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Futile, dangerous and shameful
The SpectatorThree months a ,b we argued here that the absurd 'cod war should be ended. Those months have seen an In tensification of hostilities and in every respect a d e terioration of...
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The Week
The SpectatorFirst the crucifixion, then the second coming. After months of what he considered a Ca mpaign of persecution by the Press, and what had certainly been a story relished by F leet...
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Political Commentary
The SpectatorStrange death of the Liberals John Grigg A hundred years ago the Liberal Party was a profoundly anomalous coalition of Whig magnates and urban radicals of the Joseph...
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Notebook
The SpectatorM r Jo Grimond's principal task as care-' taker will be to direct the search for an acceptable way of choosing a new leader of the Liberal Party. The problem could hardly be,...
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Another voice
The SpectatorBetween Hell and Hepburn Auberon Waugh Of all the horrors and indignities of the Heath regime—the refusal to honour P. G. Wodehouse on his ninetieth birthday, the villainous...
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Beyond sophistication
The SpectatorMax Egremont New York Historians may possibly declare that Pennsylvania did for Jimmy Carter in 1976 what West Virginia did for John Kennedy in 1960. Certainly Carter's victory...
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Finnish factions
The SpectatorPaul Neuburg Helsinki Mr Taisto Sinisalo, fifty-year-old deputy chairman of the Finnish Communist Party and head of its Stalinist wing, is both a curse and a blessing to others...
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Two Berlins
The SpectatorKeith Kyle Reichsbahn': The anachronistic sign of the Imperial Railway hangs on every station of the old-fashioned, rackety overhead line which carries you everywhere in West...
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Non e finita
The SpectatorGeorge Hutchinson An uncommonly large number of former Prime Ministers are knocking about at present. I am not sure that we have ever known so many. As to 80 per cent (or...
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Why was Lyon sacked?
The SpectatorArnit Roy W . hat was the real reason for Alex Lyon's d ismissal as Home Office Minister? It was said at the time that he was a bad Minister — Whatever that might mean. But...
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Pay policy BC
The SpectatorAndrew Alexander 'Without precedent' was the rapturous comment I heard a Labour MP make about last week's Treasury-TUC accord. The poor fellow, like so many other MPs, was...
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Student Right-about
The SpectatorJoseph Egerton °Il e of the most complicated arenas of Political contention at present is student Politics. The student unions—and especi ally the National Union of...
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Lobby lads
The SpectatorHugh Macpherson In 1970 a worthy academic, Jeremy Tunstall, published a solemn work on The Westminster Lobby Correspondents. It was quite useful in its way, but clearly out of...
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In the city
The SpectatorAgainst investing abroad Nicholas Davenport The fact that the fourth estate of the realm has agreed to share responsibility with Parliament for maintaining our economic...
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Kennedy and Scotland Sir: In publishing Mr Ludovic Kennedy's exposition
The Spectatorof the case for an independent Scotland you have given cause for gratitude to us all—not least to Scottish Conservatives who are meeting in conference at Perth. For Mr Kennedy...
Loyalist Sir: Mr Ludovic Kennedy, in his article anent Devolution,
The Spectatoroutruns even the zealots of his own party; for he would undo not only the Parliamentary Union of 1707 but also the Union of Crowns of 1603. I fear that he may be exposing...
Dear Editor Sir: Have we taken leave of our senses
The Spectator? I read in last week's Sunday Times that a letter written by Mr Jeremy Thorpe to another man displayed a degree of affection which was unusual between two men. If the meaning...
Educationalists Sir: Educationalists have certainly a lot to answer for
The Spectatorin the prevailing state of virtual educational chaos. Their sponsorship of the 'new' primary schooling is at last being called to account—although the apologetic manner in which...
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Showing the flag
The SpectatorSir: I would be the first to admit that my book Britain's imperial Century is controversial, even provocative in places: it is meant to be. But John Terraine's review...
Food cartels
The SpectatorSir: There is much talk at present of 'world food shortages', but little of food cartels. The most obvious food cartel operating at the moment is the Common Agricultural policy...
