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Terrorism the inescapable answer
The SpectatorThe calibre of the reaction of our western civilisation to organised violence has yet to be fully tested. Until the spate of outrages last week — from the renewal of terrorism...
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Giscard's burden
The Spectatorby the narrowest of majorities the French People have decided to avoid national selfu estruction, and M. Giscard d'Estaing has Proceeded with grace to the leadership of his e...
Australian setback
The SpectatorThe electoral news from Australia is far less cheering than that from France. Mr Whitlam has, in as close run a race as that in which M. Giscard triumphed, prolonged his...
India's bomb
The SpectatorPredictable outrage greeted the news of India's experimental explosion of her first nuclear bomb. Predictably, too, the Indian government issued a sanctimoniously...
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Food prices
The SpectatorSir: Mr Douglas Jay's article in The Spectator last week on food prices and the Common Market is an extraordinary web of half truths, misconceptions and false assumptions....
Prize animals
The SpectatorSir: Your criticism of competitions in which animals are the prizes is most unfair to the Sun and, what is more important, to the Sun's readers. You say that "in a large number...
Up Cosgrave!
The SpectatorSir: Up the Cosgrave Declaration! As people concerned with furthering the cause of Conservatism among students we hope that Patrick Cosgrave's willingness to talk to...
War artists
The SpectatorFrom Cdr Phipps Hornby, RN (Rtd) 'Sir: It is to be feared that a mis-statement has found its way into the book reviews that appear in your issue for May 18. The review in...
On Nixon
The SpectatorSir: From the general tone of his writing in The Spectator, Larry Adler would, I am sure, wish to be regarded as liberal. Could anything be more viciously illiberal than the...
Sir: 'Enough is (expletive deleted) Enough' says the headline on
The Spectatorthe front, page of The Spectator of May 18. 1 311 ,,` I've never heard a man with a go ev • flow of English say that. He alwaY, s , n sa n y ug s h? :' , Enough's e(expletive...
Benefactor
The SpectatorSir: I am afraid your columnist Cha d d Babble was fibbing when he clairne that mobile Mr Ronald Biggs Mad!: that anonymous £65,000 payment the Industrial Relations Court to...
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littoral fairness
The SpectatorW hile n ile Miss Enid Lakeman makes " h _ u t a good case for the single " a nsferable vote as contrasted with its una dventurous cousin, the alternative °te, I feel that she...
Sir : . d , t is very easy for Miss Lakeman
The Spectatorto 18 Parage the alternative vote by 4 4 ° ,,_tiog an extreme illustration. - " . noriy Wedgwood Benn also did so on JUne 9, 1964, when moving the i, e l,ection of a Bill under...
Darwin and religion
The SpectatorSir: Mr Benny Green's articles are always a pleasure to read, and full of stimulating ideas. But this week he has someone 'grinding the lens of thought to the point where it...
The porn debate
The SpectatorSir: It is sad to see someone with the ".reputation of Nils Bohr putting into my mouth words I did not say, presumably because they are easier to refute than what I did say. I...
Festival fringe
The SpectatorSir: Rodney Milnes takes a keek at Edinburgh Festival and Fringe audiences and secretly plans of jumbling up the tickets but I think that he has just let dab that he gets his...
Circumcision
The SpectatorFrom Dr C. H. C. Thomas Sir: I enjoy the articles by John Linklater in your publication but feel I must remind him that the story goes — "first the bad news, then the good...
Educational standards
The SpectatorSir: "There is now no excuse for thinking people not to realise that everything British education . . has stood for in its finest periods is under attack," you say in your...
Sir: When their football club is sent down into the
The Spectatorsecond division, people are upset and angry and even put on black. If they did the same whenever a good grammar school is forced to go comprehensive, there might be less damage...
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Political Commentary'
The SpectatorThe Tories need Enoch and Enoch needs the Tories Patrick Cosgrave My old teacher, Sir Herbert Butterfield — almost certainly the greatest of modern British historians — once...
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r,41, Spectator's Notebook Much power do union officers have? A
The Spectator" j ' Ar .i.'great deal — but of a very special kind. ye t'lle accusation that they possess that un...,:rnroelled freedom of action which is so rare c e Nr society is basically...
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Defence and deterrence
The SpectatorThe political will and the 'flexible response' A Senior Officer The Spectator publishes this article as matter of vital interest and concern, and is as assured of the accuracy...
GULLIVEK5 YOITAITA.L.
The SpectatorA certain Mandacticrer 2ro2osts to modify kis Asotes, to render Collision with. YootTassattgers less 1117414*os:1 do tat uttolersta4 how ki5Course ci Action i1 iitig arltievt...
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Local government (1)
The SpectatorThe corrupt juggernaut Paul Smith Local government, rarely front page news, is today in the centre of public attention because of the spate of corruption cases and reports of...
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Ai
The Spectatoraking the :rleuts id b tc lodes Boyson,MP lit, HE Greater London Council (Money) Bill r , W before the House of Commons aims to e l ve the GLC power to spend £56 million in 0....
Local government (3)
The SpectatorDan's castle': after the. fall Jane McLoughlin While the world waits to see what will be the next item of T. Dan Smith's dirty linen to be washed in public, we might spare a...
