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Myths and Realities
The SpectatorT HE old year closed with the failure of Britain's negotiations with the man who declared UDI in Rhodesia : the new year opens with the preliminary talks with the man who has...
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Pop Goes the Cathedral
The Spectator'I think there are more worthwhile causes to give money to than old buildings!—Mr Geon Stevens in reply to a request to give some money to Winchester Cathedral, about which he...
Why a Re-shuffle?
The SpectatorPOLITICAL COMMENTARY By ALAN WATKINS It is difficult to see how Mr Harold Wilson can be very much more ruthless on this occasion. True, a few of the middle- and lower-order...
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Mr Johnson as Ishmael
The SpectatorAMERICA From MURRAY KEMPTON NEW YORK W E are at one of those moments in the affairs of advanced civilisations when every hand that holds a dagger plunges it into just one...
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Spectator Symposium on 1967
The SpectatorSeven 'Spectator' contributors venture their hopes for the new year Anthony Burgess A change in the Tory leadership, alas. A ruthless aggressiveness is needed in the Oppo-...
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A Saigon Diary
The SpectatorVIETNAM From MALCOLM RUTHERFORD SAIGON with the sound and quantity of the planes the newly arrived observer, the war begins and the variety of uniforms at Bangkok airport....
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The Change at the Grass Roots
The SpectatorTORIES IN TRANSITION — 1 By DAVID HOWELL, MP rr HE structure of the Conservative party is well I suited to government. Is it as well suited to opposition? Basically, the...
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Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorI WAS pleased to see that the Prime Minister, in his speech on the press on Tuesday, echoed my colleague Donald McLachlan's repeated chal- lenge to the newspaper proprietors to...
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Know Your Consultant
The SpectatorCONSUMER'S GUIDE TO THE PROFESSIONS — 3 By JOHN ROWAN WILSON TN ordinary circumstances a patient doesn't 'choose a consultant—his general practitioner chooses for him. If he...
Honour Among Journalists
The SpectatorTHE PRESS By DONALD McLACHLAN N EWSPAPERMEN, especially those concerned with editing, commenting and reporting on public affairs, should not accept honours from governments....
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E be %pectator
The SpectatorJanuary 5, 1867 The north transept of the Crystal Palace has been burnt down. The fire broke out about two o'clock on Sunday, apparently from an explosion of gas, there was no...
The Yorkshire Stakes
The SpectatorTELEVISION By STUART HOOD P runners are already beginning to line up for the Yorkshire Television Stakes—prize money, £8 million gross advertising revenue. The trouble about...
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SIR,—Evelyn Waugh once told me that the presence of his
The Spectatorchildren, when they were young, was not one of his main delights. They were allowed to come to table when they were ten—an age, he explained, when they could wrap parcels and...
SIR,—In Mr Auberon Waugh's admirable 'Christ- mas Sermon' (December 23)
The Spectatorthe following passage occurs: 'Either the objections are valid, or they are not. If Catholics, in the dialogue with Pro- testants, • decide their objections are valid, they...
A Christmas Sermon
The SpectatorL - 7 Usg 1111 Enaan From: The Bishop of Blackburn, Rev Alan F. Mills, Hugh Heckstall-Smith, Hugh Burnett, Bishop F. A. Cockin, Dianne Farris, Cecil F. Baker, Edmund Crispin,...
SIR,—It is not hard to see, after reading Mr Auberon
The SpectatorWaugh's 'Christmas Sermon,' what it was Fr Charles Davis found so unbearable about the Church of Rome in this country. Mr Waugh may be a good deal more literate and literary...
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Three Cheers for Auntie
The SpectatorSIR,—Stuart Hood (December 30) says that the ob- jectors to Miller's Alice are 'aghast at the idea of artistic intelligence being allowed to examine afresh a cult object.' He's...
SIR,—Writing of Alice, Stuart Hood complains of 'a monstrous display
The Spectatorof prejudice ... by persons who had not seen the programme.' I was one of those persons. But why was it monstrous? We were told that a children's book had been turned into a...
Sm.—Because it has been a painful experience for me as
The Spectatora Catholic that Charles Davis should leave the Church, and because salt has been rubbed into the wound by the publicity and terrible thorough- ness ,with which he has done this,...
Home Thoughts from Abroad
The SpectatorStn,—On the whole I enjoy the contributions of Randolph Churchill; he is readable and provocative. It is a pity, however, that he shows such pettiness to Lord Butler whenever...
The Path from Rome
The SpectatorSIR,—What a relief to read 'The Path from Rome' (December 30) as an antidote to the adolescent petulance of Mr Auberon Waugh_ It would be an impertinence for anyone not...
Fleet Street Under Pressure
The SpectatorSIR,—As a newspaper worker, I have been most in- terested to read the recent articles on the press by Donald McLachlan, especially as he writes with a long experience in...
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Which Doctor?
The SpectatorSIR,—In your issue for December 23, John Rowan Wilson, in his article on general practitioners, warns against 'the so-called "clever" doctor,' who, according to Mr Wilson, 'is...
