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President Nixon has become unfit to remain in offix.A '
The Spectatornot because of any part he may t( pi rr%rita 4 in the original Watergate offence, t( pi rr%rita 4 in the original Watergate offence, and It is ho really because of his...
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Whose hand at the helm?
The Spectator"THIS YEAR has been called the Year of Europe," Dr Kissinger declared in April, adding " but not because Europe was less important in 1972 or in 1969." The reasons for the...
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Another Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorDavid Windlesham's elevation to the leadership of the House of Lords, while not entirely unexpected, still seemed unlikely. I thought he was the ideal man, but I have never been...
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Political Commentary
The Spectatorquch ado about everything Eatrick Cosgrave if one simple question is simply answered we earl learn a great deal about the apparent tra v ail in the Labour Party which...
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President on trial (1)
The SpectatorWhere the 'Times' is wrong Louis Claiborne It is said increasingly — most recently on this side of the ocean in the Times leader of June 5 — that the President of the United...
President on trial (2)
The SpectatorFor the defence Al Capp Watergate may not keep its glorious prornil It promised to demolish the President newly-respectable American conservati 9 " , There are disturbing...
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Recruitment
The SpectatorSomething about a soldier Richard Brett-Smith The difficulties of recruiting for the army in peacetime are many. Other countries may be at war, and there is therefore a need...
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Richard Luckett on
The Spectatora 'writer of English prose' To make one's debut on the stage of the World to the plaudits of a claque is not necess arily to be placed at an advantage. For an artist such...
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Go, dear lady, please go
The SpectatorTony Palmer I want to Go to Moscow Maureen . Duffy (Hodder and Stoughton £2.40) Holding On Mervyn Jones (Quartet £2.95) Shovelling Trouble Mordechai Richler (Quartet £2.50)...
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Cromwell-still elusive
The SpectatorG.R. Elton Cromwell, Our Chief of Men Antonia Fraser ( Weiderifeld and Nicolson.£4.95) S. R. Gardiner called Cromwell the greatest of e..nglishmen, but when he came to write...
Theologian and historian
The SpectatorEdward Norman The Acts of the Apostles edited by William Neil (Oliphants 0.50) It might be natural to suppose that those whose lives are given to the scholarly study of the...
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Leaving the field
The SpectatorRoy Hattersley When the Cheering Stopped Tommy Lawton (Golden Eagle E1.90) Fighting General Tom Pocock (Collins 0.00) I saw neither Tommy Lawton nor Walter Walker until each...
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He who blasts last
The SpectatorPeter Ackroyd Wyndham Lewis: Fictions and Satires R. T. Chapman (Vision 62.80) Unlucky For Pringle Wyndham Lewis (Vision 63.40) Wyndham Lewis is as they say, an enigma. He has...
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Bookend
The SpectatorBookbuyer Phase one of the literary prize season is upon us again, and with a proper sense of priority It comes to children's books first. Bookbuyer is not agin the idea of...
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Kenneth Hurren on the musical memoirs of 'Gypsy'
The SpectatorIt is a long time since I enjoyed myself at a musical comedy quite as much as I did at the show called Gypsy, which arrived in London last week at the Piccadilly. Its...
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Cinema
The Spectator• Web without the spider Christopher Hudson Plot ('A ' Curzon) is a relentlessly gripping and exciting political thriller, the best of its kind since Z, or possibly The...
Will Waspe
The SpectatorPleasing though it is to learn that Christopher Hampton's play,Savages, is to come into the West End after all, it is sad that that civilised and gentle entertainment, Dear...
Opera
The SpectatorMutual, I'm sure Rodney Milnes "We don't really seriously do it for the audience, we do it for ourselves." Thus spoke the general administrator of Glyndebourne on Radio 3 last...
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Television
The SpectatorCommunicators and mice Clive Gammon "Are Maggie and Tony using each other as a means of Communication with Dr Leafer? Or are they using Dr Leafer as a means of communicating...
To read or not to read
The SpectatorBenny Green The other day somebody very kindly offered me a free copy of the new Penguin edition of Dos Passos's trilogy, USA. I accepted it eagerly and with much gratitude,...
