Page 3
F ifty- seven varieties
The SpectatorWhen asked on Tuesday to say who will be presenting the Conservative Party's authoritative definition of policy on pay, Sir Charles Johnston, Chairman of the conference, said,...
Page 4
Political commentary
The SpectatorThe conversion of Paul Ferdinand Mount Brighton Defectors must be brushed aside. All human organisations — nations, political parties, bureaucracies and businesses alike —...
Page 5
Notebook
The SpectatorBrighton 'He eats more oysters than the Dukes' was the saying attributed to a waiter at the Beef steak club with reference to Paul Johnson, who this week addressed a...
Next week
The SpectatorGraham Greene's Journey Without Maps, an account of his first visit to Africa published in 1936, is to be reissued by Bodley Head in November. He has written a new introduction...
Page 6
Another voice
The SpectatorOur Moroccan future Auberon Waugh Casablanca My search for the clinic or nursing home where Jan Morris had her famous operation has come to nothing. Nobody knows where it is,...
Page 7
The new German nationalism
The SpectatorTim Garton Ash Berlin Does such a thing as 'Germany' still exist? The Federal Republic (West Germany) claims that it does: there are, it says, two German states, but only one...
Page 8
Better than voting
The SpectatorNicholas von Hoffman Washington Ian Smith and one of his black buddies turned up here and made a flying pass at lopping a wreath on the tomb of the Unknown Soldier but was...
Page 9
The challenge of Camp David
The SpectatorHugh Fraser 'Geopolitics' is an ugly word, almost as ugly as Hitler' s odious and disastrous guru, Alfred Rosenberg, who first introduced it. But, on returning from Israel, one...
Page 10
Ready for the hard times
The SpectatorPeregrine Worsthorne Pitt once declared, during the Napoleonic wars, that England had saved herself by her exertions and would save Europe by her example. Mr Bernard Nossiter,...
One hundred years ago
The SpectatorPrince Bismarck spoke on Wednesday for the second time in favour of the AntiSocialist Bill. He declared that he was in favour of all means for relieving workmen from need, and...
Page 12
Comprehensive insurance
The SpectatorGeorge Gale It is only a few days since the ViceChancellor of Liverpool University said that in the future the universities would have to accept lower standards of entry. This...
Page 13
Mrs Thatcher's real challenge
The SpectatorChristopher Booker It may be put down as a minuscule sign of the times that it was only, ironically, an industrial dispute which last Saturday prevented the Daily Telegraph...
Page 14
The political threat to broadcasting
The SpectatorGrace Wyndham Goldie There are several ways of destroying the quality of British broadcasting. Two of these, both rejected in the Twenties by the early Broadcasting Committees,...
Page 15
The press
The SpectatorCan of worms Patrick Marn ham According to Mr Denis McShane, the President of the National Union of Journalists, 'the Union is considering whether or not to withdraw its...
Page 16
In the City
The SpectatorBluff or no? Nicholas Davenport The Blackpool drama passed without convulsing the City. Naturally they did not like what they heard and saw on the box but the conviction is...
Page 17
Soviet aims in Africa
The SpectatorSir: If I had not actually read Mr Xan Smiley's article (30 September) on Rhodesia I would not have believed it Possible for anyone to have written at such length on the current...
Sir: The British Foreign Secretary, Dr David Owen, is naive
The Spectatorif he believes that his all - party conference on Rhodesia will bring Peace to that strife-torn land. Attem pts at r econciliation of the Patriotic Front leaders and the...
Sir: Xan Smiley, writing in your issue of 30 September,
The Spectatormakes one good point and several poor ones. He quite rightly suggests that if the i nstitutions (civil service, academia, judici ary) are handed over relatively intact this...
Prophets
The SpectatorSir: Michael Foot, writing about Ignazio Saone (23 September), tells us that 'for some reason not easily discernible he is one of those prophets who was never accorded proper...
