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Adamant for drift
The SpectatorT he Queen's Speech on Wednesday necessarily had a e,ertain air of unreality about it : until Mr Healey introCILICeS his next economic package we will not really know what the...
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The Week
The SpectatorAs Parliament ended one session and was reopened the Government showed all the signs of having lost its nerve. Mr Healey at last presented to the Cabinet the IMF's terms for its...
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Political Commentary
The SpectatorThatcher Mark Two John Grigg 'r ile general verdict on Mrs Thatcher's reshuffle is that it marks a swing to the right. NOW that her leadership is firmly established—so the...
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Notebook
The SpectatorTo the extent that it belonged to the Astors, albeit the Astors of English adoption, the Observer was in Anglo-American hands. The ownership (or 90 per cent of it) now passes to...
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Another voice
The SpectatorTo the funhouse Auberon Waugh One of the comforts of an English writer for the civilised man is that if he waits around long enough he will secure a copy of the Arts Council's...
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Transition dog days
The SpectatorNicholas von Hoffman Washington America is perhaps the only nation since the invention of the city-state to hold its elections in early November and then wait until the end of...
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The Gaullists return
The SpectatorSam White Paris T he game that the former prime minister J acques Chirac is playing with the President of the French Republic is called 'heads I win, tails you lose.' How...
Ulster jailcats
The SpectatorMark O'Neill Belfast In an Ulster prison cell a nineteen-year-old man lies on the floor. He is naked but for a blanket and moves only to eat and to relieve himself in a pot....
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Syria takes all the tricks
The SpectatorPatrick Cockburn The Syrians have emerged as the real winners from the nineteen months of fighting in Lebanon. They have won because at the end of the day their multitude of...
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Can the Union survive?
The SpectatorAdam Fergusson The devolution blockbuster of the week—it may yet be of the year—has come not from Westminster but from Scotland: the burst ing forth there of an organised,...
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By-election situation In Cambridge
The SpectatorRichard West Cambrid ge , to Malcolm Muggeridge, was a Place of infinite tedium; of afternoon Walks in a damp, misty countryside; of idle d ays, and foolish vanities, and...
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Shore thing
The SpectatorChristopher Booker It was hardly surprising that on television on Monday night Mr Peter Shore wore the apprehensive look of a man who has just Put a match to a slow-burning...
Football mastery
The SpectatorHans Keller The degree to which patriotism undermines even the strongest sense of reality is still not fully appreciated, because nobody is quite unpatriotic enough to...
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Racing
The SpectatorGhostly Jeffrey Bernard The poshest racecourse in England, Ascot, has an extraordinary grandstand. As far as I'm concerned it's a multi-million pound concrete shambles. On...
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Keynes and the problems of planning
The SpectatorRobert Lekach man For forty years three versions of Keynesian doctrine have lurked within the covers of The General Theory of Employment, interest and Money, economic gospels...
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hi the city
The SpectatorThe Bank's limit Nicholas Davenport At long last the Bank of England has aPPlied a touch of dirigisnre to the moneyl enders' market. I have never understood Why a Labour...
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A family at war
The SpectatorSir: If Mr Pryce-Jones wishes to establish a reputation for accuracy, could he, instead of hitting little tennis balls at me, answer the following questions which I politely ask...
Not acquainted
The SpectatorSir: I am puzzled by Mr Christopher Booker's quotation from Evelyn Waugh's Diaries, where Professor J. K. Galbraith is apparently described as 'an ungainly and deeply garrulous...
PLR
The SpectatorSir: The Opposition's efforts to frustrate controversial government action for which there is no mandate are laudable, but the filibuster action by three or four Conservative...
Labour value
The SpectatorSir: If, as the context suggests, Stuart Holland (16 October) is referring to Marx's Labour Theory of Value, the passage in which he states that profits result from labour...
Crime on high
The SpectatorSir: W. A. C. Harvey, in his fury at the honours conferred on those principally responsible for Britain's involvement in the Suez episode (Spectator, 13 November), states, inter...
Stay here!
The SpectatorSir: This country's position today is no t dissimilar to those years when we Wer e fighting a more sensational, a more physical , war, but with the same ultimate objectiv e of...
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Dr Gully
The SpectatorSir: A man of so many preoccupations as Lord Hai!sham may be forgiven when his memory deceives him regarding a couple of small facts. In his review of Mr Speaker, Sir (near top...
The Reverend
The SpectatorMr Richard Ingram in his article on Old times' refers to the Reverend Jimmy James as the Revd James. Why, then, does he not call Sir Lindsay Ring, Sir R ing? Violet R. Ormerod...
Enoch in Wonderland
The SpectatorS ir: Few things recently have depressed me more than your silly, ignorant and shortS ighted leading article on Enoch Powell (13 November). To suggest that our membership of the...
