Neil Sinclair Geoffrey Woolley is a gentle, self-effacing bachelor in his fifties who receives as many as 500 letters a day from strangers. He must also be among the most...

Page 16

Tree uses

The Spectator

Denis Wood The Tree Council was formed two years ago to focus attention on the importance of trees in both town and country and to remind local authorities, and indeed all of...

Page 17

In the City

The Spectator

Ethic of the mixed economy Nicholas Davenport The good-natured television interview between Robin Day and the Chancellor was a delight to watch. Every time Robin Day carefully...

Page 18

Marxianity

The Spectator

Sir: The reasons for the churches' approval of Marxist regimes may be many but the most obvious one is fear. Fear on the part of church leaders in the countries concerned that...

A liberal regime?

The Spectator

Sir: Please allow me some space to comment on the issues raised by your contributor Richard West (February 21). He has exaggerated in his criticism of Bernard Levin's article in...

Language

The Spectator

Sir: Mr Lockhart's article on the decline in modern language study mentions the lack of good language teachers as a main contributor to this sad state of affairs. Although lack...

Examinations Sir: Since examinations and all their techniques are under

The Spectator

the microscope It behoves everybody to pay attention to the outcome. Dilettante extremists argue that all examinations are superfluous and should be abolished. In that case how...

Page 19

McMahon correspondence

The Spectator

Sir: I hope that Professor Kedourie will forgive me if I say that in unravelling the Anglo-Arab labyrinth, he reminded me of a highly skilled dentist whose drill probes through...

Petitioning

The Spectator

Sir: I was interested, as I hope were many of your readers, in Norman St JohnStevas's article about petitions in your edition of 28 February. What you, and perhaps they, do not...

not exceed 1 kg in weight.'

The Spectator

Here perhaps is a means, by which we can secure not only better government, but also better PO finances—for surely government would pay the Post Office for the work done! Roger...

Rhodesia

The Spectator

Sir: As a regular subscriber to The Spectator, I must express my disappointment with the tenor of your editorial—'Rhodesian opportunity'—in your issue of 21 February. In...

Page 20

Books

The Spectator

In the junk yards Philip Mason The Opium War Brian Inglis (Hodder and Stoughton £5.25) '"A child? I always thought they were fabulous monsters," said the Unicorn. "Is it...

Page 21

Fallen arches

The Spectator

John Julius Norwich The Norman Fate David Douglas (Eyre Methuen £11.25) The Normans and their Myths R. H. C. Davis (Thames and Hudson £3.25) The Norman Age A. F. Scott (White...

Page 22

Crime compendium

The Spectator

Patrick Cosg rave It is hard to explain, not just the power, but the attraction, of Jacqueline Wilson's crime novels, the fourth of which, Let's Pretend, has just come from...

Page 23

Light blue

The Spectator

Duncan Fallowell Wilt Tom Sharp (Secker and Warburg £3.50) Wilfred and Eileen Jonathan Smith (Hutchinson £3.75) Listen, don't anyone fall off their breakfast bar stool or...

Crystal balls

The Spectator

Benny Green Paxton's Palace Anthony Bird (Cassell £4.50) In the early evening of November 30, 1936, I was fooling around in the gutters behind Euston Road with a couple of...

Page 24

Ex cathedra

The Spectator

H. J. Eysenck Life—The Unfinished Experiment S. E. Luria (Souvenir Press 0.50) The author of this book is a Professor of Biology and Director of the Centre for Cancer Research...

Lucky Lucas

The Spectator

Alan Brien The Lucan Mystery Norman Lucas (W. H. Allen E3.50) We Lucan-spotters, a devoted if dwindling corps, will pick up The Lucan Mystery with some hopes that it might...

Page 25

Old spice

The Spectator

Angela Huth The Trial of Annie Besant and Charles Bradlaugh Roger Manvell (Elek/ Pemberton £5.95) Just ninety-nine years before the Linda Lovelace trial re-tickled the British...

Introduction

The Spectator

Alan Montefiore Reflections on Language Noam Chomsky (Temple Smith £5.00) Even allowing for his own extraordinary standards of productivity, this must surely (for the present...

Grand manners

The Spectator

Peter Washington Primal Vision. Selected Writings Gottfried Benn (Marion Boyars £6.50) Man is the animal who questions his own existence; that is the proposition to which...

Page 26

The slow death of Cambridge English

The Spectator

Peter Ackroyd At a time when frenzied letters are being written to the Times about the state of contemporary art criticism, it is as well to remember that there are far more...

Page 27

Arts

The Spectator

Duds' army in the bin Kenneth Robinson One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Director: Milos Forman Stars: Jack Nicholson, Louise Fletcher, William Redfield. 'X' Odeon, Leicester...

Theatre

The Spectator

Second look Kenneth Hurren Otherwise Engaged by Simon Gray (Queen's Theatre, London) The 'Hits Revisited' caper is a well-known stand-by of theatre reviewers in those weeks...

Page 28

Music

The Spectator

Giving voice John Bridcut Brilliant though they may be, it is not by the professionals that the musicality of a nation is judged; the decisive factor is the amount of music in...

Opera

The Spectator

Ring time Rodney Milnes The English National Opera has just given three Ring cycles in London and is about to perform four more on tour—in Leeds, Birmingham, Manchester and...

Page 29

Television

The Spectator

Sporting types Jeffrey Bernard On Saturday afternoons my gambling becomes compulsive. During the week I kid myself that my hours spent in betting shops have something to do...