Page 1
Cadillacs or camels
The SpectatorIrrespective of the general strategic merits or demerits of Britain's new Middle Eastern policy — and we accept that far more than the matter of Arab oil supplies influenced the...
Page 3
Ambition, compassion, no vision
The Spectator"My Government's objective throughout," said the Queen in her speech opening the new session of Parliament, "will be to promote the interests of the individual, whether as...
Page 4
Poor vivisected doggy
The SpectatorSir: "For the diehard and unconvincible third group of anti-vivisectionists,". writes John Linklater (November 3), " the way will remain hard indeed. To remain in perfect good...
From Mrs Dorothy M. Cooke
The SpectatorSir; I have read with interest John Linklater's 'Poor Vivisected Doggy' (November 3) and in spite of his unfortunately patronising tone in choosing the title for his article and...
Sir: The article ' Poor Vivisected Doggy' by John Linklater
The Spectator(November 3) does not, in my view, make any really 'useful contribution to the reasonable discussion of the problem of the use of animals for experimental purposes. Surely any...
Unholy Waugh
The SpectatorSir: There was once a West African tribe which by long tradition employed, when a chief died, the oldest unmarried woman (habitually, because of her low status, used to dispose...
Page 5
Information please
The SpectatorSir: I am writing, as her literay executor, a life of the late Vera Brittain, with the encouragement and.full support of Sir George Catlin, who was her husband, shall be...
Abortion
The SpectatorSir: Mrs M. Simm's concern for women (Letters, November 3) is admirable until one realises that approximately o ne-half of the 156,000 babies killed every year as the intended...
Invented teenagers
The SpectatorIn reply to Mr Hines (November 3): t s he excellent Dictionary of American 1 "11 by Wentworth and Flexner, 1960 tion, says that the term is peculiar : 0 the US and that "before...
Liberal strength
The SpectatorSir: Patrick Cosgrave has ignored two obvious facts (October. 27): Liberal support is not spread evenly across the map, and the present electoral system favours any party which...
North Sea oil
The SpectatorSir: Perhaps I could reply through your letters column to the criticism of my article on North Sea oil (October 13) by the spokesman of the Royal Bank of Scotland (Letters,...
Page 6
Political Commentary
The SpectatorWhither the moderates now? Patrick Cosgrave Writing before this week's by-elections, and with the whole political world on the edge of its seat with nerves strung up in...
Page 7
Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorBeverley Nichols is the first of a number of guest 'Spectators,' distinguished writers and public figures who will each be invited to contribute the Notebook for a short...
Page 8
The economy
The SpectatorThe four horsemen Victor Montagu Britain's international trading figures are very bad. The most recent figures show that our trade with the rest of the world this year....
Page 9
Marine strategy
The SpectatorFrom Suez to the Cape David W. Wragg One of the more heartening factors of the Arab-Israeli conflict has been the realisation that a war in the Middle East is no longer a...
Politics
The SpectatorPromise them nothing Wilfred Sendai' Discussing Napoleon's Marshals, the Duke of Wellington once said: "They plan their cam paigns as if they were making a brand new set of...
Honest Dick Divine
The SpectatorThe President is near to God, Above the mortal throng; And that is why I find it odd When humans claim I'm wrong, My name is Honest Dick Divine; Woe to those against my line!...
Page 11
Westminster Corridors
The SpectatorIf an overseas shipmate of the Skipper had dropped into the Commons last week to hear him welcome the publication of the Kilbrandon Commission on the Constitution he might well...
Page 13
SOCIETY TODAY
The SpectatorOutside Society An outing with Vince Andrew Bradford Some years ago I worked as a medical orderly in a home for the handicapped in Liverpool. The residents were all long-stay...
Page 14
Science
The SpectatorRejection slips Bernard Dixon As with announcements of breakthroughs in cancer research, scientists' claims to have overcome the rejection of transplanted organs should be...
Page 15
Religion
The SpectatorCross purposes Martin Sullivan' We do not know by whose arrangement it was that Christ was crucified between two thieves, but if there was malice in it, there Wks also a...
