24 FEBRUARY 1967

Page 3

The New Kellogg

The Spectator

HE High Contracting Parties solemnly I declare, in the names of their respec- tive peoples, that they condemn recourse to war for the solution of international controversies and...

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A Conservative's Principles I find it very hard to state

The Spectator

What principles we follow. The old are mostly out of date, The new too tough to swallow. But, if we haven't quite the nerve To sack the little bl"der, Conservatives had best...

Intellectuals v. the Rest

The Spectator

POLITICAL COMMENTARY By ALAN WATKINS E l OR some reason, an exercise which is always r fascinating consists in dividing a given group of people into two—never more than two—...

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Rome and her Defectors

The Spectator

By DOUGLAS BROWN c ONSIDER this strange episode of ecclesiastical history: England's foremost Roman Catholic theologian, Fr Charles Davis, quits the Church in well-publicised...

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AN ALTERNATIVE ECONOMIC POLICY

The Spectator

A TRACT FOR THE TORIES-2 By NIGEL LAWSON I argued last week that, in their politically crucial quest for an economic policy, it is not enough for the Tories to settle for the...

Else %pectator

The Spectator

February 23. 1867 The week has been full of rumours about Reform, some of which are more or less trust- worthy. The mass of them point to a course of procedure which may prove...

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The All-Purpose Rich Uncle

The Spectator

AMERICA From MURRAY KEMPTON NEW YORK A A ND could even the wildest imaginings of the Bertrand Russell of the 'sixties have embraced the fantasy that the Central Intelligence...

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Danger: (Black) Men at Work

The Spectator

DISCRIMINATION By ANTHONY LESTER A A T the heart of this week's conference on racial equality in employment, held by the Arch- bishop of Canterbury's National Committee for...

Page 11

Spectator's Notebook

The Spectator

HE Government has done well to agree, in I the House of Lords, to drop the stultifying amendment to the Parliamentary Commissioner Bill that would have prevented the Ombudsman...

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Florence apres le Deluge

The Spectator

From JOSEPH MACLEOD FLORENCE T HE floods were last November; the response magnificent both within the city and without. Florence has been recovering ever since, so that though...

The New Poujadism

The Spectator

'TELEVISION By STUART HOOD H ow much simpler life would be if one's opponents—intellectual or political—were also nasty people. A case in point is Mrs Mary Whitehouse. After...

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Publish and be It'd

The Spectator

THE PRESS By DONALD McLACHLAN M HERE is all the difference, as every ordinary I traveller knows, between a spot test and a systematic search. That one bag in twenty should be...

Le Smoking

The Spectator

AFTERTHOUGHT By JOHN WELLS THERE was a time, shortly after I had read Huxley's Doors of Perception of Heaven and Hell, when I was rather drawn to the idea of expanding my...

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Sut,—Nigel Lawson prescribes economic policy as a cure for the

The Spectator

Tory party's present weakness. Whilst this is sound advice, I do not believe it is the vital factor in Tory recovery.. The greatest factor affecting political fortunes at the...

What's Wrong with the Tories?

The Spectator

SIR,-1 suggest that the final proposition in your article 'What's Wrong with the Tories?' ought not to be confined to this context. All people as at present constituted act, and...

`Chaos or Civilisation?' EE5 'TO 111 RHIVE

The Spectator

From: Judge Sir Gerald Fitzmaurice, A. M. Burdon-Cooper, W. K. Stead, Richard Harman, R. E. Griffin, Sir Anthony Wagner, Commander Martin Pares, RN, R. Charles Liebman. SIR,—In...

Where the Real Weakness Lies

The Spectator

SIR,—Nigel Lawson is probably right in saying the Tories' greatest weakness is a lack of clear economic policy (February 17), though this has lasted for longer than their time...

Page 15

The Fall of Adam

The Spectator

SIR,—In his attempt to whitewash Adam Clayton Powell, Murray Kempton omits the central fact that the congressman is a law-breaker who is subject to arrest if he ever goes back...

SIR,—On behalf of the Marlowe Society 1 should like to

The Spectator

register our most emphatic protest at being referred to as a 'lunatic fringe' by Martin Seymour-Smith. Surely before making such disparaging remarks about a twelve-year-old...

The Great Shakespeare Hoax

The Spectator

SIR,—In his deliberate attack on our society your reviewer has made some rash and indefensible state- ments. He claims that among those who question or reject Shakespearean...

How to Choose an Architect

The Spectator

SIR,—I n an otherwise helpful article on 'How to Choose an Architect' (February 17), Mr Michael Manser summarises neatly—and swallows whole—a favourite fallacy of the 1960s; the...

