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What chance Labour in October?
The SpectatorBefore the South Ayrshire by-election the Conservatives were quoted by Messrs Lad- brokes as three-to-one on favourites to win the next general election. After the South...
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POLITICAL COMMENTARY
The SpectatorWanted: a knife for MacHeath DAVID WALDER Despite a little local difficulty in 1715, and again in 1745, for more than three hundred and sixty years the Crowns of England and...
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FRANCE
The SpectatorDuel of the hopefuls MARC ULLMANN Paris—Two men share a common ambition :• to be the next President of France. On my right, Valery Giscard d'Estaing, forty-five years old,...
INDIA
The SpectatorMrs Gandhi rides the storm KULDIP NAYAR New Delhi—Outside the residence of the Indian Prime Minister, Mrs Indira Gandhi, there is a traffic island which was the focal point...
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VIEWPOINT
The SpectatorAncient monuments GEORGE GALE It had been for many years a surprise and regret for me that I had seen neither the Acropolis nor the Pyramids. rhad been to very many countries,...
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SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorJ. W. M. THOMPSON The Government has at long last, I under- stand, decided to bring in a Bill to prohibit the cruel sport of catching fish with barbed hooks. A number of...
A hundred years ago From the 'Spectator', 26 March 1870—Mr
The SpectatorAyrton, on Monday, ordered Members and the public to keep deputations within reasonable limit under pain of death. The floors of rooms in the older public buildings were. he...
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PERSONAL COLUMN
The SpectatorAn Easter sermon CHRISTOPHER BOOKER At no time is the mysterious interaction of joy and suffering in human life more clearly brought home to us than in spring, at Easter-...
Equation
The SpectatorCHRISTOPHER HOLLIS Pray, silence. It is Mr Eaks Who speaks. Establishment has got the Gospel wrong, As he has half suspected all along. The Liberal leader leads, But Mr Eaks...
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TELEVISION
The SpectatorViolence on the screen BILL GRUNDY When Jane Austen wrote Northanger Abbey, I take it she was doing two things, apart from producing a gem. She was taking the mickey out of...
OFFICIAL SECRETS
The SpectatorIn the steps of Mr Gladstone R. A. CLINE Broad and muddy rivers spring from small, reasonably unpolluted sources. The Official Secrets Acts (there are now two of them), broad...
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MEDICINE
The SpectatorAny complaints? JOHN ROWAN WILSON It seems likely that we are to have a new pro- cedure introduced into our hospitals very soon, to facilitate the making of complaints. There...
TABLE TALK
The SpectatorMy house of the arrow DENIS BROGAN I am not a great reader of detective stories. and I have orthodox tastes. I think that Holmes is by far the greatest figure in this genre. I...
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BRITAIN
The SpectatorThe Welsh condition EMYR HUMPHREYS In the twentieth century the concept of nationality, like the nonconformist consci- ence that used to loom so large in politics, has taken a...
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BOOKS Labyrinthine Borges
The SpectatorMARTIN SEYMOUR-SMITH Borges, born in Argentina in 1899, spent the years 1914-21 in Europe, the first five of them in Geneva, the last two in Madrid, where he was involved with...
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Peel's people
The SpectatorJAMES BREDIN Cumberland Heritage Molly Lefebure (Gol- lancz 45s) Middle-age in Cumberland starts at sixty or thereabouts, C. E. Benson once claimed, and he was thinking in...
Show business
The SpectatorR. A. CLINE Six Studies in Hypocrisy Giles Playfair (Seeker and Warburg 50s) A. Little Pattern of French Crime Rayner Heppenstall (Hamish Hamilton 35s) Of course Dr Stephen...
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NEW THRILLERS
The SpectatorGardner's last CYRIL RAY The Case of the Phantom Fortune Erie Stanley Gardner (Heinemann 25s) The Gold of St Matthew Duff Hart-Davis (Constable 30s) Cold Water P. M. Hubbard...
New optimist
The SpectatorHENRY TUBE The House of Assignation Alain Robbe- Grillet translated by A. M. Sheridan Smith (Calder and Boyers 30s) The real hatred felt by many people for innovatory art of...