Sir: In your leading article: 'And if he is perfectly
The Spectatorcorrect in saying that the engine of our most recent inflation was the creation of Mr Heath's government, he is surely unfair to disregard the possibility that the present...
Evelyn Waugh letters
The SpectatorSir: I have been appointed by the executors to edit the letters of Evelyn Waugh. Could I appeal to anyone who has, or knows the whereabouts of, any letter by Waugh to get in...
The Macmillan call
The SpectatorSir: The call for a government of national unity owns a belief that no single party is adequate to govern in the present circumstances. Can it then be reasonable to believe that...
Elegant spite
The SpectatorSir: With one or two others, Richard West seems to hanker after Auberon Waugh's choice of the elegant phrase and the spiteful intent. His comments on David Winnick and his legs...
Buy it!
The SpectatorSir: Your issue of 6 November quotes Mr John Lindsay as saying there is much to be said for forbidding presidential candidates from buying expensive television time to advertise...
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Wine and Food
The SpectatorProblems and pleasures of champagne Geoffrey Wheatcroft Hilaire Belloc drank champagne 'to raise me from the dead, a thing I need constantly' and of all drinks it provides...
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Wintertime drinking
The SpectatorPamela Vandyke Price Perhaps the saintly can withstand the rigours of the winter solstice and the intersib stress of family reunions without alcohol—but I don't know anyone...
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Food for the festivities
The SpectatorMarika Hanbury Tenison If you dread stuffing the turkey at midnight, fiddling with fairy lights that won't connect, burning your fingers trying to set the pudding alight or...
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Books
The SpectatorA resonant Bellow Anthony Burgess To Jerusalem and Back Saul Bellow (Secker and Warburg £3.90) It was proper, if not necessarily just, to give all the Nobel prizes to...
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False doctrine
The SpectatorLeo Abse The Facts of Life R D Laing (Allen Lane 0.25) Our guru Laing, we now discover in this Painfully personal work, was born cursed. His mother, immediately after his...
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Programmed music
The SpectatorAlexander Chancellor Music: A Joy for Life Edward Heath (Sidgwick and Jackson 25.95) In 1972, when I was a correspondent in Italy, the British Prime Minister came to Rome on an...
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Old boys
The SpectatorAlastair Forbes F riends, Enemies and Sovereigns John Wheeler-Bennett £4.95) (Macmillan F ootprints in Time John Colville (Collins £4.95) Of Generals and Gardens Peter Coats (...
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Craftsmen
The SpectatorNick Totton The Widower's Son Alan Sillitoe (W. H. Allen 0.95) The Glittering Prizes Frederic Rapha el (Allen Lane 0.75) The Stuffed Dog Peter de PolnaY (W. H. Allen 0.75)...
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The party's over
The SpectatorBenny Green The Party that lasted 100 Days: The Late Victorian Session Hilary and Mary Evans (Macdonald and Janes £5.95) There are a great many technical terms connected with...
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Heavyweights
The SpectatorOlivia Manning Women of Iron and Velvet Margaret Crosland (Constable £4.95) Victor Hugo Joanna Richardson (Weidenfeld and Nicolson £10) The jackets of the books in hand tell us...
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Arts
The SpectatorPunk and the Sex Pistols Edward Jones When Britain's biggest record company, E rsit, and the Institute of Contemporary Arts, the citadel of the self-regarding avantgarde,...
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Theatre
The SpectatorGhostly laughter Ted Whitehead The Ghost Train (Old Vic) Mr Laurel and Mr Hardy (Mayfair) Any Woman Can (Gay Sweatshop) Are You Sitting Comfortably? (Pirate Jenny) Arnold...
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Ballet
The SpectatorVoluntaries Anya Linden Created originally for the Stuttgart Ballet in 197 3 as a tribute to John Cranko, their late director, Glen Tetley's ballet Voluntaries was given its...
Art
The SpectatorMaster casts John McEwen The present show at the Lefevre Gallery is worthy of their fiftieth anniversary. Degas died without ever seeing any of his sculpture cast in bronze...
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Records
The SpectatorEnglish music John Bridcut During the interval of the Britten-Auden aperetta, Paul Bun.van (in the English Music Theatre's enterprising season at the Sadler's Wells Theatre),...
Cinema
The SpectatorAtrocities Clancy Sigal F for Fake (Essential and Electric Cinemas) The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (Scene 1 and 2) Death Weekend (Ritz) Schizo (Warner 4) The Confessions of...
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Television
The SpectatorLooking back Richard Ingrams According to Christopher Booker in last week's Spectator Peter Hall gets £21,000 a year for an hour's work per week reading lines off an autocue...