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13.K⢠e8 C 72/6 e Property Of Th Ber jesty's
The SpectatorC 4 r s PaP ence-tt Predkx , SPECIAL etTM/961a....0 DF-r1wIlinle inor 96 4 ) (Chequers 20 14ov 1 VLF and Germany Relations With e Secretary D89/64 by th of State for . The...
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Agenda for Chequers
The SpectatorTHE Government's decision to initiate a full-scale review of British defence policy at Chequers this weekend could hardly be better timed. Not only is the NATO alliance in...
âPortrait of the Week
The SpectatorFIFTY TORY MPS RUSHED to sign a Commons motion calling for a better deal for London com- muters, after rail drivers began a go-slow in support of a pay rise on top of their...
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Mr. Walker's Visit
The SpectatorSARAH GAINDAM writes front Bonn: M R. GORDON WALKER talked to his German colleagues last Sunday, according to him- self, for rather less than half the time available about a...
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When Will the Crisis Be?
The SpectatorPAUL LEWIS writes from Brussels: As the Common Market moves toward a Christmas which everyone has been predicting will turn out to be the most critical of its ex- istence, the...
Mr. Menzies Chips In
The SpectatorDONALD HORNE writes from Sydney : ⢠Australia is not going to become a nation in arms just because Sir Robert Menzies has an- nounced that he is going to spend some more...
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Mr. Smith Fights On
The SpectatorLEO BARON writes from Bulawayo With the chiefs' Lndaba and the referendum over, one would have expected Mr. Smith to allow the political temperature to subside. It has indeed...
Political Commentary
The SpectatorThe Way the Cabinet Works By ALAN WATKINS IN the past week the pattern of Mr. Harold Wilson's Government has become much clearer. It is now pos- sible to perceive, more...
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The Press
The SpectatorSelling the Sun By RANDOLPH S. CHURCHILL satisfactory to the advertisers, . within the area bla bla bla' whatever that may mean. World's Press News adds this helpful and hope-...
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A New Sort of University
The SpectatorBy G. S. BROSAN O NE of the problems which led to the setting up of the Robbins Committee was that of the institutions of higher education outside the universities. It was in...
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What Chance Has Mr. Brown?
The SpectatorBy ERIC JACOBS THE task Mr. George Brown has set himself may well prove to be the major diplomatic exercise of this Government. Diplomacy is the right word, because the...
NEXT WEEK
The SpectatorArticles and Reviews by PATRICK ANDERSON, NEVILLE BRAY- BROOKE, ALAN BRIEN, ANTHONY BURGESS, ALAN CLARK, QUENTIN CREWE, CONSTAN- TINE FITZGIBBON, ELIZABETH JENNINGS, JOHN LE ....
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Success Story Success Story In 1957 the Overseas Service Resettlenient
The SpectatorBureau was set up to help those who retired or were retired as the dependent territories of the Commonwealth became independent. The Secre- tary of State for the Colonies in...
Mr. Nixon Surfaces
The SpectatorFrom MURRAY KEMPTON M R. NIXON seems to have surfaced as prime candidate to command the receivership of the Republican Party. The prize is worth having; politics remains a...
Her Father's Daughter
The SpectatorLeo Baron is well known to readers of the Spectator. A solicitor in Bulawayo (and, inci- dentally, a few years ago one of the most brilliant bridge players in Britain), he has...
Lorries on the Moors
The SpectatorIf we can get the Ombudsman to work in time he might start by having a look at the proposal of the North Riding County Council to build a lorry route from Hetton-le-Hole to...
What is a Civil Servant?
The SpectatorIt is a tradition of the House of Commons that civil servants are not attacked in the House. This is partly because they are unable to reply, but chiefly because they are...
No ⢠Comment
The SpectatorExtract from leaflets issued this week by the Friends of Barry Goldwater in Britain: Barry Goldwater still leads the Republican Party and he has a very good chance of securing...
Fit to Rule
The SpectatorThe Observer, in commenting on a letter of mine in The Times, misstates my view of the con- stitutional position following a government de- feat in the House of Commons. I was...