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Now and then
The SpectatorTREVOR GROVE Nunquam Lawrence Durrell (Faber 30s) Lawrence Durrell poses something of a prob- lem for the critics: he is so immensely plausible—in both senses of the word....
Prophetic work
The SpectatorC. M. WOODHOUSE The Life and Times of Mulam►►ad John Bagot Glubb (Glubb Pasha) (Hodder and Stoughton 63s) Fourteen years ago Sir John Glubb was dis- missed from his post as...
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ARTS Death bed scenes
The SpectatorHILARY SPURLING Gloom, grief, misgiving and the collapse of the commercial theatre as we know it come together, as might have been pre- dicted, in the opening sentences of The...
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CINEMA
The SpectatorTrue grit PENELOPE HOUSTON Kes (sac, Doncaster, 'U') If It's Tuesday This Must Be Belgium (Lon- don Pavilion, 'A') The Last Grenade (Odeon, St Martin's Lane, 'A') Ken...
OPERA
The SpectatorFirst thoughts EDWARD BOYLE Lord Robbins, in one of his most perceptive lectures, once remarked that 'If anyone should doubt what [nineteenth century] liberalism meant in...
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ART
The SpectatorEasy draw BRYAN ROBERTSON If it is impossible to say without banality that one is 'deeply moved' by anything these days, it is difficult to know what else one can say of an...
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SPOTLIGHT ON WALES
The SpectatorHymn of hmm JOHN BULL My method of judging the health of Welsh industry is to look at the progress—or lack of progress--recorded by Wales's great com- panies. One's reaction...
Earth-shaking down under
The SpectatorNICHOLAS DAVENPORT No one has much sympathy for the fool who is roughly parted from his money. But there is a strong feeling that Stock Exchange Councils or Security...
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From Lady Sayer, Ian Mercer, Leopold Labedz, David Morris, Stan
The SpectatorGebler Davies, Richard Witkin, Uri Davis, Michael De-la- Noy. LETTERS The rape of Dartmoor Sir: Mr Stanley Johnson's article was fac- tual in all respects, and in her attempt...
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The tenth commandment Sir: I read Mr J. Enoch Powell's
The Spectatorpiece on Envy: A Theory of Social Behaviour (14 March) with tremendous interest. Real in- sight here, and an important message. Aid, international or local, given through...
Philosophic doubt
The SpectatorSir: After my return from abroad I have read in your correspondence column several letters dealing with the point raised by Mr Nigel Lawson in 'Spectator's notebook' (14...
On fanatiques and files
The SpectatorSir: Do I understand Mercurius Oxoniensis, whose great good sense and happily vindic- tive spirit is otherwise a great joy to me, to be advocating (7 March) the reintroduction...
Pompidou in New York
The SpectatorSir: With regard to Sir Denis Brogan's article (14 March) I would like to make a few points. Sir Denis, writing of a Jewish firm threatening to boycott a New York bank,...
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Violence pays
The SpectatorSir: I would like to comment on Mr Archi- bald Tober's letter (7 March). History is everything but 'dejective'. The historical nar- rative or the historical description of past...
AFTERTHOUGHT
The SpectatorEffluent. society JOHN WELLS The annual dinner of the Royal Effluent Society is always a red letter day in the radio and television calendar, and this year's dinner in the...
New York revisited
The SpectatorSir: Having recently returned from my first visit (of eight days) to New York I have only just caught up with Ludovic Kennedy's article on that city (7 March). You will not need...
COMPETITION
The SpectatorNo. 598: Name dropping Set by J. M. Crooks: In a recent speech, Sir Keith Joseph said that the Government was trying to 'Bennboozle' the country. There must be other equally...
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Chess 484
The SpectatorPHILIDOR J. Hartong and D. Ivanov (1st Prize, Magyar Sakkelet, 1967). White to play and mate in three moves; solution next week. Solution to No. 483 (Loshinski-b3K2b/r1R2p1r/...
Crossword 1423
The SpectatorAcross 1 Empty heads should result from oriental fruit of purification (8-4) 9 'On! —, and cry you all amain, "Achilles hath the mighty Hector slain" (Troilus and Cressida) (9)...