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In a sense perhaps it was. Mr Wilson's task was
The Spectatora formidable one. He had to face a Party bitterly divided by the Government's Policies, depressed by its performance, and de eply dispirited by an unprecedented series...
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The enemy of Europe
The SpectatorLast Friday's conference of the Foreign Min- isters of the Six in Brussels and the Franco- German weekend Summit meeting in Bonn mark the end of the phase of recrimination which...
PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorThe Labour party, assembled in conference at Blackpool, voted down the Labour govern- ment's prices and incomes policy by 5,098,000 votes to 1,124,000: the party's executive...
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Pushme-pullyou by the pier
The SpectatorPOLITICAL COMMENTARY AUBERON WAUGH Blackpool—The official slogan for this year's Labour party conference is proclaimed from great banners hoisted above the Edwardian splendour...
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Nai Nai Nai
The SpectatorGREECE MICHAEL LLEWELLYN-SMITH Athens—NAT means Yes. Last Sunday in glorious late summer weather the Greeks went to the polls and said a bigger Yes than anyone had forecast....
Schweik plays host
The SpectatorTomas Cernikowski, a Czech student who fled to Britain last month, made a series of trans- lations from the wall posters and underground newspapers published in Prague during...
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The candidates
The SpectatorAMERICA MURRAY KEMPTON New York—Journalism seems to bring a sense of duty to the presidential campaign, but it is a tedious and unattended duty. A man whose tasks set him to...
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Russia's navy—the developing threat
The SpectatorDEFENCE LAURENCE MARTIN Laurence Martin is Professor of War Studies in the University of London and defence cor- respondent of the SPECTATOR. In naval circles the ship of the...
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The case for import controls
The SpectatorTHE ECONOMY VERNON BOGDANOR Vernon Bogdanor is a Fellow in Politics at Brasenose College, Oxford. `Their policy is to reduce the standard of life of as many people as are...
A hundred years ago From the 'Spectator', 3 October 1868—The
The SpectatorBour- bons have made their exit from Spain--4.e., from Europe. In the last days of September, Isabella's ministers, the brothers Concha,—the Marquis of the Havannah and the...
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SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorJ. W. M. THOMPSON It is a thoroughly unscientific habit, no doubt, but many people find it natural to visualise large, incoherent organisations in terms of one person....
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Hitler is dead: official
The SpectatorPERSONAL COLUMN TIBOR SZAMUELY I knew Lev Bezymenski fairly well in Moscow about twenty years ago, so the publication here of his volume called The Death of Adolf Hitler...
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Cold comfort college
The SpectatorTABLE TALK DENIS BROGAN The episode of this week that has come most close to my bosom has been the refusal of the Associated Society of Locomotive En- gineers and Firemen to...
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Heart throbs
The SpectatorMEDICINE JOHN ROWAN WILSON My favourite French cheese has taken a sudden jump in price. Presumably devaluation is at last beginning to bite, and it now comes at nine shil-...
As the Romans do
The SpectatorTELEVISION STUART HOOD It says something about the nature of the pro- gramme that, when I went to check a name on the cast list of The Caesars, Granada's Sunday night epic, I...
Shoot the ref
The SpectatorTHE PRESS BILL GRUNDY There is only one sensible way to read a news- paper—the way I do. You start, as do all men of taste and judgment, at the back, and only when you have...
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Please amplify ...
The SpectatorTHE MILITARY PHILOSOPHERS-1 ANTHONY POWELL Anthony Powell's 'The Military Philosophers,' the ninth novel in his sequence 'A Dance to the Music of Time, is to be published by...
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The surplus boys
The SpectatorCHRISTOPHER HOLLIS If it becomes possible in the near future to control the sex of human offspring, what will be the likely social consequence? Amitai Etzioni, professor of...
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Orwell that ends well BOOKS
The SpectatorMARTIN SEYMOUR-SMITH George Orwell, it has been suggested, is ultimately 'less memorable as an artist than as a man.' And Tom Hopkinson, dismissing The Road to Wigan Pier as...
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Old, unhappy far-off things
The SpectatorPETER FLEMING A History of Warfare Montgomery of Alamein (Collins 84s) Fighting is, apart from cooking, the oldest of the skills which homo sapiens found it obliga- tory to...
One good Craig deserves another
The SpectatorJOHN GIELGUD The son has done his father proud. He has written a book that is fiercely loyal and affectionate, yet makes no attempt to gloss over the wiliness and weaknesses in...
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NEW NOVELS
The SpectatorRich and rare MAURICE CAPITANCHIK A Very Private Life Michael Frayn (Collins 21s) Myra Breckinridge Gore Vidal (Anthony Blond 35s) Without a City Wall Melvyn Bragg (Seeker and...
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Beyond the bounds
The SpectatorHENRY TUBE King Queen Knave Vladimir Nabokov trans- lated by DmiIri Nabokov in collaboration with the author (Weidenfeld and Nicolson 30s) Hebdomeros Giorgio de Chirico...
NEW THRILLERS AND SF
The SpectatorDesperate men PETER PARLEY Zion Road Simon Harvester (Jarrolds 25s) The Bird-Cage Kenneth O'Hara (Victor Gollancz 25s) Take a Pair of Private Eyes J. T. McIntosh (Frederick...
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In the purple
The SpectatorROBERT HUGHES Antimemoirs Andre Malraux, translated by Terence Kilmartin (Hamish Hamilton 50s) . . The "little brothers" will speak softly to the flames who are their dead, and...
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Shorter notices
The SpectatorDecisions for a Decade Senator Edward M. Kennedy (Michael Joseph 35s) and Journey into Politics John V. Lindsay (famish Hamilton 25s). Mayor Lindsay quotes St Benedict: Sena-...
