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CND comes out T he mass membership of the Campaign for
The SpectatorNuclear Disarmament presumably includes a large number of people who are not interested in politics. For them it is enough to believe that nuclear weapons are horrible, and that...
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Political commentary
The SpectatorBeer and pop Colin Welch T promised to dig out some worthwhile I stuff for you from Professor S. H. Beer's Britain Against Itself (Faber, £9.50). I'll try, but it's not an...
SPECIAL OFFER
The SpectatorAuberon Waugh selects more wines for the Spectator Wine Club on page 36.
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Subscribe
The SpectatorUK Eire Surface mail Air mail 6 months: £15.50 112f1 7 . 7 5 E18.50 £24.50 One year: £31.00 1121.35.50 £37 . 00 £49.00 US subscription price: $65.00 (Cheques to be made...
Notebook
The SpectatorI I seems odd on the face of it that Miss Rhona Ritchie should ever be pro- ,seeuted. According to the Attorney- eneral, 'her behaviour in the Crown's v `' d ie w was more...
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Another voice
The SpectatorThe Muggeridges submit Auberon Waugh O n Sunday, in the church of St Teresa, Taunton, we sang a hymn whose words, written out in the hymnbook, went like this: 'Kum-ba-ya, 0...
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' Reagan's pre-war world
The Spectatorh h l e.tolas von Hoffman Washington Washington e news was not that President Reagan Th , had decided for the second time to pro- ,i ' e ed with the MX missile — they have...
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Very flat, Shanghai
The SpectatorMurray Sayle Shanghai R evolutions revolve, dynasties fall, but bureaucrats know how to look after themselves. Peking, which did next to nothing to bring Marxism to China, is...
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An opportunity missed
The SpectatorGita Mehta M y earliest political memory is of being sent as a child to watch Mahatma Gandhi's funeral cortege pass through the streets of Delhi. Although I was only five years...
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A dying State
The SpectatorShiva Naipaul T he dark green plain, sliced through by a broad, orange-coloured arc of the Ganges, was dissected into shining rec- tangles by fields of rice which stretched as...
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ve of destruction
The SpectatorCambridge Cambridge the dank chill of Cambridge, I thought • el f a book I have recently read, beginn- in g: Ill the month of July of the year 1348, ue tween the feasts of St...
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Lunatic reform
The SpectatorThomas Szasz M r Auberon Waugh rightly criticises (23 October) the clause in the new Mental Health Bill extending the franchise to compulsorily hospitalised mental pa- tients....
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Letters
The SpectatorBlood libels Sir: Surely Paul Johnson is mistaken when he asserts in his article on the press (20 November) that the heavy coverage by the Western media of the killings in...
No way out?
The SpectatorSir: I have been 'with' Christopher Pc n n i(er l (metaphorically speaking) for longer r 1 " — as , can accurately remember, so I ,r,, ec i therefore, surprised to find...
Long memory
The SpectatorSir: The Times, as Auberon Waugh claims, may be a boring newspaper (27 November). But inaccurate, wrong and mischief-maker it certainly is not. It was once brought into utter...
Sir: 'The latest cycle of violence began in 1970 when
The Spectatorthe Lebanon was invaded by Palestinian Moslem terrorists,' writes Paul Johnson (20 November). This is an exact example of the sort of slanderous bias which he suggests is being...
Right behind the Times Sir: Perhaps not many of your
The Spectatorreaders will be surprised at Auberon Waugh's un- balanced and intemperate attack on the Times (27 November). But few, I imagine, will not be, like me, astonished at your...
Greeks and Turks
The SpectatorSir: A few weeks ago I visited the site of a mass grave in the Turkish Cypriot zone of Cyprus, containing the bodies of victims whose ages ranged from eight months to 80. This...
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Christmas Books II To suffer and be Strong
The SpectatorGavin Stamp The Victoria and Albert Museum: The History of its Building John Physick (Phaidon/Christie's £20) I n alMost every country except Britain, te n in , us einn...
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New every morning
The SpectatorRichard Ingrams Hymns for Today's Church (Hodder & Stoughton £6.95) rrhe Church of England's hymn - book, 1 whichever variety you choose, is a repository of religious poems...
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Bar Mess
The SpectatorMark Blackett-Ord The Victorian Bar J. R. Lewis (Robert Hale £9.95) ew full Victorian courtrooms were! 4 en The cartoons in Punch and the steel- sh grav ings in The...
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Mine be a cot
The SpectatorJohn Martin Robinson English Cottages Tony Evans and Candida Lycett Green, introduced by John Betjeinan (Weidenfeld & Nicolson Tphei tu e cu r lt e o sciu ft e...
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Exorcist
The SpectatorP. J. Kavanagh visions from San Francisco Bay Czeslaw Milosz ( Carcanet New Press £6.95) e v er since his publication of The Captive bn, Mi nd in the 1950's Czeslaw Milosz, i i...
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Wild Things
The SpectatorPatrick Skene Catling writes about some recent illustrators of children's books. I 've just spent a terrible, long n i g h !, sleeping, or trying to sleep, with a" Oliphaunt,...