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Westminster Corridors
The SpectatorWhen I look about_me and behold the strange variety of persons which fill the Corridors and Lobbies with Business and Hurry, it is no unpleasant amusement to pick out the...
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Society and the disabled
The SpectatorAn open letter to Alfred Morris MP from Louis Battye Mr Alfred Morris, MP for Wythenshawe, has been appointed an Under-Secretary of State in the Department of Health and...
Press
The SpectatorPoliticians and platitudes Bill Grundy Every schoolboy knows that the Sage of Ecclefechan had a poo r opinion of the public. When asked what was the population c if • England,...
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Advertising
The SpectatorGiscard v Mitterrand Philip Kleinman The role of advertising is not usually a topic with which political elections are much con cerned, though their outcome may often be...
Charivari
The Spectatork moral-issue Another influential voice has joined the chorus d enouncing President Nixon. This week an editorial in the Las Vegas magazine Cosa Nostra declared that the...
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Religion
The SpectatorEye witness Martin Sullivan It has been the business of Biblical scholars to help us to examine in detail the narrative which is before us and tease out its separate elements....
Science
The SpectatorTasteful colours Bernard Dixon Our expectations of the way something ought to taste has a real effect on the way it actually does taste. That is the remarkable implication of...
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The Good Life
The SpectatorRejoicings in Noshleigh Pamela Vandyke Price The award of the Glenfiddich Trophy to Derek Cooper, as wine and food writer of the year was an event several years overdue —...
Gardening
The SpectatorOn the eve Denis Wood Towards the end of May the country is poised at the edge of summer. The loud Wagnerian longueurs of the full opera of roses, delphiniums and phlox are...
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H. J. Eysenck on
The Spectatorpsychiatry without tears This is a difficult book to review"' Its sub-title is "A new approach to the treatment of the mentally ill," and one might think that it would be easy...
Fathers
The SpectatorMy father may be often in my dreams Yet (since he died when I was young) play parts Or be himself — and stay unrecognized. In any case dreaming often modifies The features of...
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The metropolitan outback
The SpectatorIan Robinson The Metropolitan Critic Clive James (Faber £ 3 .95) T he "metropolitan critic" of Mr James's titlees say is Edmund Wilson, but the jacket rakes it plain that Mr...
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I BOOKS WANTED I
The SpectatorLOIRE VIVIEN ROWE Ann Mansbridge Eyre Methuen. 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4. CAMBRIDGE LESSONS IN ENGLISH by George Sampson (C.U.P. 1948). Shuter, 82 Mt Pleasant Road,...
The magic roundabout
The SpectatorFritz Spiegl The Grand Tradition: Seventy Years of Singing on Record 1900 to 1970 J. B. Steane (Duckworth £10.00) At the present galloping rate of progress, with lunatics,...
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A model of rectitude
The SpectatorPhilip Ziegler William Wilberforce Robin Furneaux (Hamish Hamilton £6.00) Statesman, Orator, Philanthropist, Saint, one of the greatest Parliamentarians in a great age, a...
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Butterfly minded
The SpectatorColin Wilson Strong Opinions Vladimir Nabokov (Weidenfeld and Nicolson £3.50) Literary reputations are sometimes made in a curiously accidental manner. One mild day towards the...
Fiction
The SpectatorLife is a drag Peter Ackroyd Royo County Robert Roper (Andre Deutsch £1.75) Regiment of Women Thomas Berger (EYr e Methuen £2.75) There was once a poem, in those days when...
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Talking of books
The SpectatorVictoriana , tlenny Green N i 2thing could be more self-defeating than the n d of critical work which tries to place the ;'-reative artist under a glass dome of social...
Bookbuyer's
The SpectatorBookend The travelling 'circus descended last week on Eastbourne (we are of course referring to the annual Booksellers Conference) and a much improved affair it was, with a...
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Kenneth Hurren on being surer than Shaw
The SpectatorPygmalion by Bernard Shaw, with Diana Rigg, Alec McCowen (Albery Theatre, London) Tonight We Improvise by Luigi Pirandello, with Keith Michell, Keith Baxter, June Ritchie...
Cinema
The SpectatorScripture and kung fun Duncan Fallovell Craze Director: Freddie Francis. Stars: Jack Palance, Edith Evans, Diana Dors, Julie Ege, Trevor Howard, Michael Jayston, Suzy Kendall,...
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Records
The SpectatorHead start Rodney Milnes In launching their new series of contemporary music on the slightly equivocal label 'Headline,' Decca have wisely led with a winning trump. Messiaen's...
Television
The SpectatorMasochistic nostalgia Clive Gammon Sam is back, and a nasty bit of work he looks too. Merciful time has eroded the memory of shorttrousered Sam in last year's Granada series....
Will Waspe
The SpectatorAt the climax of a horrible little trendy play by Stanley Eveling called Shivvers, at the Royal Court's Theatre Upstairs, an actor committing a sort of hara-kiri gushes blood...
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Theory and performance
The SpectatorR.C. BeIlan An intriguing feature of post-war economic development in the Western world is that national economic performance has been worst in those countries in which t...
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Skinflint's City Diary
The SpectatorWhile the Department of Trade's boring inquisitors huff and puff their obscure way along in investigating the affairs of Lonrho, following last year's boardroom row (most likely...