6 MARCH 1971

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The Spectator

The Spectator

Established 1828 99 Gower Street, London WC1 Telephone: 01-387 3221 Telegrams: Spectator, London Editor: George Gale Associate Editor: Michael Wynn Jones Literary Editor:...

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POWELLITE TRIUMPH

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and a case of double indebtedness There is nothing repugnant in the Im- migration Bill, and it is consequently to be welcomed as a tidying-up piece of legislation, as a further...

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It would be reassuring if one could draw the conclusion

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that stern reality has overtaken Britain's attitude to her former possessions. But, as insults are exchanged this week in Wednesday's South African arms debate, there is the...

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First in public?

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Sir Gerald Nabarro is an interesting and complex man and far from being the buf- foon he frequently makes himself appear to be. Dick Clements, editor of Tribune, and I went up...

THE SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK

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Purely as a matter of fact, having talked during the past week with several pro- and anti-Market MPS, I report deepening despond- ency in the pro-Market ranks. 'The thing is...

Samaritans in the can

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In the spring of last year, an acquaintance of mine who does some writing for tele- vision put up an idea for a drama series (with draft script) to BBC-TV. After a few weeks it...

Wake up, Bedfordshire!

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Although it is, and has been for several weeks, my firm impression that, as I wrote some time ago, the third London airport would end up at Foulness, I hear some con- cerned and...

Nasty new money

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The ten shilling piece apart, I do not like the new money and I have yet to meet any- one who does. My own difficulty, shared by several friends, is occasioned particularly by...

Jolly good show

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A young member of Parliament went to Grenoble to speak on Britain's behalf, advo- cating entry. He did so in French. He was surprised, and shocked, to receive shortly afterwards...

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VIEW FROM THE GALLERY SALLY VINCENT

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In the House of Lords, five days earlier, they talked of Jesus Christ and disarmament. And one noble lord layed claim to personal knowledge of Ho Chi Minh. He was not, he...

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DIARY OF THE YEAR

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Wednesday 24 February: with the publication of the Government's Immigration Bill, it was confirmed that from 1 January 1972 common- wealth citizens will no longer have the auto-...

SOCIETY AND BUSINESS

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The morality of profit J. ENOCH POWELL 'Profit has become a dirty word'; or, 'profit ought not to be a dirty word'; or, 'socialism has made profit a dirty word'. These, and...

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THE NATION'S WEALTH

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Ups and Downs By an Economist Budget advice, now flowing so freely into the Treasury from all sides, seems for the most part to overlook two important facts about the British...

FRANCE

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Too far too fast CHARLES HARGROVE Paris When President Pompidou, a few weeks ago, chose M Rene Tomasini, a forceful and out- spoken Corsican, with an excellent record as...

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THE CIVIL SERVICE-3

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Can anything be done about it? C. H. SISSON One must not expect too much • of an organisation which has to take cognisance of all the muddled business which pushes itself...

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OXFORD AND CAMBRIDGE LETTERS

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On unions and usurpers GOOD BROTHER LONDINIENSIS, Your ingeniose contrivance of a pigeon- post has now caught on marvellously, and here in Oxon our skies are dark with pigeons...

GOOD BROTHER LONDINIENSIS,

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Your trusty pigeon did lighten upon my table, vox coelo, whilst I was a-breakfasting, and delivered itself safely of your letter, which in my appetite did speedily displace the...

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THE SPECTATOR REVIEWABOOKS

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Roger Scruton on James Joyce Reviews by George Holmes, Patrick Cosgrave, Christopher Hudson Auberon Waugh on new fiction Henry Fairlie on David Frost's Americans That the...

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PLACE A REGULAR ORDER FOR YOUR

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1=1111 MINI MIN Spectator MN NMI NM MIN 11•1•11 MEI MOM 111111 The Spectator, 99 Gower Street, London w.c.1 Please supply the Spectator for one year ED 1 two years 0 IIII...