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John Bull's First Job
The SpectatorAbsent With Leave By GILES PLAYFAIR Age has since taught me, of course, that paid non-jobs are by no means rarities in themselves. But if they are usually reserved, if not for...
Anglo-American Co-operation
The SpectatorThere is chaos In Laos, And no man is an island In Thailand. The British do not give a damn What happens in Vietnam, And the Americans would feel much easier If only they would...
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SLOGANS AND CRUSADES Si,âWhen the Rev. J. R. M. Hawthorne,
The Spectatorof Norwich, was made a Deacon of the Church of England, he was asked the question, `Do you un- feignedly believe all the Canonical Scriptures of the Old and New Testament?' His...
WORD-HAPPY SIR,âMany of your contributors have given their views on
The SpectatorMr. Wilson's verbal chastisement of the Member for Smethwick, an incident that does not seem to prove much except that the Prime Minister, when it suits him, can dispense with...
THE VIEW FROM MY GRAMMAR SCHOOL
The SpectatorSIR, â Mr. William Thornton's statement that it is 'probably inevitable' that teachers should know 'very little of what goes on in other teachers' class' rooms, and still less...
SIR, â Thank heavens Leslie Adrian has draw° attention to the fact
The Spectatorthat motherhood is not the overwhelmingly (and sentimentally) elevating experi - ence it's cracked up to be. Women are supposed conveniently to forget the nastiness of...
LORD DEVLIN'S SPEECH SR,âLord Devlin's memory of his address to
The Spectatorthe Winnipeg Press Club on October 16, as outlined in his letter of November 6, is accurate. His remarks were recorded electronically and a transcript gives these two following...
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THE SOLDIER'S LOAD From Major-General I. R. Hartwell SIR,-1 feel
The Spectatorit is important to correct the unavoidable impression given in your article 'The War Which Cannot Be Won' that the weight of pack carried by the soldier during jungle operations...
REMEMBERING NEHRU From Earl Mountbatten of Burma SIR,âOn this, the
The Spectatorseventy-fifth anniversary of his birth, I have felt, as the last Viceroy of India, that I should initiate action in this country to com- memorate the memory of the later Prime...
THE MOVEMENT AND THE GROUP SIR,âI feel rather like Princip
The Spectatorthe assassin after being beaten up at Sarajevo! Several large boots have been directed at my head, and now I lie in a pool of apostate's blood. The steel-tipped edge of Mr....
WELFARE AND BUREAUCRACY SIR,âThere must be some way of administering
The Spectatorthe apparatus of the Welfare State more acceptably than the present system of Civil Service, or government bureaucracy, control. Before the Reformation, what are now broadly...
IN DEFENCE OF PSNOW
The SpectatorSla,âPerhaps the reviewer of Corridors of Power Would be interested in the following article from The New African Review of Intellect and Culture, retranslated from the...
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NSMAPMAWOL
The SpectatorBy CHRISTOPHER BOOKER First, there is the fact that, as the creator of TW3, one of the few real signs of new life in the BBC for two years, Ned Sherrin has been looked to as the...
Liberty and Rigidity
The SpectatorDENYS LASDUN is an architect who speaks about his buildings with a clarity that builds bridges. Pre- sumably this is one reason why he was chosen to design the National Theatre...
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One Man Show
The SpectatorBy CHARLES REID Maw is a 'natural.' I am sure he has a clutch of valid operas in his knapsack. But in One Man Show both he and Mr. Jacobs get off rather on the wrong foot. The...
for Fun All
The SpectatorTopkapi. (London Pav- ilion, certificate.)â The War of the Buttons. (Paris-Pullman, 'X' cer- tificate.) Istanbul, where a gang of jewel-thieves com- posed of a...
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Flib -Flab
The SpectatorIn White America. (New Arts.)âHe Who Gets Slapped. (Hampstead Theatre Club.) THE theatrical objections to In White America are simple. It is an imitation of a television...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorTurner and Sea-Myth By NEVILE WALLIS (NE all subjects none should be more en- trancing to English painters, one would think, than the infinite phases of the sea. As to the...
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The Liberal Imagination
The SpectatorPolitical Power : USA/USSR. By Zbigniew Brzezinski and Samuel P. Huntington. (Chatto, 50s.) BRAVE men collect and publish the essays of the dear departed, who are then glad to...
