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Defend our fishermen
The SpectatorThe Icelanders, impatient with the tortuous processes of international negotiation and arbitration, have acted unilaterally and now, with the first firing of live ammunition at...
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Mr Whitelaw's emetic demulcent
The SpectatorThe Government's White Paper on Ulster makes the best of a bad job. If anything is going to work a cure, then the mixture made up by Mr Whitelaw and his aides, principally Lord...
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A Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorWilliam Craig sounds determined' to wreck the White Paper proposals — but to do so from within, and peacefully, after the elections for an Ulster assembly. This is just about as...
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Political Commentary
The SpectatorHow Barber runs the Treasury Patrick Cosgrave In Budget week I wrote of Mr Barber as a Political Houdini — a magical figure who seemed readily able to escape from any...
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The Law
The SpectatorWinking at perjury Dorothy Becker Textbook expositions on the law officers of the Crown are unlikely to depict any of them as winking at perjury, but the Attorneys-General...
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White Paper: Dublin
The SpectatorTactful quiet Ronan Fanning The political and church leaders who have for some time past pleaded against rash or instant reaction to the British Government's long-awaited...
White Paper: Belfast
The SpectatorHolding fire Paddy Reynolds For the first twelve hours of White Paper day plus one in Ulster neither the army nor police headquarters had logged a single 'incident.' This was...
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White Paper: Londonderry
The SpectatorNo mourning Rawle Knox Within an hour or so of television's first exposition of Westminster's White Paper on Northern Ireland, the customers in Londondery's pubs were watching...
Corridors . . .
The SpectatorPUZZLE IS A GENIAL fellow and doesn't mind other journalists pinching his stories though, being only human, he would like them to acknowledge his own percipience. In Monday's...
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South Africa (1)
The SpectatorEt tu, Britain Peter Rodda Adam Raphael's report from South Africa was the Guardian's front page lead story on Monday, March 12, headlined, 'British Firms Pay Africans...
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South Africa (2)
The SpectatorZephyr of change Frederic Bennett When Harold MacMillan made his famous Pronouncement in 1960 that a wind of Change was sweeping through Africa neither he nor anyone else...
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J. I. M. Stewart on
The Spectatorthe laird of Abbotsford There is a point in Quentin Durward at which the hero seeks to impress the Count of Crevecoeur with the consequence of his ancestors, the Durwards of...
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Butterfly nut
The SpectatorAuberon Waugh Another Roadside A ttraction Tom Robbins (W. H. Allen £2.25) Love on the Coast William Cooper (Macmillan £2.50) "There are only three things that I like,"...
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Undramatic river
The SpectatorJan Morris The Search for the Niger Christopher Lloyd (Collins £2.75) Some names have magic, some don't, and it is odd how often their subject-matter conforms. One might die...
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Romantic artists
The SpectatorTimothy Bainbridge British Romantic Art Raymond Lister (Bell £6.50) The Life and Art of Henry Fuseli Peter Homory (Thames and Hudson £7.00) Peter Tomory (Thames and Hudson...
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Intimations of mortality
The SpectatorDavid Harsent Delusions Etc John Berryman (Faber £1.50) Braving the Elements James Merrill (Phoenix/Chatto £1.75) One of the more surprising things about His Toy, His Dream,...
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A key to two cultures
The SpectatorChristopher Gill Plutarch D. A. Russell (Duckworth £2.95). Shares in Plutarch, it is fair to say, are rising. Indeed, there has been a sharp increase in the academic market...
Bookend
The SpectatorBookbuyer The danger of having a warehouse fifty miles away from the sales, trade and editorial departments is that often the left hand doesn't know what the right foot is...
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Christopher Hudson.
The SpectatorHollywood, in loving memory Fifteen or twenty films have opened in London in the past couple of weeks but a miserable few, two at the most, are worth paying money to see. One...
Opera
The SpectatorOxford bag Rodney Milnes When ever two or three musicologists (a !haggle, I believe, is the collective noun) are gathered together in one place, the conversation inevitably...
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Art
The SpectatorYouthful promise Evan Anthony I can't say that I actually noticed anyone nudging anyone else and remarking, "And he's just a boy," but it seems that at the age of forty-three...
