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BORN TO SUFFER
The SpectatorWars apart, if they are to be held apart and not to be regarded as a particularly brutal form of population control, in no way does the species homo sapiens deny its name or...
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POLITICAL COMMENTARY
The SpectatorANGUS MAUDE, MP The Commons rose for their unusually short Christmas recess ('What it amounts to,' said one percipient Tory to another, 'is that we lose a week's hunting now so...
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THE SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorAnother year gone; another Christmas upon us; another holiday time when the Wall between East and West Berlin has remained shut, a thing of ugliness and terror that long since...
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PEACE AND WAR IN OUR TIME
The SpectatorHenry Fairlie attacks the Spectator Washington DC The reduction of a complicated problem to a simple either/or choice is usually suspect. It can also be dangerous, as in the...
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PEACE AND WAR IN OUR TIME
The SpectatorGeorge Gale defends the Spectator The continuing and desperate endeavour and the deliberate or blind misunderstandings which characterise those who think that the idea of the...
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PORTRAIT OF A WEEK
The SpectatorUnseasonal fare MICHAEL WYNN JONES Tf, as was widely rumoured, the ill-timed food price increase in Poland was a con- spiracy within the Government to overthrow First...
About our contributors:
The SpectatorANGUS MAUDE Rugby and Oriel, Oxford and various pris- oner-of-war camps. MP for eight years rep- resenting Ealing South, then fled the country to Australia to escape politics;...
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Peacefully
The SpectatorKINGSLEY AMIS REGER, Max. German composer ... died I 1th May. 1916. The second battle of Verdun had started Eight days earlier. Once. My feeling would have been : Poor sod;...
BEVILEHEMLY
The Spectator0 little town (1YLES BRANDRETH 'This, ladies and gentlemen, is where it all began.' The Arab guide points emphatically to the silver star embedded in the floor of the crypt of...
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COMICALLY
The SpectatorGeorge Orwell, Great - Wilson and the Tuppenny Bloods BENNY GREEN One of the first, and surely one of the most captivating exhibitions of 1971 will be Michael Kustow's...
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Political apathy
The SpectatorSir: IL as John Grigg suggests in his article (12 December), Britain adopted triennial parliaments, does he not think that the apathy, which he admits has increased steadily...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorLetters from Lionel Gilber, Lord Drogheda and David McKenna, lain Moncreiffe of that llk, Lady Brabazon of Tara, Rev J. L. Peace, George Strinn, D. A. N. Jones, Douglas Collins,...
Ramsey in lions' den
The SpectatorSir: It is somewhat unusual for an Archbishop of Canterbury to be the 'darling of the Left', and it may be unwise to underestimate the weight of opinion against Dr Ram- sey in...
Garden and Wells
The SpectatorSir: In your current issue the Spectator's Notebook recommends that Covent Garden and Sadler's Wells should be allowed to wither and die. Throughout the world opera and ballet...
A dream of that ilk Sir: Ever since reading Dunne's
The Spectatorfascinating Theory of Time, I've intermittently kept a journal of my dreams. It has, of course, been lost: as women insist on tidying up houses. The curious thing about what...
Child whores
The SpectatorSir: Having been a Governor since Holland Park Comprehen- sive School was only a plan on a drawing board, and Chairman of the Governors from 1968-1969 I feel I must comment on...
Unromantic gypsies
The SpectatorSir: The film shown recently on Late Night Line-Up. on BBC-2 was probably supposed to give another `romantic' view of the modern gipsy, but, in my opinion, all it did was to...
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Which rat-race?
The SpectatorSir: Michael Isens's reference to 'the hundred yards rat - race' sug- gests that he sees it in terms of a distance race. Not so! My inter- pretation derives from the mill- race,...
Skinflint is slapdash
The SpectatorSir: I was very sorry to see in the SPECTATOR that you have omit- ted the last paragraph of my letter. It seems to me to be the only part worth publishing: 'The prospect of...
Right roots
The SpectatorSir: I am, as you indicate. general editor of Roots of the Right and contribute the briefest of general prefaces to successive volumes. To entitle a collective review as 'on...
Palmer bash
The SpectatorSir: My thanks to Tony Palmer for the laugh of the week. A member of the 'minority of a minority' has at last begun to realise the futility of plugging the high progressive...
0' God's in his hell ...
The SpectatorSir: 'There is great impatience about; there is much disquiet with the pass to which we have come.' (5 December).
Siberian trip
The SpectatorSir: I have just read Involuntary Journey to Siberia, attributed to `Andrei Amalrik,' together with another book, Will the Soviet Union Survive until 1984?. ascribed to the same...
Rhodesian talks
The SpectatorSir: In his article on Rhodesian talks, 'Another Conservative' ap- proaches the problem on the basis of two assumptions: first, that those who oppose the withdrawal of...
End of Empire
The SpectatorSir: May I comment on Sir Denis Brogan's remark that 'Canada and Australia and India are no busi- ness of ours ...' (5 December). As Australia is constitutionally tied to the...
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Beauman bash
The SpectatorSir: Readers of the SPECTATOR ,should be informed that Sally Beauman's description of the novels of Nina Bawden (12 December) as 'bad books . . . of a slushy romantic nature' is...
Protests lodged
The SpectatorSir: With his lips firmly pressed to the hem of Mr Wilson's gar- ment—or to somewhere close to it—it is hardly surprising that your correspondent, Mr T. C. Skeffing- ton-Lodge,...
Waugh bash
The SpectatorSir: In his review of The Fruits of Winter (12 December), Auberon Waugh castigates the author. Ber- nard Clavel, for taking ninety- seven pages to describe how a re- tired...
