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Portrait of the Week
The SpectatorTHE FOREIGN SECRETARY announced that the Soviet Union had carried out two nuclear tests since the opening of the Geneva talks. He found this 'regrettable,' though Mr. Dulles...
HOW NOT TO DO IT
The SpectatorTNDUSTRY' in this country can be taken to be 'Conservative. A few industrialists like to call. themselves Socialists (presumably on the pattern of Mr. Brendan Behan's vision of...
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PRINCIPLES IN RETIREMENT
The SpectatorR. BOYD-CARPENTER cannot complain that the Opposition have attacked him for water- ing down their precious pensions proposals; when in Tuesday's debate he claimed the virtues of...
Mr. Khrushchev's Bluff
The SpectatorA UDIENCES at the Covent Garden production A of Boris Godunov have been reading, in their programme note on Act IV, Scene III, how `a mob of hungry peasants drags on...
NEXT WEEK
The SpectatorChristmas Number (Price Two Shillings) LORD ATTLEE John Bull's Schooldays HAROLD NICOLSON Marginal Comment PATRICK CAMPBELL The Gorgeous Indestructible Gael LESLIE ADRIAN...
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The Inevitable War
The SpectatorTHE decision to issue arms to British civilians in Cyprus can be justified as a necessary pre- caution, or condemned as window-dressing; but wise or foolish,, it signals the...
Small Beer in France
The SpectatorBy DARSIE GILLIE AN election coming at the end of such a year as France has ex- perienced might well promise much greater alarums and ex- cursions than this one so far does....
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A Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorWHAT TO Do v■i111 the leaders of the widen rclginie is always a nasty problem for revolu- even though one may sympathise with the difficul-. ties of General Kassim and his...
DR. VERWOERD - S remarks on the sort of majority that he
The Spectatorthinks would be needed to turn Soutb Africa into a republic made good reading. Accord - ing ing to The Times report, he has come to the cor elusion that the acceptable numerical...
I HAVE LONG SINCE ceased to be surprised who West
The SpectatorEnd producers turn a Shakespeare charac ter upside-down for their amusement (i11,tking serious part comic being the commonest trick) but I was surprised to find the same thing...
THINK . THAT its warmest admirers—and 1 am one of them—would
The Spectatoragree that the Board 01 Trade Journal is mostly dull.' Thus, Sir Frank Lee, the permanent head of the Department, in this year's Stamp Memorial Lecture. I do not see the...
THE COMMENTS Of the British press upon the visit of
The SpectatorPresident Neuss' have convinced the German press that there is an undercurrent of antagonism to Germany in this country. Now they have dis- covered further evidence in the...
THE ANNIVERSARY edition of the Christian Science Monitor is a
The Spectatorformidable one-hundred page affai r. Americans have become accustomed to such spreads, but 1 confess they still fill me with gloorn lightened this time by the friendly account...
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What's Left?
The SpectatorBy JO GRIMOND, MP T AM continually told that we must have a two- 'party system. I am not convinced—but at least two parties are better than one. And some- where in politics you...
'A VERY GOOD BOOK,' our reviewer commented last week on
The SpectatorBrendan Behan's Borstal Boy, 'in very good bad language.' 1 agree : but the nature of the bad language raises an interesting point. The Publishers have allowed Mr. Behan much...
R EMINISCING ABOUT the Strauss Privilege decision, Lord Attlee has some
The Spectatorsensible things to say about unnecessary intervention by MPs in matters which are not their concern. In the Fabian Journal for November he points out that the prac- tice of...
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Trick-Cyclists
The SpectatorBy BRIAN INGLIS T icv gave us pegs to fit into the appropriate- sized holes, words to be matched with synonyms or antonyms, and a code to unravel; and then they examined our...
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Kassim and Pan-Arabism
The SpectatorBy ROY JENKINS, MP ABDUL KARIM KASSIM is a wiry, intense soldier who looks as though he worked a little too hard for his health. When he emerged as Prime Minister of Iraq after...
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Monorails
The SpectatorBy REX MALIK T HE recent proposals for a monorail service between Victoria and London Airport are intended to provide a rapid and economic link which should be able to cope with...
