Page 1
Whom the Gods would destroy?
The SpectatorThe Government is now running into very serious trouble indeed. It is a year since the Industrial Relations Act came into force, and last year saw more days lost through...
Page 3
A warning to Mr Barber
The SpectatorThe Budget is a government's annual statement of ability to fulfil its promises and of intent to avoid them. The present Government came into office with a specific set of...
Page 4
Another Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorI have been greatly interested in following the various more or less neurotic kerfuffles of the British press in their discussion of the consequences of Ian Smith's closure of...
Page 5
Political Commentary
The SpectatorThe Government's forked tongue Patrick COsgrave It is a truth universally acknowledged that the Prime . Minister is in control of the Government so absolutely that the...
Page 6
Ireland (1)
The SpectatorVotes are not solutions Rawle Knox The other Friday I was standing outside Bishop Gate, in the old walls of Londonderry City, waiting for a bomb to go off, or rather, hoping...
Page 7
Ireland (2)
The SpectatorWhat chance moderation? Constantine FitzGibbon In the closing stages of the second world war a friend of mine was sent to Greece as member of a politico-military mission taxed...
Page 8
French election
The SpectatorHow French are the communists? Martin Short " So this is our choice: either the Gaullists with their hands in the till or the Communists and a gun in our back." The cynical...
Page 9
Industrial relations
The SpectatorLeft, right and extreme centre George Gale The Labour Government of Harold Wilson produced legislation dealing with prices and incomes and set up a statutory Prices and...
Song of the TUC
The SpectatorThe wind from the heath, brother, Is blowing bitter cold. We don't like its look, brother, Or what it may unfold. The weather forecast's rotten, No horror is forgotten, As we...
Corridors...
The SpectatorPUZZLE SENDS HIS congratulations to Jeremy Thorpe and his bride to be. And, as an engagement bouquet, he adds this story showing the Liberal leader in a customary, but to the...
Page 10
Shirley Robin Letwin on the hero of the Beat Generation
The SpectatorPaul Goodman" was a prophet fully licensed and acclaimed in America. And now, shortly after his death, his works are being launched here. At home, he succeeded over several...
Page 11
Criminal connection
The SpectatorAuberon Waugh Billy Rags Ted Lewis (Michael Joseph £2.00) Stories of escape from prison touch a chord in anyone who has been to a boarding school or served in the armed forces....
Page 12
On the House
The SpectatorJohn Kenyon Parliamentary Reform 1640-1832 John Cannon (Cambridge £5.70) There is more than one view to be taken of the movement for parliamentary reform which culminated in...
Page 13
Addled egghead
The SpectatorIsabel Quigly D'Annunzio Philippe Jullian. Translated by Stephen Hardman (Pall Mall 0.86) i; The Latin habit of naming streets after real people always seems an appalling...
Page 14
Astonishing centuries
The SpectatorSimon Hornblower The Presocratics Edward Hussey (Duckworth £2.75) This is a magisterial book, and a wholly admirable achievement. Mr. Hussey provides, in 168 pages, a lucid and...
Page 15
Poetry and criticism
The SpectatorDouglas Dunn A Poetry Chronicle Ian Hamilton (Faber E2.95) Founding father of the 'Greek Street cenacle,' Ian Hamilton has been editing The Review and contributing to The...
Bookend
The SpectatorBookbuyer Copyright seems to be everybody's problem these days. A recent edition of the Evening Standard carried, quite by chance, two phrases which could be said to orginate...
Page 16
Kenneth Hurren on Jane Eyre's entrancing sister
The SpectatorI can't say I was expecting much of the National Theatre's production of Moliere's The Misanthrope beyond some determinedly respectful hands-across-the-Channel tribute,...
Page 17
Cinema
The SpectatorBlack or white. Christopher Hudson Sounder(' U' Rialto) tells a simple story with grace and economy. The setting is Louisiana; the time, 1933. A black sharecropper nad his...
Television
The SpectatorBarrel's bottom Clive ,Gammon The Operation, BBC l's offering on Monday night in its pretentiously labelled 'Play for Today' series, was as insulting a piece of meretricious...
Will Wasp e
The SpectatorI am sad, though not necessarily surprised, to learn that Franco Zeffirelli will not now be producing Carmen for the Royal Opera this summer. What with his film work and his...
Page 18
Art
The SpectatorMellon watercolour Evan Anthony To own one Turner watercolour could be considered good fortune, to own a dozen, one would have to have a fortune. Mr and Mrs Paul Mellon do,...
Records
The SpectatorHero worship Rodney Milnes Shostakovich's fifteenth symphony is already being referred to as his ' Enigma,' and the musical quotations dotted throughout the score have given...
