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jeternitrillgi he pledge Those who have continually opposed Britain's entry
The Spectatorinto the Common Market, and who have ever maintained that the undesirability of entry would become ever more evident as the vicious contradictions of the Community made...
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Israel's vital unity
The SpectatorIii the unprecedentedly divided political situation now being endured by Israel the friends of that embattled country ought to attempt to encourage Israeli soldiers and...
Spiteful attack on Mr. Wilson
The SpectatorThe Prime Minister has been the victim of a spiteful attack from some Conservative backbenchers who have attempted, without success, to tie him to the Ince-in-Makefield property...
Abortion on demand
The SpectatorDespite the unanimous feeling of its members that the Abortion Act should not be amended in a restrictive way, it is impossible to feel that Mrs Justice Lane's committee of...
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Established church
The SpectatorFrom the Rev. Victor Hellabv Sir: Your editorial of April 6 will have pleased many, besides myself, who are not Establishment bashers, and on the contrary would champion all...
From Dr. Michael Bell
The SpectatorSir: Far abler pens than mine will be able to discuss the pros and cons for the establishment of the Church of England. I agree with you that it seems absurd and illogical that...
Sir: "The Church of England is an established Church," you
The Spectatorwrite, "or it is nothing." Your love of a rhetorical punch line has led you to make an absurd statement. If the Church of England were disestablished, it would still remain a...
CAP—social policy
The SpectatorSir: How it would simplify things if farmers were machines and not people. Gerald Segal's letter from Brussels (in your issue of March 30) implied that the fundamental problem...
Melchett Trust
The SpectatorSir: I am writing to comment on Skinflint's remarks (The Spectator, March 30) about the Julian Melchett Trust, whsich is being set up to pursue social objectives in steelmaking...
Pornography
The SpectatorSir: I am delighted to answer Mr George Martelli's questions to me (April 6) on pornography, arising out of my review of Lord Longford's The Grain of Wheat (March 23). Here are...
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i l,2 find it increasingly difficult to avI ct anY degree of
The Spectatorrationality in 41 Holbrook's writings. He seems j00,111,Mand space in the weeklies 1 ' lla proportional to the support he er the case he presents. latest article does not help....
Sir: David Holbrook is incontestably right in claiming that a
The Spectatorlegislative curb is needed on the present systematic debasement of public taste, in the cinematic field especially. Nonetheless I can never read any article deploring the...
Victorian chivalry
The SpectatorFrom Eric E. Rich, M.A., Ph.D. Sir: Victor Montagu, in your issue of March 30, gives the impression that Queen Victoria personified the age of chivalry, but 1 expect he does...
Sir Alec
The SpectatorSir: — Many will endorse, and mostly rightly, what Patrick Cosgrave writes about Sir Alec Douglas Home's character and personality. That he is an extremely nice and honest man...
Sir: May I add a PS to your article on
The SpectatorSir Alec Douglas-Home (March 30)? The 14th Earl has been contemptuously dismissed by some as an anachronism. Maybe he is, but if so, what a remarkable and resilient specimen! He...
Private lives?
The SpectatorSir: It was at a public meeting in Edinburgh last year that I was made aware of the horror and the extent of what has resulted from the 1967 abortion act. The main speaker at...
Contraceptive politics
The SpectatorSir: Ronan Fanning's sneering article claims that it was not liberal zeal which made the Irish Government introduce a Bill to legalise contraception. but rather a Supreme Court...
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Political Commentary
The SpectatorCallaghan: an instinct for the jugular Patrick Cosgrave During that dreadful weekend after the election, when Mr Heath was trying his hardest to hold on to office with the...
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'A Spectator's Notebook
The Spectator, The Home of Lost Causes is, by description, a i Sanitorium and ultimate cure resort of itself. 1 Oxford undergraduates of strange reputation and report usually contrive to do...
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Return to the Fourth Republic
The SpectatorDouglas Johnson General de Gaulle was once asked about the g reat emptiness which would follow him in France. There would be no emptiness, he said, there would rather be an...
GULL IVER'S x01711-1TAL.
The SpectatorDr. Casuisticus, the, enent sto.ral nilosopitor, koicts that, sinc,e,noPart can bestore, v-irt wows than the, Whole , Nre rkwat jultcje anA.ction by that Part of It titat Men....
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After Pompidou (2)
The SpectatorPrance and the Atlantic crisis ,Nicholas Richardson .;;;;-- , 'Ile change in the wizard's voice was as` 01 Anding. Suddenly it became menacing. Po werful, harsh as stone . ....
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Europe and the US
The SpectatorReality breaks through Douglas Jay _ It was a piece of good luck for sorely-bruised Anglo-American relations that Mr Callaghan's "pro-Atlantic" first speech as Foreign...
Ulster it
The SpectatorSeal and search Rawle Knox • blameless citizen, right credit-worthy and, 111 L bert ond ne o e n d d ed er s Imagine yourself (if imagination good standing at the local golf...
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Richard Crossman
The SpectatorIt was in the variety of his ideas, and the passion with which he regarded and promoted them, rather in their originality or precision, that Richard Crossman made his major...
Botswana Letter
The SpectatorBig brother Naomi Mitchison Many a Botswana is desperately proud of his little country and proud also of being an African. But there are tough discouragements for such people....
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A New Folly of the Old Fooles
The SpectatorMercurius Cantabrigiensis I had so fear'd for you at the hands of your student rebels that your letter of the 20th inst. .cheer'd me ultra morem. You ask me regarding our...
Westminster Corridors
The SpectatorThe other night, my good friend Sir Simon d'Audley tottered into the Club in search of such stimulant as would enable him to take post for the country without endangering an...