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Roundabout
The SpectatorRoses IN THE ATV offices, high above Kings- I way, Miss Eartha Kitt scowled for the photographers and demanded tea. 'I am a very personal type of person,' she said, savouring...
Theatre
The SpectatorMummy Was A Vampire By ALAN BRIEN The Stepmother. (St. Martin's.) —No Concern of Mine. (Westminster.) THE time is 1947. The place Gunners—a typical old family residence in...
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Design
The SpectatorGuilt on the Gingerbread By KENNETH J. ROBINSON Nu r everyone can claim to have driven Frank Lloyd Wright through Shepherd's Bush. It happened a long time ago, but it is too...
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Music
The SpectatorKarajan the Conqueror By DAVID CAIRNS Through the tumult the heavy brass and per- cussion moved up and the conqueror, who smiled with his lips while his level gaze took us in...
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Cinema
The SpectatorNo Spurs in Bed By ISABEL QUIGLY The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw. (Carlton.) — What Lola Wants. (Warner.) — I Only Arsked. (Plaza.) EVERY . nation has its favourite national image...
Consuming Interest
The SpectatorTo the Hairdressers By LESLIE ADRIAN Now, a bad shampoo and set is merely time- wasting, annoying and expensive, and a bad cut will grow out in a week or two; but heat and...
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A Doctor's Journal
The SpectatorThe Drug Habit By MILES HOWARD The word 'addiction' usually calls to mind the victim of morphine or heroin, but there are other kinds of addiction, less dramatic but much more...
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Their Man in Habarovsk
The SpectatorCOMRADE COLONEL-GENERAL, Habarovsk. 3111158. As instructed by your MVD/ANGLIT/475/T of 1/10/58 I have carried out an analysis of the latest novel by the British writer G....
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Letters to the Editor
The SpectatorThe Wolfenden Debate A. E. Dyson, Peter Wildeblood Anger in a Small Town Robert Hodge, Ian Nairn The 'Daily Sketch' and the Anzio Crash 1. M. Hall Egg Basket W. S. Mitchell...
SIR,—May I try to enlighten Mr. Royston Pike? There are
The Spectatorthree available sets of statistics for the incidence of homosexuality. In America, according to Dr. Kinsey, 4 'per cent, of the adult male popu- lation are exclusively...
EGG BASKET
The SpectatorSIR,—In your issue of October 31 under this heading Y join the adverse criticism of the BEMB's 'l e tt offices. You add 'there can be no possible justifieol', ° 0 for this...
ANGER IN A SMALL TOWN
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. Wyndham Thomas's petulant exposition of the urban outlook on planning constitutes heckling rather than debate and could well be ignored but for the personal charges he...
THE 'DAILY SKETCH' AND THE ANZIO CRASH
The SpectatorSIR, —As a professional journalist working in Fle et Street, 1 would like to assure you that Pharos's eos sr , ment on the Daily Sketch editorial on the death 0 ` . its...
SIR,—If Mr. Hodge's telescope is the wrong way round, I
The Spectatorfeel Mr. Wyndham Thomas must have polarised glass in his, in the sense that he may be seeing the problem of overspill large (too large), but he is seeing nothing else. New and...
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CONSUMER REPORTS
The SpectatorSIR,—Leslie Adrian refers to an article of mint in The Manager as 'attacking the publishers of Which? and Shopper's Guide for the disservice done to manu- facturers" and...
THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND AND DIVORCE SIR,—Canon Dobson writes with
The Spectatorinsight and courage. What must worry us both in our common experience is the bias against conviction and sound learning in much of our Anglican leadership. We both know a...
CO RONATION CEREMONIAL
The SpectatorSio was interested to note Pharos's comments on the rather lackadaisical attitude to ceremonial seen at the Coronation of Pope John XXIII and the com- e,atison with the more...
LO RD KITCHENER SIR, — professor D. W. Brogan is usually so fair-
The SpectatorMinded in his writings on the United States and France that his review on the Life of Lord Kitchener must s urprise many of his admirers. He states that by 1 914 Lord Kitchener...
Tht gopettator
The SpectatorNOVEMBER 16, 1833 THE accounts from Spain, received during the week, render it not improbable that a pretence will be afforded to the French Government for an armed...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorWittgenstein By A. J. AYER !THE Blue and Brown Books* are transcripts of notes which Wittgenstein dictated to his pupils at Cambridge during the academic years 1933-34 and...