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Adult education
The SpectatorAcademic and therapeutic Oliver Emerson There is probably no country in the world where education attracts more adult students than in this country. As a tutor, a lecturer, a...
Science
The SpectatorForgotten but not gone Bernard Dixon There's no more depressing spectacle than the compulsory retirement of someone who has retained to the full both professional skills and a...
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Country Life
The SpectatorThe writing lark Peter Quince There are gains as well as losses in the fluctuations of the wild-life Population. Not so many years ago, the yellow-hammer was one of the...
Gardening
The SpectatorFlowerdeluce Denis Wood In June, when the days are still lengthening, before the summer settles itself into its longuers of roses, phlox and delphiniums, the most beautiful...
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The Good Life
The SpectatorHave stomach, will travel Pamela Vandyke Price Those who, like the ungastronomic Napoleon's armies, march on their stomachs, are flexing their digestions preparatory to the...
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Doubting Thomases
The SpectatorNicholas Davenport Up goes the price of British bread but travelling abroad makes you realise that the inflationary rise in food costs is a universal, not just a British...
Account gamble'
The SpectatorBritish Oxygen John Bull The practice in North America is for companies to produce quarterly figures but in this country, apart from the oil majors, few others report more...
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Skinflint's City Diary
The SpectatorAmerican recession The South African revaluation of the rand this week poses more problems for the unhappy dollar, and the even more unhappy President Nixon. The dollar has...
Nephew Wilde's Portfolio
The SpectatorEastern promise Mr Wotherspool We tend to forget when looking at the British involvement in India the prime object was one of profit. Of course, later profit motive and that...
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Rowse on Shakespeare
The SpectatorSir: While Dr Rowse engages in his spirited bouts with all corners, one can quietly follow up trails as he suggest. And all the evidence about his Emilia Lanier so far...
Sir: Considering that I was sent, no proof of my
The Spectatorarticle (June 2) your reproduction of it was a miracle of exactitude. But there were two mistakes: Gabriel Towne should of course be Thomas Towne. And my harmless little joke...
Homosexuals
The Spectator'Sir: I apologise for intruding on your columns two weeks running. But Mr D. Watkins rightly challenges my statement that" nowadays a politician would not, be forced out of...
Palmer under fire
The SpectatorSir: In what passes as a review but which is in fact a peevish " hatchet job," Tony Palmer takes more than a column to attack the author of Death Cap, June Thomson, for writing...
Sir: I was appalled by the mindless and impertinent nastiness
The Spectatorthat Tony Palmer had the effrontery to offer as a ' book-review ' of Angus Wilson's As If by Magic; and by the strange editorial indulgence which had seen fit to waste a...
Juliette's weekly frolic
The SpectatorIn the old days, when it was run on a Friday, the Epsom Oaks had a neat habit of coinciding with halfterm holiday and was naturally a firm favourite with this hardened gambler....
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Constitutional issue
The SpectatorSir: In the May 26 issue of your journal Louis Claiborne comments that Louis Heren would have been wiser to have left "interpretation of the American Constitution to...
Pornography
The SpectatorSir: Apropos the reference to the murals at Longleat carried out by the son of the house, when may we expect to see advertising commence for "The Loins of Longleat "? Ralph...
Sir: I was amused to see that despite all David Holbrook's oft stated opinions his address is Yonder, Lustleigh!
The SpectatorElisabeth Taylor 25 Spring Close, Histon, Cambridge
For and against
The SpectatorSir: Kenneth Hurren is the only critic who makes me laugh out loud, even when cruelly wrong_ — as he surely is about the National Theatre's Cherry Orchard (June 2). I don't...
Sir: It is much regretted that in his thrust against
The Spectator"a dying audience" that he camouflages as a review of No, No Nanette (May 26), Mr Kenneth Hurren, who seems to think his generation is immortal, should have passed some...
Spectator June 9,1973 Topsy lamb
The SpectatorSir: When I was a child in London, it was sometimes said pityingly that poor Londoners never saw a blade of grass growing. This made my patriotic Mum very angry, but now, I...