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THE CHINESE THREAT
The SpectatorMiin Chinese pressure on Indian forces con- tinues in Ladakh and the North-East Frontier Agency. Mr. Shastri, the Indian Home Minister, has stated that strong Chinese forces...
— Portrait of the Week B ORROWING PHOTOGRAPHS and echoing innuendoes from
The Spectatorthe popular press, the Opposition began a full-scale attack on the possible implications of the conduct of present and late members of the Government. In the light of new...
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Reporting Africa
The SpectatorTT is not easy for the British press to give sympathetic and at the same time truthfu l coverage of African affairs. Two separate attacks were delivered this week by persons as...
Clearing the Air
The SpectatorI T is good news that an independent tribunal is to be set up to look into the whole Vassall affair. Lord Radcliffe and his colleagues will have to sift a mass of rumour and...
No Licence to Kill
The SpectatorA tstyoNE doubting the possible influence of the Belgian court's thalidomide acquittal should take a look at last week's Tribune. Writing even before the verdict was known, so...
Arabia Infelix
The SpectatorI N spite of widespread criticism in this country .and opposition in Aden itself, the Federation of South-West Arabia goes ahead. The reason for the haste is still undeclared;...
LEsiar: ADRIAN, KINGSLEY ANUS, DENZIL BATCHELOR, JOHN BETTEMAN, LORD BOOTHBY,
The SpectatorD. W. BROGAN, JEREMY BROOKS, RONALD BRYDEN, DAVID CAIRNS, ROBER CONQUEST, NICHOLAS DAVENPORT, ELIZA- BETH DAVID, GERARD FAY, MICHAEL FLANDERS, PETER FLEMING, SARAH G AIN- HAM,...
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The Nixon Years An Obituary
The SpectatorFrom MURRAY KEMPTON NEW YORK 'Just think what you are going to he missing. You won't hare Nixon to kick around any longer!--Richard Nixon. M R. NIXON'S defeat in California has...
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Malawi and the Doctor
The SpectatorBy T. R. M. CREIGHTON A soon as the people of Nyasaland were allowed a free vote for the first time in their history under the Macleod Constitution last year they elected the...
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Fingers Crossed in Helsinki
The SpectatorBy RICHARD BAILEY T arc no direct flights from Helsinki to Brussels, and the majority of Finns appear to see no reason for changing this situation at present. This does not...
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Holding the Pass
The SpectatorThe people of Highgate, having made their Point unanimously and forcefully about the M inistry of Transport's scheme to turn Highgate Hill into a one-way endurance test for...
He Kept His Head
The SpectatorYevgeny Yevtushenko was recently described with some surprise as `a rebel within the existing order.' But why the surprise? Anybody with any contact with younger Russians abroad...
Goddess Armed
The SpectatorOne of the major achievements of nineteenth- century liberalism was the creation of what are called `academic values'—that is, those standards of independence, objectivity and...
The Politic Poet
The SpectatorPoets come, roughly speaking, in either of two forms: the disorderly and the orderly. One should not be misled by the general publicity advantage of the former. For every Dylan...
The Skull Beneath the Skin
The SpectatorMeanwhile, on the western slopes of the Northern Heights, Hampstead, that home of the 131 P, is celebrating the fact that so many writers breathe its healthy air. Thirty-nine...
Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorSUPPOSE that the British Government's decision to explode a nuclear device under- ground in the Nevada desert might be called bad Public relations. It will certainly bring the...
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Lord Boothby Backpedals
The SpectatorBy HENRY FAIRLIE N o one except Lord Boothby; it must be admitted, could in one week act as a judge in the Miss World competition at the Lyceum Theatre and cause a minor...
Which Establishment?
The SpectatorTo which of my would-be topside friends shall I send Collins's Gentleman's Diary, which is now in the shops? The most intriguing entry is the very first one in a list of...
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The Common Enemy
The SpectatorBy JULIAN CRITCHLEY, MP M R. ANTHONY CROSLAND is certainly the most articulate and probably the most able advo- cate of the extreme centre of British politics. But he is not...
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A Democratic Europe
The SpectatorBy ANTHONY HARTLEY DERHAPS a journey around Western Europe was hardly needed to show how uninformed much comment in Britain on European issues is. Even excluding horror comics...
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The Castro Canker Accident or Design Cliche-Ridden Bo You Anything
The SpectatorExit Menon Major-Gen. I. R Travel Trade Tricks Cuba and the Press The National Theatre Patients Association Oxfam Appeal Ilaya de la Torre Paul Reit!) , Russell Braddon A.S....
ACCIDENT OR DESIGN SIR,—Leslie Adrian wrote last week that 'the
The Spectatorwhole trouble with the ColD is its close tie-up with manu- facturers and retailers.' It would have been much more to the point had he written that these close tic- ups are the...
CLICHE-RIDDEN Sta,—Reviewing my perfectly splendid biography of Joan Sutherland, your
The Spectatorcritic, Mr. Charles Osborne, accuses me of using cliches—and himself, in one short notice, uses the following cliches: 'Flinging oaths' 'with some semblance of `makes me blush ....
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am organising for the above charity a col- lection which
The Spectatorwill take place on Christmas Eve this year. Young people, from eighteen to fifty. will visit public houses all over London and the suburbs and also in Bristol, Blackpool and...
PATIENTS ASSOCIATION
The SpectatorSIR, — Recent reports on thalidomide babies, wrong patient operations and tests on patients underline the need for an association to represent the interests of patients. A group...
THE NATIONAL THEATRE Sin.—Before Mr. Andrew Knight metaphorically expires in
The Spectatorthe sludge of his own verbosity, he might be more explicit about the howls of disappointment arising in Leicestershire over the appointment of a Director to the National...
