23 JULY 1977

Page 3

Folie de grandeur

The Spectator

President Giscard d'Estaing has discovered an opportunity for France to re-assert the Gaullist line on foreign policy which finds its origin in profound distrust of the United...

Page 4

Political commentary

The Spectator

Towards the abyss John Grigg What one might term the choreography of Denis Healey's statement in the House of Commons last Friday was not the least intriguing aspect of it. As...

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Notebook

The Spectator

A cricket team of Young Australians (young equals under nineteen) has just finished a tour of England. Their play has been so proficient and so exciting to watch that several...

Page 6

Another voice

The Spectator

Something to celebrate Auberon Waugh It couldn't happen here, we are told by a smug Electricity Council. This is because we have nationalised our electricity supply. We now...

Page 7

A new American era

The Spectator

Nicholas von Hoffman Washington It was disconcerting that the White House should leak the news that the United States was now in what an unnamed high official called 'Era 2.'...

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Smith's fraudulent election

The Spectator

Xan Smiley Salisbury A heady concoction of white Rhodesian lunacy and Anglo-American, cowardice now makes the prospects for a settlement look grimmer than ever, The antics of...

Page 10

Books Wanted

The Spectator

GUIDE MICHELINFRANCE 1969,1963, pre-1960. Good condition. Offers to BM/Eamon, London WC1, MONRO ILIAD XIII-XXIV 5th edition Oxford to Oakeshott, Old School House, Eynshom,...

Sex, race and Grunwick

The Spectator

Richard West The name of Grunwick is spoken wherever oppressed workers fight for their rights, according to Pravda; and one of the visiting pickets, who had been, arrested, has...

Page 11

Learning to love the bomb

The Spectator

Julian Critchley What is the neutron bomb? It has been called a 'super capitalist' weapon because its target is people not property, and by Mr Reginald Maudling in a letter to...

Page 12

The great oil fiasco

The Spectator

George Szarnuely The British National Oil Corporation, created in order to 'secure effective control on behalf of the British people' of the development of North Sea oil is an...

Page 14

Monopoly muscle

The Spectator

George Gale A free market economy will not work to the general benefit if competition within it is restricted by monopoly. Monopoly distorts the workings of supply and demand...

In the City

The Spectator

Second thoughts Nicholas Davenport The Stock Exchange took a cynical view of Mr Healey's remarkable tour de force in the House of Commons. Markets went down although I thought...

Page 15

Overseas aid

The Spectator

Sir: It is refreshing to see a non-orthodox view of foreign aid (How foreign aid makes the world poorer, 25 June), but it strikes lme that all the talk about the Third World has...

Page 16

Proof required

The Spectator

Sir: What is your evidence that the 'world largely disbelieves in God'? (Bad News, 16 July). John Biggs-Davison, MP House of Commons, London SW1

Lucky Waugh

The Spectator

Sir: Auberon Waugh will surely find consolation for the intrusion of the pensioners and the retired into his Somersetshire Arcadia in the fact that while we all contributed...

All right

The Spectator

Sir: Opinions may differ as to whether 'alright' is all right but surely there can be no doubt that 'prejudice' is not synonymous with 'opinion', 'belief' or 'conviction'. Yet...

Smith by Worsthorne

The Spectator

Sir: It was pleasing to see that Peregrine Worsthorne intends to push ahead with a biography of Ian Smith (Notebook, 9 July) .notwithstanding the fact that a major British...

Error

The Spectator

Sir: A misprint crept into my article on capital punishment (16 July): in the second paragraph of the last column, 1 meant to say that there is evidence that in our century (not...

Blasphemy

The Spectator

Sir: It is hard to make much sense of your leading article (16 July) on the trial of Gay News for publishing James Kirkup's poem 'The Love that Dares to Speak its Name'. You...

Grunwick

The Spectator

Sir: Whatever may have been said about divisions in the Cabinet, at least over Grunwick they have shown a true example of collective irresponsibility. Patrick Lawrence Fawley...

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Leon Radzinowicz on crime and punishment

The Spectator

Simon Courtauld Sir Leon Radzinowicz has recently written, jointly with Joan King of the Cambridge Institute of Criminology, The Growth of Crime: The International Experience*....

Page 21

The fine print

The Spectator

Hubert Picarda Race Relations — The New Law Ian Macdonald (Butterworths £14.50) Tax Planning for Businesses in Europe M. Roy Saunders (Butterworths £12.00) Gore-Brown on...

Page 23

Books

The Spectator

Institutional passion Raymond Carr Peculiar Privilege: A Social History of English Fox-hunting, 1753-1885 David C. ltzkowitz (Harvester Press £10.50) Embedded in the midst of...

Page 24

Good as Goldy

The Spectator

Richard Boston The Notable Man: The Life and Times of Oliver Goldsmith John Ginger (Hamish Hamilton £7.95) The doctors who murdered Byron were far from untypical, for the...

Page 25

Tosh mistress

The Spectator

Richard West Nettle and Steele Penelope Dell (Hamish Hamilton .25.50) The reigning queen of heart-throb fiction, Barbara Cartland has written that 'Ethel M. Dell was the first...

Page 26

Invisible bars

The Spectator

David Levy Russia's Political Hospitals: The Abuse of Psychiatry in the Soviet Union Sidney Bloch and Peter Reddaway (Gollancz E6.95) Dr Yuri Orlov, the physicist and friend of...

Page 27

Kiss me!

The Spectator

Peter Ackroyd Johnny I hardly Knew You Edna O'Brien (Weidenfeld and Nicalson £3.65) If there are any rewards for unliberated, socially conditioned and culturally deprived...

Page 28

Lost jewel

The Spectator

Benny Green The Raj Quartet Paul Scott (Heinemann E7.50) It is doubtful if the British will ever quite lay the ghost of empire, even if the day ever dawns when they wish to,...

Page 29

Arts

The Spectator

London and the Thames Terence Maloon The 'Fine Rooms' of Somerset House are open to the public for the first time since the Royal Academy moved out in 1836. They were the RA's...

Page 30

Cinema

The Spectator

Death wish Clancy Sigal Islands in the Stream (Plaza 2) The Best Way to Walk (Scene Leicester Square, Screen Islington Green) John Updike called it a gallant wreck of a...

Dance

The Spectator

Starlight Jan Murray Two superstars of movement, namely Nureyev and Curry, have each made an assault on their public images of late; so too the Ballet Rambert, which followed...

Page 31

Theatre

The Spectator

Dark comedy Ted Whitehead Abigail's Party (Hampstead) Candida (Albery) Some years ago I popped up in the theatre as E. A. Whitehead, and promptly received a letter from the...

Page 32

Art

The Spectator

Face values? John McEwen Moore, Sutherland and Ben Nicholson — like the title of a Highland landscape in the Summer Exhibition, the gravity of its sub-' ject precluding...

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Television

The Spectator

Priorities Richard Ingrams If politics is a matter of priorities, the same must be true also of television. Quite obviously the BBC does not regard commenting on current...

Racing

The Spectator

Ghost trains Jef frey Bernard It must have been wonderful to go racing in the pre-British Rail era. With spirits gay I mount the box, My tits up to their traces, With elbows...