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SPRING IN PARIS
The SpectatorT HE. apparent thaw in the relations between France on the one hand and Great Britain and the United States on the other may be merely a tactical move designed to restore at...
— Portrait of the Week —
The SpectatorIN THE POST-BUDGET PHASE, home political life became interesting once more. The threat of a three-day rail strike abated till after Easter, when a joint meeting of union...
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Rumblings from Russia
The SpectatorR UMOURS of a great political battle in the Kremlin are this time reinforced (though not by any means confirmed) by hints in the official Italian Communist press, which...
Press Counsellorship
The SpectatorAI a time when the British press is as ..unpopular with the general public as it has ever been and may soon find itself threatened with restrictive legislation, it might be...
Laos and SEATO
The SpectatorT HE first meeting of the eight-nation SEATO council to be held in Europe may be proving useful as a meeting-ground for Western Foreign Ministers, but it is doubtful whether the...
A Change for the Better
The SpectatorC ANADA'S electors have almost made up their minds this time. It is a pity they did riot do so completely and give Mr. Lester Pearson the extra six or seven seats his Liberal...
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KINDLING INTEREST
The SpectatorI N a nation which is by common consent post- Christian, it is .a matter of some surprise to those on the fringe of the Church that it still 'commands enough public interest to...
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Tangled Lines
The SpectatorBy JOHN COLE I TT has all the shape of an inevitable tragedy, perhaps one should have known that a strike over the Beeching Plan would follow cer- tainly from the strike over...
Dead Ends
The SpectatorFrom SARAH GAINHAM BONN B ora the events of the week in Bonn—neither of which occurred in Bonn itself—were non- events which appeared to solve problems of weight but which in...
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Teaching: Profession or Trade
The SpectatorBy JOHN VAIZEY 'THE dominant fact about education since the war has been its rapid expansion. Expen- diture on education is something like nine times What it was in 1938 and the...
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Letter to an Emigrant
The SpectatorBy KENNETH MACKENZIE D EAR S1R,—You, and the surprising thousands of others who have decided to go to South Africa, have, of course, been told all about the sunshine, the...
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But neither this. nor the German initiative at Brussels earlier
The Spectatorin the week, nor the first hints of a thaw in Paris, did anything to lessen the con- fusion which characterised the talks at Koenigs- winter. The British guests were given more...
It seems to me perfectly clear that if President Kennedy's
The Spectator'true course of history' is indeed to be realised, the US Administration will have to take its courage into both hands and offer to put some genuine political content into the...
The most positive of all performances on the British side
The Spectatorwas, naturally, Mr. Richard Cross- man's. Having confessed that, because he had at last backed a winner, he found an ox sitting on his tongue, he thereupon summoned up all his...
Spectator's Notebook
The Spectatorr"1" HE annual Anglo-German Conference at Koenigswinter, started in 1950 by Frau Lilo Milchsack and sustained in its independence by her formidable combination of energy, grace,...
The mild boo to de Gaulle has at long last
The Spectatorbeen made, of course. I heard Mr. Adlai Stevenson in Bonn make the same sort of state- ment as he had made in London a few days be- fore about multilateralism, and indicate...
So much for the light relief. But for all the
The Spectatoruncertainty, confusion, depression and indeed dread in which the talking came to a stop, some- thing emerged. Speaker after speaker had talked of Atlanticisation and the like....
I spent a couple of days reconnoitring in Bonn before
The Spectatorthe conference began. Certainly the pros- perity of Western Germany is great and is still growing,. if rather more slowly because of the acute shortage of manpower. But the...
'Yet my feelings were mixed when I set out last
The Spectatorweek. It was nine years since I had last been to Koenigswinter, and things were simpler then. The menace from the East was simple and our protection against it was simple; and...
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The Story of C.N.D.
The SpectatorTREMBLE, DAMMIT! By HERB GREER J UST over twenty years ago, on December 2, 1942, Enrico Fermi and his research team In Chicago raised paper cups of Chianti wine in a toast:...
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MIDDLE EASTERN POLITICS
The SpectatorSIR,—Your leader on Arab-Israeli politics (Spectator. March 29) discounts the possibility of Egypt having missiles as a Levantine rumour from the bazaars of Beirut; clears Bonn...
St R ,— Bertrand Russell is the Savonarola of our day. Hell-fire has
The Spectatorbeen replaced with fission. The i mminence is even greater than the magnitude of the disaster. What could be more distasteful than to see Lord Russell on the plinth at...
, 8111,--1 suggested that the Royal Academy could Pegin to recover
The Spectatorits proper authority by confining as members' exhibitions to the ample Diploma Gallery, and letting its main galleries—where its 1 ,.inage is created—to instructive causes and...
Suit, — Mr, Leo Kersley gives fewer reasons for his 'insulting pronunciamentos
The Spectatorde haut en bas' about Mr. Clive Barnes than Mr. Barnes did for his about Mr. Robert Helpmann. He simply repeats the dreary old insinuation that a mere ballet critic's views are...
SIR, —Mr. Kersley's attempted rehabilitation of Helpmann's Elektra really will not
The Spectatordo. Even if your critic had not already given argument enough in support of his condemnation of the ballet, Mr. Kersley's dismissal of any 'outraged moral reaction' would be...
Defeat of Intellect Henry Adler, William Hardie Royal Academy Dilemma
The SpectatorNevile Wallis Middle Eastern Polities Conrad Jameson 'Flektra' John Percival, Oleg Kerensky ChaWove Airfield Lady Rothen stein ` Oh What a Lovely War' A. Comerford Good Food...