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Ireland

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That ragged leaking, raft held between sea and sea its long forgotten cable melting into deeper darkness where, at the root of it, the slow sea circles and chews. Nightly the...

George Holmes on the Avignon Popes

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The Avignon Papacy 1305-1403 Yves Renouard translated by Denis Bethell (Faber £2.75) From 1309 to 1376 Avignon, an Otherwise unimportant town on the Rhone, was the seat of the...

Auberon Waugh on Gold in California

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The Great American Jackpot Herbert Gold (Weidenfeld and Nicolson £1.75) One great advantage of having a Negro pro- blem in a country is that it produces the most excellent...

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Contemporary poetry: two views

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Patrick Cosgrave on the dissolution of our poetry To speak of greatness, or even of achieve- ment of a high order, in connection with post- war British poetry is not merely...

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Christopher Hudson on Ted Hughes and the Review

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The Review (No 24) edited by Ian Hamilton (25p) - Crow was not reviewed in these pages when it first appeared; and this is a good oppor- tunity to mark its appearance, and to...

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Roger Scruton on James Joyce

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It is easier for the ordinary English reader to come to terms with Joyce than it is for many English critics. Joyce's writings are everywhere ironical, but nowhere satirical;...

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Crossword

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No. 1471 DAEDALUS Aro prize is oflered this week. The solution will aPpear in next week's issue. Across 1 (Here is the answer) (2, 11) 9 Such a political jibe is bound to...

Solution to Crossword 1470. Across: 1 Forage 4 Ball-room 10

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Rostrum II Contest 12 Eros 13 Dressing up 16 Tragic 17 Rotunda 20 Risings 21 Tavern 24 Constitute 25 Asia 27 Inherit 29 Correct 30 Gannetry 31 Bossed. Down: I Fer- ments 2...

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• ARTS • LETTERS • MONEY. LEISURE CINEMA

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Roll over, Tchaikovsky CHRISTOPHER HUDSON Another of Ken Russell's tours de force, The Music Lovers (x, Odeon, Hay- market) takes us fortissimo through the life of...

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THEATRE

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Intruders KENNETH HURREN As soon as I laid eyes on the stage set for Stanley Eveling's play, Mister, at the Duchess, I knew we'd all have a hard time trying to catch the drift...

ART

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Time, gentlemen EVAN ANTHONY Anyone unfortunate enough to have died the same day as John F. Kennedy or Winston S. Churchill, probably got short shrift in the obi- .tuary...

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NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND

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Overground in Old Vienna TONY PALMER 'I shoot lions,' my host began. 'Come down- stairs and see my trophies. Of course, these days you are only supposed to shoot one of each...

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The reassertion of sovereignty

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Sir: A. J. Hendry says (27 Febru- ary), `I only hope your opposition [to EEC entry] does not become so much of an obsession as did Biafra during the Nigerian civil war'. Pro-...

Jolly Juliette

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Sir: I had the pleasure of meeting your talented young racing corres- pondent in the bar at Kempton on Saturday last and found the experi- ence both delightful and, at the same...

The right of reply

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Sir: Mr Summers and Miss Collins would have done better to go on sheltering behind the screen of anonymity I had chivalrously erected in front of them. Both, in different...

Sir: Ignoring the irony that Israel should be attacked for

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'churlish- ness' by the paper which, in Gale and Waugh (whatever happened to Biafra when it ceased to be news- worthy?), harbours two most cele- brated churls, I would reproach...

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

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Israel and the olive branch Sir: I was appalled by the lack of balance in your leading article 'Israel and the Olive Branch' (27 February). It betrays a shocking ignorance of...

The Gospels

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Sir: I would like to offer two com- ments on Professor Trevor-Roper's discussion of the origins of Chris- tianity (27 February). 1. He disposes of the evidence of Tacitus by...

