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Towards a siege economy
The SpectatorI t would be a mistake to suppose that the election of a new Leader of the Labour Partyâand a new Prime M i n isterâwill of itself mark a new departure in national affairs....
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The Week
The SpectatorThe Labour Party held its first two leader- ship polls. Out of six contenders for the burdens of office in the first, one (Mr Cros- land) was counted out, two ( Messrs Wedg-...
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Political Commentary
The SpectatorFoot wins the war Patrick Cosgrave The period of a contest for the leadership is a fevered time in any political party: the utterances of partisans, whether vindicated or...
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Notebook
The SpectatorLord Avon is nicely upholding the agreeable tradition that provides us with books of memoirs from retired statesmen. Sixteen Years after the appearance of his first sub-...
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Another voice
The SpectatorThin green line Auberon Waugh Earlier this week, I saw a most amazing sight. It happened a few hundred yards from my French abode, on a track which runs between the village of...
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A million-dollar gloat
The SpectatorAnthony Holden New York America's bicentennial election campaign needed a court jester to stifle the nation's Yawns, and suddenly it has one. It is not Jimmy Carter, whose...
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The new radicals
The SpectatorPhilip Vander Elst One of the principal themes that has domi- nated the American presidential campaign up till now has been the unpopularity of big government with electors of...
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Doon in Troon
The SpectatorJim Higgins Troon, Scotland 'Politics', said Lenin, `is concentrated econ- omics' and, whatever you may think about the rest of his ideas, you have to agree that he had a point...
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Will Jim fix it?
The SpectatorGeorge Gale Leonard James 'Sunny Jim' Callaghan once said of his friend and sailing and travelling companion, the Old Etonian ex-communist Secretary of State for War John...
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Mr Silkin's fantasy
The SpectatorChristopher Booker This year it seems likely that some £ 500,000,000 of public moneyâequivalent to Britain's share of the entire Concorde Programmeâwill be spent on...
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The gift of the gab
The SpectatorLogie Bruce Lockhart One of the particular magisterial bees in my mortar board is a pastime I run with sixth- formers, rather pretentiously called 'Public Speaking'. All...
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Vowel play
The SpectatorEdward Pearce The English are trying very hard to come to terms with foreigners, to make their own vowels, genteel or proletarian, jump through the hoops required to pay due...
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Communist debts
The SpectatorCharles Stahl Not too many people in the Western world are cognisant of the fact that our monetary system is not the only one in existence, and that the East European trading...
If you read THE SPECTATOR the chances are that you
The Spectatorappreciate objective comment on the Middle East. To add to your knowledge read MIDDLE EAST INTERNATIONAL We are a specialist magazine, founded in 1971, published monthly in...
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In the City
The SpectatorWhat we expect of Jim Nicholas Davenport By the end of last week the stock market had already assumed the victory of Mr Callaghan. The FT index of industrial shares had risen...
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Letters
The SpectatorNo, Mr Macmillan Sir : A possible line to take over Rhodesia is the very reverse of Mr Maurice Macmillan's proposal. Mr Macmillan's idea is for Britain, on account of her...
Liaison
The SpectatorSir: William Trevor (13 March) writes: 'Lewes was married when she [George Eliot] met him, and remained so, sharing his wife in a bohemian manner with a man called Thornton...
Sir: I would like to comment on Mr Hyam Maccoby's
The Spectatorand Mr Jacob Gewirtz's letters (Spectator, 13 and 20 March), which attack Patrick Marnham for his article: 'is Israel racist ?' Mr Hyam Maccoby states that `Mr Marnham makes...
Israel and Dr Shahak
The SpectatorSir: I feel that one of the most significant factors in the correspondence on Patrick Marnham's Israel article was Baroness Gait- skell's revelation that Dr Shahak's 'League for...
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McMahon correspondence
The SpectatorSir: Pace Mr Lionel Bloch (Spectator, 6 March) those who 'with deep-seated feel- ings' believe that Britain's Palestine policy from 1917 to 1948 involved grave injustice to the...
Primaries
The SpectatorSir: The primary system, advocated by Mr Keith Raffan, is a cumbersome way of effecting by two operations what the single transferable vote accomplishes in one. Under either...
Bad language
The SpectatorSir: With regard to Mr Marc Attwood- Wood's complaint about the misuse of the word 'careening' there is at least one excel- lent modern literary precedent which sug- gests...
Mr Peter Ratazzi is a member of East Sussex County
The SpectatorCouncil, not East Essex County Council, as was erroneously stated under his letter last week.
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Spring Books (I)
The SpectatorThe rise of a minor poet H. J. Eysenck Freud and His Followers Paul Roazen (Allen Lane £10.00) This book is difficult to review because certain value judgments are implied in...
