1 SEPTEMBER 1961

Page 3

DUMPING

The Spectator

B RITAIN, it was announced on Tuesday, is to ask GATT to regulate butter imports 'to secure a proper relationship between supply and demand by a reduction in the quantities of...

—Portrait of the Week— THE BERLIN CRISIS simmered on. There

The Spectator

were more border incidents in the city. Russia accused the West of misusing the air corridors, in violation of the 1945 agreements, in order to allow 'revan- chists, extremists,...

The Spectator

The Spectator

No 694 Established FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER I, 1828 1961

Page 4

Identification Parade

The Spectator

rrilE scientific investigation of crime has made I enormous advances in the last few years; it is a pity that the investigation of the causes of crime has, largely owing to the...

Before the Beginning

The Spectator

W ITH any luck, and a lot of cool heads, the action of the United Nations forces in Katanga might turn out to be the first real stroke of good fortune the hapless Congo has had...

On the Slide

The Spectator

ne situation in Northern Rhodesia is de- teriorating more slowly than might have been feared only a few weeks ago, but it is deteriorat- ing none the less surely for all that....

Page 5

Unpacking after the Holidays

The Spectator

From DARSIE GILLIE PARIS T HE holidaymakers are returning to a very uncheerful situation. There is the Berlin crisis to share with the rest of the world, but for the French in...

Quadratic Equations

The Spectator

C OMING so soon after the ending of the Pan- American meeting at Punta del Este, the resignation of President Quadros of Brazil will not help President Kennedy's plans for aid...

Page 6

Berlin Waits

The Spectator

From SARAH GAINHAM C EVE RAL things have now become clear about I./Berlin. The mildness and slowness of American reaction to August 13 make it clear that, whatever the words...

Page 7

The Anti-Marketeers

The Spectator

By ANTHONY HARTLEY N ow that Britain has formally applied for membership of the Common Market those of us who welcome this step and have been urging the Government to it will...

Page 9

Imber and Salisbury Plain

The Spectator

By GEOFFREY GRIGSON MBER is, or Imber was, until its people were I removed in 1943 so that it could be used as a battle-training area, the loneliest village of Salis- bury...

The TUC Purge

The Spectator

By JOHN COLE T HE ninety-third Trades Union Congress at Portsmouth next week may well decide whether the centenary Congress in 1968 is to be an event of national and...

Page 11

Riding Down from Bangor

The Spectator

B y D. W. BROGAN IDING down from Bangor in an Eastern train.' I was horrified recently in Washing- ton to discover that close friends of mine, about my age, had never heard or...

Page 13

The Churches

The Spectator

Divine Differentials By MONICA FURLONG DEARLY love a bishop. Not, as it happens, any I particular one, but the general complexion of bishops, their colourfulness and...

Page 15

PROSCRIPTION BY PRESCRIPTION

The Spectator

SIR,-1 see that one of our MPs is continuing his campaign to name doctors who are fined by Health Executives, but I wonder if he would name doctors who are fined for...

MALCOLM LOWRY

The Spectator

Sue,—Frank Tuohy's introduction to this greatly gifted writer is as penetrating as might have been expected; but it contains some errors of fact, which should perhaps be...

The Unmarried Mother Brenda Leys Proscription by Prescription Alan Harrison

The Spectator

The Lucrative Mystery Eric Goldschrnidt Gagarin—Si! Laurens Otter Malcolm Lowry John Davenport The Dollar Princesses Lord Esher Hire Cars Philip Binham The Bootleggers Garin...

THE LUCRATIVE MYSTERY

The Spectator

SIR,—When investigating the early days on inde- pendent television, Peter Forster found a ripe collec- tion of ironies. 'The Lucrative Mystery' listed among the curious...

GAGARIN—SI!

The Spectator

SIR,—May I point out that in the years before the Stalinists jumped on the unilateralist bandwagon, they voted for Gaitskell's multilateralism. Does Mr. Clarke know of any...

Page 18

THOSE ADVERTISEMENTS SIR,—Mr. Roy Brooks is shrewdly aware that unless

The Spectator

an advertisement is read it is not an advertisement at all: it is only a waste of money. A. J. F. GILL ' 15 Upper Cavehill Road, Belfast, 15

SIR,-1 am troubled by Kenneth Allsop's contented acceptance, in the

The Spectator

last extract of The Bootleggers, of the image of the Chicago gunman as a dead-eye dick. Thus he quotes a contemporary source, Pasley, on the training of Capone killers: 'It...

PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK

The Spectator

SIR,—Perhaps you will allow me to make a small correction to Mr. Haden-Guest's reference to Monta- cute in last week's 'Portrait of the Week.' The paint- ings stolen from here...

