19 APRIL 1975

Page 3

The Budget: administering catastrophe

The Spectator

The most remarkable moment in Mr Healey's Budget speech was when he announced, after he had been on his feet for nearly two hours, that he was going to give a general judgment...

Agricultural autarky

The Spectator

The suggestion that the Government is about to unveil a five-year plan to make the country less dependent on imports by growing more food is welcome — though surprising, given...

Army in Ulster

The Spectator

For all that his forthrightness has almost certainly earned him a heavy rebuke from his political masters, General Sir Frank King, General Officer Commanding in Northern...

Arab guerrillas

The Spectator

It is probably too much to hope that Arab governments will have the sense to see for themselves the implications of the most recent clash in Beirut between the indigenous...

Page 4

Market matters

The Spectator

Sir: It seems incredible that a British Labour Chancellor of the Exchequer, like the offical Conservative and Liberal parties, proposes to make us pay, indefinitively,...

Bivine intervention?

The Spectator

Sir: Your two Devizes correspondents (April 3) would have Her Majesty, as Head of the Church of England, order a day of prayer in order to seek divine guidance in the momentous...

Country houses

The Spectator

Sir: Mr Patrick Cormack's article (March 29) laments the sad state of the English country houses. He says, "It is in them and in our churches that we come closest to the soul...

Wealth tax

The Spectator

Sir: Mr Patrick Cormack, MP, expresses. the hope in his article "Heritage in Danger" (March 29) "that whoever is caught by the Capital Transfer Tax and the Wealth Tax, it is not...

That Bhutto degree

The Spectator

From Sir Frederic Bennett, MP Sir: Hugh Trevor-Roper (March 15) has done a real service to the cause of maintaining good community relations here and in regard to our national...

Page 5

Eye witnesses

The Spectator

Sir: Martin Sullivan compares the evidence for the Resurrection of Jesus with that for the Moorgate train crash (April 5). But the documents about the latter were written within...

Bow Group

The Spectator

Sir: Spectator's Notebook (April 5) in trying to establish that women are following Mrs Thatcher into influential jobs missed the point. There are two ladies standing for the...

Peregrinations

The Spectator

Sir: Congratulations on your first Peregrinations. It read very well and it is clear that I am going to have to keep a sharp eye out. Of course, if it gets too good I shall go...

Cyril Connolly

The Spectator

From Mrs George Orwell Sir: In your paragraph about the late Cyril Connolly, 'Dying beyond his means' (April 12) you correctly say an appeal is being sent round to raise money...

Page 6

Political Commentary

The Spectator

On underestimating Harold Patrick Cosgrave Since the last parliamentary vote on the EEC the press, the politicians and miscellaneous others have been happy playing at their...

Page 7

A Spectator's Notebook

The Spectator

It went unremarked that the Conservative Party had it in their power to force the Prime Minister to go to the country by calling a General Election on the historic vote on the...

Lobby lyrics-23

The Spectator

Lord Bloggs, through years of party strife, Had earned his barony for life And, sometimes, was inclined to sneer At each hereditary peer; For what had any of them done, Except...

Page 8

Spectator peregrinations

The Spectator

Whatever happened to former Liberal pink elephant Christopher Mayhew? I got up very early one morning (9.30 am) last week and found him chairing an international conference of...

Westminster corridors

The Spectator

Last night we received a Piece of Ill News at the Club, which very sensibly affected every one of us. I question not but that my Readers themselves will be troubled at the...

Page 9

Wifi Waspe

The Spectator

There is balance and balance, as the admirable Allan Hargreaves — of the London commercial station, Capital Radio — has been demonstrating to the IBA. Learning that he was to do...

Book marks

The Spectator

British publishers are understandably irked by the American government's attempts to dismantle the British Market Agreement by means of its recent Anti-trust suit (this column,...

Page 10

Shakespeare and Stratford (1)

The Spectator

Twenty questions for believers Francis Carr Next Wednesday, April 23, St George's Day, is the official birthday of William Shakespeare, acknowledged to be the greatest figure...

Page 11

Shakespeare and Stratford (2)

The Spectator

Answering the sceptical A. L. Rowse Most of the nonsense written about Shakespeare comes from people who know little or nothing of Shakespeare's Age, or of the life and...

Page 13

Sovereign State

The Spectator

How common a market? Victor Selwyn After the uncertainties of the past thirty years, one can hardly be surprised if a CBI poll among British industry shows a vote for the...

Page 14

Victor Selwyn is the editor of the Brussels publication Guide to National Practices in Western Europe

The Spectator

Capful Bulging with beef • Should give relief; Flooded with wine Sounds good and fine; Engulfed by eggs Some bounty begs A land replete With lots to eat; Or so I thought This...

