Page 1
Page 3
After Los Angeles?
The Spectator`T is proper to stress,' said the Superinten- I T dent, 'that this disgusting breach of the peace resulted not directly from any racial conflict but minor differences between...
Portrait of the Week
The SpectatorMORE AMERICANS were killed last weekend in Los Angeles than in Vietnam, and probably more troops were deployed. Four days of burning, looting, shooting, and stoning left the...
Page 4
IMMIGRATION
The SpectatorDefending the White Paper By ROY HATTERSLEY, MP B URIED deep beneath the layers of professional assurance and synthetic self-confidence, most politicians possess a skin as...
VIEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorFrom Afar MURRAY KEMPTON writes from Long Island : Everyone even here—as far from the scene as it is possible to get and remain on the same continent—talks about the Negro...
NEXT WEEK DESMOND STEWART
The SpectatorThe Soviet Writers' Rest House • DAVID KNOWLES on The Dark Ages One year's subscription to'the'Speciator': £3 15s. (including postage) in the United Kingdom and Eire. By...
Page 5
THE PRESS
The SpectatorBack to Form? - CHRISTOPHER BOOKER writes : It was rather unfair of Private Eye, I thought, to entitle their recent parody of the Daily Ex- press 'The Daily Getsworse.' Comets...
7 HE LAW
The SpectatorA Slight Case of Rape ALAN WATKINS writes: Over a month has passed since the Court of Criminal Appeal refused Derek Hampton leave to appeal against a sentence of three years'...
Page 6
Strictly for the Rats
The SpectatorA rat which has injections From an experienced vet, Regains in recollection What other rats forget. They say that by December, Thanks to this picric fat, Some monkeys will...
RHODESIA
The SpectatorComing or Going? HARRY FRANKLIN writes from Salisbury : Predictably, Mr. Ian Smith. Rhodesia's Prime Minister, has let off steam again. He has to, whenever his followers'...
Page 7
Our Yankee Correspondent
The SpectatorRiffling through back volumes in an idle Moment, I came upon a letter on the racial s ituation from .our American correspondent in New York, dated August I I, 1865--four months...
The Exodus
The SpectatorFrom OSBERT HASTINGS F OR several thousands of years Italians have been getting into practice for celebrating the mid-August holiday, a ritual of release even before the time...
Spectator's Notebook
The Spectatorsuppose one can namedrop about a building and an organisation as easily as about a person. So then Leslie Adrian's comment that in Norway all wines and spirits are bought by...
Tailpiece
The SpectatorNothing, but nothing alters the even tenor of a BBC interview. Not even the gallant Mr. Manry —Nay I join you in your boat?' I was just reeling from the impact of the deadpan...
Dog Days Parliament is in the doghouse. The Session ended
The Spectatorwith protest tetters from study and rectory, boardroom and commonroom. In general we were thought to be too rude, too controversial, too destructive. Parliament is not what it...
The Tempest
The SpectatorThe appalling destruction caused by almost a week of savage storms all over Chile must seriously endanger President Frei's programme of reforms. The washing away of houses so...
Saying of the Week
The SpectatorThere is something that these three largely admirable institutions (the BBC. the Guardian and the Observer) have in common which drives some people to quite extravagant...
Page 9
Notes from the Yemen
The Spectatorb ruin ARNO 1. 1) Iii ICHMAN TAIZ HE late Imam Ahmad's headsman is now a I gatekeeper at the water supply and sanita- tion project fostered by the United States aid programme....
LONDON PRIDE
The SpectatorDeptford* ROGERS By DAVID T HE rush hour sweeps hard down the Old Kent Road, past the last outpost of the Metropolitan Line at New Cross, and is finally halted at the traffic...
Page 10
The Overnight-Bag
The SpectatorBy GRAHAM GREENE 'Tim little man who came to the information 1 desk in Nice airport when they demanded 'Henry Cooper, .passenger on BEA flight 105 for London,' looked like a...
Page 13
London Transport
The SpectatorSIR.---The two electronic " ticket gates at Tumham Green station, which Giles Playfair writes about in your issue of August 6, are part of a major ex- periment London Transport...
The Man , Who Was Shakespeare SIR. —Mr. Calvin Hoffman asks why,
The Spectatorin 'calumni- ously' referring to his lurid book proposing that Marlowe wrote Shakespeare's works. I did not draw readers' attention to what he alone calls his rebuttal of the...
Observermess , SIR,—Being on holiday. I have only just seen
The SpectatorMr. . Christopher Booker's latest essay on the Observer. Should one try to answer such a jumble of spite, arrogance and grotesque misrepresentation? Prob- ably not. I think I...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorFrom : Peter PatersOn, Martin Seymour-Smith, D. H. W hitinf.!, R. M. Robbins, L. I. Clarke, David Astor, lint Clark, W. Diment. Devlin-Worship slit,- In the course of his...
Mrs. Castle's Blueprint
The SpectatorSIR,—Quoodle's high praise for the contribution made to the development of friendship with the developing countries by school-leaver volunteers is fully justified. His implied...
SIR,--I cannot allow to pass without comment. Mr. Booker's references
The Spectatorto myself in the Spectator of August 6. He refers. to the Observer Magazine and then talks about the 'amateurishness with which it employed Jim Clark to write about driving...
The Anti-Whites
The SpectatorSIR,--Mr. Lewis Hastings argues (Spectator. August 6) that because the Blacks in the Congo behaved badly, then the Blacks in South Africa, more than 500 miles away, are not to...