Country Life
The SpectatorAutumn reflections Peter Quince I rather enjoy walking along our hilltop as the November daylight fades, and from there watching the windows light up in the valley. There is...
Page 16
The Good Life
The SpectatorBonnes bouches Pamela Vandyke Price Most people have to go out and do energetic things to achieve their pleasures. The gastronome merely has to keep each sense alert. For...
Juliette , s 'Weekly Frolic
The Spectator"The man who thinks he understands the fair sex in either their actions, or thoughts, is a raving lunatic, a diabolical liar, or worst of all, very vain." So says poor Mr Mills...
Page 17
REVIEW OF BOOKS
The SpectatorRichard Luckett on whatever happened to the Man in the Moon One of the few genuinely astonishing things about science fiction is the way in which it has universally come to be...
Page 18
Defying the conventions
The SpectatorPeter Ackroyd Elizabeth Alone William Trevor (Bodley Head £2.50). Richard's Things Frederic Raphael (Cape £2.25). I have never had a hysterectomy, and I never hope to have...
Page 19
More and still More
The SpectatorBlair Worden The Vision of Politics on the Eve of the Reformation. S. H. Hexter and (Allen Lane E3.50) Niccolo Machiavelli's The Prince, Thomas More's Utopia and Claude de...
Page 20
The slippery pole
The SpectatorNick Emley From Dartmoor to Cambridge: The Autobiography of a Prison Graduate Douglas , Curtis (Hodder and Stoughton £2,40) This book is almost a virtuoso performance, the...
Signature in sand
The SpectatorJan Morris Philby of Arabia Elizabeth Monroe (Faber £4.50) The son of a colonial philanderer, the father of a communist spy, H. St John Philby spent his life restlessly...
Page 21
Master of the revels
The SpectatorBeverley Nichols Cowardy Custard Edited by John Hadfield (Heinemann £.75) When this latest tribute to the Master. was announced, my heart sank. Surely the laurels had already...
Bill Platypus's
The SpectatorPaperbacks For those of you who, like Platypus, are tired of the cult of the contemporary, a reissue — after a moratorium of ten years — of the seventh volume of the Pelican...
Page 22
Talking of books
The Spectator'Azure main' and all that Benny Green Any man who announces his intention of compiling "a big, ornate, frank but affectionate book about Victoria's empire," is bound to be...
Bookbuyer's
The SpectatorBookend The purpose and point of review pages is a matter that has occupied the finest minds since the birth of the printed word. Whether. like John Osborne, you believe that...
Page 23
REVIEW OF THE ARTS
The SpectatorKenneth Hurren on magic, goulash and applesauce The opening number of the new American show, Pippin, at Her Majesty's has most of the cast bouncing about the stage proclaiming,...
Opera
The SpectatorNun better Rodney Milnes Penderecki's The Devils of Loudun has been given eight new productions since its premiere four years ago, which is some indication of success. Whether...
Page 24
Will Waspe
The SpectatorI suspect that Tristram Powell's ' Omnibus' show about the Hollywood witch-hunt of ' Reds,' screened by BBC 1 last Sunday, has been ' in the can ' for some time. The programme...
Cinema
The SpectatorPoor Pamela Christopher Hudso The certificates handed out by the censor have of late been so erratic and unpredictable that one must assume he has been acceding rather tamely...
Television
The SpectatorNet work Clive Gammon I once knew three men called the Murphy brothers — no one seemed to differentiate amongst them Christian name-wise — who operated a lobster boat out of a...
Page 25
MONEY AND THE CITY
The SpectatorCompany (and directors') reform Nicholas Davenport For the City the most pregnant sentence in the Queen's speech was " The creation of a prosperous, fair and orderly society...
Page 26
Skinflint's City Diary
The SpectatorThe story was related a year or two ago that three clerics once dined together: a Protestant clergyman, a Catholic priest, and a Rabbi. "Tell me, Mr Smith," asked Father...
Scientific purchase
The SpectatorNephew Wilde I am in a self-congratulatory mood. Is this justified? Well my broker Wotherspool certainly seems to think that honours are due judging by the number of times he...