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Enoch Powell
The SpectatorSir: One positive proof that the recent Conservative Government, particularly its leader, is 'out of touch' was given us on the evening of February 7 when the PM on TV was asked...
Sir: At this moment of intermission in the parliamentary career
The Spectatorof Mr Enoch Powell. may I be permitted to place on record my thanks and appreciation for all he has done on behalf of Britain. His decision not to seek re-election for...
Sir: Your cartoonist misinterprets Mr Powell. As he says in
The Spectatorhis review: "Every item of de Gaulle's life as a statesman . . . is totally untranslatable into the terms of British politics." What could be clearer than that? There are people...
A slender marjonty
The SpectatorSir: An overall Labour majority of about twenty-three will be the result of the general election of February 28. This could be too slender a majority for Labour to live on for...
Vendetta
The SpectatorSir: I am glad that someone has at last expressed his views on The Spectator's 'editorial vendetta' with the Prime Minister. Mr Bell (Letters, February 16) is not the only one...
Full-hearted
The SpectatorSir: It may well be that politics has become so amoral an art that a Conservative government, returned to power, would take its re-election to mean that full-hearted consent to...
Controlling inflation
The SpectatorSir: Inflation seems to be the gr ea , l issue of this election. All parties a' against the monster, but the wea,P ° d li c they have chosen to fight it WO not impress me....
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Inflation and the unions
The Spectatorb.om Lt. Commander Noel Paulley Sir: The trade unions cannot reasonably be held responsible for an inflat ion which has got progressively worse during a period when wages were...
litieS
The SpectatorSir , May I submit the enclosed jingle in i!PlY to Christopher Hollis's jingle on ,ne Revolt of the Rich in this week's 'ssue5 lo defend Mr Michael Foot's policies , A gainst...
a4Ste system?
The Spectatorw age . • • a general attempt to stabilise th e , 8 ' • . to bring the lower paid up to to f 'evel of the better paid. . . doomed te r „ all • . . .murder the spirit of en-...
Rotten opportunism
The SpectatorSir: The fallibility of experts, especially political and economic, is notorious. Hence it was not a tremendous surprise to hear your able political correspondent Patrick...
Place in history
The SpectatorSir: If the history books ever require a nickname for the present administration, may I suggest the 'What I say three times is true' Government. L. A. Partridge 72 Eastfield...
Irish jokes
The SpectatorSir: Angus Maude's reference to the current spate of Irish jokes is timely, even if it is ambivalent (does he approve of them or not?). Is the fact that the Southern Irish...
Music to vote by
The SpectatorSir: Angus Maude writes in 'A Spectators Notebook (February 9) that when "the shadows of doom darken and hope seems futile" the best recourse is to play the 'Dies irae' from the...
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Campaign Commentary
The SpectatorThe leaders and their vulnerabilities Patrick Cosgrave Since it is at the moment fashionable not merely to deride our political leaders, but to assume that one's derision is...
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A Spectator's Campaign Notebook
The SpectatorAs you might expect in a 'bitter' and 'divisive' election, there has been remarkably little humour during the campaign. Mr Heath jerks his hands in and out of his pockets,...
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Opinion polls
The SpectatorMaking sense of the swings and roundabouts Conrad Jameson Interpreting opinion polls is the most gratifying of intellectual pastimes: everyone wins and no one loses, since...
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Bolton East
The SpectatorPeter Turner Once upon a time Bolton East was an easy industrial constituency to forecast. Bolton Tories and Liberals had a pact which gave Mr Philip Bell QC (Conservative) a...
Buckingham
The SpectatorBeryl McNulty Tory Bill Benyon won the marginal seat of Buckingham from Labour in 1970 with a majority of 2,521. Whether he will hold the seat on February 28 is one of the big...
Carshalton
The SpectatorA local correspondent The demi-richs.area of Surrey is not a Pla ce ,. where one would expect to find Michael Fo O : campaigning enthusiastically against tha' most moderate of...
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Exeter
The SpectatorGeoffrey Harvey-Barnes W ti hichever party wins Exeter is likely to form ; L rle next Government. The cost of living is not `ne biggest issue. Exeter people are not obs ,essed...
1 .oucester A l ocal correspondent he Intervention of a Powell-Conservative' i` a ndidate
The Spectatorhas added to the uncertainty at m er Y - held Gloucester where the indefatigable t o r t Sally Oppenheim had been widely tipped ,"eP hold of the seat she captured from cilloour...