CUBA AND THE PRESS
The SpectatorSIR, — Allow me to thank you most warmly for your recent leading articles on the Cuban situation : such a welcome contrast to the . disgraceful quibbling and cowardice of some...
BET YOU ANYTHING
The SpectatorSIR, — I was astonished to find anybody querying my statement that motor insurance is unprofitable. Is Mr. Malbert the sort of man who queries whether Northerners do work harder...
SIR , — In your 'Portrait of the Week' in last week's issue
The Spectatoryou write: '. . . the inadequacy of Indian troops put Mr. Krishna Menon into the political Wilderness.' As this presumably does not refer to the numerical numbers of Indian...
TRAVEL TRADE TRICKS
The SpectatorSm,— Congratulations to Leslie Adrian on his ex- c ellent article in your issue of October 26. It is un- doubtedly true that the many reputable organisations in the field of...
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Theatre
The SpectatorA Lear of the Head By BAMBER GASCOIGNE ii EVEN when settling into one's seat, one has a foretaste of the chief quality of Peter Brook's King Lear—a magnificent clarity. The...
Beyond the Boulevards
The SpectatorBy ADRIAN BRINE O N the face of it, the current theatrical season in Paris is again designed for readers of Paris-Match; but the surface keeps trembling an d cracks appear. The...
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Remains of O'Neill
The SpectatorFrom ROLAND HUNTFORD STOCKHOLM F UGENE O'NEILL was appreciated in Sweden F when neglected almost everywhere else— something he never forgot. On his death, in 1953, he left his...
Art
The SpectatorReturn of Masson By NEVILE WALLIS virttl° s° hittY of continuous resource. 1 of his canvases painted during the last four years, now shoWg at the Marlborough are as...
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Cinema
The SpectatorNow Face to Face By ISABEL QUIGLY I AM not a Bergman fan in the warm-hearted sense of the word, since I don't really warm to his work. But Through a Glass Darkly ('X'...
Television
The SpectatorWaiting for Beastie By CLIFFORD HANLEY I hope I'm wrong, because we could use a good serial, yet this one seems to me to suffer from the dread disease that can kill any...
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Ballet
The SpectatorStrange Blossom By CLIVE BARNES JUST presuming, for ened. The pity of this is that nobody could call the RoYat moment, that it possesses one, Ballet's music policy enlight -...
Records
The SpectatorTracking the Best By DAVID CAIRNS d'amante,' in which for eleven bars there is no interval bigger than a tone). The Decca re- cording does this: it effaces the impression of...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorVoyage to Everywhere By SYBILLE BEDFORD S HIP of Fools, Das Narrenschiji, Stultifera Navis: took for my own this simple almost universal image of the ship of this world on its...
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Russian Roulette
The SpectatorWITH the obvious exceptions of Everest arid , in the nineteenth century, the Matterhorn , E l° mountain and certainly no single rock face ba s had such concentrated and...
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Assessment
The SpectatorThe income tax is coming in: Polite close-shaved inspectors Assess internal revenues All up and down the avenues. Having no income to declare But reading, travtl, faces, I add...
Iona
The Spectatortasking in the Bay at the Back of the Ocean lay one black stone the sun could not unglisten; a round, wet seal, which neither pulling motion o f wind nor wave could make appear...
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Katanga: Neutralism in Arms
The SpectatorBy DAVID REES E VENTS in the Caribbean and on the Indo- Chinese border during the last few weeks have focused our interest as never before in the cold war on the relationship...
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The Wise and the Whizzers THERE are some novelists—not generally
The Spectatorthe Ma st applauded—who seem less concerned with ri l k e latest boundary of consciousness than Wi tt ' ground already covered. In one sense the novel must always move forward...
Port Royal Jamaica
The Spectator'In this place dwelt Horatio Nelson. You who tread his footprints, remember his glory.' The sea, heavy with jellyfish, jointed With sharks, is completely present here. It would...
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Tragedy of Errors
The SpectatorDo cuments on German Foreign Policy, 1918- , 1945. Series D, Volume XII: The War ears ( February to June, 1941). (H.M.S.O., 60s.) 111 E period covered in these documents is...
Poetry and Terror
The SpectatorTHE desire to write an autobioeraphy, though understandable, isn't always the product of a wide or interesting range of experiences. But in writing this book—subtitled 'A...
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Unsocial Realism
The SpectatorThe Bluebottle is an addition of some in 3 P° I. ., t ‘ ance to the growing corpus of `smuggle"_, Soviet literature now available in the West aria, consisting of work too...
Hereabouts
The SpectatorThe Future of London. By Edward Carter. (Penguin Books, 4s. 6d.) The London Nobody Knows. By Geoffrey Fletcher. (Hutchinson, 21s.) WE are such hypocrites about London, those of...
our issue of October 26, thereview n er :
The Spectator: f it : f it Penguin edition of Stephen Potter's Garnesillafiver books suggested that the publishers werc ° r od charging, as a copy sent for review was 4s. 6d. In fact,...
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Next April
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT IT is suggested by some faint- hearts that Mr. Maudling has already tabled his Budget and will have nothing more to do in April. This is absurd. What he...
Investment Notes
The SpectatorB3 CUSTOS T HE new account on the Stack Exchange brought a Maudling come-back in equities in spite of the Lloydian tax on short-term capital gains. No one proposes that an...
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Roundabout
The SpectatorThe Boys in the Darkroom By KATHARINE WHITEHORN The category we were concerned with was Royal pictures—Royals getting wet, Royals dancing, Royals in boats, Royals in the Far...
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Consuming Interest New 'Choice'
The SpectatorBy LESLIE ADRIAN The first thing to be said about the opening pro- gramme is that its editor and producer have taken this criticism to heart. In the first half of the programme...