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The Spectator
The SpectatorEstablished 1828 99 Gower Street, London WC1 Telephone: 01-387 3221 Telegrams: Spectator, London Editor: George Gale Associate Editor: Michael Wynn Jones Literary Editor:...
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THE COMMON MARKET Political principle and party calculation
The SpectatorOn the principle enmeshed in the negotia- tions to effect British entry into the Com- mon Market, the SPECTATOR is not in two minds. Its position is unequivocal. It has been for...
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DIARY OF THE YEAR
The SpectatorWednesday 10 February: the findings of the Wilberforce committee on power workers' pay caused some confusion between disputing Parties. In the CommOns Mr Can interpreted It as...
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POLITICAL COMMENTARY
The SpectatorTo refer or not to refer HUGH MACPHERSON The issue of the Common Market has had just as curious an effect on the political world as one or two wayward ladies in the past. It...
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Danubian culture
The SpectatorOur Review of Books begins this week with two discussions of the politics of Georg Lukacs, who is fashionable in England for the same reasons as Noam Chomsky, whom I mentioned a...
Larry Burrows
The SpectatorI would like to add nay tribute to the many rightly paid to Larry Burrows, the English photographer who established his reputation as one of the great war photographers with his...
The usual buffoons
The SpectatorLuktics's most famous work, History and Class Consciousness, has for some time now been the sort of book with which any intel- lectual on the progressive merry-go-round would...
After Dutschke
The SpectatorThe liberals (and others) of Oxford still rumble on about the Dutschke affair, con- cerned more about the deterioration of the relations with their students than with Dutschke...
THE SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorPeople I came across over the weekend and early this week seemed to be treating the issue of new money much in the way they treat major inclemencies of the weather, sporting...
Hush! Want to be a spy?
The SpectatorMy own answer would most certainly be 'Yes'. I go further, and suggest that native as well as foreign students, if they so feel inclined, could do worse than take note that some...
Mud-slinging
The SpectatorIn response to an invitation that promised 'a continually changing tableau,' our art critic, Evan Anthony, went along last week to the Angela Flowers Gallery in Lisle Street,...
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OXFORD LETTER
The SpectatorA babble of tongues MERCURIUS OXONIENSIS GOOD BROTHER LONDINIENSIS, The publick prints will have informed you how the party of learnin g at Oxon prevailed this Tuesday in the...
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THE CHURCH
The SpectatorA day in the life of God? EDWARD NORMAN It is a disagreeable thing when a man who has been in a position of confidence subse- quently chooses to compose an attack on his...
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THE CIVIL SERVICE-1
The SpectatorAfter Fulton, the pseudo-revolution C. H. SISSON Whether or not new wine is being poured into the Civil Service these daysâand it has been habitual ever since the Fulton...
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THE NATION'S WEALTH
The SpectatorSimple questions By an Economist When Mr Barber puts his Budget on the Dispatch Box next month, the chances are that he will become the twelfth successive Chancellor of the...
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100 years ago
The SpectatorFrom the 'Spectator,' 18 February 1871â Mr. Cardwell brought forward his measures for the Reorganization of the Army on Thursday night, and they are unexpectedly satisfactory...
PERSONAL COLUMN
The SpectatorWords per minute BENNY GREEN As your eyes race along this line of print, you are embarking on an essay of approxi- mately fourteen hundred words. Nobody has actually counted...
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SV THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorREVIEWaBOOKS Elie Kedourie on Lukacs T. G. Rosenthal on Jonathan Cape Reviews by Barbara Hardy, Peter Linehan Percival Spear and Auberon Waugh Tibor Szamuely: Lukacs's History...
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Elie Kedourie: Lukacs's History and Class Consciousness II
The SpectatorIn his preface, Lukfics tells us that ever since his childhood he had felt 'hatred and contempt' for life under capitalism. Lukacs's childhood as is well-known, was that of a...
THE POSTAL STRIKE
The SpectatorRegular subscribers to the SPECTATOR may be assured that the copies they have missed during the postal strike will be forwarded to them as soon as postal deliveries are...
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Barbara Hardy on a reissue of Praz
The SpectatorPoetry of the 'Nineties edited by R. K. R. Thornton (Penguin 40p) To call The Romantic Agony a model for literary historians is to risk the insult lurking in the term. Literary...
