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The Decline of the Western Will
The SpectatorIt is not necessary to have supported the AmeriaanAfkg.t irj , Vietnam — nor now to acitbc6t1„arfnecr iniervention in Angola either by tliJnited States or one or more of her...
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Dissatisfied
The SpectatorSir: The British and Irish Governments may feel quite satisfied with the security situation in Northern Ireland now, and particularly in South Armagh, with their hot-line...
Misread
The SpectatorFrom Dr T. D. M. Martin Sir: How odd of the reviewer of The Victorian Public School (December 27) to take Kipling's lines • • Then ye contented your souls With the flannelled...
Non-event
The SpectatorSir: N 1 9 , ancy Mum, in her comprehensive review of c. as far as women were concerned, denies that the Inte rnational women's year' was after all a non!vent, and proceeded to...
Special information
The SpectatorSir: Richard West states (in his article on Ireland) that eighty-eight executions were carried out by the wartime Irish government. Professor Lyons (himself citing T. P....
Immigration
The SpectatorSir: I was encouraged to read that Mr Patrick Cosgrave is facing up squarely to the uncomfortable problems brought about by the immigration policies of successive governments...
Feudal view
The SpectatorSir: Mr Witcombe's letter (December 27) is none the less interesting for failing to touch upon the subject of my letter which you kindly published in your December 13 issue,...
Passing the buck
The SpectatorFrom Mrs M. E. Smith Sir: Dr Rhodes Boyson in his article 'Passing the buck' (January 3) pointed out that the influence of school governors in spheres other than appointments is...
Not quite right
The SpectatorSir: No doubt it is Scrooge-like and pompous to complain of inaccuracy in a question in your Christmas Quiz (December 27). Nevertheless, Vaughan Williams did not say that Mahler...
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A question of morale
The SpectatorPatrick Cosgrave The morale of a political party is a curious, evanescent, mercurial thing: for no very tangible reason it takes sudden leaps up and down. I remember, some...
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A Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorLi A Minister for London. This is not a new suggestion but it remains a good one and has lately been gaining ground. Nor is that surprising, as London becomes ever more...
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Any complaints?
The SpectatorDavid Napley The Police Bill now before Parliament aims to improve the procedure for making complaints against police officers. This, of course, fully accords with modern...
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The Westminster succession
The SpectatorStuart Reid The new Archbishop of Westminster, who is likely to be named by the Pope later this month, Will inherit a church that is going through its worst crisis since the...
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Richard against Richard
The SpectatorVictor Evelyn It is an unusual spectacle to see the chairman of a nationalised industry rushing into print twice in three weeks — in letters first to the Sunday Times (November...
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Plague year
The SpectatorRichard West Dublin Last summer in Ireland there was a plague of lady-birds, which are feared here as they are in England ()four house is on fire') and in Germany where they...
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The unions
The SpectatorOut of Molehills Jim Higgins It is an interesting fact that. most people of my acquaintance do not know the name of the new head of British Leyland; they do, however, know...
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Country life
The SpectatorWinter light Denis Wood While the days are still slow to lengthen, winter &rkn . ess in the country brings to my mind the • ginning of The Return of the Native in which, a...
Science
The SpectatorBangers Bernard Dixon 'l op prize for the daftest piece of quasi-scientific advice offered recently must go to the British Medical Journal which, just before Christmas, chose...
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Another voice
The SpectatorKissinger: the grim truth Auberon Waugh From time to time I receive letters, pamphlets and other material through the post from a gentleman whom I think I have never met, but...
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The great whiner
The SpectatorRichard Cobb The Making of a Saint: the Tragi-comedy of J ean - Jacques Rousseau J. H. Huizinga (Ha mish Hamilton E7.95) • • . There is only one thing that might Perhaps be...
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Easy answers
The SpectatorRobert Skidelsky The Last Bunker; A Report on White South Africa Today Guy Arnold (Quartet Books E5.50) The Portuguese military uprising of Aril 1974 changed the balance of...
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Tradesman's entrance
The SpectatorHarriet Waugh P eers and Plebs Madeleine Bingham (George Allen and Unwin £5.50) Class is one of the safest commercial publishing Prospects. Everybody belongs to. a class, and...
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Breaking up
The SpectatorFrancis King Between Me and Life Meryle Secrest (Macdonald and Jane's £7.50) Although she was undoubtedly one of the finest women painters of the twentieth century — a little...
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Walled in
The Spectator°an Robinson Russian Studies of China E. Stuart Kirby ( Macmillan £10.00) T he grievances of the Chinese against USSR are not hard to understand. In all the murky st ory of the...
Crime fiction
The SpectatorNew thrills Patrick Cosgrave Some years ago some bright young publishers hit on a jolly wheeze: rather than publish before Christmas titles that might get lost in the huge...
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Talking of books
The SpectatorOld grouch Benny Green The Marx Brothers Scrapbook Groucho Marx and Richard Anobile (Star Books 75p) Memoirs of a Mangy Lover Groucho Marx (Manor Books 65p) There is no reason...
Bookend
The SpectatorPublishers have never had much time for television as an advertising medium for booksIn the first place, most of them can't afford it. In the second, there are few titles likely...
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All that
The SpectatorJohn McEwen 'The Golden Age of Spanish Painting' (Royal Academy till March 14) is a disappointment. Apart from the Goya exhibition of 1964 this is the first substantial show of...
Theatre
The SpectatorMini-America Kenneth Hurren The Hot L Baltimore by Lanford Wilson (Tower, Canonbury) The Browning Version by Terence Rattigan, and Carol's Christmas by Frank Marcus (Kings...
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Kenneth Robinson
The SpectatorExpirations 'Cinema The Counsellor Director: Alberto De Martino Stars: Martin Balsam, Tomas Milian 'X' Warner West End 1(110 mins) Rancho Deluxe Director: Frank Perry. Stars:...
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Gilts and gold
The SpectatorNicholas Davenport hi. boom times — no one can say that the City is dull or boring when nearly every market . booming except gold — a money column largely writes itself. Last...
Skinflint's City Diary
The SpectatorHow right we have been to be sceptical of statistics. Remember all those jokes about blind reliance on figures? The way to reduce the chances of someone planting a bomb on your...
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A fool and his money
The SpectatorMixed economy problems Benard Hollowood "This radioactive waste that we're importing from Japan, Germany and other countries," said Cartwright. "Presumably we're processing it...
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COMPETITION
The SpectatorNo. 894: Scots wha hae Set by M. K. Cheeseman: Burns Night this year b y well be an occasion . for further outbursts ,I 3 ) , the Scottish Nationalists. A pity the poet h...
No. 891: The winners
The SpectatorCharles Seaton reports: Competitors were a sked for an extract from the sort of school Prospectus that might be expected if the here. Ed ucation Voucher system were ever adopted...