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Portrait of the Week
The SpectatorJUST LIKE THE OLD DAYS: the Government declared direct rule in Aden and the aircraft - carrier Eagle moved down the Suez Canal to be in attendance. Mr. George Thomson, Minister...
Governing from Blackpool
The SpectatorPVHE Prime Minister was rough on the I Liberals on Tuesday. This was plainly not because he spurns their assistance. He is in , no position to do so. But Mr. Grimond at...
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VIEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorNow for Reform From SARAH GAINHAM BONN T HE cries of triumph and disaster have died down into the jumble of voices resolving_ diverse demands into a government coalition;...
NEXT WEEK
The SpectatorTowards a New Foreign Policy KEITH KYLE • Also Charles Reid's report on the 'Spectator's' inquiry into opinion among Promenade Concert audiences. One year's subscription to...
ITALY
The SpectatorFanfani's Promotion OSBERT HASTINGS writes from Rome : President Saragat arrived home from his rather spectacular tour of South America to a twenty- one-gun salute, leaving...
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THE PRESS
The SpectatorMirror Images By CHRISTOPHER BOOKER M R. CECIL HARMSWORTH KING, SiXty-four, and Mr. Hugh Cudlipp, fifty-two, are, as everyone knows, the most important figures in the largest...
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Ultimaotum
The SpectatorThe Chinese government presents Its most distinguished compliments And begs the honour to insist That you're an ex-colonialist. With deep regard we stigmatise Your well-bred...
BLACKPOOL COMMENTARY
The SpectatorSome Trust in Harold By ALAN WATKINS 'g R. REGINALD MCKENNA,' said Bernard Shaw on one occasion, 'apparently be- lieves himself to be the Tsar of Russia—a very common form of...
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A LABOUR VIEW
The SpectatorThe Prospect Grows Brighter . By ROY HATTERSLEY, MP F OR the Labour party the outlook has not been brighter since before the general elec- tion. The pound seems safe at last...
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A PLACE IN MY MIND
The SpectatorHonky-tonk and Black Poetics By STANLEY REYNOLDS L GENDS by definition are larger than life. This makes it always surprising to find that, say, Mae West, that Empire State...
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Conference Town Blackpool, so I hear, is not the most
The Spectatorpopular of conference resorts, either with journalists or with politicians. For one thing, the train service is at best dilatory; then there is the impossi- bility of getting...
Conductorless Opera Sitting down before Nigerian opera as sampled at
The Spectatorthe Commonwealth Arts Festival, white legisseurs sighed admiringly. Here was something Europe simply cannot do. The sample was Oba- Koso ('The King Does Not Hang'). In this...
Wingless Words This season of mists is also, aptly, the
The Spectatorseason of oratory: and even partial exposure to the political conferences so far reminds one of the mediocrity of most public speaking today. Per- haps, since more and more...
lal age-making h According to Walter Terry in Wednesday's Mail Mr.
The SpectatorWilson has been complaining to fhe BBC about the television treatment of the ,abour , conference. He objected, apparently, to r. Clive Jenkins, the left-wing trade union te....
Domestic Strife I haVe only just discovered the extent (and
The Spectatorgrowth potential) of the industry sustained by Anobiion punctatum. Xestobium rufovillosum, and even Hylotrupes bajalus. My imminent move to another hquse has brought the matter...
Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorI T is hard to take the new British strong-arm methods in Aden very seriously. I prefer to see them as a prelude to Britain accelerating her departure. It is. after all, very...
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Lord Butler and Mr. Hogg
The SpectatorSin, 1 am sorry that Mr. Hogg, who is a friend of Lord Butler's and myself, finds that like Lord Butler I am a source of embarrassment to my friends. I have never been...
The War in the Commonwealth
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. A. Yasamee views India with such a 'distempered appetite,' that his letter (Spectator, September 17) makes little sense, if any. To begin with, that absurd statement he...
Sell up the London Jails
The SpectatorBy GEORGE HUTCHINSON TN tackling London's new housing programme, IMr. Richard Crossman, thoroughgoing as ever, has undoubtedly contemplated all sorts of ways in which he might...
The Lib-Lab Question
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. Desmond Donnelly is the perpetual 'Charley's Aunt' of British politics. On what possible basis is his assertion made that they are moving 'in favour of a progressive...
fail to sec how D. C. Watt can say Hitler
The Spectatoris as much a part of Europe's intellectual history as, say, Marx. Some of Marx's writings may have a strong emotional appeal but surely have deep in- tellectual foundations,...
LETTERS
The SpectatorFrom : Professor H. J. Hanham, C. J. Reddall, Randolph S. Churchill, John Papworth, H. K. Bhabha, Shaun Mandy, Lilian Knapp, Richard Hughes, David Charles Ross, K. Jagatsingh,...