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SHIRT-WASTERS
The SpectatorSIR, —Can nothing be done to dissuade shirt manu - facturers from the exasperation they cause to the public or from the waste of materials, time an d money in which they...
C7rIALGROVE AIRFIELD SIR,—A fortnight ago you published a letter in
The Spectatorwhich I gave a very condensed account of the present state of the Chalgrove question. The present situation is, of course, only the latest chapter of a history that was at its...
'OH WHAT A LOVELY WAR' SIR, —When, as he promises, Mr.
The SpectatorBamber Gascoigne writes fully about Joan Littlewood's new musical on its West End transfer I trust that he will pay some attention to a feature of this brilliant produc- tion...
SIR,-1 am perturbed at what seems to be a private
The Spectatorwar conducted against my Guide to Eating Places by Leslie Adrian for the second year running. What else can the reason be for stating that 'it is taken to be a one-man book,...
SiR,—In thanking you and Mr. Leslie Adrian for your notice
The Spectatorof the Good Food Guide, 1963-64, may I make a correction of fact? Mr. Adrian says that Mr. Postgate and his volun - tary 'inspectors' (why the quotation marks? TheY do inspect,...
voting at all. m vote Liberal at the next election, or
The Spectatorrefrain fro Poor,' who overwhelmingly voted Tory? And they mg most, especially those who have retired and ar, e living on small pensions or fixed incomes, and fi ing it more and...
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Art
The SpectatorTwo Visionaries By NEVILE WALLIS BEAUTIFULLY assembled by the Waddington Galleries, the re- trospective exhibition of Jack Butler Yeats, the poet's brother, may well be a...
Theatre
The SpectatorAncient and Modern By BAMBER GASCOIGNE The Tempest. (Stratford-upon- Avon.)—Measure for Mea- sure. (Old Vic.)—Naked. (Royal Court.) ACADEMIC critics of every hue have always...
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Architecture
The SpectatorVernacular By TERENCE BENDIXSON ACROSS the street from Bur- lington House a crisp new French Railways House is neither brilliant nor sensational, but it is interesting for...
Cinema
The SpectatorTwo's Company By ISABEL QUIGLY Two for the Seesaw (director: Robert Wise) is almost a duo- logue, with two big parts and no one else around for more than a minute or two. And...
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Television
The SpectatorInflation By CLIFFORD HANLEY Leaving Miss Keeler aside (no great effort is required for this), I was curiously fascinated by what the BBC did with Lunik IV, in a special,...
The Russian Chequer-Board
The SpectatorBy ANTHONY GLYN T HREE. afternoons a week the crowd gathers at the Estrada Variety Theatre, a grim grey building overlooking the frozen Moscow River. They come to watch the...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorBagehot Revised B Y ANGUS M AUDE T HERE is much talk at present of constitutional reform, and in particular of making the House of Commons more powerful and efficient. Not for...
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From Hour to Hour We Rot and Rot
The SpectatorSixty Days that Shook the World. By J. Benoist- Mechin. Edited with a preface by Cyril Falls. Translated by Peter Wiles. (Cape, 45s.) To read this book will mean for some...
Desirable Woman
The SpectatorI'm already forgetting the social details of Her- mosa, the African State which is the setting of Unity's Children, but I'll remember Unity for some time. On a remarkable page 1...
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The Strength of Indian Democracy
The SpectatorC. H. Philips. (Allen and Unwin, 25s.) Politics and Society in India. Edited by THE persistence of parliamentary democracy in India, when in so many of the new States of Asia...
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Pride and No Prejudice
The SpectatorThe Novels of Jane Austen. By Robert Liddell. (Longmans, 25s.) MR. LIDDELL'S new study of Jane Austen ' s novels is one for the initiate rather than for the novice; but his...
The Anchorites
The SpectatorMonks and Monasteries of the Near East. By Jules Leroy. Translated by Peter Collin. (Harrap, 25s.) IT is a paradox that some of the greatest re- ligious art has been produced...
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New Wave
The SpectatorExperimental Drama. Edited by William A. Armstrong. (Bell, 16s.) J. C. TREWIN, in his contribution to this collec- tion of lectures in book form, is concerned to point out the...
The Insulators
The SpectatorI've gathered nine cats about me Instead of one life. I can face Eighteen eyes without suspicion— Lie safe on these vitreous humours. Smooth talk is a foreign body visitors...
A Monster Metaphor
The SpectatorThe Strange Story of the Great Whale, Also Known as Big Mae. By Erib Kos. Trans- lated by Lovett F. Edwards. (Methuen, 15s.) IN February of 1953 the Belgrade newspaper Politika...
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Investment Notes
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS S Emma thoughts in Throgmorton Street brought buyers into both the gilt-edged and the equity markets. The gilt-edged market had every reason to be more confident, for...
Second Thoughts on the Budget
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT IF my second thoughts on-the Budget are slightly more critical, it is not because 1 have shifted one inch in my t..-J opinion of Mr. Maudling. As compared...
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Consuming Interest
The SpectatorA Smell of Fresh Lemon By ELIZABETH DAVID find I can even believe in eating again so long as I avoid thinking of things like oxtail and sausages and sauerkraut-ouch--and dwell...
Company Notes
The SpectatorBy LoTIIBURY T HE setback in profits from the Ross Group for the year to September 30, 1962, was ex- Pected. Pre-tax profits dropped from £1.66 Mahon to £679,000, but the...
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The Hard Sell
The SpectatorBy LESLIE ADRIAN SALESMEN and advertising ex- ecutives are proud of the kind of nagging approach to selling that they call the 'hard sell.' Sales resistance is there to be...