Whistling Beethoven
The SpectatorSir: I do not think that Mr Geoffrey Wheatcroft is quite correct in his 'Last Word' in the 30 September issue entitled 'Singing songs'. He states that 'Beethoven's quartets have...
Low flying
The SpectatorSir: So the Ministry of Defence do what they can 'to alleviate the problems' of low-flying aircraft 'by spreading the burden around as fairly as possible' (Letters, 30...
Travoltamania
The SpectatorSir: When tuning in to Radios 3 and 4 I sometimes find it difficult to avoid getting the regional version of local radio, Radio Bristol, and the other day I heard a voice say,...
Sarah Grand
The SpectatorSir: I am writing a biography of Sarah Grand (Frances McFall) 1862-1943, author of The Heavenly Twins, The Beth Book and other novels, as well as being a suffragist. I should be...
Page 19
Born loser
The SpectatorFerdinand Mount C onservative Dissidents: Dissent within the Parliamentary Conservative Party ( 197 0 - 1974) Philip Norton (Temple smith 210) Dr Norton states his thesis nice...
Sideshow
The SpectatorPatrick Cosgrave Burma: 1942 - 45 Raymond Callahan (Davis-Poynter 0.50) Poor Burma. Of the many tracts of the British Empire acquired in a fit of absence of mind she was the...
Page 20
,Traveller
The SpectatorCollor Cruise O'Brien N or th of South: An African Journey Shiva Naipaul (Deutsch £6.50) This is an account of a journey in Kenya, Tanzania and Zambia. The writer, unlike mos t...
Page 22
Ring-chat
The SpectatorBenny Green Shadow Box George Plimpton (Deutsch £6.95) It is not easy to write well about sport. Many men have tried it and very very few have succeeded, Hazlitt in the...
Odds on
The SpectatorJohn Graham The Encyclopaedia of Gambling Peter Arnold (Collins £6.95) if y o u go into the average bookshop and manage to fight your way past the shelves groaning with...
Page 23
Sixtyish
The SpectatorPaul Ableman The Clique Ferdinand Mount (Ghetto & Windus £4.95) There are five or six novels racing for the winning post across the uneven turf of this book. Home first, by a...
Page 24
ice-cold intellectualism
The SpectatorRodney Milnes Der Ring des Nibelungen (Covent Garden) There is without doubt a powerful mind behind the Royal Opera's Ring. Whether it has been put to the service of Wagner is...
Page 25
Theat re
The SpectatorHaunting Peter Jenkins The Lady From The Sea (Royal Exchange , M anchester) IvanOv (Old Vic) An e xceptional actress is needed to anchor The Lady From The Sea in the depths of...
Page 26
Art
The SpectatorAmbiguities John McEwen It is difficult to imagine Bob Law's moreor-less white-on-white and all black paintings causing much righteous indignation anywhere except in...
Cinema
The SpectatorPotboiler Ted Whitehead Slavers (Filmcenta) With Roots in the ascendant, I suppose a film about the Imperial land-grab in Africa and about the conflict between rival slave...
Page 27
Architecture
The SpectatorNortherner Gavin Stamp With Sir Hugh Casson as President, it is to he expected that the Royal Academy should give more attention to that often neglected art: architecture. But...
Page 28
High life
The SpectatorFair play Taki The title 'high life' is misleading as I suddenly hit a snag in the pursuit of the good life. The reasons are simple. I went to Yugoslavia, for sport. Never...
Low life
The SpectatorAnticipatory Jeffrey Bernard Recent abuse I've received from my seemingly dwindling band of readers has come in two forms. There have been face-to-face confrontations with...
Page 29
Last word
The SpectatorPO blues Geoffrey Wheatcroft The Post Office is run by maniacs and half-wits. That may seem an exaggerated , hyperbolic statement, a cheap attempt to grab attention. So before...
Mr Steve Brodie
The SpectatorIn my column last week I made an unfortunate ill-founded reference to the death of the Picture Editor of the Sunday Times, Mr Steve Brodie. The passage stated that the Sunday...