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THE SPECTATOR'S £500 NEW WRITING PRIZE
The SpectatorAn annual prize of £500 will be awarded by the SPECTATOR to whoever In the opinion of the Judges, submits the best piece of original, unpublished, new writing of not less than...
Peter Linehan on Dr Elliott's lectures
The SpectatorThe Old World and the New, 1492.1650 I, H . Elliott (cup paperback 60p) br Elliott is a leading authority on the his- tory of early modern Europe. In The Revolt of the Catalans,...
The judges for THE SPECTATOR'S New Writing Prize 1971 will
The Spectatorbe: Shod story category Kingsley Amis, novelist, poet and essayist, the film of whose book Take a Girl Like You is currently on general release. Descriptive reporting: Brian...
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Percival Spear on Linlithgow
The SpectatorIt was certainly time someone spoke up for Lord Linlithgow. Since Wavell was a wartime and winding-up ruler and Lord Mountbatten a coroneted undertaker, he was in fact the last...
Auberon Waugh on the Music of Time
The SpectatorIn Oslo (or so I have been told) there is a huge park, arranged in great avenues of giant statues, all nude, cold and capering in tlfe brumous air. Every day, coachloads of...
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T. G. Rosenthal on an occupation for players
The SpectatorCompany histories are usually, after the memoirs of second-rate generals and cabinet ministers, perhaps, the most boring books in the world, prompted as they inevitably are by a...
The Socratic Traveller
The SpectatorBeneath the inconsistent skies Be moves, in sun and sudden rain, The rinsed air following, his eyes Undaunted, as if unaware Of what might turn aside their stare And mitigate...
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Solution to Crossword No. 1468. Across: 1 Postmark 5 Hubbub
The Spectator9 Position 10 Ablush 12 Cleave 13 Momentum 15 Estrangement 18 Dis- inherited 23 Location 24 Solace 26 Trivet 27 Forester 28 Resist 29 Carapace. Down : 1 Pap- acy 2 System 3...
Crossword
The SpectatorNo. 1469 DAEDALUS No prize is offered this week. The solution will appear in next week's issue. Across 1 Fish - glue? A delicacy from Yarmouth, no doubt (7, 5) 9 Meagre...
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⢠ARTS ⢠LETTERS i ⢠MONEY. LEISURE CINEMA
The SpectatorCome back Snow White, all is forgiven CHRISTOPHER HUDSON The Daily Mirror editorialised last week about the disgusting trends in present-day films, instancing Myra...
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THEATRE
The SpectatorThe quality of Mercer KENNETH HURREN Bernard Link, the drama critic protagonist of David Mercer's play, After Haggerty, though a man who bears as stoically as any the...
TELEVISION
The SpectatorDisturbances Patrick Skene CATLING `Some viewers,' an announcer warned us before The Rainhirds, Clive Exton's 'Play for Today' (nee 1), `may find certain scenes dis- turbing.'...
OPERA
The SpectatorOnegin no tonic RODNEY MILNES This is a good month for those who believe in opera as drama. Following Sadler's Wells's approachable Twilightâ¢of the Gods, the Royal Opera...
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NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND
The SpectatorA new kind of charity TONY PALMER There is a distinct collection of smart ladies in London without whom good works would be almost unthinkable. They turn up with aristocratic...
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Records and data banks
The SpectatorSir: Hugh Macpherson, in his arti- cle 'A Royal Commission on Sin', evades several important issues. What is a data bank? He does not say. The idea that data bankers will have...
Cultural client
The SpectatorSir: As general manager of one of the 'cultural clients of the Arts Council', referred to in 'The Spec- tator's Notebook' (13 February), may I raise two points arising from his...
Down with the poor
The SpectatorSir: Your review by Angus Maude MP of Down with the Poor shows how much the book is needed: he welcomes it, yet like so many men on the side of private enterprise he seems to...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorLetters from Porcus-Piscis Orie- lensis, Gerald McDonald, Dr Rhodes Boyson, Alan Alexander, Rosemary Collins, Peter Redd- away, L. E. Weidberg, Philip Norman and others....
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The Gospels and the professor
The SpectatorSir: For an historian Professor Trevor-Roper has a curiously haughty attitude towards docu- ments. His review of Dr Dodd's hook on Jesus is so petulant that it fails to situate...
