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COMPTON MACKENZIE
The SpectatorThe Scottish Conspiracy Trial SIR ROBERT WATSON-WATT : A Scientist's Choice M. H. MIDDLETON : Flemish Art D. W. BROGAN: The Splendid Century J. P. W. MALLALIEU: Varsity Rugger...
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The Scottish Conspiracy Trial
The SpectatorFrom time to time an incident occurs which suggests the extent to which England and Scotland are separate countries. The recent trial in Edinburgh, upon charges of conspiracy...
NO MIRACLE AT BERMUDA
The SpectatorN OBODY has claimed, or is likely to claim, that the Bermuda meeting of the three Western Powers was a roaring success. Its flat final communiqué could be taken to convey...
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Wake Up Australia
The SpectatorWhat has happened to that most marked of Australian characteristics, objection to arrogance in high places ? Stories of corruption in Australian politics are common, and in the...
Wage Demands
The SpectatorThe wage struggle sharpens. The disappointment of the railwaymen over the result of their 15 per cent. wage claim— the Railway Staff National Tribunal awarded them a 4s. per...
Ho Chi Minh Flies a Kite
The SpectatorIf Ho Chi Minh, the rebel commander in Indo-China, were to repeat the offer to make peace, which last week he dropped so casually to the correspondent of a Swedish paper, the...
Ben Gurion
The SpectatorIn 1797, George Washington retired to Mount Vernon, the first president of the United States. Until Mr. Ben Gurion resigned the prime, ministership of Israel last Sunday, George...
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AT WESTMINSTER
The Spectatorp ARLIAMENT has had a domestic week for once, and seems quite to have enjoyed a glance at home affairs. Colonial controversies have of course kept breaking in, and next week...
Striking Oil
The SpectatorAustralia, where an oil discovery has set off a gamblers' boom, is not a place where the geologists as a whole have ever expected to find really big oilfields. Petroleum is the...
The End of Scrutiny
The SpectatorThe, premature decease of the Cambridge. review, Scrutiny, removes the most candid friend and critic of English literature. Founded in 1932, Scrutiny has consistently maintained...
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BRITAIN'S COLONIAL POLICIES
The SpectatorD EPENDENCIES of Britain that were quiet a year or two ago are now loud with discontent. A con- stitution has been suspended; a native ruler has been exiled; a tribal society...
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Mauvais Quart d'Heure ?
The Spectator" Today it takes," the Dean of Worcester College had said in an unguarded moment, " three men to do what one man used to do-"; and he cited as an example of something beyond the...
For Verbiage-Fanciers
The Spectator" Say what you will," remarked the cynic, " against the Bermuda communique; but from the fact that the word inebranlable' occurs nowhere in the French version of it I deduce...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorI AM all for altruism, a virtue (or is it only a quality ?) of increasing rarity. But I cannot help wondering whether the members of the Everest Expedition are not being re-...
Incommunicado
The SpectatorThough it savours of ideological cant, the dignity of labour is something (unlike parity of esteem) in which I am prepared to believe. But it is a nebulous and delicately poised...
A Private Affair
The SpectatorMr. Pollen—unlike Henry Kingsley, who I rather think won the Diamond Sculls—is a dry-bob. He was allowed a racing start in his skiff; but, in addition to a strongish headwind,...
Striking Force
The SpectatorThe easiest way to increase the exceptional difficulties con-. fronting the Territorial Army during 1954—to some of which a sensible speech by its Director, Major-General...
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President of the French Republic
The SpectatorBy D. R. GILLIE Paris 0 N December 17th the members of both houses of the French parliament will, for the fourteenth time, gather at Versailles to elect a president of the...
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A Scientist's Choice
The Spectator- Y SIR ROBERT WATSON-WATT The Spectator has asked a number of scientists the question 4 you were beginning your career now what branch of science or field of research would you...
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Two Jewish Burial Grounds
The SpectatorBy JAMES POPE-HENNESSY . A LTHOUGH it is common knowledge that Stepney and Whitechapel are the chief Jewish centres in London, it is not perhaps always realised for just how...
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THEATRE
The Spectatorthe Boy Friend. By Sandy Wilson. (Embassy.)—No Sign of the Dove. By Peter Ustinov. (Savoy.) WHAT were the Twenties really like ? Were they as gay and cynical as all that ? Were...
CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorART Flemish Art. (Burlington House.) To start with, it is playing-card country. Then, as the figures take on more substance, the glimpses of daily life become more real as...
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'SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 200 Set by D. R. Peddy Competitors.
The Spectatorare asked to write a report on 1953 in the form and style of a company report for shareholders, a school report, the report of a Government Committee, a staff confidential...
CINEMA
The SpectatorThe Kidnappers. (Gaumont.)—The Golden Coach. (Cameo-Poly.) CHILDREN in films are either, it seems, perfectly wonderful or perfectly dreadful. There is no such thing as a...
Psychiatrists and Others
The SpectatorSPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 197 Report by Guy Kendall Competitors were asked to define (each in four lines of verse) any two of the following: a snob, a psychiatrist, a virtuoso,...
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.Centers to the Editor
The SpectatorTELEVISION BY SUBSCRIPTION SJR, —The House of Commons have still to debate the Government's proposals on tele- vision. Before they do so, it would be well for them to recognise...
THE BIG TRUTH SIR,—Your leading article in your issue of
The SpectatorNovember 27th is an admirable exposition of the need for a closer understanding between the people of our country and those of the USA, " The Big Truth still stands. The United...
BY WANDLE BANKS SIR, -- 1I was interesting to read John Pope-
The SpectatorHennessy's article on Wandsworth, one of the many former towns and villages Which have been swallowed by London but which still retain something of their own character and...