Slips showing
The SpectatorROBERTO CORSANO A History of Sicily Denis Mack Smith (Chatto and Windus, two volumes 90s) Sicily has always had the ability to make myth into reality, but in preparing his...
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THEATRE
The SpectatorWell spoke HILARY SPURLING Hair (Shaftesbury) The Advertisement (Old Vic) ' "It's Michael!" I cried. "Rendezvous 15.00 hours. I think he might propose. I've got to be...
King of a cold country ARTS
The SpectatorPENELOPE HOUSTON Carl Theodore Dreyer died last March, aged seventy-nine. One of the great names of cinema, dutifully honoured. But when people thought about his films, the...
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King size
The SpectatorART PAUL GRINKE After the chaos of the last Venice Biennale, where the British Pavilion with its splendid two- horse team of Riley and King provided a wel- come oasis of calm,...
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Best last
The SpectatorOPERA CHARLES REID this year's first Ring cycle at Covent Garden ended on Saturday with a GOtterdammerung which restored my faith in the Wagnerians of the Royal Opera House....
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The World Bank go-go MONEY
The SpectatorNICHOLAS DAVENPORT The annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, which are being held in Washington this week, promised to be the most exciting in...
Inflation-proof
The SpectatorPORTFOLIO JOHN BULL Australian mining shares have been plunging sharply. The list on Monday night sounded like the roll call after a massacre: Great Boulder down 35s at 107s 6d...
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CITY DIARY
The SpectatorCHRISTOPHER FILDES You know the Leicester Temperance? That's right : the building society which whacked its rate on new mortgages up to 8 per cent for a fixed term of two...
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Lump it and like it
The SpectatorBUSINESS VIEWPOINT MARTIN J. GRAFTON Martin J. Grafton is the Director of the National Federation of Building Trades Em- ployers. A few minutes on television and some news-...
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Plunging pool
The SpectatorCOMMODITIES JOHN CAVILL International commodity agreements fall into two types whether they be the International Sultana Producers' agreement or the Inter- national Wheat...
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Market report
The SpectatorCUSTOS The breaks in this two year old bull market, when they have come, have been abrupt. To see the Financial Times index down 23 points, or 4 per cent, in a week is enough...
Non-politics of Harold Wilson
The SpectatorSir: One is scarcely surprised that your politi- cal commentary of 27 September should deal with Paul Foot's somewhat over-clever Penguin The Politics of Harold Wilson. I say...
Sir: Quintin Hogg says he regards as 'altogether excessive' Enoch
The SpectatorPowell's 'estimate of the power of human reason, and not least his own, in pre- dicting the probable oourse of human events' (27 September). If a former colleague so mis-...
Washed in public
The SpectatorSir : I note that in his letter in your issue of 27 September Professor Trilling claims to know better, from the other side of the Atlantic, what was the state of teaching in...
Anatomy of Enoch Powell
The SpectatorLETTERS From Geoffrey Grigson, D. E. Folkes, T. C. Skeffington-Lodge, Mrs F. R. Leavis, Lilian von Versen, R. L. Travers, R. T. M. Lindsay. Beverley Woodroffe, Geoffrey Birch,...
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Lord Cranfield as he wasn't
The SpectatorSir : Judged by his fascinating diaries, Harold Nicolson was a 'dear,' loving man, a wonderful family man, with charming values. He wished to draw a line between himself and all...
MCC: the men for the job
The SpectatorSir: I have been a subscriber to the SPECTATOR for many years and find much of interest in every issue. Nothing you have ever said has so aroused my admiration and gratitude as...
Sir: As a result of grave mishandling of every stage
The Spectatorof preparation for a cricket tour of South Africa, the MCC committee has forced that tour to be cancelled at the eleventh hour, causin g severe disruption in the life of the...
A plea to Mr Michael Stewart
The SpectatorSir: Your correspondents Grenville Jones and George Knapp (Letters, 27 September) have performed a most useful service in pointing to a deplorable deficiency in the manner in...
Table talk
The SpectatorSir : I have no pretension to being a biblical exegete, and Mr K. W. Nicholls (Letters, 27 September) is as likely to be right in his inter- pretation of the story of Onan as I...
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Forty-two per cent in Swindon
The SpectatorAFTERTHOUGHT JOHN WELLS and JOHN FORTUNE It has been estimated that if all the pyjama cords at present in use in this country were taken out and laid end to end there would be...
Sir: What a great deal of wisdom the majority of
The SpectatorAfrican leaders had as reported in the West Africa issue of 21 September about the OAU Summit! They supported Nigeria's war against Biafra and condemned countries which allowed...
On living with pain
The SpectatorSir: That was an inspiring article on pain by Kenneth Allsop (13 September). Neither mawkish nor braggy (I quote him), and without a trace of self-pity despite his many years of...
Albert Einstein
The SpectatorSir: I have been commissioned by British, American and Continental publishers to write a life of Albert Einstein which will deal not only with his scientific work, but with his...
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No. 521: The word game
The SpectatorCOMPETITION Competitors are invited to use the ten following words taken from the opening passages of a well-known work of literature, in the order given, to construct part of...
Chess no. 407
The SpectatorPHILIDOR Black 15 m H. W. Grant (1st Prize, B.C.F. Tourney 113). White to play and mate in two moves. Solution next week. Solution to no. 406 (Shinkman): Q - R 1 !, no...
No. 519: The winners
The SpectatorTrevor Grove reports: Competitors were invited to compose an octet, using the given rhyme words, on one of the following subjects : lines to a lover during the recent floods, on...
Crossword no.1346
The SpectatorAcross 1 Flighty sea-dog in appreciative mood? (5, 7) 9 Latest neckwear from Carnaby Street (9) 10 Head's a regular tear-jerker! (5) 11 Seal of the old school tie, of course (6)...