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— Portrait or the Week— MR. MACMILLAN arrived in Salisbury
The Spectatorand appeared at a public meeting with Sir Roy Welensky. He was generally regarded as having explained .away for Sir Roy's benefit the reassurances he had given in his Lagos...
MACJANUS
The SpectatorThis was no excuse, though, for the British decision to present their terms on sovereignty and on the size of the bases not as a matter for discussion but as an ultimatum....
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Justice in Turkey . . .
The SpectatorT HE Turkish NI inister for Justice. Esat Budakoglu. has been trying to defend his Government from the charges recently levelled against it by the International Press Institute....
What's Left?
The SpectatorAdi Foo.r is .unlikely to have attended the 'Which Way For Labour?' meeting at St. Pancras Town Hall last weekend; it was spon- sored by the Doily Worker, an organisation for...
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Nasser Redivivus From MICHAEL ADAMS BEIRUT A FTER a confused
The Spectatorand confusing 1959, these first A weeks of the new year have seen a recog- nisable pattern emerging again in the Middle East. And the most striking single element is the...
• . and at Home
The SpectatorThe resounding judgment by the Court of Criminal Appeal—that 'it is a cardinal principle of our criminal law that in considering their verdict, concerning as it does the liberty...
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A Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorIn the Woodpile loNcE had lunch with an African Negro in a Victoria Street pub (which, just to make the whole Reche,rche more charming, was in those days one of the few places...
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• • •
The SpectatorIf Seven Maids, with Seven Mops From ROY JENKINS, MN PARIS IN January. 1957, upon his accession to the 1 Premiership, Mr. Macmillan announced that the central feature of his...
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Up the Garden
The SpectatorBy MICHAEL FOOT T o make sure I had got it right, I read two sentences in your editorial last week six times. 'The point of the Piccadilly affair,' you wrote, 'is that the...
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`Man in a Dressing Gown'
The SpectatorBY IAN GILMOUR MHE Spanish press..has been described by Mr. I H. L. Matthews, the former Spanish corre- spondent of the New York Tinto': as 'one of the greatest insults to the...
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Letter of the Law
The SpectatorHard Cases By R. A. CLINE A RECENT issue of that handy and under- rated compendium, the All England Law Reports, includes three judgments with the most diverse kind of facts,...
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CHEAP LITERATURE am truly sorry that my little parody has
The Spectatorupset the fine and famous Trinity College, Dublin, at a time when they are making a new appeal for support : and I have sent a modest cheque to the fund. But I am very glad to...
SIR,—There are cogent arguments for and against the use of
The Spectatorwafer bread at Holy Communion. It doesn't resemble ordinary, everyday bread; but it is much more convenient to handle. It can, of course, be described as rather tasteless. But...
NEVER SO GOOD?
The SpectatorSIR,—Your editorial advice to the Labour Party to throw off the dead weight of nationalisation enlists my support, but .,you might have found a better precedent than the...
SIR,—T am delighted to hear from Monica Furlong of the
The Spectatorvast and surprising new enthusiasm sweeping through the Established Church; but I rather wonder on what she bases her report. How many bishops, for example, enforce thc.use if...
Reforming the Reformed
The SpectatorRev. T. F. Robinson, W. N. J. Howard, Rev. V. W. S. Leatherdale, Rev. J. W. Kennedy Never So Good? Brian Bond Cheap Literature Sir Alan Herbert, Sir Stanley Unwin...
SIR,—No one has ever explained why boOk publishers should , be
The Spectatorsingled out for this special form of Capital Tax which presses most hardly on expensive scholarly books in English, whether produced here or imported from a broad, That the tax...
SIR,—Many thanks for Monica Furlong's stimulat- ing and right-up-to-date article.
The SpectatorThings are really happening these days. Next year's retranslation of the New Testament' will, we hope, give a real impetus to the retranslation of the Book of Common Prayer into...
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EMB ARRASSMENT OF EMPIRE have just read, and with great surprise,
The Spectatora letter fro m my friend, Dr. Sudhin N. Ghose, in your issue of December 18, in which he vehemently denies Kipling's knowledge of Indian India, and even charges h im with lying....
ANTI-SEMITISM
The SpectatorStR,—ln his article (January 8) on the current out- break of anti-Semitism and neo-Nazism in Western Germany, Mr. Bernard Levin's suggestion that people should keep a sense of...
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SiR,_Peo who do not know Greece will get, on read ing
The SpectatorMr. Simon Hodgson's article 'Attic Attitudes,' a very untrue impression of that lovely country, of its Peo Ple. of its officials and of its food. People who do know Greece will...
THE SOUTH AFRICAN FOUNDATION S1R,—The formation of the South African
The SpectatorFounda- tion has been reported in your columns. This Founda- tion professes a concern to.establish a good name for South Africa. It will seek, on a projected half a million per...
SIR,—It seems to me that Mr. Simon Hodgson travelled in
The SpectatorGreece determined to be miserable. Every time he ordered a meal he deplored his absence from the Tour d'Argent; when the bill came he was upset because drachmas.don't look like...
THE BRITISH STUDENTS' ORCHESTRA
The SpectatorSIR,—I appreciate Mr. Cairns's courteous reply to my letter. It is true, as he states, that the orchestras of the conservatoires do not always reach, in their terminal concerts,...
Sta,--Mr. Eric Sevareid is rightly provocative in his continents on
The SpectatorNigeria and one might question much of what he says. May I take him up on two points? I. Although I have been closely interested in music in the Eastern region since 1939, I do...
