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Keeping the Irish peace
The SpectatorThe Irish Prime Minister, Mr Jack Lynch, visits the United States. One of the purposes of his trip is to dissuade Irish Americans from contributing cash and other assistance to...
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Down with expectations
The SpectatorFerdinand Mount The first time round, it sounded quite impressive. To begin with, the government's White Paper had the inestimable advantage of being presented to MPs by Mr...
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Notebook
The SpectatorWhen I met Ian Smith a fortnight ago he said that Lonrho had switched its financial support from the Patriotic Front leader Joshua Nkomo to Bishop Muzorewa. This may explain...
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Wrigglesworth's England
The SpectatorAuberon Waugh One learns many strange and wonderful things out East, not all of them suitable for repeating back home. One of the things I learned in Hong Kong was that there...
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Does Kennedy's philandering matter?
The SpectatorHenry Fairlie Washington By nothing more than a freak of accident, Edward Kennedy's announcement that he is now truly a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination has...
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Iran: the clergy take over
The SpectatorRoger Cooper The resignation of Mehdi Bazargan brings to an undignified end Iran's 70year-old experiment in Western-style cabinet government. Bazargan was the first to admit...
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Crying for Argentina
The SpectatorRichard West Buenos Aires It was no surprise to read in an English newspaper that: 'The London Borough of Camden is "adopting" a South American political prisoner a sociologist...
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Gandhi and her rivals
The SpectatorCharles Douglas-Home For 29 of the 32 years since independence, India has had a Nehru as Prime Minister. Father and daughter between them have established an Indian identity...
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Benn and Caliban's mirror
The SpectatorChristopher Booker Among all the hundreds of thousands of words spilled out last week in the aftermath of the massive vote by British Leyland workers in favour of Sir Michael...
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The CBI: a new estate?
The SpectatorGeorge Gale The Trades Union Congress, our present chief estate, did not distinguish itself this year. Last year it pulled, then held, itself together, ready for Mr Callaghan...
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The myth that failed
The SpectatorPeter Ackroyd Oxford Six or seven people were marching down the High Street; they were carrying banners, but most of them had been furled and the rest were tucked under...
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One hundred years ago
The SpectatorA very praiseworthy effort to interest working-men in thoroughly good music has, we hear, been recently almost unexpectedly successful. Two popular concerts were given this week...
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Letters
The SpectatorMusical fantasia Sir: 'The chief defect of Master Booker', as Belloc might have written, forsaking rhyme for respectability, 'is being such a silly chap'. Nowhere is this sad...
Friendships in war
The SpectatorSir: In his Notebook (3 November), Simon Courtauld raises the connection of several Asian leaders in their collaboration with the Japanese army in the last world war. He seems...
The Lucan affair
The SpectatorSir: In his Notebook (27 October) Mr Chancellor uses the phrase 'Lady Lucan, whom . . . her husband wanted to murder'. Since Lord Lucan has not merely not been tried but has not...
Sir Barnes Wallis
The SpectatorSir: With The Times still absent for a little longer, the obituaries in the daily press of Sir Barnes Wallis, who has died at the age of 92, have been rather brief and...
Religion and the individual
The SpectatorSir: In his article (27 October) Auberon Waugh asserts that man's relationship to God is an intensely private affair. While this is true as far as the first commandment goes, it...
Pour mieux sauter
The SpectatorSir: I did French at school; I guess most of your readers did. I guess most of them have, like me, since forgotten most of it. Why do you let your contributors clutter up their...
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The Child of England
The SpectatorAlastair Forbes Princes of Wales Alan Palmer (Weidenfeld £8.50) The Court of St James's Christopher Hibbert (Weidenfeld £7.50) Charles, Prince of Wales Anthony Holden...
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Palestinians
The SpectatorEdward Mortimer The Palestinians Jonathan DIMblebY Photographs by Donald McCullin (Quartet £ Let me get some criticisms of detail out of the way first. It is not true, as...
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Women's art
The SpectatorJohn McEwen The Obstacle Race Germaine Greer (Seeker £9.95) What to do for an encore, that is the great problem for writers with a bestseller to their credit. There are two...
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Essayist
The SpectatorBenny Green The Americans Alistair Cooke (Bodley Head £5.95) The composition of a radio script to be read by the writer has little to do with literature. In the pragmatic...
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Reincarnate
The SpectatorPaul Ableman rhe Mangan Inheritance Brian Moore ( Cape £5.50) l'his is a marvellous book. The prose is rich 4nd flexible and, as it generates people and Places and thoughts,...
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What about the heritage?
The SpectatorPat Gilmour The announcement that the Arts budget will not be cut in 1980 - 81 (except possibly by the ravages of 22 per cent inflation) comes only just in time to cobble a...
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The architecture of fashion
The SpectatorGavin Stamp The 'Thirties' show At the Hayward (until 13 January) may have something for everybody but it is almost indigestible; the organisers seem to have tackled the...
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Former feasts
The SpectatorJohn McEwen The 'Thirties — British art and design before the war' (Hayward Gallery tilt 13 January) is more of a hotch-potch than its sub-title suggests. Art, at least in the...
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Excursions
The SpectatorRodney Milnes L'amoredei tre re, La Vestale, Crispin° e la comare (Wexford Festival) The well balanced Wexford programme presented one good bad opera, one good good opera and...
Slow motion
The SpectatorPolly Toynbee Amadeus (Olivier) Old Herbaceous (Mayfair) Amadeus by Peter Shaffer should have been a musical. The only moments that were really moving were when Mozart's music...
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Poor show
The SpectatorRichard Ingrams I used to enjoy having a good sneer on a Sunday at Read All About It, the BBC programme devoted to new paperbacks. Now however it has been taken off for reasons...
No shame
The SpectatorTaki Occasionally horrors of such magnitude take place that only the perpetrators, the mercenary, and the totally insensitive go on about their business as usual. Such a...
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To Muriel
The SpectatorJeffrey Bernard I suppose the final joke was that Muriel Belcher should have died on Halloween and then been cremated on Guy Fawkes Day, She certainly would have appreciated it...
In cold blood
The SpectatorJohn Mortimer Last week seems to have been lived under the shadow of the gallows. There is a court in London which disposes of capital cases in a brisk, not to say...