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Mauritius
The SpectatorSIR, —Ni g el Fisher's article on Mauritius (Spectator, September 17) was quite fair and in line with what he publicly stated in Mauritius a few weeks ago. But he is inaccurate...
Electoral Reform
The SpectatorSIR,—It would appear that Alan Watkins, having heard Mr. Grimond's first speech at the Liberal Assembly, paid no attention to the electoral reform resolution that followed. If...
The Sex War
The SpectatorSIR,—lt was never my intention to get involved in a sex war, neither do I subscribe to the trite phrase quoted by Claire Rayner—If-women-ran-the-world-...
King Hal's New Crown
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. Knox Cunningham in his letter (Septem- ber 17) about the pigeons losing their safe seats at Westminster shows unnecessary concern that King Hal's living 'crown' has...
That Plan
The SpectatorSIR,—The Government's recently published National Plan contains an interesting analysis of Britain's economic structure. But as there is no provision for either carrots or...
Mods, Modes and Models
The SpectatorSIR,—Miss Holland will need no help from any or us in defending her friends among the motel aristocracy from Mr. Gray. if the notion of he' championing their virtues is slightly...
SIR,—I must protest against Dr. A. L. Rowse's absurd protest
The Spectator(September 17) against your editorial blaming Britain for the imbroglio in the Indian sub-continent. Dr. Rowse places the onus of blame on Pandit Nehru. But is it not natural...
SIR,—Why is Mrs. Knapp so sure 'that grand ex- ponent
The Spectatorof the English language, Sir Winston Chur- chill, would have flinched at the use of the word "frivial" '? Has she forgotten his own wartime in- vention of the word 'triphibian,'...
More about Windscreens
The SpectatorSut,—Once upon a time, as all good stories should begin, however incredible, a man parked his car in a lay-by and started to read the Spectator. On the back window was a label,...
Defending the White Paper
The SpectatorStn,—It is quite true, as Mr. Hattersley says (Sep- tember 3), that in my original letter I did not answer his 'crucial question' as to whether integration is possible without...
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RADIO
The SpectatorNo Substitute D RAMA 'is no doubt a sore point at Broad-' casting House. After all, it must cost a good deal, considerable resources of equipment and manpower must be deployed,...
ARTS & AMUSEMENTS
The SpectatorYou Know it Well, Reader By HILARY SPURLING L'Ecole des Femmes. (Old Vic.)—Too True To Be Good. (Strand.)—The Marriage of Mr. Mississippi. (Hampstead Theatre Club.)— A Month...
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COMMONWEALTH FILM FESTIVAL
The SpectatorDrums Over Elsinore T HEY have come in all sizes and shapes and at every sort of level, the Commonwealth films, and at all hours of- the day and night, from Donald Campbell...
ARCHITECTURE
The SpectatorPrima Donna E NGINEERINO laboratories, long constrained in classical temples or the more pompous kinds of commercial architecture—Imperial College, for instance—are beginning...
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MUSIC
The SpectatorRing Well Sung T HE first half of Der Ring, with twenty-five parts sung by the Covent Garden resident company, leaving only three for foreign im- portees, would have been a...
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AUTUMN BOOKS
The SpectatorMr. Standfast By SIMON RAVEN 9 TIKE world,' proclaimed Lord Birkenhead in I 1923, 'continues to offer glittering prizes to those who have stout hearts and sharp swords.' This...
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Ghosts and Gargoyles
The SpectatorMemoirs of the Forties. By J. Maclaren-Ross. (Alan Ross, 25s.) Memoirs of the Forties. By J. Maclaren-Ross. (Alan Ross, 25s.) SEVENTY-FOUR inches of egocentricity in a Teddy-...
Southey Plain
The SpectatorIN one place or another, more than 2,000 of Southey's letters have appeared in print since his death in 1843, some in garbled form. From a large number still in manuscript,...
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Rough Riders
The SpectatorThe Winning of the West. By Theodore Roose- velt. (Premier Books, 6s.) Outlaws on Horseback. By Harry Sinclair Drago. (John Long, 35s.) 'BULLY' was one of Theodore Roosevelt's...
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The Liberation Show
The SpectatorThu engaging achievement of this you-are-there documentary is almost to convince the reader that no one was there. No paltry feat, for quite a lot of people were in Paris on...
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Koestler's Danube
The SpectatorB y ANTHONY BURGESS As a sixtieth birthday present, Arthur Koestler's works are being brought out in a uniform collection, very well printed and bound, though rather expensive,...
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NEW YORK LETTER
The SpectatorWhat's New? By M. L. ROSENTHAL 1TERATURE, said Pound, is `news that stays news,' But most news about literature is of the more transient kind, gossipy or political or both....
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Every Season
The SpectatorAt flashpoint leaves fall, Light, air, shell, in after-seasons; Where I lived the British well-being of children out of sight, Towns, mining valleys, a child bouncing on...
