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A DUTCHMAN AND HIS WIFE were banned from attending church
The Spectatorfor the sin of buying a tele- vision set, it was denied that Mrs Jacqueline Kennedy is to become engaged to the Spanish Ambassador to the Vatican, and Miss Barbra Streisand...
Portrait of the Week
The SpectatorON MONDAY the new Members began swearing in, Dr Horace King was re-elected Speaker and on Thursday the Queen opened the new ses- sion, the sixteenth of her reign. The Leader of...
MR IAN SMITH made a dawn broadcast in Rhodesia admitting
The Spectatorthat there was no immedi- ate prospect of receiving oil through Beira and announcing the closure of the residual British mission in Salisbury. Rhodesia, however, con- tinued to...
Creeping Devaluation
The SpectatorI T is widely supposed that the present Government, whatever mistakes it may make in the management of the nation's finances, is at least trying to run the eco- nomy in a new...
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POLITICAL COMMENTARY
The SpectatorThe Enochs of the Left By ALAN WATKINS M R HAROLD WILSON is said to hold the view that if he fell under the proverbial political bus, his successor would be Mr James...
To Lucasta, Going to the Polls
The Spectator'Son, if you want to represent people you must love them first.'—Advice given by his father to the young Lyndon Johnson at the commence- ment of his career. Tell me not (Sweet)...
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MOORS MURDERS
The SpectatorLiberty's Muddy Fountain By LUDOVIC KENNEDY IKE some hidden but slowly festering sore, of L i whose existence we have all been aware for some time, the evidence in the Moors...
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MOSCOW LITERARY TRIAL
The SpectatorAll Are Guilty By TIBOR SZAMUELY A DREI SINYAVSKY and 1 were students together at Moscow University in 1948-50: he at the Philological, and 1 at the Historical Faculty....
AMERICA
The SpectatorAn Academy Goes to War From MURRAY KEMPTON NEW PORK HE higher learning in America accepted its I social responsibilities in the 'thirties, its military responsibilities in...
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How Relevant is the Budget?
The SpectatorBy WILFRED BECKERMAN rr'llERE is a danger that, in about two weeks' I time, commentators on the budget will have nothing more interesting to say than whether it provides the...
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Shadow Ministries
The SpectatorEveryone—except those in a position to do something about it—agrees that the reform of Parliament, and in particular the growth of specialist, professionally staffed,...
Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorIt's good, too, to see Mr Quintin Hogg, a humane man, as Shadow Home Secretary: a thoroughly worthy opponent for Mr Roy Jen- kins. With the loss of so much of the old guard (and...
The Press 'Verwoerd warns on Gold' ran the main head-
The Spectatorline in last Tuesday's Daily Express : 'South Africa has issued a grim warning.to Britain on the havoc that would hit world gold markets. in- cluding London, if trade sanctions...
Ten Per Cent Like Mr Harold Wilson, I've been caught
The Spectatorby the Ten Per Cent Census. Happily, all the form- filling has at least been made relatively easy thanks to Somerset House's ingenious crib: a facsimile census form, all...
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Rhodesia: The Road to Ruin By SIR EDGAR WHITEHEAD
The SpectatorTr is now just over five months since the Rho- idesian government made its unilateral declaration of independence It is just over three months since Mr Wilson told the...
MEDICINE TODAY
The SpectatorInstant Zen By JOI-IN ROWAN WILSON T ()Nice knew a man who was an alcoholic. After la while he grew alarmed at his state of health and tried to cure himself, unwisely, by...
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AFTERTHOUGHT
The SpectatorSensual Pleasures By ALAN BRIEN I'vn always thought my- self, in a quiet way, some kind of connoisseur of 'sensual pleasure. There seems to me hardly any activity, if savoured...
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BBC Impartiality
The SpectatorSIR,—An error in stating the broadcast time has enabled the BBC to produce an analysis of a French-language broadcast quite different from the one of which I complain. This is...
Stabat Mater
The SpectatorSIR,—I'm" interested to read that Rossini's Stahel! Mater has got a riveting grip on you ('Spectator's Notebook,' April 8), but horrified that the recording you've gone and...
Dearer and Dearer Money
The SpectatorSta,—As one who bears some responsibility for the memorandum recently submitted to the Chancellor by the Wider Share Ownership Council, I hope Mr Nicholas Davenport is right in...
A Word to Mr Hollis
The SpectatorSta,—The best of verse will surely jar If Pennsylvania's known as Pa. For over here, as all will say. _Pennsylvania's called—pee-ay., 'JAW(' MEREDITH 1015 W. Cherry Hill...
Dybbukism and the US Intellectual
The SpectatorSIR,—My -book Starting Out in the Thirties, so crudely made an excuse for an attack on 'New York Intellectuals' by Mr Arnold Beichman of New York. is not—as the unwary reader of...
SIR,—After eleven years and the death of his victim, Alan
The SpectatorBrien is disposed to retract his words and to write appreciatively of Evelyn Waugh. While in this retrospective and penitent mood, is he prepared also to review his opinions on...
Evelyn Waugh
The SpectatorSis.- -If I were an effective writer there is one task I would like to undertake: that of refuting the popular impression of Evelyn Waugh having been an idolater of the...
F ',it: Jack Longland, Thomas W. Gadd, ,V,vt W. Rogers,
The SpectatorHenry Jones. John Biggs- . i3on, MP, David Meredith. Alfred Kazin, M ft. Thompson. E. W. I. Palamountain, L. G. Pine, Charles Hamblett. In Defence of Oxbridge Sts.-1 find it...
Atomic Diplomacy SIR.—Reviewin g Atomic Diplomacy: Hiroshima and Potsdam, by Gar
The SpectatorAlperovitz. Mr D. C. Watt de- scribes the author's thesis that the US decision to drop the A-bomb was directed against the USSR as much as against Japan as 'new and startling.'...
