Page 1
Wilson's true legacy
The SpectatorEver since Harold Wilson retired from office last year so r A e lnarkably unscathed, it has seemed likely that the 'chilies heel of his continued relatively good standing w9ul4l...
Page 3
The Week
The SpectatorThe memoirs of Mr Joe Haines, former Principal press secretary to Sir Harold Wilson, provided the best political scandal the country had seen for a long day when they were...
Page 4
Political Commentary
The SpectatorFor whom the tumbrils? John Grigg Resignation, as Frank Johnson was arguing recently in this column, is a mug's game for individual politicians. It seldom, if ever, pays for a...
Page 5
Notebook
The SpectatorWhen did so few last add so much to the gaiety of nations? First came the news of Mr Edward Short's title of nobility. In case You had not noticed it, he has adventur° LIMY, or...
Page 6
Another voice
The SpectatorRoots, roots, roots Auberon Waugh In the year of the Jubilee it is only natural, I suppose, that some anniversaries should receive more attention than others. 1 January of...
Page 7
Warheads and wintertime
The SpectatorNicholas von Hoffman Washington We've been very busy over here the last two weeks being ourselves. We are enjoying several major crises, one or two second-rate sensations and...
Page 8
Grasshoppers and cattle
The SpectatorJonathan Benthall If, as seems likely, Britain is experiencing a general reaction towards what may loosely be called conservatism, one would expect the phenomenon to be spread...
Page 10
Saving the shires
The SpectatorTimothy Raison Let us avert our eyes from the painful progress of the Government's Scotland and Wales Bill as it lurches its way forward, rather like a brand-new warship which...
Page 12
Mad for conservation
The SpectatorChristopher Booker I wish to discuss, this week and next, the fate of two remarkable and unique nineteenth century buildings. The two have almost nothing in common, except that...
Page 13
Crabbed age and 'Youth'
The SpectatorGeorge Gale Last Friday I was invited by Thames Television to take part in their Friday debate, which was to do with youth and which was based upon a conference at Wembley...
Page 14
Was Mrs Whitehouse right?
The SpectatorMary Kenny Last week the Daily Mail brought us interesting news from the world of advertising and commercial promotion; the latest rage in the selling of clothes, the marketing...
Page 15
Racing
The SpectatorMistakes Jeffrey Bernard I offer you the story of last Saturday's events at Sandown Park in the hope that you might learn something from my idiocy. After three races I was £20...
Page 16
In the City
The SpectatorBack to Bank rate Nicholas Davenport It continues to astonish me that events which occur in the City of great importance to our working lives fail to get much notice, if any,...
Page 17
Merchants Merchants of death Sir: How evocative of the 'thirties
The Spectatorwas the ti tle—Merchants of death--of the article on arms sales by Julian Critchley (5 February)! Much of what he says makes good sense, and yet . . . What future is there for...
Honest Enoch Sir: Belatedly I read the speech The humbug
The Spectatorof 'compassion', by the Rt Hon Enoch Powell, M P (29 January). This like his widely mis-reported speech on the 'race issue' revealed to me that he was an 'honest politician,'...
Dogged
The SpectatorSir: A few months ago Mr Daniel Farson wrote in the Spectator in defence of dogs. He rebuked Mr Bernard Levin for his anticanine arguments and paraded the usefulness of some...
Yours hopefully
The SpectatorSir: With regard to recent correspondence in the Spectator concerning the use of the term 'hopefully,' maybe its ambiguity can best be demonstrated by analogy such as...
WHS
The SpectatorSir: A. E. Dean, in his letter (5 February) rushing to the defence of Messrs W. H. Smug, seems to think that the people of Taunton are well served by their local branch of this...
Page 18
Comparisons
The SpectatorSir: When the Daily Mail—once a great newspaper—follows the Daily Express to the dinosaur's graveyard, someone seeking a deeper cause for the long decline may dig up David...
Bullock and capitalism
The SpectatorSir: In your issue of 22 January, Nicholas Davenport recommended the Institute for the Study of Conflict's new report, The Survival of the Capitalist System, to your readers. In...
Charity at school
The SpectatorSir: One was aghast to hear on television recently a worker for the 'Shelter Charity Collection' say that school children should be instructed in school as to which charities...
Postal delays Sir: Some months ago in your correspond ence page
The Spectatora spokesman for the GPO stated that it was not true that second-class mall was deliberately delayed in transit. On 27 January, I received eighteen such letters from different...
Hugh Dalton Sir: Could I make an appeal to any
The Spectatorreader who knew Hugh Dalton, Labour politician , economist and writer, or who possesses anY documents relating to him ? I have been commissioned by Cambridg e , University Press...
Page 19
Bo oks
The SpectatorSweetness and light Kenneth Clark The Paintings of Correggio Ceci l Gould 1Faber and Faber £50.00) The historian of art must always be prepared for ridiculous changes in...
Page 20
Rose, thou must die
The SpectatorJan Morris The Cousins Max Egremont (Collins E6.50) I sometimes pine for a cultivated oligarchy: something less than autocracy, but more than populism, to give us government...
Page 21
Unnatural acts
The SpectatorBenny Green The Acts of King Arthur and his Noble K nights John Steinbeck . (Heinemann 26.50) E very epoch gets the Round Table it deserves, and as it is now five hundred...
Page 22
Tricks of the light
The SpectatorPeter Ackroyd The Consciousness of Joyce Richard Ellmann (Faber arid Faber £5.50) Richard Ellmann's slim volume, looking rather like a breviary, treads again on the hallowed...
Page 23
On the move
The SpectatorPat Rogers Beard's Roman Women Anthony Burgess. Photographs by David Robinson (H utchinson £4.25) Agents of a Foreign Power Peter Prince ( Gollancz 23.80) It's all done with...
Page 25
Arts
The SpectatorPleasure dome in Paris Alastair Best The late President Pompidou was un honune de cu lture — contemporary culture especiall y. He was addicted to poetry; he collected Modern...
Page 26
Cinema
The SpectatorFake cross Clancy Sigal Cross of Iron (ABC, Shaftesbury Avenue) Next Stop, Greenwich Village (Rialto) Anyone who ever served in the armed forces as an other-ranks will feel...
Page 28
Television
The SpectatorMore banality Richard Ingrams Haying last seen Professor Galbraith discussing the ideas of Adam Smith while seated in a French marketplace surrounded by clucking hens, I was a...
Page 29
Richard Long
The SpectatorJohn McEwen This is Richard Long's second exhibition at the Whitechapel (till 27 February) in six years, which all too accurately reflects the awe in which the institutions...