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MISSED OPPORTUNITIES
The SpectatorT HE new Chancellor's first Budget may just 'do the trick; but it was far from a personal triumph for Mr. Macmillan. To all who expected that he would bring a sense of drama and...
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THE PLAN FOR CYPRUS?
The SpectatorI T is becoming increasingly clear that Archbishop Makarios was not deported because of his connections with EOKA, strong though these were. He was deported in order to clear...
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Portrait of the Week
The SpectatorrrIns last week has been one of anticipationâanticipation 1 of the Russian visit; anticipation of the Budget; anticipa- tion of the wedding of Miss Grace Kelly with Prince...
MISINFORM
The SpectatorW HIN the Spectator was considering last August, at the height of the Geneva good will, what gestures the Russians might make which would cost them little or nothing, we said,...
A DEPLORABLE DECISION
The SpectatorT is occasionally argued, in support of some of the more extraordinary decisions of the House of Lords acting in its judicial capacity, that the legislation passed by Parliament...
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Political Commentary
The SpectatorBY HENRY FAIRLIE M R. MACMILLAN'S was a puzzling speech, and even now it is difficult to be sure about its political impact. He started off on the wrong foot. The elegant and...
SOCCER INTELLIGENCE
The SpectatorENGLAND lucky to snatch a draw.âSunday Dispatch. SCOTLAND'S lucky draw.âSunday Pictorial. A DRAW was perhaps the fairest result.âSunday Express. A SHOCKINGLY inept...
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member of the NFU, as official investigator into the egg-
The Spectatormarketing scheme appear to me to be legitimate; for obviously and this is no reflection on the Commissionerâhis verdict, if favourable to the scheme, will carry no public...
I HAVE BEEN amused to hear from a friend in
The SpectatorItaly of the Italian Liberal Party's ingenious expedient to restore its depleted membership. Its leader, Signor Malagodi, wrote recently to the Union of Italian Monarchists, a...
SINCE I WAS more interested in the people who had
The Spectatorcome to gaze than in the visitors themselves, I stood well to the rear of the crowd outside Victoria Station on Wednesday afternoon. There was nothing unusual; it might have...
A Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorAFTER TAKING another look at the report of the 1926 Com- mittee of Inquiry into the Lane Bequest, 1 am more than ever convinced that Dublin has been shabbily treated. This Com-...
THE PUBLIC SCHOOL spirit seems to be double-distilled at Cranwell,
The Spectatorthe Royal Air Force College. From someone who has a boy there I have some interesting details of the 'hazing,' or toughening-up process, by which the seniors undertake to put...
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AMID THE jewel robberies, the caperings of French photo⢠graphers,
The Spectatorthe flights of fancy of English journalists, the allegn' tions of incompetence in the making of the arrangements, the tears, the recriminations, the inevitable Docker row, and...
One-Party Press
The SpectatorA FEW months after the Eisenhower administration took office, Vice-President Nixon, addressing a large gathering in St. Louis, paid rather a generous com- pliment to Harry...
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Contrasts in Kashmir
The SpectatorBY L. F. RUSHBROOK WILLIAMS W OULD the people of Kashmir, if left to themselves, choose to join India or Pakistan? Or would they prefer, if circumstances permitted, to become a...
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The Shogun
The SpectatorBY D. W. BROGAN I T is a fact of some importance that the most popula American plays and novels of the late world war and it aftermath deal with its eastern section; South...
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City and Suburban PY JOHN BETJEMAN M OTORING through Stockport last
The Spectatorweek I noticed a building on the main road inscribed with the words `Slumberland Research Laboratories.' I had long supposed that `Slumberland' was a kind of mattress. What have...
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The Prince of Limbo
The SpectatorI N the Army, demonstrations of tactics or of drill are some- times preceded by a sort of curtain-raiser in which everything is ,done amiss, the idea being to engage' the...
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Upon the Irish Shore
The SpectatorBY BRIAN INGLIS `B LACKGUARD, bully, drunkard, liar,' Bernard Shaw wrote fifty-odd years ago, 'foulmouth, flatterer, beggar, backbiter, venal functionary, corrupt judge, envious...
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IRELAND
The SpectatorTODAY The Political Scene Welcome, Stranger! u King Sweeney's Valediction Power from Peat An Open Economy The Writer's Mop Ended Isolation The Course of Commerce Where Motley...
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Welcome, Stranger!
The SpectatorBy JACK WHITE Jack White is Features Editor of the Irish Times, and Dublin Correspondent of the Observer. His novel One for the Road is to be published later this month by...
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King Sweeney's Valediction
The Spectator(from the Irish) Suibhne, or Sweeney, King of Dal Araidhe in Ireland, treacherously kills one of St. Ronan's acolytes during the battle of Moira in An 637. As a result of St....