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DM A LAIL2INEng
The SpectatorDown Among the Dead Men By HILARY SPURLING O F all human plants,' said Proust, 'habit requires the least fostering, and is the first to appear on the seeming desolation of the...
Faugh, by Strix
The SpectatorSnt,—I really do not mind being shot at for genuine inaccuracies, especially when the brave critic has the shield, which I never employ, of anonymity, but I do object to being...
Censorship
The SpectatorSm,—I am gathering material for a book on censor- ship in the theatre, cinema, television and publishing. would be pleased to hear from authors, directors, producers and actors...
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TELEVISION
The SpectatorThe Beady Eye A ATER watching Sir Kenneth Clark talking on Courbet (ATV—Monday, 11.10 p.m.), I am confirmed in my suspicion that I am basically a sucker for the electronic...
MUSIC
The SpectatorBraving the Deluge W ITHIN a matter of eight weeks, from mid- April to early June, London will have heard seven of Mahler's ten symphonies, Nos. 1, 6 and 10 being the odd men...
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BALLET
The SpectatorSolar Eclipse T YIELD to no one in my admiration for 'Western Theatre Ballet and in my pleasure at seeing them at last installed at Sadler's Wells, but to find them moved in...
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`The Volunteers are Dead'
The SpectatorBy ROBERT RHODES JAMES 'ruts has taken everyone by surprise.' With I these words James Stephens opened his daily narrative of the Easter Rising in Dublin in April 1916.* It...
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American Dreams
The SpectatorHENRY JAMES once contributed an essay to a symposium on life after death. He thought there might be some form of after-life, but this surely must be reserved for people of...
The First Liberals
The SpectatorThe Formation of the Liberal Party 1857-1868. By John Vincent. (Constable, 42s.) IN spite of the amount written about ,nineteenth- century Britain, great tracts of its history...
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Devil's Advocate
The SpectatorThe Mandarin and Other Stories. By Eva de Queiroz. (Bodley Head, 21s.) The Seed. By Tarjei Vesaas. (Peter Owen, 25s.) The Ballad of Oliver Powell. By Stead Jones. (Bles, 18s.)...
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Versailles to Potsdam
The SpectatorTo compress the history of Europe from 1919 to 1945 into 70,000 words, to be thorough yet lively, to combine a high level of scholarship with a simplicity which will attract the...
In the Galaxy
The SpectatorVoices from the Sky. By Arthur C. Clarke. (Gollancz, 25s.) THE best science-fiction is always that which we doubt is really fiction at all, rather a reality which we believe may...
The Loyal Lord
The SpectatorThe Abdication of King Edward VIII. By Lord Beaverbrook. Edited, with an introduction, by A. I. P. Taylor. (Hamish Hamilton, 16s.) `CHURCHILL,' wrote Mr A. J. P Taylor, in his...
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`LIE EOBVArUf `ME @DIM • , More Capital Curbs Ahead
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT B FIORP. the election. Mr Callaghan saw no need for any 'severe increase' in taxation. But our foreign creditors are doubtless watch- ing the trade...
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Investment Notes
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS T um not-so-good trade returns had little effect upon security prices because they had been generally anticipated. Brokers are mostly hold- ing their investment fire...
Company Notes
The SpectatorBy. LOTHBURY T HE results, before tax, of Thomas Tilling, the industrial holding company, are little different from those of 1964, itself a record, but the second interim of 20...
Copper Shares Last week I wrote before the excitement in
The Spectatorthe copper market had flared up. The aggressive buying of RST came from America, which got wind of the sensational rise of £160 in Chilean copper to £496 a ton. When the...
British Sugar Corporation This is a case of private enterprise
The Spectatorinde- pendently run, but with 25 per cent of the equity held by the Sugar Board and 114 per cent by the Government.The company was originally formed to buy the UK crop of sugar...
Chess
The SpectatorBy PHILIDOR B. J. DE C. ANDRADI, (The Star, 1953' WHITE to play ani mate in three moves solution ne,ct week Solution to No. 278 (Kubbel). K- Kt 5 !, threat Q R. 1. ..P-B5ch: 2...
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A dining-car luncher, due to arrive at his destination within
The Spectatorminutes, demanded his pudding of the waiter with evident anxiety. 'You've got plenty of time, sir,' was the reply. 'I have not,' complained the passenger, 'we arrive in three...
CONSUMING INTEREST
The SpectatorGetting the Balance Right By LESLIE ADRIAN Elsewhere in the book she points out that the manufacturer knows his product intimately (after all, he makes it, and he makes it to...
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1218
The SpectatorACROSS I. Old fellows who help to soften the blow (7) 5. Water-jumps? (7) 9. Old Moor (7) 10. Artist and friend, look. Where? In Daly (7) 11. Cooks take umbrage-with a chopper?...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 1217 ACROSS.-1 Set ups. 4 Agrimony.
The Spectator10 Opossum. 11 Repulse. 12 Fairy money. 13 Amid. 15 Authors. 17 Evolved. 19 Elected. 21 Sadness. 23 Iota. 24 Stirrup- cup. 27 Stamina. 28 Extreme. 29 Tin- tacks. 30 Crater....
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My Grandfather
The SpectatorBy LORD EGREMONT I WAS messing about in my muniment room the other day and dusting off e , various old papers and my old friend, Mr Francis Steer, the county archivist, who...
NEXT WEEK
The SpectatorFrom Balfour to Sir Alec : by lain Macleod Spring Books-2 One year's subscription to the 'Spectator': f3 15s. (including postage) in the United Kingdom and Eire-By surface mail...