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BOYCOTT?
The SpectatorT HE Spectator this week includes three appeals from Africa—from our correspondents in South Africa and in Northern Rhodesia and from Chief Luthuli in exile—for British support...
— Portrait of the Week— ME BOGEY-MAN of the week was
The Spectatornot the Russian with a rocket in his pocket, or the American with a dollar sign on his top hat, or even the French- Sitting astraddle the barricades, but the e, ntline driver...
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Country Club
The SpectatorTT may sound inconsequential, but one of the 'main reasons for the breakdown of the Cyprus talks is to be looked for a few hundred miles to the West, in Malta. The dispute is...
Contempt
The SpectatorA s we have been agitating for years past for a 11, reform of the law relating to contempt of court, it would be ungracious to criticise the Bill Lord Shawcross has laid before...
African Tour
The SpectatorN balance the Prime Minister can look back on his African tour with pardonable self- satisfaction. Certainly his speech to the South African Parliament compounded for the...
Electrical T.U.
The SpectatorI TN-Communist countries an election is a cool' paratively simple matter. There is only 011 candidate, and the voter either votes for hun not at all. In democratic countries...
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The Missile Gap
The SpectatorFrom RICHARD H. ROVERE NEW YORK m HE debate over missile production, American I and Russian, goes on and on and on, and the truth, if there is , any truth, seems increasingly...
STRIKE ACTION
The SpectatorThe distribution of the Specialor will be affected if there is a railway strike; readers who cannot obtain their copies through the ordinary channels should write, enclosing...
Tac tical Weapons HAT,' Sir John Slessor asked in his broad-
The Spectatorat e • Cast A new decade for defence, 'is a tactical flue weapon? Is a missile with a range of 200 , r " 60 0 miles a tactical weapon?' This, surely, is 1 question that ought to...
Rail Dispute
The Spectatorwo things have become clear about the nature of the. railway dispute during the past few d aYS. The first is that, as Nicholas Davenport wr ites this week, the railwaymen seem...
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Westminster Commentary
The SpectatorBy ROY JENKINS, MP A FORTNIGHT ago, at the end of the long Christmas recess, Parliament slipped unobtru- sively back to work. The dominant atmosphere in the House after, as...
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The Thrill i ng Cities; 32 ) 781
The SpectatorQueen of the North -West By I-N FL-M--G (creator of J---s B--d) 'W E want Bond, we want Bond,' chanted the local piccaninnies crowding round Black- Pool Station when 1 arrived...
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Boycott
The SpectatorWords and Deeds From KENNETH MACKENZIE CAPE TOWN T HE day before Mr. Macmillan made his sur- prising and stirring speech—those words 'individual merit, and individual merit...
Boycott Us
The SpectatorBy CHIEF LUTHULI Chief La:hull is President of the African National Congress. He is at present banished by the South African Government to Groutville, a remote part of Natal,...
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2 - Beer and Scuffles From GRACE SCOTT A TIME-HONOURED South African
The Spectatorcustom, which has spread to the Rhodesias, is for town councils and management boards with large African populations in their responsibility to sell beer to them and to use the...
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Come Here Till I Tell You
The SpectatorRaving Reporter By PATRICK CAMPBELL M ISS GLORIA NORD, tiny jewel of the roller- skating rink, suspended rumination on her chewing-gum when she saw the prospect ahead. 'Well,...
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Letter of the Law
The SpectatorWilder Shores By R. A. CLINE T HOSE wreaked on the wilder shores of divorce law will find themselves in familiar country when comparing two recent decisions. As is well known,...
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Fair Continent He Gaulle Critical Quarterly What Khrushchev Said Advanced
The SpectatorMotoring Devil's Work The Lily White Boys On the Beat Mr. Dooley Mahatma Gandhi Congested Magistrate? Courts Dissent Derek Hoddinott Kenneth MacGo wan Andor Gomme John Long...
DE GAULLE SIR,—I am amazed at your editorial comments on
The Spectatorrecent events in France and Algiers. Is it true that these events have been 'set off' by de Gaulle's own policies? Surely the shadow of pos- sible rebellion has been dark in...
CRITICAL QUARTERLY
The SpectatorSIR,—I suppose we shall go on getting letters from Mr. Dyson as long as anyone finds the Critical Quar- terly worth commenting on. I too was sharply re- buked (by Mr. Dyson's...
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SIR.—Reading Alan Brien's remarks on The Lily White Boys in
The Spectatorthe current number of the Spectator, some of your older readers must have been reminded of their youth, perhaps with a sad shake of the head. As one of the few 'funny lines' in...
A DVANCED MOTORING SIR,-1 was delighted to see Gavin Lyall's attack
The Spectatoron t he insurance companies who refuse to grant per- centage reductions to members of the Institute of Advanced Motoring. I am both an undergraduate and a sports-car driver, and...
THE LILY WHITE BOYS
The SpectatorSIR.—In his review of The Lily White Boys Alan Brien only found one line worth quoting. Unfortu- nately this particular line is hardly part of 'the original dialogue of Harry...
CONGESTED MAGISTRATES' COURTS SIR,—In referring to the law's delays in
The SpectatorMetropolitan magistrates' courts, your contributor, Mr. R. A. Cline, points out that when traffic in divorces became similarly congested, commissioners were appointed to help...
ON THE BEAT
The SpectatorSIR,-1 can speak only for myself, but I have found my respect for and confidence in the police very much reduced by the knowledge that some of them, when in plain clothes, act...
