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Portrait of the Weekâ THE NEW PARLIAMENT reassembled and, the
The SpectatorGovernment having refused to consider any Labour candidate other than Sir Frank, and Sir Frank having declined, elected as its new Speaker Sir Harry. Mr. Douglas Jay began the...
GOOD LOSER
The SpectatorMHE country's radical mood, the Spectator sug- WHAT REALLY HAPPENED? Researching for his book on the Middle East (to be published next year by Hutchin- sons), Erskine B....
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The Young Don't Care
The SpectatorFrom SARAH GAINHAM BONN I T is rather sad thnt Beethoven's place of birth should hay e the odd distinction of providing some of the .\\ orst performances of his works it has...
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Westminster Commentary
The SpectatorThe Lost Follower BY the time my carriage turned into Whitehall, the crowds had become so thick, and had en- croached (despite the efforts of the police cordon) so far on to...
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NOW THAT THERE is a new Colonial Secretary and a
The Spectatornew Governor of Kenya I hope we shall hear of a happy ending to the story of Mr. Lalji Devraj of Nairobi, a law-abiding and industrious young Indian who has twice been...
WHY IS 1Tâone of our correspondents asks this weekâthat so
The Spectatormany doctors act as if their patient automatically loses his intelligence with his physical health? And why is it, 1 am tempted to add, that so many doctors lose their own...
I CRITICISED the Lord Chief Justice recently for some of
The Spectatorhis pronouncements in Canada; and subsequently he made other speeches there which were even more ill-advisedâincluding one which suggested that 'exemplary' sentences are occa-...
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A FRIEND OF MINE Who lives in Westminster was recently
The Spectatorwoken after I a.m. by sounds of a fight going on under her window, Fired by the posters saying 'Don't look the other wayâyour suspicions could prevent a crime,' she resisted...
BY WAY OF CONTRAST, I wish the public (and the
The SpectatorDr. Meyrick discusses the advantages of an appointments system for attendances at his sur- gery; he surveys the difficulties (even the patients tended to dislike the idea at...
A Task for Mr. Sandys
The SpectatorBy OLIVER STEWART He can cure the ills that have plagued and enfeebled British aviation since the war and can set it to work on the job for which it is ideally suited : that of...
'IN A DECENT WORLD,' Mr. Justice Elwes said at Durham
The SpectatorAssizes this week, 'an adolescent would not be prosecuted on a criminal charge arising out of a sexual offence. He would be handed over to some intelligent sympathetic person...
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Come Here Till I Tell You
The SpectatorThe Chocolate Civilian ⢠By PATRICK CAMPBELL W HEN a fellow is faced by armed men it's my honest opinion that he should have his mother around, if the situation is not to...
Domestic Occasion
The SpectatorBy ROBERT ROBINSON l T was a Sunday morning in St. John's Wood, and outside Mr. Stephen Spender's house in Loudon Road stood two vans and a car. The Producer, his Secretary,...
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The Reason Why
The SpectatorBy MAURICE GOLDSMITH W e know less about the floor of the ocean than we do about the surface of the moon. There are detailed maps of the heavens, but the sea depths have so far...
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Theatre
The SpectatorReserve Teams By ALAN BRIEN Make Me An Offer. (Stratford, East.) â The Importance of Being Earnest. (Old Vic.)â The Edwardians. (Saville.)â Man On Trial. (Lyric, Ham-...
Art
The SpectatorVia Euston By SIMON HODGSON 1 r may be that critics get tired of the same old truths. It is certain that, in inventing newer and newer descriptive words, newer and newer tags...
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Music
The SpectatorIn Defence of Bernstein By DAVID CAIRNS I do not deny that there is a great deal to be said against Bernstein's treatment of the two works; but I would be happier if I could...
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Cinema
The SpectatorUpstairs and Downstairs By ISABEL QUIGLY North by Northwest. (Empire.) --Summer Interlude. (Paris- Pullman.) THE Hitchcock guarantee is one of the most foolproof things in an...
Ballet
The SpectatorThe Fratricide Squads By CLIVE BARNES The Antigone legend is given almost intact, with that gnarled Theban family tree in full and tortuous flower. The death of Father...
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Links Lord Beveridge
The SpectatorRev. Herbert R. Barton, S. Knox Cunningham, MP L. F. G. Anthony Henry Durant Beverley Cross Mrs. Winifred Cummings Bomb T. Crowe F. S. Black, D. I. Davies Naomi Mitchison Frank...
SIR,--Mr. Ludovic Kennedy has mistaken the nature of Mr. J.
The SpectatorE. S. Simon's article. It was not to prophesy the result of the election or of the contest in indi' vidual marginal seatsâhe was obviously content to leave that to others,...
SIR,âDoes not the result of the General Election look like
The Spectatora victory for materialism? 'I will pull down my barns, and build greater and there will I bestow all my fruits and my goods. And I will say to my soul , Soul thou hast much...
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SIR,â`A Spectator's Notebook,' in the edition of October 16, states
The Spectatorthat Sinn Fein is 'still the fourth, largest party' in Britain following the election results.' This is, however, not true. Plaid Cymru obtained' a total of 77,571 votes in...
GONE MORE RIVER' SIR,âAlan Brien's grumpy notice of my play
The SpectatorOne More River echoes the wails and accusations of a few of his fellow-critics. He damns it for being a Tory play with a Tory moral, and for using the same ingredients mixed in...
THE SCIENTISTS AND THE BOMB SIR,âRudolf Peierls in his article
The Spectatordiscussed the fac- tors that influenced the authorities causing them to drop two atomic bombs on large cities, and he finds it difficult to condone such extreme action. He has,...