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i n HE publication simultaneously of the Tate Gallery's annual report

The Spectator

and a freshly con- ceived guide to the collections is a convenient moment for trying to assess the functions of the Tate, as well as its recent innovations. These have been...

Finn Things

The Spectator

MUSIC O NE of the jolly, corrective things so far about this year's Camden (ex-St Pancras) Festival, which is being run hand in glove with the Finnish Ambassador and other...

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THEATRE

The Spectator

Sexless in Gauze Fiddler on the Roof. (Her Majesty's.)—She Stoops to Conquer. (Yvonne Arnaud, Guild- ford.) FIDDLFIDDL ER on the Roof is far and away the ER musical I have seen...

CINEMA In Codrolik, Second Breath. (Cameo Victoria, 'A' certificate.) J EAN-PIERRE

The Spectator

MELVILLE seems to be one of those film-makers whose work, like some wines, doesn't travel. Or perhaps, also like some wines, it travels perfectly well but is rarely given the...

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Come Blow Up Your Horne

The Spectator

RADIO By HENRY TUBE R 0 UND the Horne, which has just started a new series on the Light, is well named. It combines a sense of solid virtue—for who would venture round the...

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The 1917 Overture

The Spectator

HIM By BERTRAM WOLFE Fr FEE present year marks the fiftieth anniver- I sary of the fateful events in Russia in 1917 that opened the time of troubles in which we still live....

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NEW NOVELS

The Spectator

The Cruel Time The Lady and the Little Fox Fur. By Violette Leduc. (Peter Owen, 25s.) To the End of the World. By Blaise Cendrars. (Peter Owen, 32s. 6d.) The End of Something...

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Qasida on the Track to Msus

The Spectator

Towards sundown we came out of the valley Along that track Not knowing then where it led to, when we saw The stone circles, the heaped cairns of stone, the stones Arranged like...

Walpole's Triumph

The Spectator

By ROBERT BLAKE T HE published version of Professor Plumb's Ford Lectures, delivered in Oxford in 1965, is, as one would expect from his two volumes on Walpole, scholarly,...

Death in Edinburgh

The Spectator

THE crime, of course, is the death of Darnley and thus in the title itself the author's solution of the mystery is announced. For Kirk o' Field remains a mystery. Did the...

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Very Special Vocation

The Spectator

VERNON WATXINS has always been a rather lonely figure in English poetry. He has never been associated with any movement or involved in any coteries. He is a Welshman who writes...

short Sentimental Journey and Other Stories. By [talc) Svevo. (Seeker

The Spectator

and Warburg, 35s.) A Time for Heroes short Sentimental Journey and Other Stories. By [talc) Svevo. (Seeker and Warburg, 35s.) Lrrenanv success came late to Italo Svevo, for It...

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Silver-Steel Lining

The Spectator

By JOHN BULL A I write, equity prices have begun to crack under the weight of fears that the forth- coming Budget will contain a demand for higher taxes. Nobody can blame...

The Local Spending Spree

The Spectator

4H1 100KM/il7 A In E By NICHOLAS DAVENPORT I 1 7 he has had to eat his words, Mr Callaghan must not be chided too severely. He has done his best, but his spending colleagues...

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Current Affairs

The Spectator

CONSUMING INTEREST By LESLIE ADRIAN J UST what, I wonder, do architects really think about as they sit at their drawing boards de- signing the dwellings for our property-starved...

Market Notes

The Spectator

By CUSTOS O N Monday equity shares had their worst day for five months. The steep rise in Govern- ment spending was a shock to the market which began to imagine that corporation...

CHESS by Philidor No. 323.

The Spectator

C. MANSFIELD (1st Prize, Falkirk Herald, 1929) WHITE to play and mate in two moves; Solution next week. Solution to No. 322 (Kohnlein) : I R - B 7 I, P - Kt 6 ; 2 B- K 4, K - K...

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SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. za6r

The Spectator

ACROSS.—, Salamis 5 Bearish 9 Ravings to Tapping Literalism 12 Shah 13 Tat 14 Lamplighter 17 Westernised 19 Cie so Soho 22 AsSistance 26 Immerse 27 Pranced 28 Sadness 29...

CROSSWORD No. 1262

The Spectator

6 I0 II 12 13 15 16 17 20 21 22 2 4 26 29 30 31 32 ACROSS Skilful about being against bridge? (zo) They . .. with wand.eringsteps and—Through Eden took their solitary...