Camelot
The SpectatorSir: No one likes being rudely shaken into the bleak, grey world of hard reality when slumbering fast in the depths of a golden dream, so when a journalist of liberal persuasion...
Shining Knights
The SpectatorSir: Having just finished Professor Knights' book Encounter 3, and having just read Peter Ackroyd's article in the 6 March issue of the Spectator, may I say I think Professor...
British documentary
The SpectatorSir: While I. appreciate that Penelope Houston at the end of her fine review of Elizabeth Sussex's The Rise and Fall of British Documentary might not wish to classify us as a...
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Books
The SpectatorThe woman in white Hilary Spurling The Life of Emily Dickinson Richard B. Sewell (Faber, Two volumes, £17.50) The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson edited by T. H. Johnson...
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Slipping out
The SpectatorWilliam Trevor A New Life of Chekhov Ronald Hingley (Oxford University Press £8.75) The old cliché that everyone has a story to tell is true, and more often than not it's a...
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High things
The SpectatorI. A. Richards The Complete Poems of Thomas Hardy Edited by James Gibson (Macmillan £6.50) After Hardy's 'earliest known production in verse, Domicilium'—descriptive rather...
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The Deep Peter Benchley (Andre Deutsch £3.25)
The SpectatorT wo Much! DohaId E. Westlake (Hodder and Stoughton £3.75) What do morphine, explosives, voodoo, Sharks, moray eels, rape, murder, mutilat ion, Spanish treasure, forgery,...
Collector's items
The SpectatorBenny Green Wisden's Cricketers' Almanac (Sporting Handbooks £3.00) To attempt to review Wisden would be an impertinence, so I will merely record the arrival of the one hundred...
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Forlorn Hope
The SpectatorA. L. Rowse The Protestant Duke: A Life of Monmouth Violet Wyndham (Weidenfeld and Nicolson £4.95) Many years ago I was lucky enough to penetrate the most exquisite house in...
Timeless
The SpectatorSimon Courtauld Gallipot Eyes Elspeth Huxley (Weiden feld and Nicolson £4.25) I played cricket at Oaksey last summer. It was a timeless occasion—the weather and the tea were...
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Shockin'
The SpectatorPatrick Campbell The Irish Thomas J. O'Hanlon (Andre Deutsch £3.95) O'Hanlon, who wisely lives in New York !hough born in Wexford, says that his book IS an objective portrait...
Statistics
The SpectatorPatrick Cosg rave The Art of Warfare in the Age of Marlborough David Chandler (Botsford £6.95) War is a human condition: art does—and should—attend its arrangement. In the...
Books Wanted
The SpectatorFIRST EDITIONS, particularly early, Evelyn Waugh, John Tidey, 22 Pattison Road, London NW2. BELLS RING . BACKWARDS by Oliver Onions. Johnson, 46 York Road. Liverpool 23. ELSIE...
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Arts
The SpectatorThe lure of the West John Spurling People who hear that I'm engaged on a series of visits to provincial theatres tend to make sympathetic noises, as if only masochism, poverty...
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OPera
The SpectatorBeyond Bach Rodney Milnes Of the two operatic genres that, from the Performance point of view, remain virtually closed books—French opera of the Baroque and Revolution...
Theatre
The SpectatorMusic master Kenneth Hurren Side by Side With Sondheim (Mermaid) Gigi by Colette and Anita Loos (Fortune) Endgame by Samuel Beckett (Royal Court) At the riverside Mermaid they...
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Cinema
The SpectatorSick sex Ian Cameron In search of something more promising than the week's official menu of press shows, I have been trying my luck with the double bill of Canadian horror...
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Art
The SpectatorWinning John McEwen There are several shows worth a visit at the moment but Howard Hodgkin is the man of the hour with a retrospective at the Serpentine (till 31 May), an...
Television
The SpectatorMelancholy Jeffrey Bernard Homosexuality—Towards a Christian View (Thames Television) was a short sharp reminder at the ungodly hour of 12.40 am that the Almighty is keeping...