DEVIL'S WORK SIR.—Diabolus typographicus has been at work in the
The Spectatorvery kind, indeed flattering, review of the third volume of Science and Civilisation in China in your issue for January 22. Though loth to disappoint the more mystical of your...
DISSENT
The SpectatorSIR,—A word to your television critic: it wasn't C. Day Mills who appeared in We Dissent. In fact, it wasn't C. Wright Lewis either.—Yours faithfully, [The name of the...
MR. DOOLEY SIR,—May I tell you with ,what delight I
The Spectatorbecame aware of the resurrection of Mr. Dooley in your issue of January 15; he spoke with the authentic voice which I recollect in the early years of the present century. I...
is a pity that Mr. Hollis in his admirable article,
The Spectator'Some Disarmament is Strength,' has to quote the nuclear scientist Dr. Lapp in support of one of his arguments. Unfortunately Dr. Lapp, by accepting at its face value an...
MAHATMA GANDHI SIR.—A committee has been formed in London, under
The Spectatorthe chairmanship of Mrs. Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, in order to help in the collection of Mahatma Gandhi's letters. speeches and writings, the publication of which is at present...
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Theatre
The SpectatorGhost-art By ALAN BRIEN The Wrong Side 'of the Park. (Cambridge.) THERE are some tours de force which can only be described as manifestations of ghost-art. I mean those...
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Blague?
The SpectatorCAIRNS By DAVID A NEW wind is blowing through our concert halls. We may not like what it is bringing with it, may wish ourselves for- ever snug in the old, safe world of the...
Ballet
The SpectatorOle Smoke By CLIVE BARNES Naturally I have picked up a good deal of the jargon. I can talk about son and duende, palmas and pitos until the bulls come home, and I have seen...
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Cinema
The SpectatorLove and Corpses By ISABEL QUIGLY don Pavilion.) — Bed of Arch.)—The Burmese Harp. (Everyman, Hampstead.) — Night and Fog. (Berkeley.) FOR days, if you remember, or it may...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorSmashing Things By ANTHONY CROSLAND 114 _ R. POTIER is a twenty-three-year-old ex- chairman of the Oxford University Labour C lub, who was also a prominent figure in the old U...
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Mr. Lehmann's War
The SpectatorI Am My Orother. By John Lehmann. (Longmans, 25s.) THE second volume of John Lehmann's auto- biography is about his war. He has published a great quantity of writing about other...
A New Thucydides
The SpectatorThe Greek Historians. Selected and Edited by M. I. Finley. (Chatto, 30s.) MOST people probably still leave school with the notion that Herodotus was an amusing but frivolous...
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Operation Bonaparte
The SpectatorN apoleon Immortal. By James Kemble. (Murray, 28s.) GotA tiE once said that he found the experience clf thinking about Napoleon's career similar to t hat of reading the...
Being Simple
The SpectatorPoetry of This Age: 1908 to 1958. By J. M. Cohen. (Hutchinson, 25s.; Grey Arrow Books, 5s.) WE already owe a debt to Mr. Cohen for, among other translations, his Penguin...
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Freud as Pessimist
The SpectatorFreud: the Mind of the Moralist. By Philip Rieff. (Gollancz, 30s.) SUBTLE and closely reasoned, alive to spreading relevances while it focuses on particular points, this book...
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The Best of Good Manners
The SpectatorA Commodity of Dreams. By Howard Nemerov. (Seeker and Warburg, 16s.) An Aspidistra in Babylon. Four Novellas. By H. E. Bates. (Michael Joseph, 13s. 6d.) The Stuff of Youth, By...
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INVESTMENT NOTES
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS A STRIKE-BOUND market is the scene as I write here in the City. The gilt-edged market has, however, scored some advance, while equity shares have been losing ground...
MR. AMORY'S INFLATION WARNING
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT Mr. Amory's intention in rais- ing Bank rate to 5 per cent. was to repeat Mr. Thorneycroft's tac- tics and try to frighten the trade unions into a...
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COMPANY NOTES
The SpectatorN ORTHERN DAIRIES continue_ to increase their milk business in Yorkshire, where they L many depots for dairy produce, ice cream. and frozen foods. Recent acquisition of Ivanhoe...
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Roundabout
The SpectatorLetting My Hair Down By KATHARINE WHITEHORN HAIRDRESSERS are of two kinds: those who won't do what you ask them, and those who can't. On the whole I prefer the first, since...
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1076
The SpectatorACROSS 1 Not, however, the book-worm. (4-6) 6 Rush around about nothing (4) 10 Just the region for the ascent, we hear (5) 11 A thousand and one in assemblies give battle (9) 12...
SOLUTION OF CROSSWORD 1074
The SpectatorACROSS.-1 Toucan. 4 Folded up. 9 Coburg. 10 Prestige. 12 Meetings. 13 Mantua. 15 Able. 16 Palindrome. 19 Masti- cates. 20 Odds. 23 Carib,. 25 Heat wave. 27 Autserges. 28 Critic....
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ThouOt for Food
The Spectator• • Nobly, Nobly, to the North-West. By RAYMOND POSTGATE First, then. on the way towards Oxford. I think there is little doubt you should stop at Milton C °mmon. which is on...
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Wine of the Week
The SpectatorTo check this recipe I consulted the sumptuous Old Vienna Cookbook, one of the American 'Gourmet' series, published here by Hamish Hamilton at 75s. There I also found one of the...
Consuming Interest
The SpectatorDelivering the Goods By LESLI E ADRIAN In the hope that it may give them some satis- faction, give a few manufacturers and stores a jolt and, possibly, do us all a bit of good,...