Bed and Breakfast
The SpectatorI smoke in bed, seeing myself in mirrors. This is not home, where I do not smoke in bed Or see myself in mirrors. In the room through one wall Radio Caroline plays a comic...
Facts
The SpectatorWinter is coming soon. I know because It always does. Hush. You can feel the chill wind blow, Carrying snow, Carrying dark. The branches lean And let their leaves down. I Look...
FOUR POEMS
The SpectatorPrimary Sources I in the quiet and oak Cores of the house stripping by (To rest my eyes' over-reading) The mellow of a candle. My bed Expectant, comprehending. I glimpse From...
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NEW PAPERBACKS : The Spy Who Came in from the
The SpectatorCold. By John Le Carrt5. (Pan Books, 5s.) As a Man Grows Older. By halo Svevo. (Penguin Modern Classics, 4s. 6d.) The Wings of the Dove. By Henry James. (Penguin Modern...
The Fixer
The SpectatorThe Political Journal of George Bubb Doding- ton. Edited by John Carswell and L. A. Dralle. (O.U.P., 70s.) SHORT, very short; fat, very fat; jowls, a tip- tilted nose; eyes...
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The Admiral as Historian
The SpectatorBy D. W. BROGAN I HAD better begin by 'declaring my interest,' as they say in the House of Commons. I was one of the first pupils inflicted on the first Harmsworth Professor of...
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Pound Saved Again— Ezra Pound and Sextus Propertius: A Study
The Spectatorin Creative Translation. By J. P. Sullivan. (Faber, 35s.) EzRA POUND'S nontage to Sextus Propertius is handsome enough as an act of homage. As a poem in its own right it has...
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NOVELS
The SpectatorRebels and Officers The Mains. By Eca de Queiroz. Translated by Patricia MacGowan Pinheiro and Anne Stevens. (Bodley Head, 30s.) Drive, He Said. By Jeremy Larner. (Blond, 21s.)...
Open Conspiracy
The SpectatorThe Invisible Government. By David Wise and Thomas B. Ross. (Cape, 30s.) MODERN states, especially large and aggressive ones, are increasingly influenced by the opera- tion of...
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Number One
The SpectatorSAUL BELLOW is Number One now. In a recent interview a well-known American novelist quoted him as saying. 'There are those who didn't like Herzog. but since the big critics...
THE ECONOMY & THE CITY
The SpectatorThe Fabulous American Boom By NICHOLAS DAVENPORT S A V1NG the £ has probably meant saving us all from a slump in world trade. Devaluation of the t , would have been...
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Investment Notes
The Spectator• By CUSTOS HEN the recovery in the gilt-edged market 'W VV had pushed the price of War Loan up to 57 and the yield down to 6/ per cent, it was everybody's guess that the...
Company Notes
The SpectatorBy LOTHBURY HE results from Louis Newmark, the watch 1 importers and electronic group, for the year ended March 27, 1965, are most encouraging. Pre-tax profits are up from...
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Stars and Tigers
The SpectatorBy LESLIE ADRIAN MOTORING Madness takes on as many shapes as Proteus at the top of his Virgilian form. It encom- passes the whole human range, from Bank Holiday tragedy, for the...
ENDPAPERS
The SpectatorAnother Part of the Forest By STRIX `Lucy,' I said when I came in for luncheon, 'have we got a thermometer in the house?' 'Yes,' said my daughter. 'It's hanging up on the wall...
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LONDON PRIDE
The SpectatorGreenwich Morning By DAVID ROGERS "'THURSDAY. Early morning. Still dark, but the I park gates are already open. Shadows on the wet grass. We slip quickly past Wolfe's house,...
Afterthought
The SpectatorBy ALAN BRIEN I HAVE often boasted that I could sleep through any- thing, if necessary.. It was necessary this Tuesday morning in my favourite city of Dublin and I think I have...
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SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1190
The SpectatorACROSS 1 . Mother Carey's brood (6, 7)' 9 . Brought back as an armchair made new (9) P. For drawing of a fish (5) 11. Roles for- one without a win- ning way (5) 12. Robin's...
SOLUTION OF CROSSWORD No. 1189 ACROSS.—I, 5 Noblesse oblige. 9
The SpectatorPas- tures. 10 Big top. 12 Egeria, 13 Brainier. 15 Pettifoggers. 18 Leatherneeks. 23 Shanties. 24 isolde. 26 Irises. 27 Mat- inees. 28 Grease. 29 Pargetcr. DOWN.-1 Napier. 2...
Chess
The SpectatorBy PHILIDOR 250. DR. A. WarAwA (Deutsche Schachzeitung, June, 1965) BLACK (8 men) WHITE (7 men) WHITE to play and win; solution next week. A chal- lenge to your imagination...