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Crime and punishment
The SpectatorIt is too easily forgotten, a's we contemplate the present difficulty in our prisons, that these crises of the incarcerated are now a regular and, indeed, cyclic occurence in...
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The consequences of Amin for Britain
The SpectatorIt is distaseful, when the Ugandan Asians are preparing for their flight from the country in which they have made their lives, and founded their hopes for so long, to advert to...
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Another Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorI am one of those crusty reactionaries who feel that the slide downhill of the Times as a newspaper began when advertisements were put on the front page; and was virtually...
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Political Commentary
The SpectatorYoung Liberals around the grave Hugh Macpherson The first gathering in the annual summer political circus which we politely call the party conference season takes place at...
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Defence
The SpectatorProblems of European security Adam Watson Dispassionate thinking about defence is rare in this country. The subject is distasteful: both the destructiveness and the cost of...
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India
The SpectatorEnemies again? Kuldip Nayar India and Pakistan are back at square one. The same mistrust and suspicion which the two countries had tried to shed through a peace agreement at...
Concorde
The SpectatorThe big twister Oliver Stewart Concorde is the butt of insults. It is too expensive. It is too noisy. It smokes too much. It is commercially unworkable. It damages the...
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GOVERNMENT
The SpectatorThe weakness of the Prime Minister Patrick Cosgrave Issues in British politics nowadays have a way of appearing and disappearing. And this is disturbing, because it suggests a...
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The American scene
The SpectatorThe truth about Nixon Henry Fairlie Even in the United States, although one does not often meet them socially, there are people who support Richard Nixon and, gathered in...
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REVIEW
The SpectatorOF BOOKS , ,1:1- ■ ( Norman Stone on the Russian agrarian revolution Victor Serge's book* is a good piece of reportage of the year 1918 in Russia, a year in which the...
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The drastic and
The Spectatorthe pathetic Auberon Waugh A Happy Man P. J. Kavanagh (Chatto and Windus £2.00) Poets are not people, in my experience, who should be encouraged to write novels. Although it...
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Slum kid into sewer-rat
The SpectatorNicholas Richardson North Louis-Ferdinand Celine (The Bodley Head £3) Any consideration of Celine's novels raises the age-old question: just how far can an author's work be...
Shaking the foundations
The SpectatorJuliette Harrison Secretary Mary Kathleen Benet (Sidgwick and Jackson £2.50) Have you noticed how dejected, degraded and downright miserable the female officeworker has become?...
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Exorcising the ghost
The SpectatorClive Wilmer Tennyson Christopher Ricks (Macmillan 0.95) The poetry of Tennyson is only just recovering from the early twentieth century reaction against all things Victorian....
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Bookend
The SpectatorBookbuyer Bookbuyer has warned readers against vanity publishers — one he had in mind was the Janay Publishing Company Limited, who seem to have a sadly underdeveloped sense of...
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REVIEW OF THE ARTS
The SpectatorCinema A slice of sporting life Christopher Hudson An honest slice of reality means a great deal to people who spend their lives going to the cinema. At least it would appear...
Opera
The SpectatorOh brother Rodney Milnes "It is important to bear in mind, from the outset of a performance of 11 Trovatore, that the Troubadour, known as Manrico, is in fact the younger...
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Arts choice
The Spectator• Theatre: Pick of the London plays: National Theatre production of O'Neill's Long Day's Journey Into Night with Olivier, Cummings, Pickup and Quilley (Old Vic); two wry...
Will Waspe
The SpectatorSpike Milligan, I learn, has been ' blackingup ' again — to play another comic Pakistani in an episode of the new series of Till Death Us Do Part for BBC-tv. This is surely a...
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Television
The SpectatorIn trouble at mill Clive Gammon Whoever Glasgow belongs to on a Sunday it is clearly not the traveller benighted there. I had doubted the horror stories of the Glaswegian...
Theatre
The SpectatorMemory Lane Kenneth Hurren The trouble with Popkiss, the new musical at the Globe, like Mercutio's wound, is "not so deep as a well, nor so wide as a church door, but 'tis...
Games
The SpectatorCricketing cavalier Benny Green Twenty-five years ago this weekend the greatest English player of ball games of this century went in to bat against the South African touring...
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The Good Life
The SpectatorHoliday season Pamela Vandyke Price For many years we have not had a war, a Crusade, the Black Death, the South Sea Bubble, the exaction of Danegeld or the fall of...
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Abolish the Olympics
The SpectatorSir, — "The Foreign Office hopes fervently that the Olympic authorities will sort out their own muddle" (report in an evening paper last week, referring to opposition to...