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Crime
The SpectatorThe forgotten victims Graham Junes A fifteen-year-old boy was appearing before a juvenile court, accused of two offences of indecently assaulting teenage girls. One of these,...
(With apologies to Rudyard Kipling)
The SpectatorIf you can smile when rising income taxes Swallow the extra cash you hardly earn; If, when you see the price of petrol waxes, You stain Arab nations good discern: It you can...
Press
The SpectatorCopy rights Bill Grundy I remember as a boy being frequently puzzled by that newspaper column known vulgarly as 'Hatched, Matched, and Despatched' — Births, Marriages and...
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Science
The SpectatorTechnumaniacal failure Bernard Dixon I'm happy using a credit card td buy petrol and settle restaurant bills, but not to purchase a packet of Rawlplugs, a Scotch, or the...
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Religion
The SpectatorJonah's message Martin Sullivan Three hundred years before the birth of Christ a thoughtful man was concerned about the narrow exclusiveness of his church. To challenge this...
Gardening
The SpectatorYulan Denis Wood The yulan is very old: 1,00 years at least in China before it was brought to Europe in the last decade of the eighteenth century, when it must have been seen...
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Mary Whitehouse on the making of a pressure group
The SpectatorPressure Groups and the Permissive Society* IS well written and, within its limits, well documented though it is not a particularly exciting book. Which is a pity since being...
The enchanted forest and other fictions
The SpectatorPeter Ackroyd The Rain Forest Olivia Manning (Heinemann £2.50) Dogcatcher Peter Prince (Gollancz £2.50) Well well, says Miss Manning as she glides into the neighbourhood...
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Rose is a rose
The SpectatorMarigold Johnson Times to Remember Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy (Collins £4.95) Exactly a year after Chappaquidick, Rose Kennedy decided to spend her eightieth birthday in Ethiopia....
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Violence with intent
The SpectatorCharles Marowitz Violence in the Arts John Fraser (Cambridge University Press £2.50) This should be made required reading for Lord Longford and Mary Whitehouse for, in the...
Factions
The SpectatorEdited and introduced by Giles Gordon and Alex Hamilton Brian W. Aldiss, Maureen Duffy, Robert Nye, William Trevor, and many other d istinguished fiction writers have each...
Country Topics
The SpectatorAuberon Waugh Illustrated by Ken Taylor A brilliantly funny collection of essays on country life, revealing to the unenlightened urban inhabitant rural reactions to world...
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I BOOKS WANTED I WANTED. Copies by J. M. Grou
The SpectatorChristian Sanctified by the Lord's Prayer: and by E. Bandeur Living to the Lord's Prayer. Pub. by Burns & Oates. John Cumming. Burns & Oates 270 Jerdan Place, SW6 5PT....
That uncertain feeling
The SpectatorJohn Casey Keats and Embarrassment Christopher Ricks (Oxford University Press 0.75) Hegel thought that one great outward manifestation of the human soul was the' transparency of...
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Alice in lonelyland
The SpectatorKay Dick Staying on Alone: Letters of Alice B. Toklas Edited by Edward Burns. (Angus and Robertson £4.50) Gertrude Stein died in 1946, leaving behind her dearest friend and...
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Under the dome
The SpectatorA.L. Rowse That Noble Cabinet. A History of the British Museum Edward Miller (Andre Deutsch. £4.80) I have never been — unlike so many of the eminent — an habitué of the BM, as...
Elizabethan
The Spectatormagic Richard Luckett Simon Forman: Sex and Society in Shakespeare's Age A. L. Rowse (Weidenfeld and Nicolson £4.50) A. L. Rowse's latest book is essential reading for anyone...
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Talking of books
The SpectatorMusic, maestro Benny Green I have sometimes thought what a good idea it would be for somebody to write a book analysing the various motives people have for writing books,...
Bookbuyer's Bookend
The SpectatorBritain is unusual among civilised countries in not having a national bestseller list and a good deal of sales baloney has been allowed to pass because of it. Last year the...
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Kenneth Hurren on not being beastly to Priestley
The SpectatorIf you can't get a defence of J. B. Priestley's Eden End from me — libellously reputed as I am to languish in a bygone day — I don't know where you are going to find one. The...
Cinema
The SpectatorMauling Mahler Christopher Hudson The sea pounds the headland; the rich symphonic music swells and lours; on the desolate rocks a white chrysalis inches painfully out of its...
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Television
The SpectatorWasted journey Clive Gammon I was delighted to see that BBC] were repeating Shakespeare — or Bust last week as a Play for Today because I'd missed it first time round and I...
Opera
The SpectatorConspiracy Rodney MiInes • One had hoped that the current outcrop of four new operas presented by London and regional companies would form some sort of cornerstone of a...
W i l l
The SpectatorWaspe Despite the scorn which this column poured a month ago over the weird reports that the commercial theatre was in a critical condition from which it could only be rescued...
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Levering up the Stock Exchange
The SpectatorNicholas Davenport As Nigel Lawson remarked in his elegant maiden speech in the budget debate, if we are to have an autumn budget most of us would prefer it to be delivered by...
Travel trouble
The SpectatorUnwanted holidays David W. Wragg During the late 1950s and e,..rly 1960s, shortly after the trend towards cheap holidays abroad first reached boom proportions, a spate of...
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Skinflint's City Diary
The SpectatorIf ever a reverse takeover situation should be referred to the Monopolies Commission it is the merger proposal between Sterling Guarantee Trust and Town and City Properties....
Mr Charles Stahl, the American editor of Greens Commodity Newsletter,
The Spectatorhas been visiting London. His newsletter has been almost invariably correct in forecasting the market in silver and gold and should be obligatory reading for commodity dealers...