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Children's books
The SpectatorGillian Avery The Borrowers Avenged Mary Norton Illustrated by Pauline Baynes (Kestrel £5.50) The Song of Pentecost W. J. Corbett Illustrated by Martin Ursell (Methuen £5.95)...
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Frogs on a log
The SpectatorJonathan LOake Ancient Enemies Elizabeth North (Cape £7.95) e 'c ock-up theory as Petra, Elizabeth North's narrator, calls it, might be ap - Plie d to much contemporary...
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Arts
The SpectatorStandard formula Peter Ackroyd Gandhi ('A', Odeon Leicester Square) 4 Jo orbandar State. Some Years Later.' 1 So many years later, in fact, that the characters have to...
Dance
The SpectatorMeasured steps Jann Parry London Contemporary Dance The ° exultant leap in Paul Taylor's Espion ade. is shown in slow motion before the title quence of a Dance in America...
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Opera
The SpectatorBetrayal Rodney Milnes Semele (Covent Garden) I feel a bit diffident about my approach 1 to this one, having rather to my surprise been employed as advertising copywriter...
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Theatre
The SpectatorDaily grind Mark Amory The Slab Boys (Royal Court) Still Life (Royal Court) Camelot (Apollo Victoria) to grasp Shakespeare, it is by no Ine ar/5 0 - . that Phil is talented...
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Art
The SpectatorFlying colours John McEwen rr he biennial John Moores Exhibition to painters what the Booker is to wri- ters — opened last week at its traditional venue, the Walker Art...
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High life
The SpectatorPosted Taki New' T didn't see John De LOreall on I Concorde this time but I did ge t a l glimpse of Tiny Rowlands. By God, wh at h ; sinister-looking character. No wonder '...
Television
The SpectatorUntapped Richard Ingrams I t is nearly a year now since the BBC appointed a new Director-General in the shape of Alastair Milne. I am not sure what Mr Milne has been doing...
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Low life
The SpectatorS crubbing along Jeffrey Bernard iu st -e word. This is not to knock the film, W w er ,, li • Young people today have got the it i2 ;" scrubbe r ' all wrong and Miss Zetterl-...
Postscript
The SpectatorBorn Tired Patrick Marnham J ournalism is an occupation for under- achievers. It attracts the idle, those who consider that the world owes them a living, and people with a...
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No. 1244: The winners • v ited No. 1244: The winners
The Spectator• v ited Jaspistos reports: Competitors were in for' to provide, gravely or g aily, the word s new Australian national a nthem. In spite of their own national C,snol"P:ot tion...
Chess
The SpectatorSerendipity Raymond Keene W ith Christmas approaching, I w ill devote this week's article to a sum- mary of books that would serve well as presents. Some of them I have...
Competition
The SpectatorNo. 1247: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 • • • No. 1247: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 • • • Set by Jaspistos: You are invited to P r°61.1 c l ee s, a piece of entertaining prose of 50 O r da the first word a...
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Solution to 583: Operrors i
The SpectatornRrgrin mnimumoin ge innnER'' anunnon me rr- 0 r den S GR nnarman omprem n, A onnnoon unnuni. 0 E.J . ; N I D I N ' I) 1.1471 El A GELDS S ...a . RI El P SA■1 , 1 1-4151...
Crossword 586
The SpectatorA pri ze of ten pounds will be awarded for the first correct solution Pened on 20 December. Entries to: Crossword 586, The N)ec ator, 56 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LL. r i e...
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Special Offer
The SpectatorSpectator Wine Club Auberon Waugh L ast month I promised to move down- market and recommend some cheaper wines and so I have, but the unexpectedly enthusiastic response to the...
ORDER FORM SPECTATOR WINE CLUB
The Spectator7 Park Street, Bristol BSI 5NG Telephone: 0272 214141 UNIT PRICE INC ORDER VALUE PRODUCT SIZE VAT NO. UNIT C6tes du Rhone 12BTS £33.12 CASE 1979 6BTS £16.56 1/2CASE 46300791...
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Portrait of the week
The SpectatorO nly a few days after Sir Geoffrey Howe said that the exchange rate for sterling L we uld be set by market forces, the clearing 'auks, prompted by the Government, rais- e d...
Books Wanted
The SpectatorVENICE by Lord Snowdon and Derek Hart. Privately published by Olivetti. Anthony Bir- chall, 5 Valeside, Throckley,• Newcastle-upon- Tyne, NEI5 9LA. CARDS OF IDENTITY by Nigel...
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Ninth Clue
The SpectatorE ach set of three questions leads to a Li place somewhere in the British Isles. Remember the three questions all have the same answer. 1) Adam Smith was magisterially in-...
How to take part
The Spectatorach issue of The Spectator until the L . /Christmas issue (18 December) will carry a clue. Each clue is made up of three separate questions, designed (except where stated) to...
Answer Form 9
The SpectatorAnswer How does each question lead to the answer 9 Name . Address . Company (if eligible for special prize) Important: Please keep this answer form, as you will need to...
The Great Spectator
The SpectatorTreasure Hunt Set by Christopher Booker T his issue of The Spectator has the ninth clue in the Great SPe c : tator Treasure Hunt. The Treasure Hunt will last for two ftl" f...