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Old Master
The SpectatorR. V. W. A Biography of Ralph Vaughan Williams. By Ursula Vaughan Williams. (0.U.P., 50s.) FILLING out impressions one got from occa- sional talks with him and from fugitive...
While We Live
The SpectatorThinking about streets: Tar and gravel. A jarring surface to the heel. Thinking about towns: A million mammoth honeycombs; concrete and glass and steel. Thinking about words:...
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âand Remembering the Thirties
The SpectatorPoetry of the Thirties. Introduced and edited by Robin Skelton. (Penguin, 5s.) IN some ways, the poetry of the 1930s seems even more remote from us than that of the Victorians...
Poetry : Big Gameâ IN this extremely rhetorical and ambitious
The Spectatoressay John Holloway sets out to consider the relation- ship of poetry to contemporary culture. The Lion Hunt of the title refers to the 'marvellous and terrifying work of art'...
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All Power to the Soviets!
The SpectatorThe Life and Death of Lenin. By Robert Payne. (W. H. Allen, 42s.) Justice in Moscow. By George Feifer. (The Bodley Head, 25s.) THEODORE DAN, born in 1871, devoted his whole...
Treasury Blues
The SpectatorThe Split Society. By Nicholas Davenport. (Gollancz, 25s.) IF ever there was a voice crying in the wilderness, it has been Nicholas Davenport in the City for the last forty...
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As Others See Us
The SpectatorShe finding on his lips sour champagne, and he on her hair confetti, they enter that eclipse the novels promise. She in his eyes, he in hers, melt as the moon devours the sun....
Two Poems
The SpectatorBy JON STALLWORTHY Thistles Half grown before half seen, like urchins in armour double their size they stand their ground boldly, their keen swords out. But the farmer ignores...
The Lost Danube
The SpectatorTHE Vienna of 1931-34 is the setting of John Gunther's novel The Lost City, and the events leading to Nazi domination of Austria form a well-documented background to this story...
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Investment Notes
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS T HE equity share markets are drifting down, as I anticipated, on the realisation that a cor- poration tax means 'double taxation' of dividends and a cut in dividends...
The Economy
The SpectatorSecond Thoughts on the Budget By NICHOLAS DAVENPORT The first idea does not depend simply on mak- ing a show of social justice. Everyone welcomes the higher pensions and...
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Company Notes
The SpectatorBy LOTHBURY A SUBSTANTIAL rise in dealing profits and addi- tional income received from two acquisitions made last year are mainly responsible for the big increase in pre-tax...
Consuming Interest
The SpectatorDesert Song By LESLIE ADRIAN But it is most encouraging to observe the way in which the gas industry, at one time apparently indissolubly tied to a clumsy, dirty and increas-...
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Mrs. Wilson's Tea Party
The SpectatorBy MARY HOLLAND Jr may be hard to recog- nise yourself as a tourist in a foreign country. It's even tougher to gather with a group of people who do your job and , realise that...
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Afterthought .
The SpectatorBy ALAN BRIEN ⢠As an avid, engrossed, self-identified reader of Arthur Koestler's auto- biographies, I feel I know him very well. In many ways, he is the modern author I...
Chess
The SpectatorBy PHILIDOR No. 205 A. ZARUR (Hon. Men., Nanning Tourney, 1959) BLACK (10 men) WHITE (10 men) WHITE to play and mate in two moves; solution next week. Solution to No. 204...
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SOI.E'TION TO ('ROSSWORD 1144
The SpectatorAC ROSS.-1 Salary. 4 Advances. 10 Adonais. 11 Stowage. 12 0),e-worked. 13 Shod. IS Essence. 17 leemnan. Is Amphora. 21 1)ogsiar. 23 reek. 2-1 t .e.7 Grandma. 2S Andvari. 29...
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1145
The SpectatorACROSS 2. 1. Dream about what's right and 29. then do wrong (6) 4. Shakespeare's trick to gain ap- plause? Nonsense! (4-4) 9 . The murmur of birds (6) ⢠Sern back Unity. .As-...