True socialist character
The SpectatorSir: Whilst welcoming your new practice of inviting people of various parties to contribute ar- ticles to the SPECTATOR (we may soonâwho knows?âsee an article by a...
Wonderful Noam
The SpectatorSir: While I have never had much sympathy with the political atti- tudes which colour the editorial stance of the SPECTATOR, I have al- ways, until recently, had consider- able...
Sir: 'This is not to say,' writes Geoffrey Sampson (6
The SpectatorFebruary) 'that Chomsky's philosophy is merely a by-product of his politics; but the two certainly hang togeth- er.' In the context, this can only be intended as a criticism....
Human aggression
The SpectatorSir: Christopher Booker's funda- mentalist review of Dr Storr's Hu- man Aggression, which would be more suitable for the pages of The Voice of Prophecy, begins with the myth of...
Uncharitable
The SpectatorSir: Can you tell me if your re- viewer Auberon Waugh is jealous of Hunter Davies? Philip Norman The Sunday Times, Thomson House, London wcl
The right of reply
The SpectatorSir: Mr Amis has accused me in your columns (30 January) of in- accuracy, illiteracy and incom- petence. Now he goes too far, for in admitting (13 February) that I wrote about...
Strikfeldt smear
The SpectatorSir: With his full-blooded enthusi- asm for the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia Commander Edgar Young (13 February) at least con- firms his position as an orthodox...
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MONEY From Rolls to the oil crisis
The SpectatorNICHOLAS DAVENPORT 'The options remain open' was the headline applied not only to the Rolls-Royce crisis but to the oil crisis in the Middle East. As this was the slogan of Mr...
WEEKLY FROLIC
The SpectatorA spectacular cavalry charge over the final flight, resulting in a triumph for the handi- capper, characterised last Saturday's Schwep- pes, and I, at least, felt considerably...
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Familial propriety
The SpectatorWhen Lord Rothermere finally gave up the cares of chairmanship at Associated Newspapers, it was the general consensus in Fleet Street that his departure marked the beginning of...
Kindly but misguided
The SpectatorPeter Paterson is the eupeotic industrial cor- respondent of the Sunday Telegraph. He sees the progress of the Industrial Relations Bill like Milton saw the Puritan Revolution...
Sir Kenneth Keith
The SpectatorSir Kenneth Keith is a merchant banker and head of Hill Samuel. His bank is not growing like it was and had a severe setback recently in failing to take over Metropolitan...
SKINFLINT'S CITY DIARY Sell signal
The SpectatorChartists have a capacity for tendentious drivel but as what they say affects the action of their customers a degree of sceptical acknowledgement of their existence must be...
Foolhardy investment
The SpectatorSir Kenneth Keith has firmly asserted, in the SPECTATOR and elsewhere, that the Stock Exchange should not be subject to public regulation. He has seen that the agreeable...
Satisfaction guaranteed
The SpectatorLast month the nice girl who cooks for the SPECTATOR's contributors' lunchroom wrote to Tesco Stores with a minor complaint to receive immediately a telephone call from Sir Jack...
Funebrial rites
The SpectatorThe trouble, it now appears, with this scenario is that it took no account of Vere Harmsworth, who has not taken particularly kindly to the general suggestion that he has...
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CLIVE GAMMON
The SpectatorThere's been a lot of anguished talk, I see, over the suitability of professional journalists, whose direct acquaintance with the mud, blood and conflict of the soccer field is...
THE GOOD LIFE
The Spectator11 â 1 , - 17L1 Pamela VANDYKE PRICE The typewriter keys had been sharpened preparatory to my delivering the written equivalent of a slap on the chops with a wet flounder to...
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BENNY GREEN
The SpectatorWalking along. Chiswick Mall the other morning, I found myself wondering whether I might not after all be the type of man who could be happy living on a boat, this par- ticular...
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Spectator Hotel Guide
The SpectatorEngland CAMBRIDGESHIRE Garden House Hotel**" CAMBRIDGE Cambridge 55491 Royal Cambridge Hotel** â¢* CAMBRIDGE Cambridge 51631 CORNWALL Meudon Hotel**** NEAR FALMOUTH Mawnan...