SIR, —Sir Thomas Armstrong's letter which you pub- lished last week
The Spectatorexposed the fallacy of much that Mr. David Cairns had written about the colleges of music in a recent article. Mr. Cairns's further comments on this letter will also inspire...
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Opera
The SpectatorThe Critics' Revenge By DAVID CAIRNS KNOWING better than the creative artist is a favourite obsession of our neurotically analytical age. The habit is growing among music...
Theatre
The SpectatorWords Made Flesh By ALAN BRIEN Bloomsday. (Unity.)—A Pas- sage to India. (Oxford Play- khouse.) IT is an admirable discipline for a critic to find himself flattened nose to...
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Television
The SpectatorWorse Confounded By PETER FORSTER REALLY, a most confusing week, 'el which has left me unsure whether I am suffering from critic's palsy or snow-blindness, what with all those...
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Ba Ilet
The SpectatorCharming Ethnics By CLIVE BARNES THE big, yawning difference between amateur and profes- sional performers is usually one of relaxation—and this is even more marked with...
Cinema
The SpectatorSelf-Parody By ISABEL QUIGLY Pillow Talk. (Odeon, Marble Arch.) — The Jaywalkers. (Plaza.) — The Shakedown. (New Victoria.) — Happy Anniversary. (London Pav- ilion.) IT had to...
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Surgical Ward : Men
The SpectatorSomething occurred after the operation To scare the surgeons (though no fault of theirs) Whose reassurance did not fool me long. Beyond the shy, concerned faces of nurses A...
BOOKS
The SpectatorBig Stores and People's Palaces BY MARGHANITA LASKI T o start with a point about which there can be very little disagreement : Reginald Pound has Written a very competent...
Mayday on Holderness
The SpectatorThis evening, motherly summer moves in the pond. I look down into the decomposition of leaves— The furnace door whirling with larva:. From Hull's sunset smudge Humber is...
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Galahads and Chancers
The SpectatorTo Appomattox: Nine April Days, 1865. By Burke Davis. (Eyre and Spottiswoode, 50s.) Jim Fisk. By W. A. Swanberg. (Longmans, 25s.) WHEN the Civil War broke out, there was a...
A New Enlightenment
The SpectatorLogical Positivism. Edited by A. J. Ayer. (Allen and Unwin, 48s.) • Before the inexorable judgment of the ne w I logic, all philosophy in the old sense; whether I t is...
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Ulster Innocents
The SpectatorNo Surrender. By Robert Harbinson. (Faber, 18s.) AN autobiography that stops at long trousers — the form that blurb-writers call an evocation of childhood — has observable...
The Stage in the Middle
The SpectatorShakespeare's Wooden 0. By Leslie Hotson. (Hart-Davis, 30s.) WHETHER Mr. Hotson has his inspirations in the bath or in the Public Records Office, they are more frequent and more...
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King-Size Chronicle
The SpectatorIT is slightly chastening to read Allen Drury's Advise and Consent, the enormous novel about Washington which has led the American best- seller lists since last September. For...
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Tributes to Mathematics
The Spectatorhe Co rrespondence of Isaac Newton. Vol. I, 166 1-1675. Edited by H. W. Ttirnbull. 0 stip ( C.U.P., i'..7 7s.) at '- ` 11ce and Civilisation in China. Vol. III. By Joseph oseph...
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MONETARY FETISHES
The SpectatorDAVENPORT By NICHOLAS ONE of the fetishes in Western capitalism, which we seem keen to preserve, is the worshiprof the Gold Reserve—the golden calf of the capitalist system....
INVESTMENT NOTES
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS • L Asr week our bill rate edged up to .£3 I 5s. 8d. per cent.. while the American is about 4i per cent. City eyes are anxiously watching the next move of the...
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COMPANY NOTES
The SpectatorD UILDING SOCIETIES are facing keener competi- D tion in the small savings field than before, but none the less the reports coining in for 1959 are showing excellent results....
SOLUTION OF CROSSWORD 1071
The SpectatorACROSS.-1 Absalom. 5 Medulla, 9 Pin- on. 10 Nonentity, 11 Abloom. 12 Emeritus. 14 Indus. IS Cashiered. 18 Grapevine. 20 Proof. 22 Mercator. 24 Tassie, 26 Old Lights. 27 Horse....
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1073
The SpectatorSolution on February 5 ACROSS 30 I Painter of tho marsh? (6) 4 Though apparently hoarser, he • can stdloollect the stakes (8) 9 th And e destroyer (] in thelittle valley one...
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Design
The SpectatorBut Does it Work ? By KENNETH J. RGBINSON THE American magazine In- dustrial Design has just pub- lished its annual review of • The editors admit they can't hope to know 11...
Can Do
The SpectatorB y KATHARINE WHITEHORN THE art of canning has its 150th birthday this year, and the celebrations that will attend the anniversary were given a cautious send-off in a room...
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Consuming Interest
The SpectatorClean as Clean By LESLIE ADRIAN A FRIEND of mine some time ago bought a pink coat. Not a hunting coat, but a shapely and rather expensive coat that was lined with Vilene, a...
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Wine of the Week
The SpectatorYou wouldn't think, of cutter Lane as a name to set the gastric juices ‘ flowing. But this narrow alley in the City, off Gresham Street (Which is opposite the GP0),, has two...