Page 3
Facing North from the South
The SpectatorHegel said that in history tragedy occurs not when right meets wrong but when right meets right. Slowly it has dawned on people — more slowly perhaps in Ireland than in Great...
Page 4
Political commentary
The SpectatorOur dumb friends Ferdinand Mount Brighton At 7.30 a.m. there were only two men on Brighton beach. One wore earphones and a rubber suit and walked slowly along the *foreshore,...
Page 5
New York Notebook
The SpectatorAmericans, who generally think of language as some arcane disease of the throat, are now rediscovering the abstract noun. Instead of swallowing medicine, they receive...
Page 6
Another voice
The SpectatorSuffer the little children Auberon Waugh The most remarkable — some may find it encouraging — aspect of recent queerbashing outbreaks in Swansea University College and Red...
Page 7
The gathering storm
The SpectatorRichard West Johannesburg The captain of the Northern Transvaal, Thys Lourens, waxed biblical over his rugby team's victory last Saturday over the Orange Free State: 'I want to...
Page 8
The legal jungle
The SpectatorNicholas von Hoffman Washington Like a summer romance, the Bert Lance affair lasted too long. After three extensively televised days of testimony before a Senate Committee,...
Page 9
An emperor for Ethiopia?
The SpectatorBrian Dixon Colonel Mengistu Haile Mariam's record is unsurpassed in the recent, annals of black Africa. Directly or indirectly, he has been responsible for the deaths of three...
Page 10
Ireland: myths and realities
The SpectatorConor Cruise O'Brien It is, on the face of it, odd that the question of Northern Ireland could have been treated as a non-issue in the recent Irish general elections. All...
Page 13
English sexual politics
The SpectatorLeo Abse Almost all Labour candidates for the coming election have now been chosen: but, despite the efforts of Transport House, the selection committees have in the...
Books Wanted
The SpectatorLADY CLARKE OF TILLYPRONIE'S COOKERY BOOK; almost anything by or about John Oliver Hobbes. Recording of Constant Lambert s ballet suite The Prospect Before Us, Write Spectator...
Page 15
Doing the decent thing
The SpectatorPatrick M arn ham In his novel, The Way We Live Now, Trollope presented one of his finest characters, Augustus Melmotte, the Jewish financier who had been hounded out of Vienna...
Page 16
Music, please
The SpectatorLogie Bruce Lockhart Great debates bring casualties. Every time that someone suggests education should be more practical, or more geared to the needs of industry or 'national...
In the City
The SpectatorMadness in the air Nicholas Davenport I have a theory that as the world gets madder the price of gold goes up. Did not the hot air being breathed at the IMF meeting cause gold...
Page 17
Tories and closed shop
The SpectatorSir: There are undoubtedly Conservatives who relish the thought of, in the words of your editorial of 17 September, 'cutting the unions down to size.' They see trade unions as...
Page 18
Sir: It would be a tragic mistake, I feel, if
The Spectatorthe Conservative Party were to accept the fallacious and almost cowardly attitude towards the closed shop proposed in your editorial of 17 September. Those Conservatives who...
Reproof
The SpectatorSir: Rhodes Boyson does really try hard to please, but 'could do better'. In his article Educational jollies (24 September) he says: 'A system to be successful must work with...
The Archbishop
The SpectatorSir: Taki Theodoracopulos tries to serve his misrepresentations with a sour sauce of humour (17 September). Indeed I deny the existence of Epikouriki. As I wrote in the...
Laetrile and opium
The SpectatorSir: Is it not curious that your medical and scientific readers have provided no informed comments of any kind upon the important letters from Mr Carr and Ms Dalin extolling the...
The Bantams
The SpectatorSir: 'The Bantams' were a special force recruited by the British Army in the First World War. It was composed of soldiers below average height. I am a professional writer...
Page 19
Books
The SpectatorNo champagne for Woodrow Auberon Waugh What's Left of the Labour Party? Woodrow Wyatt (Sidgwick and Jackson £4.95) The wrapper of Mr Wyatt's new book, which might more...
Page 20
Gringuita
The SpectatorAlistair Home Audacity to Believe Sheila Cassidy (Collins £4.50) If there is one thing I learned in four grim years of study on the Algerian War, it is that physical torture is...
Page 21
More Jamesiana
The SpectatorAlastair Forbes Prophesying Peace James Lees-Milne (Chan° and Windus £6.50) 'This diary', wrote Mr Lees-Milne in the entry, dated 1 October 1945, on the last of the twelve...
Page 22
Curing and caring
The SpectatorElisabeth Whipp Hospital Polly Toynbee (Hutchinson £4.95) Everybody loves a hospital. It's a giggle, a touch of drama and a good cry. Soap operas mop up every possible angle of...
Page 23
Melancholic
The SpectatorSebastian Faulks Lorenzino Arvin Upton (Bodley Head 23.50) On the wall of the gents in my local pub someone has written 'Time leaves its iron grimace', and underneath another...
London life
The SpectatorPeter Ackroyd Injury Time Beryl Bainbridge (Duckworth 23.95) Faced with a large picture of the Annunciation, Beryl Bainbridge would probably notice that the peasant in the...
Page 24
Moonbeams
The SpectatorBenny Green Debussy on Music ed. Richard Langham Smith (Secker and Warburg £6.90) The way of a musician is hard indeed, and he has to take his compensations where he can find...
Page 25
Arts
The SpectatorOle and goodnight Philip Bergson The scene, a stately Spanish resort, formerly a Court retreat and now a terrorist hideaway, exotic setting for the world's number four film...
Page 26
Cinema
The SpectatorOne-woman Clancy Sigal The Story of Adele H (Odeon Haymarket) Exorcist II: The Heretic (General release) Even in these liberated times many women find it hard, even...
Theatre
The SpectatorLost worlds Ted Whitehead Saki (Apollo) The Plough and the Stars (Olivier) 'Not that I ever indulge in despair about the Future; there always have been men who have gone...
Page 27
Pudding
The SpectatorJohn McEwen British Painting 1952-1977 (Royal Academy) The jubilee bonanza of British painting (Royal Academy till 20 November) has been chosen by a large committee and it...
Page 28
Opera
The SpectatorFact and fiction about Callas Robert Skidelsky Most of the obituary notices of Maria Callas, while fulsome, were neither particularly accurate nor perceptive; in her death, as...
Page 29
Television
The SpectatorMysteries Richard Ingrams Television, which broadcasts from sittingroom to sitting-room, often gives the illusion of intimate...revelations when it is at its most...
Bored in Soho
The SpectatorJeffrey Bernard I was talking to a Maltese ponce in the Helvetia in Old Compton Street the other day and it occurred to me to ask myself what the hell was I doing? That's not...