Portrait of the Week SIR,—Your 'Portrait of the Wcek' (December
The Spectator23) states that Christopher Britton, who won his appeaT on December 19, is 'the first person sentenced under the 1965 Race Relations Act.' He is not. He was convicted on October...
A Question of Gender
The SpectatorSIR, —Why 'women priests'? ('A Spectator's Note- book,' December 23.) What is the matter with 'priestess'? Kyoto, Japan li P. MARTIN I
SIR,—The services of a family doctor tend to be more
The Spectatorintimate, important and long-lasting than those of any other professional man, yet how hard it is to choose personally and well. Dr Rowan Wilson (December 23) listed the quali-...
SIR,—Lord Egremont's article (December 23) on the adventures of his
The Spectatorancestor so intrigued me that I hied to the Clergy List for 1856 (in my possession) and found that Master Thomas Sockett (two t's) had indeed done pretty well for himself (or...
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Resolution
The SpectatorBALLET more adventurous policy than other companies. In sum, ballet spent most of last year looking back over its shoulder: and it is surely not neces- sary to remind the...
The Tiny World of John Osborne
The SpectatorDRAMA By HENRY TUBE L max wonder that John Osborne lost his temper with the critics last summer; he was, as it were, only honouring his bond to play the role of Devil's...
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And Independence
The SpectatorOPERA N old dream is on its legs again: a shiny new opera house in the heart of Man- chester, with the latest in the way of knobs, dials, stage lifts, bridges, turntables and...
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Art's Best Friends
The SpectatorART W ins the next couple of weeks bringing us nothing but Millais and Gillray to leaven our aesthetic lot and breathing a quiet, inward moan that none of the stupendous shows...
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Kipling and the Kuch-nays
The SpectatorMOM By ANTHONY BURGESS I N Singapore, a few years ago, there was a slogan competition, run by the 'Tiger' beer company. One of the winning entries was : If all Malaya's rivers...
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The Great Survivor
The SpectatorTHIS is the sixth instalment of Ilya Ehrenburg's monumental autobiography, the whole series being longer than War and Peace and contain- ing rather more characters. Looking...
Gombrich's Therapy
The Spectator'IT is a frightening thought, yet I believe true,' writes Professor Gombrich, 'that anything we say or write about a painting may change it in some subtle way. It reorganises...
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The McMahon Line: A Study in the Relations Alastair Lamb.
The SpectatorTwo volumes. (Routledge Along the Imperial Frontiers Tun main range of the Himalayas, which divides the Indian subcontinent from the Central Asian plateau, forms one of the...
Reflections at the Forge
The SpectatorThe blacksmith gruffed at me To look at his hammer-haft. When I took Its rise and hollow, shapely as a limb, Burnished down to the grain, a worked wood Married to the horny...
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Master Plan
The SpectatorHe bought stones first in the corners of fields And thorn bushes for birds He bought time like a lotion To smear over the island in an amber light He bought a master plan for...
Town Hall Routine
The SpectatorDoobie-Doo. By Ivan C. Karp. (Heinemann, 21s.) Hannah and the Peacocks. By Edward Coddrik. (Secker and Warburg, 30s.) The Succubus. By Matthew Finch. (Dobson, 18s.) IN...
Open Spaces
The SpectatorTHE fervour with which the public took the Rev Keble Martin's British Flora to its heart is a token of how we are beginning to feel as the concrete spreads more widely and the...
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Stormy New Year in America
The SpectatorVHE BDDHOH a nil 0071" By NICHOLAS DAVENPORT I T is always useful for businessmen—not to mention journalists—to have an economic blueprint for the year issued in January by...
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Cash Registered
The SpectatorCONSUMING INTEREST By LESLIE ADRIAN Now, while the sales are supposed to drain away our remaining liquid re- sources, we shall be called to account for Christmas. The big...
Market Notes
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS MBE markets opened the New Year a little I more cheerfully, especially as various scribes have been producing their tips for the new year's winners. The easiest...
Future Indefinite
The SpectatorBy JOHN BULL H OLDING shares in 1967 is unlikely to be such Elan exasperating experience as it was last year. That is not to say that the market will move decisively upwards,...
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Birthday Honours
The SpectatorBy STRIX IRsEN: Charles II: William Penn : the Duke of Nor- folk : and Strix. Which is the odd man out? To say that I was gratified when my attention was drawn to the entry...
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CHESS by Philidor
The SpectatorNo. 316. M. HAVEL (1st Prize, Natal Mercury, 1911) wHrrE to play and mate in two moves; solution next week. Solution to No. 315 (Hannelius): Kt- - Q 6!, threat B . . R x B P;...
CROSSWORD No. 1255
The SpectatorACROSS x. Outline an unwelcome state of affairs for Cleopatra returning home? (4, 3) 5. Rummy hiding-place ! (7) 9. It's an exact copy to a T of an old-fashioned jacket (7)...