TELLING THE PATIENT
The SpectatorSIR,âWhen Mr. Dickson Wright says he is 'a great believer in carrying the patient along in ignorance' he surely only shows his own ignorance: As to it being 'an impertinence...
THE SINN FEIN VOTE SIR,âAs an Ulsterman I was interested
The Spectatorin the drop in the Sinn Fein vote in Northern Ireland in the recent election and I agree with Pharos's interpre- tation up to a point. I think another strong factor was the...
CIVILISATION BAR SIR,âIn your issue of October 2, Grace Scott
The Spectatorcontri- buted an article on the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland. In it she referred to an alleged incident at an hotel in Southern Rhodesia when Mr. Wellington Chirwa, a...
IMAGES SIR,âEven Taper, of all people, is stuck for a
The Spectatorword. He uses 'image' three times, only to be beaten at the post by Dick Crossman, who elsewhere uses it four. Francis Williams runs into second place with two and Malcolm...
PUBLIC OPINION POLLS SIR,âMr. Brian Inglis, introduced on ITV as
The Spectatoreditor of the Spectator, assessed for the benefit of his TV audience the performance of opinion polls in the past election. No one minds serious, informed comment. In fact, it...
SIR,âWhy should not the Labour Councillors refuse to go to
The Spectatorlunch with the man who had publicly insulted their convictions? As I am a County Councillor myself I would be glad of guidance. Could they have cut (a) tea or (1)) cocktails?...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorThe Facts of Fiction By JOHN COLEMAN 'Why do modern novelists dish out so much sex? Why have they always got everybody in the sack?' 'Maybe they don't know the facts of...
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Come to Dust
The SpectatorArabian Sands. By Wilfred Thesiger. (Longmans, 35s.) IT is a commonplace that those who choose to wander in strange places have ample motive in what they leave behind them on...
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Imaginative Climb
The SpectatorThe Last Blue Mountain. By Ralph Barker. (Chatto and Windus, 21s.) THIS is the story of the disastrous Oxford Univer- sity expedition to climb Haramosh in the Kara- koram, which...
Wild Country
The Spectator'ON the morning of the 10th of November, 1835, found myself off the coast of Galicia, whose lofty mountains, gilded by the rising sun, pre- sented a magnificent appearance. I...
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Negro States
The SpectatorOld Africa Rediscovered. By Basil Davids0 (G ollancz, 25s.) MR. DAVIDSON'S 'Old Africa' consists mainly various `civilisations' that flourished in the and south-east of the...
Moby Jack
The SpectatorThe Identity of Jack the Ripper. By Donald McCormick. (Jarrolds, 18s.) THE scholarship of murder has grown to be a specialised industry in the twentieth century....
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Adam's Image
The SpectatorFree Fall. By William Golding. (Faber, 15s.) MR. GOI.DING will never do anything easy. In his first three novels there are skeletal parables, but with each book the telling...
Spanish and English Armadas
The SpectatorThe Defeat of the Spanish Armada. By Garrett Mattingly. (Jonathan Cape, 25s.) THE defeat of the Spanish Armada is central to English historical mythology. Elizabethan propa-...
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BRAVE NEW FALLACIES
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT Old-fashioned ideas about ordinary shares were swept away long ago. It is fifteen months since the average yield on equities fell below the yield on...
Lots of Love
The SpectatorAnd the Bridge is Love. By Alma Mahler Werfel. (Hutchinson, 25s.) Wttsr's in a name? More than one would think. The average English reader can hardly be expected to feel a...
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IN THE BLEAK DAWN
The SpectatorFrom Our Industrial Correspondent W HATEVER the results of the investigation which the Labour Party is making into its electoral failure, it is safe to say that a substantial...
INVESTMENT NOTES
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS Fr HE stock markets became much more interest- ". ing this week. Discrimination reappearedâ after the first mad rush to buy. A welcome feature was the rise in the...
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Roundabout
The SpectatorBoys in a Tight Spot By KATHARINE WHITEHORN THREE magistrates faced three boys across the dark boards of the Juvenile Court. The boys, tow- headed angels of different sizes,...
COMPANY NOTES
The SpectatorS HAREHOLDERS in Debenhams will be pleased to hear that a one-for-ten rights issue is to be made at 20s. This was quite unexpected, although a small increase in the forecast...
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A Doctor's Journal
The SpectatorBoys at a Loose End ye e. tri Or By MILES HOWARD 'How to cure those Stevenage Blues?' the newspaper headline ranâso I thought I was going to hear about some aspect of the...
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1060
The SpectatorACROSS I Melodious sales talk ? (12) 9 So a dull reel might be distin- guished (9) 10 Extracts from The 7'imes? (5) 11 They are at the receiving end! (6) 12 Is a tenet...
SOLUTION OF CROSSWORD 1058 ACROSS.âI Claimant. 5 Assist. 9 Regis-
The Spectatorter. 10 Benoit. 12 Errors. 13 Palliser. 15 Ploughshares. 18 Bellows-maker. 23 Over- turn. 24 Cygnet. 26 Violin. 27 Revising. 28 Dekker. 29 Crumpled. DOWN.-1 Curvet. 2 Angers, 3...
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onsuming Interest
The SpectatorFor Pictures and Pills By LESLIE ADRIAN WHEN I recently discovered that picture frames three inches and over in width are free of the 25 per cent. tax which must he paid on...
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Wine of the Week
The Spectator1 CANNOT understand the curr prejudice against sweet white win True, I couldn't drink them with fi but then I wouldn't drink a dry wh burgundy with a luscious, juicy p or a...