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Best Way To Do It
The SpectatorThe Rest We Can Do: An Account of the Trial of John Bodkin Adams, By Sybille Bedford. (Collins, I5s.) ART and Law have not usually been on good terms . with one another for all...
New Obscurity
The SpectatorThe Chequer'd Shade, By John Press. (0.U.P., 25s. THESE reflections on obscurity in poetry make an agreeable book which is nevertheless unequal to its great subject. Mr. Press,...
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Novel of Manneis
The SpectatorIT is autumn, 1956. Janos Lavin, a Hungarian Communist painter who has been living here for nearly twenty years without recognition, has dis- appeared immediately after his...
Make Him Decent
The SpectatorVerlaine: Prince of Poets. By Lawrence and Elisabeth Hanson. (Chatto and Windus, 30s.) IT was in 1933 that Francois Porchd published his revealing study of Paul Verlaine, which...
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Love in High Places
The SpectatorNapoleon and Mademoiselle George. By Edith Saunders. (Longmans, 21s.) Love and the Princess. By Lucille Iremonger. (Faber, 25s.) IT would come high in any album of male fan-...
School of Maugham
The SpectatorPoints of View. By W. Somerset Maugham. (Heinemann, 21s.) IF writers kept a studio, or stud, as painters used to do, this book would seem very like 'School of Maugham.' The...
Elective Affinities
The SpectatorThe Neon Halo. By Jean-Louis Curtis. (Seeker and Warburg, 15s.) THE nature of George Lamming's impressive third novel is better explained by describing the various elements he...
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Mummy Doesn't Love Me The Psychology of Gambling. By Edmund
The SpectatorBergler. MD. (Bernard Hanison. 25s.) Da. BERGLER proposes to substantiate the para- doxical thesis that the habitual gambler is a 'neurotic sucker gambler' who only wants to...
Mayhew for Fun
The SpectatorT he Bia City: or The New Mayhew. By Alex Atkinson and Ronald Searle. (Perpetua, 21s.) HENRY MAYFIEW, a founder and editor of Punch. Was a superb reporter and an innovator. He...
Lucky Flook
The SpectatorFlook. By Trog. (Faber, 6s. 6d.) FLOOK, for the benefit of Express readers, is a small, round, presumably brown, presumably furry (he's certainly covered in something) animal,...
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Gabble, Gabble
The Spectatorlk Leaf from the Yellow Book: The Correspon- dence of George Egerton. Edited by Terence de Vere White. (Richards, 16s.) AN initial feeling of surprise that anybody could be...
THE SELECTIVE BOOM
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT IF there is still a cycle in business affairs,' Mr. Amory told the Insti- tute of Directors at their annual conference on October 30, 'it is very different...
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COMPANY NOTES
The SpectatorP ETER BROTHERHOOD'S results for the year ended March 31, 1958, have certainly confirmed the confidence expressed last Novem- ber by the chairman, Mr. A. M. Neal. Group profits...
INVESTMENT NOTES
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS T HE end of the Stock Exchange account on Tuesday marked a tremendous turnover in securities-the highest since the end of the pre- vious 'bull' market in June, 1955....
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SOLUTION OF CROSSWORD No. 1,016
The SpectatorACROSS.-1 School. 4 Blt by bit, 10 Belcher. 11 Integer. 12 Tear. 13 Sana- torium. 16 Fading, 17 Lothair. 20 Capitol. 21 Albert. 24 Left-handed. 25 Scan. 27 Orpbcan, i9 Corinna,...
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1,018
The SpectatorSolution on November 28 ACROSS 29 1 The workbasket's contribution to Hamlet's armoury (6) 30 4 Prerequisite to a job at Scotland Yard ? (4, 4) 10 Schedule of dwellings at the...
Crime Wave
The SpectatorSPECTATOR COMPETITION No 454: Report by Allan 0. Waith On the first of September, one Sunday morn, I shot a hen pheasant in standing corn Without a licence. Contrive who can...
A Top Person has been heard to say that Th e
The SpectatorTimes has missed the bus for years in not running a. strip cartoon. The usual prize of six guineas is, offered for extracts from the script (not illustrated ) of a 'strip'...