COMPETITION
The SpectatorNo. 636: Dear Sir . . . Set by E. 0. Parrott: Recently a letter appeared in the SPECTATOR apparently from E. M. Forster in the Elysian Fields. Competitors are invited to submit...
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A quiz for Christmas
The SpectatorCHRISTOPHER BOOKER By general demand this year's Christmas Quiz is considerably shorter and easier than last year's. There are 108 answers in all, of which any well-informed...
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A sense of direction
The SpectatorCOLIN WILSON On 5 January 1895 Henry James's play Guy Domville opened in London. The author, too nervous to sit through it, went instead to see Oscar Wilde's An Ideal Husband....
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Pseudo-
The SpectatorBRIAN GRIFFITHS British Budgets in Peace and War 1932-1945 B. E. V. Sabine (Allen and Unwin 75s) What was the Keynesian revolution? Was it a decisive break with the past in our...
False truths
The SpectatorJ. ENOCH . POWELL Appearance and Reality in International Relations Grant Hugo (Chatto and Windus 35s) Statesmen and politicians are not, upon the whole, false men—not, that is...
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U-talk
The SpectatorSIR IAIN MONCREIFFE How to Pronounce It Alan Ross (Hamish Hamilton 30s) Few things are more embarrassing than tell- ing the truth about matters of social distinc- tion....
Pukka sahib
The SpectatorAUBERON WAUGEI The Prevalence of Witches Aubrey Menen (Chatto and Windus, The Landmark Library 25s) The Chosen Place, The Timeless People (Part Two) Paule Marshall (Longman...
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THEATRE
The SpectatorMissing pixie KENNETH HURREN Drama critics' columns around Christmas- time give the impression of having been written by other people. Normally egomania- cal in the matter of...
CHRISTMAS ARTS
The SpectatorTELEVISION Something happy Patrick SKENE CATLING `It is beginning to feel like Christmas' may not seem like a prize-winning line, but in the circumstances it was beautifully...
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CINEMA
The SpectatorOver to 11 9 CHRISTOPHER HUDSON Films with a 'LI' certificate seem to have become the exception rather than the rule, but this week three or four have been trotted out to meet...
ART
The SpectatorArty greetings EVAN ANTHONY It might be easy for the performing arts crowd to accept that critical comment this week should be festively larkish and frolic- some, but we...
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POP RECORDS
The SpectatorStocking tops DUNCAN FALLOWELL Brinsley Schwarz: Despite It All (Liberty 45s). They have just about recovered from that mercilessly misguided publicity stunt which flew a...
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MONEY Snakes and ladders 1970
The SpectatorNICHOLAS DAVENPORT It has been a year of extraordinary violence, as we all know, and the City has not escaped. I have never before seen in a lifetime spent in the money...
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SKINFLINT'S CITY DIARY Patronage secretary
The SpectatorThere is a class of highly cultivated men of business who after a few years are able to leave business and begin to follow ambitions, which to Bagehot meant public service. The...
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JULIETTE'S WEEKLY FROLIC
The SpectatorGlencaraig Lady's five-length victory at Ascot, resulting in my second profits, my initial £100 has now become £113 to take on to Boxing Day at Kempton Park, where the festive...
COUNTRY LIFE PETER QUINCE
The SpectatorWe had been up in the wood looking for holly with berries, a more difficult quest than seemed likely a couple of months ago, when the countryside was profusely decorated with...
BENNY GREEN
The SpectatorI am willing to concede that Christmas in London is probably no more farcical than it is anywhere else, except that being a larger city than most, London's fatuities are more...
Quiz answers (See page 845)
The Spectator1. (a) Bertrand Russell; (b) Sir Allen Lane; (c) Kerensky; (d) Salazar, (e) Lord Thurso (Archibald Sinclair); (f) de Gaulle and Nasser; (g) de Gaulle and Basil Liddell Hart; (h)...
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THE GOOD LIFE Pamela VANDYKE PRICE
The Spectator'Only Satan.' says Kipling, 'can rebuke sin: The good don't know enough.' So when efficient young interviewers begin to stumble as to whether I have ever—been unfortunate enough...
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TONY PALMER
The SpectatorI suppose we live in such a self-pitying age - that it's sometimes very difficult to get any real suffering into anything like an under- standable perspective. Countlesi...
CLIVE. GAMMON
The SpectatorGoing about my sporting occasions a couple of weeks ago, I had to travel to Cork on the 'Innisfallen' car ferry. I had some misgivings _ because of previous, summertime...
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Prize Crossword
The SpectatorNo. 1461 DAEDALUS A prize of three guineas will be awarded for the first correct solution opened on 4 January. Address solutions: Crossword 1461, The spec' tator, 99 Cower...
The Spectator. Registered as a Newspaper at he UPO, London.
The SpectatorSecond-cia' , mail authorised by New York 1'0. Pt■hlished by The Spe,tatot 1.td., vs (loner Street, LONDON. WCIE 6At. TeL 01-387 3221. Printed by Merritt & Hatt.lits Ltd., High...
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INDEX FOR JULY- DECEMBER 1970 SUBJECTS AND TITLES
The SpectatorABBREVIATIONS USED (A) ARTICLE (M) MEDICINE (AF) Aermmoumrr (P) POEM (CL) Courrrav Lox (R) BOOK REVIEW (CO) COMPETITION (S) THE SPECTATOR'S (GL) THE GOOD LIFE (SL) SPORTING...
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CONTRIBUTORS
The SpectatorAdrian, Leslie, 98, 154, 266, 361 (Cl) Alexander. Morag, 432 (A) Amis, Kingsley. 371, 837 (P) Amos', 'Israel, 513 (A) Anderson, Patrick. 159, 443 (R) Another Conservative, 556,...