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No tooth-powder!
The SpectatorOlivia Manning So Late into The Night The fifth volume Of Byron's letters and journals, edited by Leslie A. Marchand (Murray £5.95) What more brilliant figure in literature...
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Blow-up
The SpectatorAl Capp Conversations with Kennedy Benjamin C. Bradlee (Quartet £4.50) Fifty or so years ago, there flourished an American biographer no one now remem- bers, and whose books...
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The road to Istanbul
The SpectatorHumphrey Trevelyan The Genius of Arab Civilisation edited b y A. Hayes (Phaidon £13.95) The World of Islam edited by Bernard Lewis (Thames and Hudson £12.50) Patterns in...
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Bangs and shingles
The SpectatorDuncan Fallowell Northern Lights Tim O'Brien (Marion Boyars £5.95) Nostalgia is such a wanton weed that any optimist worth his salt would be quite justi- fied in refusing all...
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Gay dogs
The SpectatorBenny Green The Cleveland Street Scandal H. Mont- gomery Hyde (W. H. Allen £5.95) A Casebook of Jack the Ripper Richard W hittington-Egan (Wildy and Sons The soft underbelly...
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No craft
The SpectatorNigel Cross Lovecraft: a Biography L. Sprague de Camp (New English Library £5.75) H. P. Lovecraft (1890-1937), fantasy and science fiction writer, led a life so pathetic that...
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Noble savage
The SpectatorElspeth Huxley The Last of The Nuba Leni Riefenstahl (Collins £10.00) Nobody as sophisticated as Leni Riefen- stahl could really believe that in a province of Sudan there...
Dear Mummy
The SpectatorDee Wells Qoodbye Father Maureen Green (Rout- ledge and Kegan Paul £3.95) C ompulsive readers will read almost any- t hi ng, that is a hoary old truth. But even c ,_ °...
Books Wanted
The SpectatorWANTED: LIONS AND SHADOWS. Christopher Isherwood, hardback, Hogarth Press, 14 . Church Lane, Southampton. BRASSEY'S NAVAL ANNUAL, Volumes 1924-8 and 1931-39 inclusive. R.P.T....
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Arts
The SpectatorThe game without rules Hans Keller It happened in 1934, at the very latest; so the intellectual teenagersâbe they seven- teen or seventyâwho, the day before yesterday,...
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Mu sic
The SpectatorChoir practice John Bridcut Fleet Street has so indulged itself over the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Amendment) Bill that it has failed to observe another shop being...
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Theatre
The SpectatorMidas touch Kenneth Hurren Very Good Eddie by Guy Bolton, from a farce by Phillip Bartholomae; music by Jerome Kern (Piccadilly) Gaslight by Patrick Hamilton (Criterion) Very...
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Art
The SpectatorExplorations John McEwen Retrospectives are apt to drain artists but Dick Smith's device at the Tate last summer of presenting a series of reinstalled one-man shows deprives...
Television
The SpectatorBreakdowns Jeffrey Bernard They keep promising us that madness, like cancer, is moving steadily towards the great day of the final cure. The puzzle they say is about to be...
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Competition
The SpectatorNo. 905: Is this a record? Set by Harrison Everard: The letters of the famous make good reading. Competitors are asked for a letter to the Times from Dylan Thomas, Bernard...
No. 902: The winners Charles Seaton reports: Competitors were asked
The Spectatorfor prose or verse comment from Sir Walter Raleigh on the present dearth of potatoes. Alas! The truth is that Sir Walter could no more have brought the first potatoes to Europe...
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Solution to Jac 246: Sedative
The Spectatorc IM REIM MI 0 B A , N 1 A gn N num= , u AssomenInpunnED 6 A i r l iArrigialig : ,T s L GARN:R6Rri. S 0 , fillinETRWEADP U.HOMIEMMVnEOD GQ ' G DRininGLE HU A /...
Solution to Daedalus 1733 Across: I Radioactivity 9 Scrim- shaw
The Spectator10 Ratel I I Elemi 12 Emana- tion 13 Faberge 15 Haircut 17 Stellar 19 Fantail 21 September 23 Cling 24 Minim 25 Clothiers 26 Campanologist. Down: 1 Agree- able 3 Iambi 4 Athlete...
Jac 249: Hold it!
The SpectatorThe unclued lights (all but one in Chambers's) have something in common. One of the other lights is hyphenated. ACROSS 3 Arkwright up could be! (11) 9 A crazy Scot's...
_A prize of three pounds in each case will be
The Spectatorawarded for the first correct solution opened on 20 April. Entries to: Jac 249 (or Crossword 1736), T he Spectator, 56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL. (Entries for both...