Sir; As a poet and athlete who has supported the
The SpectatorGames for many years, I was sorry to see that you had felt it necessary (August 26) to demand nothing less than the abolition of the Olympics. I am sure that after reading this...
Sir: Would you be interested in printing a memorable judgement
The Spectatorby a BBC news broadcaster in this evening (August 21) 7 pm BBC radio news? Discussing the Rhodesians' chances of being allowed to compete in the Olympics, the newscaster...
The supernatural
The SpectatorSir: Mr Blish (August 19) is perfectly entitled to disbelieve in all the evidence of poltergeists and to assume there is not such a thing as telepathy or water divining though...
Sir: The goat and witches on the Spectator cover (August
The Spectator19) held promise of much worthier fare than was served up for us in Mr Blish's quadruple book review. I gather that Mr Blish's built-in predisposition to discount all that I...
Ugandan Asians
The SpectatorSir: I am not surprised by the xenophobic response (Letters, August 19) provoked by your attitude towards the expulsions of British Asian citizens in East Africa. The absence of...
Sir: It may be our duty to help the Ugandan
The SpectatorAsians; it is really necessary to take them in? For India resettlement of these people causes no social problems. Surely with good will on both sides the British government...
From Alderman Cecil F. Baker Sir: I thoroughly concur with
The Spectatorthe letters from your correspondents Baird, Bond and Baker (no relation) (August 19). However, as is the custom of governments, I am sure that this one will take no heed of the...
The dockers' motives
The SpectatorFrom the Revd W. 1. Bulman Sir: I have bought and read The Spectator for over thirty-five years and I write to congratulate you as the only organ of opinion, so far as I know,...
Big brother Sir: It was kind of you to devote
The Spectatortwo whole pages to a review of my book on international companies (August 26), particularly since, in your reviewer's opinion, it was a 'trivial and silly little book.' I could,...
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Deep red?
The SpectatorSir: As Peter Flinn queries my description of Willy Brandt, alias Herbert Frahm, as politically deep red, I give some extracts from Herr Branch's own book In Exile (1971), which...
The Czech purge
The SpectatorSir: I do not dissent from Mr Graham Greene's views on architecture which he is entitled to hold, but I could wish he were not forever silent about the iniquities of the USSR as...
Nicholas's coffee
The SpectatorSir: It is, of course, unthinkable that Mr Davenport should stand at a bar when travelling abroad and I am sorry if I appeared to entertain such an idea. It is, indeed, we not...
'Dictator' Videla
The SpectatorSir: In his review of Pablo Neruda's Extravagaria (August 5), Mr Doug las Dunn refers to "the dictator Gonzales Videla." It must be pointed out that Gabriel Gonzalez Videla,...
Worn-out democracy?
The SpectatorSir: Are we witnessing the death throes of a worn-out system of democracy, a system which has taken several hundred years to run its course? Are we faced with the challenge of...
Juliette's Weekly Frolic
The SpectatorA bitter Lord Wigg is quoted as "wanting nothing more to do with the sport" once he retires as Levy Board Chairman in November. Such outspoken comments won't make life easy...
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MONEY AND THE CITY
The SpectatorPresident Nixon and Wall Street Nicholas Davenport "This is the American Dream," cried President Nixon as he was embraced by Sammy Davis Jnr at the Miami Republican...
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Skinflint's City
The SpectatorDiary • Young Lord Vestey the meat packing king is a handsome fellow. He has come across as likeable and able in being interviewed about the troubles at his Midland Cold...
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Portfolio
The SpectatorInto the property pool Nephew Wilde The troubles on the industrial front never seemed so far away as during this last August Bank holiday weekend. And I am convinced that the...
Account gamble
The SpectatorMagic carpets John Bull Once again, following recommendations to buy Bond Worth Holdings and Carpets International in recent weeks, I am punting on a carpet share for the...
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WELFARE STATE
The SpectatorPoverty. Individualised justice Ruth Lister Custos wrote recently of a report received from a tenants' association in Southwark, which revealed that many families had not...
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Society
The SpectatorEducation in social work Jef Smith Involved in social work at various times during the last ten years with miners on the fringe of Edinburgh, with railwaymen in York and with...
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Medicine
The SpectatorHow to staff hospitals John Rowan Wilson If two men ride a horse, goes the old saying, one must ride behind. This bitter but inescapable fact is at the root of the most...
Socialities
The SpectatorSquatters' rights custos Rights are breaking out all over, or so it is beginning to seem as far as squatters are concerned. Under the revised rules of both the High Court and...