THE KENYA HOME GUARD
The SpectatorSta.—Without rancour I must comment briefly on the letter in the Christmas number of the Spectator (November 20th) entitled. "The Kenya Home Guard." I have been a member of this...
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THOSE CHOUGHS SIR,—Though I make no claim to be either
The Spectatora Shakespearian scholar or an ornithologist, may I suggest what seems to me to be a more convincing interpretation than that in Strix's delightful article ? Strix is " a...
PRIESTS, POLITICS, AND THE POPE SIR,-1 must thank Mr. Gedge
The Spectatorfor his explana- tion. " The Roman hierachy," he tells us, Means " the French Bishops." And he settles the black cap yet more firmly on his head as he sentences them for...
SIR, — M r . Gedge raises so many interesting points that one could
The Spectatornot answer them adequately without occupying more space than is available. If you could arrange for an article by some authority on the subject to be printed in the near future,...
Wintering Cattle
The SpectatorWinter puts a thicker coat on a horse, and any animals that stand out in the colder weather, such as the bullocks I looked at the other day, become as shaggy as buffaloes by the...
Rotting Apples Most people hasten to examine stored vegetables after
The Spectatora heavy frost. We have had no frost to speak of yet, but the mild, humid atmosphere has brought my thoughts to the stored apples more than Once and only just in time at that. It...
Country Life
The SpectatorANYONE who contemplates keeping chickens in our part of the world must take account of the fox, and ours is a hill fox, a creature that travels along ledges, runs under over-...
Field Glasses
The SpectatorTo watch birds or study wild life at all one needs a pair of good field-glasses. Mine are old and rather battged but they are good. They belonged to a sea captain who has gone...
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The SpectatorCompton Mackenzie Quern Jupiter vult perdere prius dementat. W HOM Jupiter wishes to destroy he first drives mad. That sombre apophthegm kept tolling in my mind throughout the...
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SPORTING ASPECTS
The SpectatorHard Play Hard Lines By J. P. W. MALLALIEU p ROBABLY the most remarkable opening to a big rugger match was in the Twenties. As I remember it, H. L. Price kicked off for England...
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Tbe spectator, 1BecenV:er 10th , 1553 Six seamen of the Russian
The Spectatorfrigate Aurora, recently at Portsmouth, deserted. It is said they were seduced by Polish refugees, but there is no proof of anything of the kind. They had reached Guildford,...
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Five Types of Science Fiction
The SpectatorBy TOM PULVERTAFT This article arrived at the Spectator office accompanied by. the following letter: Dear Sir, —I enclose an article for consideration for the Spectator, also...
Spectator Competition for Schools
The SpectatorThe Spectator offers three prizes, each of books to the value of eight guineas, for articles to be written by boys and girls in schools In the United Kingdom. Entries should be...
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BOOKS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorLe Grand Siecle By D. W. BROGAN T HERE are national heroes who can and do appeal to nations other than their own. There are at least as many Napoleon fans in England today as...
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The Poetic Quarry
The SpectatorTo deal at all properly with either of these books would need an essay of Macaulayesque dimensions, and a year or so of cogitation. All that can be done here is to give some...
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Since Columbus
The SpectatorThe Bombard Story. By Alain Bombard. (Andre Deutsch. 12s. 6d.) A HISTORY of the twentieth century written two hundred years hence would seem a discouraging project. Already we...
Family Histories
The SpectatorThe Brudenells of Deene. By Joan Wake. (Cassell. 21s.) THE great country houses are suffering the fate which overtook the monasteries more than four centuries ago ; and their...
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Colonial Documents
The SpectatorBritish Colonial Developments, 1774-1834. By Vincent Harlow and Frederick Madden. (Oxford : Clarendon Press. 35s.) IT is now twenty-five years since the late Mr. K. N. Bell and...
My Mother's House
The SpectatorMy Mother's House and Sido. By Colette. Translated by Enid McLeod and Una Troubridge. (Seeker and Warburg. 12s. 6d.) IT must be highly satisfactory to a writer to be awarded a...
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New Novels
The SpectatorNOVELS are rarely works of art but that does not mean they cannot be enjoyed in a mild way; it is no use asking for Tolstoi every week. Which brings us to this week's novels....
Bitter and Earnest
The SpectatorPolitical Thought in England (Tyndale to Hooker). By Christopher Morris. (Oxford. 6s.) " Brrrsa and earnest writing," said Bacon, " must not hastily be condemned ; for men...
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Shorter Notices
The SpectatorThe Ancient Capital. A Historian in Search of Winchester. By Hugh Ross Williamson. (Muller. 15s:) " EMINENT alike as historian and dramatist, novelist and theologian," says the...
Merseyside—A Scientific Survey. Edited by Wilfred Smith, M.A., F. J.
The SpectatorMonkhouse, M.A. and H. R. Wilkinson, M.A. (Pub- lished for the British Association by the University Press of Liverpool. 21s.) THE most permanent memorial of a visit by the...
THERE is something at once immediate and elusive in our
The Spectatorpersonal reactions to music and .painting, which has little to do with formal aesthetic valuation, although that may be invoked later to justify our prejudices. Mr. Ehrenzweig...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT THE battle for the Savoy which began in the stock markets looks like ending in the Courts. To prevent Mr. Harold Samuel rebuilding the Berkeley Hotel as...
Company Notes
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS SELECTIVITY is now the keynote in the industrial share markets. Dark horses are slipping back in the market race and the well-known stayers are coming to the front....
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THE " SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. 760
The Spectator[A nook Token for one guinea will be awarded to the sender of the first correct solution opened alter noon on Tuesday week, December, 22nd, addressed Crossword, 99 Gower...
Solution to rossword No. 758
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