Page 19
In the pit
The SpectatorBenny Green in reading Ronald Pearsall's admirably lucid and concise Victorian Popular Music, it occurred to me that whatever their shortcomings the Victorians did at least...
Page 20
The Good Life
The SpectatorGood guide PamelaVandykePrice Even before Lent has begun, this is a season when gastronomy is either under attack or preposterously aggressive. One colleague flits from high...
Page 21
Guilt and Gingerbread
The SpectatorDouglas Curtis There are some mothers, and fathers too, who don't have to worry about the outcome of the tax credits/family allowance squabble. They are the ones without a...
Page 23
Fine at seventy
The SpectatorJoan Woollcombe Now that I am seventy, I am entitled to feel borne on a rising tide of power — there are 8 million of us of retirement age and over; by 1980 there will be 10 or...
Science
The SpectatorUseless experiments Bernard Dixon A scientist at the University of Oregon recently decided to investigate grooming behaviour In mice. He wanted to find out to what degree the...
Page 24
Dialectical inflationism
The SpectatorNicholas Davenport The idea is around that the ordered growth of the economy is getting out of balance once again. The all-party Expenditure Committee in its fifth report...
Page 25
Skinflint's City Diary,
The SpectatorWalter Salomon is one of the most distinguished minds in the City, and a forthright defender over many years of the kind of libertarian economic views which I myself espouse; as...
Account gamble
The SpectatorHopes for Burgess John Bull Homfray came in for an even better improvement in profits than I had forecast last week but even so I was dismayed by the apparent apathetic market...
Page 26
Portfolio
The SpectatorIn the Scillies Nephew Wilde My plans were well advanced for a short skiiing holiday at the beginning of last week. However, in the event, I saved myself from the perils of...
Israel and the Arabs
The SpectatorFrom the Rev Tony Crowe Sir: Your timely article 'Peace in jeopardy' highlights the dangers of another war in the Middle East, in which Israel will once again emerge as victor....
Sir: There seems to have been a lack of co-ordination
The Spectatorbetween your editorial and the article by Joel Cohen in your issue of February 24. Mr Cohen's article discusses the problems of how the innocent may be protected by attacks from...
Sir: In the wake of the shooting down of an
The Spectatorairliner and of a raid 150 miles into Lebanese territory to write about a film may seem trivial. However, it is part of the same situation. Accompanying Robert Bolt's film Lady...
General practice
The SpectatorFrom Mrs Helen Hodgson Sir: We should be very grateful if you could allow us through your correspondence columns to invite any of your readers who have recently been in contact...
Page 27
Have a heart
The SpectatorSir: With reference to Bernard Dixon's article (February 17), which recounts the fatuous presumptions that man can outwit Nature, by trying to replace the damaged organs of the...
The National Trust
The SpectatorSir: I have read the correspondence which has followed Mrs Brock's initial letter of criticism and I now feel I should make known my own experience in running a Stately Home...
Germans in the Tyrol
The SpectatorSir: I should like to say a few words about Patrick Cosgrave's impressions of his Tyrolean trip (January 6). I have been in Austria several times a year for at least a decade...
Pull out now
The SpectatorSir: Canadians are indeed curious — why a referendum on whether or not the population of Northern Ireland wish to remain with the British? The results will show two things. One...
Sloppy English
The SpectatorSir: 1 am reluctant to raise again the subject of sloppy English, about which you were good enough to print a letter of mine (February 10). However, it is only fair to your...
Made in Britain
The SpectatorSir, When a British Rhodesian, fishing on the Rhodesian side of the Zambesi River, is killed by bullets fired from the Zambian side, and when those bullets are found to be of...
Juliette's Weekly Frolic
The SpectatorPendil's runaway win in the 'Yellow Pages' three-miler was in itself worth the jaunt to Kempton last weekend, and I was amused by the reactions of my elders and doubtless...
Page 28
Motor madness
The SpectatorSir; There is nothing like an uraan motorway being planned to pass your door for concentrating the mind on transport policy. As a Conservative Parliamentary candidate in the...
Rather casually
The SpectatorSir: Bookend in your issue of February 24 says that we offered Richard Webb a directorship after he rather casually mentioned an offer of a job from Collins. I'd like to correct...
Wrong again?
The SpectatorSir: Has Bookbuyer got it wrong yet again? I am sure that the only difficulty. Collins are having in finding a replacement for their former publicity manager is of deciding...
Skinflint's memory
The SpectatorSir: I regret that Skinflint does not look at the back numbers to refresh his memory — particularly September 23 and December 30. When he bet me El that the index would sink to...
Simple and compound
The SpectatorSir: Michael Brett-Crowther describes as " teutonism, ponderous nouns tying up thought," the creation of words like " biosphere " and " technosphere." The Teutons, or Germans as...