Sir: Some of the splendid rhetoric produced by the SPECTATOR'S

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editorial volte-face over Europe has spread to your correspondence columns, as witness Mr G. J. A. Stern's letter (27 February). But does he not rather overdo the wog bashing in...

Sir: I am an old Anglican priest, seeking truth. I

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find that H. R. Trevor-Roper's view is pretty well what I had reached by my own wits. I hold that the Christ of the Christian church is an ideal man (therefore called divine)...

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Sir: I have enjoyed reading the SPECTATOR for over ten

The Spectator

years, until a fortnight ago, when I was ap- palled by your leading article on the Common Market. For a publication of your stan- dard to state that 'its position is...

Sir: Sir Winston Churchill is reported as having once said

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that While all politics was about power, Power politics was about the misuse of power. Sir Harry Legge-Bourke (23 January) asserts that politics is essentially concerned With...

Market facts

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Sir: One cannot help wondering how much your unequivocal oppo- sition to British entry into the EEC owes to misconception and mis- understanding. Your article 'The Common...

Greece today

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Sir: The outlook of the 'new' SPECTATOR is commendable both for its realism and for the artic- ulate way in which this is usually presented. Clearly we owe more to Peterhouse...

Monday's child

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Sir: With reference to Mr Seton- Watson's letter (20 February) re- garding the Dutschke protest meet- ing at Oxford, I feel l obliged to make clear one or two of his...

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MONEY The coming slump

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NICHOLAS DAVENPORT The economic barometer is falling rapidly. The storm of 'a sizeable recession is blowing up—perhaps the worst since the war. Unem- ployment was last reported...

JULIETTE'S WEEKLY FROLIC

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Poor Titus Oates trekked all the way from Penrith to Kempton for a rotten Saturday afternoon's sport. I, on the other hand, had only to come from London and had a splen- did...

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Arriviste

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Richard Eldridge aged thirty-one is the latest atriviste to the city's go-go scene. His public company, Junitex, and his private vehicle, Eldridge Pope, have started on the...

Honest broker?

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'One broker summing up the general disillu- sion with the performance of the Heath gov- ernment said "There is nothing worse than being let down by your own side": Seeing this...

Peter Saunders

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Peter Saunders Limited is the name of a direct mail company based at Malrnesbury in Wiltshire selling tweeds and twin sets to young suburban matrons. Their sales are being hit...

Encounter with Ryder

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Property owner Harry Hyams has arranged to buy for 0.05m the Methodists' Kingsway Hall site with a frontage on Kingsway. I am sorry to hear that to get good access he is now...

Uplift

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It is usual to see in the financial press during a period of takeover activity announcements by stockbrokers and merchant bankers of their purchase 'on behalf of an associate',...

SKINFLINT'S CITY DIARY Mix with care

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Make no mistake. Mr Maudling's Immigra- tion Bill reflects the Conservative party's immitigable attitude to the coloured. Standing aside from the fuss it is clear that it is...

bear Minister of Works

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Now that smokeless zones have made 'London air a little cleaner will you tell your Superintendents of Parks to plant more evergreen trees like Cedars of Lebanon (Cedrus Ulan!),...

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PETER QUINCE

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Someone brought the news to our village pub the other evening that the local tribe of gipsies were on the point of packing up and finding somewhere new to settle. Gipsies might...

THE GOOD LIFE Pamela VANDYKE PRICE

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Whenever anybody says 'I know just what you ought to do—you should . . I im- mediately resolve on the opposite course, even before I know what it is. But advice in print [love...

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,

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BENNY GREEN On a recent day of archetypal London weather, when outlines are obscured, not by the peasoupers of pulp fiction, but by that milky mist which wipes out distinctions...

Giver Yourrial.

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Spectator Hotel Guide

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England CAMBRIDGESHIRE Garden House Hotel**** CAMBRIDGE Cambridge 55491 Royal Cambridge Hotel"* CAMBRIDGE Cambridge 51631 CORNWALL Meudon Hotel"•• NEAR FALMOUTH Mawnan Smith...