Dockland

The Spectator

Disputes within disputes David W. Wragg It is simply a statement of the obvious to say that an island nation is dependent on its ports for economic survival. No doubt the poor...

Conservatives

The Spectator

The moral appeal Patricia Hodgson Situation vacant, wanted: a natural governing party to fill the vacuum existing in British politics since 1963. Several applicants have, of...

Page 15

Personal column

The Spectator

Brian Inglis "What makes us tick?" the Advertising Standards Authority asks in a full page advertisement, replying to recent criticisms. Mysteriously, most of the page is...

Page 17

REVIEW OF BOOKS

The Spectator

Simon Raven on growing up Hardy This new biography*, as its title declares, deals with Thomas Hardy's youth. The bulk of it is a blow by blow account of his struggles and his...

Page 18

Big Tom

The Spectator

Frank Morley Eliot Stephen Spender (Fontana Modern Masters 80p) Stephen Spender in this introduction to Eliot's poetry makes good advantage of having been born twenty-one years...

Page 19

The American way of death

The Spectator

Elwyn Jones The Manson Murders Vincent Bugliosi, with Curt Gentry (Bodley Head £3.95), Most murderers know their victims. Most murderers have a discernible motive for their...

Page 20

Fiction

The Spectator

Soi-disant Peter Ackroyd, Look At The I-larlequins Vladimir Nabokov (Weidenfeld and Nicolson £3.25) Mr Nabokov clearly thinks of himself as a very good, if not a great writer;...

Talking of books

The Spectator

Ugly duckling Benny . Green In those bleak but depressingly frequent moments when the gulf between his aspirations and his achievement seems too vast to contemplate, and the...

Page 21

Eastern Europe

The Spectator

The failure of leftist writing Petru Popescu More and more western writers visit Russia and Eastern Europe: the majority as guests of Unions of Writers, Boards of Culture and...

Page 22

SOCIETY TODAY

The Spectator

Medicine A woman, a dog and a walnut tree John Linklater An interesting psychological experiment at Loughborough University recently made headline news* by demonstrating...

Country life

The Spectator

In April, Come he Denis Wood My mother-in-law used to maintain that the cuckoo was first heard everywhere in the land on April 17, her son's birthday, and woe betide any badly...

Page 23

The Good Life

The Spectator

Are we what we eat? Pamela Vandyke Price People do look like their pets. As one minces, Agag-like, across the excrement-encrusted pavements of the Royal Borough, one...

Page 24

Religion

The Spectator

Missionary doctor Martin Sullivan I have just put down a book which I hope everyone who reads this column will go out at once and buy. It is Daylight Must Come by Alan Burgess...

A lobby correspondence

The Spectator

The following letter, dated March 21 and addressed to the Editor of The Spectator, was received from Mr John Desborough, Secretary of the Parliamentary Lobby Journalists: The...

Press

The Spectator

Guilt by association Bill Grundy . 1t was, I remember, a child who spotted that the emperor had no clothes. It takes a child's eye to see that there is nothing to see. But...

Page 25

REVIEW OF THE ARTS

The Spectator

Kenneth Hurren half persuaded at Stratford Henry V by William Shakespeare; Royal Shakespeare Company (Stratford-upon-Avon) A Family and a Fortune by Julien Mitchell, from the...

Cinema

The Spectator

A nation's tragedy Kenneth Robinson Distant Thunder Director: Satyajit Ray Stars: Soumitra Chatterji, Babita 'A' Academy One (105 minutes). This is the Indian film that won...

Page 26

Art

The Spectator

What do you know? Evan Anthony This is going to be, probably, the first 'conceptual' art review ever written. Simply put this means that participants will be provided with the...

Ballet

The Spectator

Canadian capers Robin Young The National Ballet of Canada are a strong company built in the tradition of our own Royal Ballet but, as befits a group from North America, rather...

Page 27

ECONOMICS AND THE CITY

The Spectator

Mr Varley's dear oil Nicholas Davenport Time being short I am reserving my criticism of Mr Healey's budget for next week. Today I have chosen a subject which is irrelevant to...

A fool and his money

The Spectator

The anger of the dispossessed Bernard Hollowood I am middle class — all right, lower upper middle class — and angry. But not really for the reasons stated so eloquently in a...

Page 28

Skinflint's City Diary

The Spectator

I am sorry if I seem always to be criticising — perhaps a glance at my portrait above may explain my carping nature — and promise to try and find something nice to say about...