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Power from Peat
The SpectatorBy C. S. ANDREWS The epithet 'politicians by accident' used to be applied to the men who had to switch from gun to party warfare after the Treaty of 1921. On that score C. S....
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An Open Economy
The SpectatorBy PATRICK LYNCH Patrick Lynch abandoned a promising career in the Irish civil service so become Lecturer in Economics at University College, Dublin; then, while still.in his...
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The Writer's Map
The SpectatorBy BENEDICT KIEL Y Benedict Kiely is literary editor of the Irish Press; he is also the author of several novels, of which the most recent, There Was an Ancient House...
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Ended Isolation
The SpectatorBy ERSKINE B. CHILDERS Erskine B. Childers is the grandson of the author of The Riddle of the Sands, who later become one of Mr. de Valera's staunchest supporters; and the son...
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The Course of Commerce
The SpectatorBy GEORGE HETHERINGTON George Hetherington is Managing Director of a printing business and of the Irish Times : and a poet whose work has appeared in several anthologies of...
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Where Motley is Worn
The SpectatorBy SEAMUS KELLY Resident columnist and theatre critic of the Irish Times, Seamus Kelly will shortly assail far larger audiences: he was press-ganged a couple of years ago by...
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The English in Ireland
The SpectatorBy THOMAS HOGAN .1 civil servant, 'Thomas Hogan' contributes caustic articles to a wide range of Irish newspapers and periodicals under almost as wide a range of pseudonyms. T...
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The Incompleat Angler
The SpectatorBy J. P. DIGBY .1. P. Digby's book Emigration : The Answer did much to awaken Irish opinion to the extraordinary neglect of potentially one of its most profitable resources. T...
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JUDAS'S SERVICE
The SpectatorWing in fourth Gospel is likely to -c .., 1 , 1 1 ing in putting the Last Supper in the e v '"" is before the Passover. Nevertheless, there hardly a Biblical scholar today who...
Letters to the Editor
The SpectatorCapricorn Africa Jeannine Scott, Lord March The Labour Party's Soul Patrick Mabel CyprusâThe Other Side Zenon Rossides Some of the Evidence Peter Evans Judas's Service Rev. J....
THE LABOUR PARTY'S SOUL
The SpectatorSIR,âIt is quite true that the parties in Britain are 'converging towards a common denomi- nator'; but it is surprising that Henry Fairklie, who discusses this so...
SOME OF THE EVIDENCE
The SpectatorSIR,âMr. Robert Lindley (March 30) 195 every right to find against my Law and order; he has no right to misrepresent me. I have not achieved the 'notable fear ( 3 ` 'comparing...
CYPRUSâTHE OTHER SIDE
The SpectatorSIR,âA damaging division within the Western World, which has contributed to the Middle Eastern crisis, has been the Greco-Turkish rift, caused by a wrong British approach to...
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THE LOST LEADER S IR,- -In your issue of April 13 Lord
The Spectator4 Ir kenhead may be pardoned perhaps for °Lb ibiting ignorance of age-long democratic pra ctices, but to insinuate that a Prime Minister must never be criticised Or attacked....
TV Sport
The SpectatorTilts last week I have been watching sport on TV. Let me say at the outset that I com- mend the whole BBC set-up in this sphere from the benign Peter Dirnmock down to the...
ART GALLERY DEFENCES
The SpectatorSIR,âThe audacious theft of the Morisot from the Tate Gallery will have caused many people to wonder if the paintings on exhibition there are given adequate protection. Some...
St a , âYour correspondents overlook the fact, Perhaps not quite made sufficiently
The Spectatorclear by C hristopher Hollis in his excellent article, that w hen Jesus said in the garden 'I AM' he was had the Name of God (Jahvch) just as he nad on another occasion with...
Contemporary Arts
The SpectatorGood Melodrama THE CRUCIBLE. By Arthur Miller. (Royal COUrt.)âTHE CHALK GARDEN. By Enid Bagnold. (Haymarket.) SEEING The Crucible in Paris a year ago, I had realised that it...
I N THEIR SHALLOW GRAVES' S111,â We were interested to read in
The Spectatorthe April 6 ti ssue of the Spectator the review by Mr. .ndovic Kennedy of one of our books, In 1 1-. heir Shallow Graves, by Benno Zeiser. We much regret that Mr. Kennedy...
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IIJe Spectator
The SpectatorAPRIL 23, 1831 A CONSPIRACY was lately discovered at c ca . stantinople in favour of the exPatr 13 , t `, Janissaries. It was cut short in the usual:!-', the unhappy wretches...
Two South African Composers
The SpectatorOr the few South African composers played in this country, Priaulx Rainier, the senior and best known, long settled in England, is the only one in whose music any trace of...