Keighley and Bradford West
The SpectatorA local correspondent Keighley is a solid Yorkshire textile and engineering town with Howarth Moors within its boundaries. Miss Joan Hall, the Tory MP, had a majority of 616 in...
North Devon
The SpectatorChris Machin Housing, industrial development and communications are the three major local issues facing Jeremy Thorpe and his opponents in North Devon. Rising property prices...
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An election ABC
The SpectatorAbstention: an inability to choose the lesser of two evils. Balance: a statutory method of arranging television programmes to favour the other party. Common Market: the gun...
Paddington
The SpectatorA local correspondent "This," said Tory headquarters, "is the most crucial constituency in the election." and with the television cameras and national newspapers descending on...
Brussels letter
The SpectatorTime to think again Gerald Segal Fortunately we are not just back in sqL 18 , 1 ! one. The situation as it arises from both t"; EEC's failure to agree on internal and exterl...
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Left and right
The SpectatorWhen both ends meet John Fletcher Instead Of the conventional political map — a straight line with the left wing at one end and the right at the other, with consensus politics...
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Election Corridors
The SpectatorThis past week I came upon the trot for a visit with my friend Sir Simon at his seat in Huntingdon. The journey was a long and tedious one, my coachman getting frequently lost...
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Medicine
The SpectatorVD —the irresponsible propagandists John Linklater Daily newspapers do not often advise readers to risk catching venereal disease by indulging in promiscuity. But this is...
Advertising
The SpectatorAir conditions Philip Kleinman Licences to print money are pretty hard to come by these days, as the men who run our commercial radio stations can tell you. The prospect of...
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Religion
The SpectatorThe exile Martin Sullivan Alexander Isayenvich SolzhenitsYn has been thrown out of his native land. Born in Rostov-onbon in 1918, he was a mathematician first rather than a...
The Good Life
The SpectatorConfound their politicks Pamela Vandyke Price Aristotle would have been balked by me. For I am a wholly unpolitical animal. But indeed, was Aristotle gastronomic? And as...
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Juliette 'S Weekly Frolic
The SpectatorFinishing fifth in the Welsh Grand National does not get you a mention in the Sunday papers but Straight Vulgan did a lot better than most of his twenty-three opponents and in...
Country Life
The SpectatorCrocodile tears Peter Quince On a day when the wind howled in the tree-tops, and the rain swept across the landscape like an agent of divine retribution, it was pleasant to...
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Paperbacks number
The SpectatorRichard Luckett on Schoenberg and his search for structure 'Tor me the only exposition deserving the name of analysis is that which brings out the idea of a work and shows it...
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Who are the masters now?
The SpectatorKenneth Minogue Anyone who wishes to trace the movement of modern British sensibility can do no better than look at the books that are published each year by commercial houses....
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Paperback rider
The SpectatorPeter Ackroyd .w Reluctant Bride Barbara Cartland (Arrow Rook s 30p) ,, nfessions of a Private Soldier Timothy Lea (Sphere 30p) Although Miss Cartland always appears in s...
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Talking of books
The SpectatorPenguins and Paladins Benny Green It is not all that easy for a paperback to - 1 , its way into my library; easy, perhaps, but On` e ' all that easy. I suppose the rigour of...
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Bookbuyer's
The SpectatorBookend Sir Neville Cardus, in his memorable autobiography, tells a delightful story of his experience in the Long Room a Lord's. It was late in the summer of 1939, and...
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Clive Gammon on the election's witness box
The SpectatorMr Wilson, according to Peter Harland of the Observer who has been accompanying him on his travels, doesn't want to be bothered too much by the press. "He clearly appreciates,"...
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. 0 0d news_ R odney Manes
The Spectatorthe news seems bad Wadays," remarks someone in e – h e course of War and Peace; true d ' 4 °Ligh but not, for once, at Lonn n s opera houses. Maybe this is the week for Western...
Theatre
The SpectatorMirage of inconvenience Kenneth Hurren For most of his career as a dramatist, Jean Anouilh has been sardonically preoccupied with the ephemerality of love and the unholy...
Wi l l Wasp e
The SpectatorVanessa Redgrave's candidacy on behalf of the Workers Revolutionary Party is no surprise to Waspe who, by happy chance, was having a lunchtime fortifier the other day in a pub...
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Who are the guilty men?
The SpectatorRalph Harris Suppose we take a break from the Party political shadow-boxing that Passes for a mature democracy in action and ask who, if anyone, is r esponsible for the latest...
Computers
The SpectatorChallenging the DTI Ivor Catt The NRDC (National Research Development Corporation) was first asked to support the CAM invention eighteen months ago. Since then, though...