Will Waspe
The SpectatorInside the millionaire chat-show interlocutor, David Frost, that frustrated stand-up comedian is still yelping to get out. Never successful in his cabaret attempts in London,...
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Television
The SpectatorRare old bird Clive Gammon There seems to be a convention among television critics that one shouldn't ever notice old films. Well, certainly most of them aren't worth...
Change of life
The SpectatorBenny Green The book which changed my life was Kipps. That is not to say it is the greatest book I have ever read, or the first one I thought was great, or even the first to...
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The floating world (monetary)
The SpectatorNicholas Davenport Farewell — but no laments, please — to Bretton Woods. On March 16 the international monetary system which bears its name came formally to an end. The...
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Portfolio
The SpectatorSchweet profits Nephew Wilde My Uncle George (you may remember he advised investing in Sabina last July) is a very wealthy man. And like most people of means he is extremely...
Skinflint's City Diary
The SpectatorAge comes upon all of us, sometimes gradually, sometimes suddenly; and even those who have seemed irrepressibly young eventually succumb. I thought the hitherto vigorously...
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Account gamble
The SpectatorBibby bet John Bull It is a far cry from the days when J. Bibby enjoyed a glamour rating in the 1968-69 bull market and at one point the shares then touched 280p. Now Bibby...
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Education
The SpectatorHow much freedom? John H. Chambers A permanent problem presents itself to teachers in liberal western democracies—the problem of appropriately allowing children freedom at...
Socialities
The SpectatorTwo reports custos Reports from two much underrated voluntary bodies landed on Custos's desk this week. First was from the Family Service Unit, or FSU as it is known to many of...
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Medicine
The SpectatorLabouring the obvious John Rowan Wilson One of the luxuries of spending a few weeks abroad is that one is cut off from the British newspapers. It is possible, at least...
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The Good Life
The SpectatorSour sweet Pamela Vandyke Price " They asked for beef and he gave them a crisp," is one comment provoked by the Budget. I suppose that the improvidence and greed implied by...
Topping topic
The SpectatorSir: Your ' Notebook ' (March 17), makes out a good case for the return of capital punishment — or, rather, for its re-legalisation, since we should always hope for its...
Sir: In last week's Notebook I am credited with attempting
The Spectator(wholly unsuccessfully) to dampen the writer's misguided admiration for President Nixon's public announcement of intention to restore capital punishment for certain federal...
Student unrest
The SpectatorSir: A finer example than your cover article 'Fewer means Better' (March 17), of anachronistic interpretation of a situation leading to gross misunderstanding and crass...
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Sir: I was surprised at the statement, in the leading
The Spectatorarticle in your paper (March 17) that time at university provides "three or more comparatively idle and carefree years." Compared to what, I should like to know? Students by and...
Centre points
The SpectatorFrom Sir David Anderson Sir: The great victory of Dick Taverne at Lincoln has been rightly hailed as a triumph for the individual against the rigidity of the party machine....
Whose slip?
The SpectatorSir, — Since Mr Benny Green's article, Caught in the Slips (March 10), is all about checking one's facts, is it unkind to ask him precisely where did Ouida write, "All rowed...
Smoke screen
The SpectatorFrom Dr Eileen Crofton Sir, In the issue of March 3, 1973, your correspondent has written a singularly unpleasant piece (' Smoke Screen ') about a pamph let issued by the...
Juliette's Weekly Frolic
The SpectatorThis coming Saturday horserace sponsorship celebrates its 100th birthday. In 1873 thanks to the generosity of the bookmaking fraternity, Lincoln's executive were able to offer a...
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Israel and the Arabs
The SpectatorSir: Israeli leaders have from the very beginning of the conflict, back in 1948, offered the Arabs peace negotiations. This offer still stands. It is in the light of this fact...
Antony Gibbs Ltd.
The SpectatorSir: I was horrified to read your article (Skinflint, March 10), concerning Mr Walton's complaint about our firm and I am sorry you did not discuss it with us first. Indeed, it...
Rowse and the Sonnets
The SpectatorSir: Now that the showers of wit and derision which greeted Dr A. L. Rowse's latest proclamation on the subject of Shakespeare's Sonnets seem temporarily to have slackened, your...