Acting Diminuendo
The SpectatorTHEY WON'T FORGET. (National Film Theatre.) âHELL ON FRISCO BAY. (Warner.)âON THE THRESHOLD OF SPACE. (Rialto.) To compare the acting in They Won't Forget, now showing as...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorThe Bourgeois Strain BY LORD DAVID CECIL T first sight this seems a very odd book. * It purports to deal with Victorian novels; but nearly half of its 467 pages deal with...
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The People's Victor
The SpectatorBY DONAT O'DONNELL How came it that this prudent, economical man was also generous? That this chaste adolescent, this model fatW: grew to be in his last years an ageing faun?...
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Divagations
The SpectatorPREDILECTIONS. By Marianne Moore. (Faber, 180 THOSE who cannot make much of Miss Marianne Moore's ve rse . and feel they have perhaps not missed much either, will find the...
Unpredictability
The SpectatorRISK AND GAMBLING. By John Cohen and Mark Hansel. (Long- mans, 14s,) THIS is not an easy book. Up to a point the metaphysics of probability are plain sailing, and so far...
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High-Grade Adventurer
The SpectatorTHIS is no ordinary biography. Its author describes Palavicino as 'a very convenient peg upon which to hang illustrations to a . . . set of themes.' Palavicino's greatest virtue...
King Oil
The SpectatorS YRIAN HARVEST. By Edwyn Hole. (Robert Hale, 18s.) C HRYSLER replaces camel, and the badu dance before the shaikhly s ociety of Kuwait in the secondhand coats of American hotel...
Petty Paces
The SpectatorROW much courteous consideration is due from readers to authors a nd vice versa? It was Robert Louis Stevenson, I think, who said l hat he was unable to enjoy Shakespeare's As...
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SOMETIMES it's hard to see what makes a best-seller sell;
The Spectatorbut v " 1 11 Sloan Wilson's The Man in the Grey Flannel Suit (Cassell, 12s. 6d.), which I understand has been a best-seller in the States' it's very plain; Besides the obvious...
Red Spies
The SpectatorSOVIET ESPIONAGE. By David J. Dallin. (O.U.P., 45s.) IN this country remarkably little has been told us about the operations and contacts of Maclean and the other Soviet agents...
Impostors Just the Same
The SpectatorI PRESUME: Stanley's Triumph and Disaster. By Ian Anstruther. (Geoffrey Bles, 18s.) ADMITTING the woodenness that laid Stanley open to ridicule, Mr. Anstruther makes his...
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A PIPING STARLING
The SpectatorApart from the cry of the nesting plover and the sounds from a rookery, I think one of the delights of spring, or any other time of the year when one is lucky enough to hear it,...
Country Life
The SpectatorBy IAN NIALL ONE becomes very used to living in a. quiet, place. Until yesterday we could listen to the morning songsters, and at lunch, if we paused for a moment and shut our...
SPRING SALMON
The SpectatorThe excitement along the river at this time of year ebbs and flows as anglers take account of weather reports and water levels at known marks, for salmon, come upriver by fits...
SOWING IN RELAYS
The SpectatorSuccessional sowings are the secret of many a -well-stocked small garden. The rush to get things in tends to make the average little plot overcrowded with things better produced...
Chess
The SpectatorBY PH ILIDOR No. 46 M. LIPTON (1st Prize, MeWilliam`Under 21 Tourney ,I955) BLACK (8 men) WHITE (10 men) WHITE to play and mate in two moves: solution next week. Solution...
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SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 884
The SpectatorACROSS 1 The kind of compensation that the dieter dreads (10). 6 An objection at the border (4). 10 Keats's December was so flighted (5). 11 Play within a play? (9) 12 Sam...
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No . '` Set by Guy Kendall A prize
The Spectatorof six guineas is offered ' 01 foreign correspondent's despatch (inft''Z or uninformed) on a rumour that Staiil mof not dead, and may be expected to reaP 1 ,0 at any moment to...
Solution on May 4 Solution to No. 882 on Nig
The Spectator351 0 N 0 013- 33 Westwood Park, '.F.23. "II Lane. Glass H° t ht°° ' C4stietbrd' Y orks, and siLDR. A. ALP The winners Cr r °"1 No. 882 arc' Mits. E. J. WINFIEIJ''
Under-cover Work
The SpectatorA prize of £5 was offered for an extract from the adventures of one who was a Viewer for the 1TA, a Taxpayer for the Treasury, a Non-U for Nancy Mit ford, a Bright. Y01111,1;...
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COMPANY NOTES
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS AT the end of last week the Stock Exchange was, as I have said, sold out. It was all prepared for an advance. Sentiment in the gilt-edged market had been improved by...
FLEXIBILITY AND MONETARY CONTROLS
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT MUST challenge the Chancellor on his statement that no one has yet found an easy way to restrict credit without high interest rates. I have shown in this...