Page 14
Mozart and Bach
The SpectatorSIR,—Speculations concerning Frederick the Great's would-be contributions to music could hardly go further than they seem in Sir Denis Brogan's letter. Frederick the Great was...
ARTS & AMUSEMENTS
The SpectatorWe Came, We Saw, We Concurred By DAVID BENEDICTUS MNE conquest of the Waterloo Road by the I East Berliners ranks with Hannibal's cross- ing of the Alps as a triumph against...
Page 15
RADIO
The SpectatorWord That I Lack T HERE are three jades in radio ' s stable: music, words and other noises. What with the P i rates, the Light Programme and its new pri- vate paddock all day...
Page 16
Old Lamps For New
The SpectatorW E tune in or climb to the Proms balcony oith apprehensive ears. A newly commis- sioned work, composer British, is coming up. Are we going to enjoy it? The cynic in us replies:...
ART
The SpectatorPeople's Art A Ar the Hamilton Galleries a small, fascinating . 1,show has been mounted of '30 Centuries of Iranian Art,' covering the Amlash, Luristan and Islamic periods....
THE SPECTATOR AND THE PROMS Our questionnaire on Promgoers' tastes,.has
The Spectatorbeen widely circulated, but copies arc still available and may he obtained, with stamped envelopes for replies, from the offices of the Spectator, 99, Gower Street, London, WC1.
Page 18
BOOKS Richard Jefferies
The SpectatorBy HENRY WILLIAMSON R ICHARD JEFFERIES, who died in 1887, was one of those men who are born with an extra-sensory awareness of the wild or natural world, and the strange...
Page 19
Scourge of the Bourgeois
The SpectatorIT is tempting to • compare Mayakovsky with Kipling. Both poets, for example, express the once fashionable, but now dated, ideology of an imperialist ruling class, and each has...
Repeal! Repeal!
The SpectatorCATIIOLIC emancipation, in 1829, may have brought with it few immediate practical advan- tages for Irish Catholics, but it won for Daniel O'Connell an ascendancy in Irish...
Page 20
Ends of the Earth
The SpectatorThe Nooks and Byways of Italy, by Craufurd Tait Ramage, appeared in 1864. Since then it has been a rarity known to few. Miss Edith Clay has edited Ramage in South Italy...
Page 21
Roads to Ruin
The SpectatorNumber. 7 : Alexander Hamilton's Secret At- tempts to Control American For;:ign Policy. By Julian Boyd. (PrincetonIO.U.P.,.32s.) TitE.Ainerican approach to revolution has been...
It's a Crime
The SpectatorThe • Fidelio Score. By Gerald Sinstadt. (John Long, 15s.) A British Intelligence courier is killed, not accidentally,. and his successor is sent, inadequately briefed and...
Joker Take Queen. By Bruce Munslow. (John 1..ong, 15s.) Nothing
The Spectatorever happened in remote Pindletor, on the edge of Dartmoor, and yet what Chris Knight saw . on the common on the fi rst night of' his visit sent him running to the village hall...
NOVELS
The Spectator• Gurlie, Joe, and Spider White Mule. By William Carlos Williams. (Mac- Gibbon and Kee, 30s.) EXCEPT for The Great American Novel, which is 'experimental' prOse-poetry and...
Page 22
Five Failures
The SpectatorTHE more I read new novels, the more I am convinced that what makes most of them so mediocre is a failure of sensibility in the writer -a failure which we recognise, in its many...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 1183 ACROSS: 1 Tug-of-war. 5 Purdah.
The Spectator9 Macropod. 10 Big-wig. 12 Aprons. 13 Sprouted. 15 Permanent way. 18 Wishing- wells. 23 Narwhalk. 24 Scouts. 26 Ornery. 27 Confrere. 28 Greats. 29 Detritus. DOWN: I Tom-cat. 2...
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1184
The SpectatorACROSS 1. A novel piece of luck (8) 5. So fast? You must be dreaming! (6) 9. Up came a trunk for the stan- dard (4-4) 10. Bear a utensil (6) 12. I wish a pound for the man from...
Page 23
THE CITY
The SpectatorInvestment Notes By CUSTOS T 'I 1 E attempt to put the equity market better in the new Stock Exchange account is fizzling ° tit as I write. The latest bulletin of the National...
Company Notes
The SpectatorBy LOTHBURY T Antiference Group is just about holding its own with pre-tax profits of £225,727 for the year ended March 31, 1965, against £240,790. The company is mainly...
Page 24
Finding Fault
The SpectatorBy LESLIE ADRIAN One way out of this situation is to buy an 'as new, one good owner' second-hand car. We all know the tale of the bashed-up car so advertised that had in fact...
ENDPAPERS
The SpectatorAnother Part of the Forest By STR1X THE other day I found myself, for about ten minutes, in a curious. mildly disagreeable, and thought-provoking situa- tion. I was, or rather...
Page 25
Chess
The SpectatorBy PUILIDOR 244. 0. GALLISCHEK (from Richter's Schach-Delikatessen) BLACK (3 mew WHITE (to men) W "IL ,t.• thi s position Black plays . . . R—I3 6 ch; how can .,, "Re avoid...
Afterthought
The SpectatorBy ALAN BRIEN RELUCTANTLY. I am coming to the conclusion that be- d ing a professional critic of anything may be an un- natural occupation. I would rather not admit this as I...