SIR,—In Coming Events in Britain, issued by the British Travel

The Spectator

Association, and elsewhere, there are innumerable advertisements urging foreign visitors to hire a car in Britain. Do they get one? While running a summer school for Finns in...

DICKENS LETTERS

The Spectator

SIR,—In 1962, the 150th anniversary of the novelist's birth, will be published the first volume of the Pil- grim Edition of the Letters of Charles Dickens. This is intended to...

SIR, — Loyalty to the vanished past prompts me to write to

The Spectator

you a few words about Mr. Hesketh Pearson's superficial book, The Pilgrim Daughters. Your reviewer, Katharine Whitehorn, considers that one of the occasions on which Mr. Pearson...

SIR, — 'The history of any medical discovery—invari - ably opposed furiously as

The Spectator

long as possible by the mass of the medical profession.' I am disturbed by Katharine Whitehorn's repetition of this old canard and correspondingly inclined to distrust the...

Page 19

Edinburgh Music

The Spectator

Schoenberg and the Common Man By DAVID CAIRNS THE fifteenth Edinburgh Festival, the first of Lord Harewood's regime, has fir Loid Provost's foreword recent predecessors have...

Page 20

Edinburgh Theatre and Art

The Spectator

Picnics on Lesbos By BAMBER GASCOIGNE THEATRE at the Edin- burgh Festival reveals a pungent trend towards what Aldous Huxley called `smellies.' In the first scene of Luther in-...

Page 21

Berlin Theatre

The Spectator

Prophetic Irony By SARAH GA INHAM Sternheim was an ironist, and has therefore never been taken as seriously as his talents war- rant by his own people, who often fail to divide...

Cinema

The Spectator

The Real Thing By ISABEL QUIGLY Visconti Season. (National Film Theatre.)—The Naked Edge. (London Pavilion.) A RARE month's film-going is coming up for anyone within hailing...

Page 22

BOOKS

The Spectator

Houyhnhnm's Travels By BERNARD LEVIN mitt. quite recently I believed (consequent upon reading his City of Spades, but not the blurb) that Mr. Colin Maclnnes was a black man....

Page 23

An Unrebuked Brass Band

The Spectator

The Age of Churchill, 18744911. By Peter de Mendelssohn. (Thames and Hudson, 42s.) Tuts is the first volume of a trilogy on Sir Winston Churchill's life and times. The author,...

The Survivors

The Spectator

In a certain light the heroines Shine tawdry and brash, Women of few sins, Ophelia choked with river water, Desdemona with flesh. Their acceptance of the end was right, More...

Page 24

Mapping The Cosmos

The Spectator

HOWEVER long our civilisation survives, it is unlikely that man will ever again live through four decades of the kind of astronomical drama which has been concentrated into the...

Uproar in Church

The Spectator

The Whiston Matter. By Ralph Arnold (Hart. Davis, 21$.) IN the year 1842 the Reverend Robert Whiston was appointed by the Dean and Chapter to be headmaster of Rochester...

Page 25

Inanity Fair

The Spectator

A PRIME need of our age is a new D u nciad, In ten years of Conservative rule metropolitan society has become so infested with rogues on the make and fools trying to be that a...

Page 26

Good, Bad and Chaos

The Spectator

The New American Poetry 1945-60. Edited by 27s. 6d.) Collected Poems. By Ralph Hodgson. (Mac- millan, 21s.) THOM GUNN'S poems first began to be published and known in...

Page 27

Planning—By the Treasury

The Spectator

By NICHOLAS DAVENPORT Is it just possible that one does not write for the heathen in vain? That even the uncon- verted take some heed of the gospel that the elect preach so...

Page 28

Investment Notes

The Spectator

fly CUSTOS T HE prevailing opinion in the City is that equity shares can and should fall further. We are only just beginning to see the first signs of the biggest squeeze ever...

Company Notes

The Spectator

T HE entry ot this country into the European Common Market will have no fears for Pasolds, manufacturers of children's clothing. The chairman, Mr. E. W. Pasold, and his co-...

Page 29

ConstuningInterest

The Spectator

Keeping Fit By LESLIE ADRIAN A CORRESPONDENT Who wants to be able to take physical exercise in a gymnasium with- out having to pay fees to a health emporium for slimming...

Roundabout

The Spectator

Mange BY K A THAR1NE WHITEHORN THE French Government's at- tempt to keep more people in Paris in August has apparently met with complete failure. There is nobody in town but...

Page 30

Thought for food

The Spectator

In Brighton By RAYMOND POSTG ATE HALF A CENTURY ago there was a sort of predecessor of mine (so far as I can claim to be a public gourmet) named Colonel Newnham Davis. A few...