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—Portrait of the Week-
The SpectatorTA-TA-TA, TA-TA-TA, ta-ta-tiddle-ti-tum-pom-pom. Tchaikovsky never dreamed of providing the music for a pas seal of the kind that Dame Margot Fonteyn has been dancing this...
SHADOW BOXING
The SpectatorU SUALLY it is the noisy debates which are held to reflect discredit on the House of Com- mons : the occasions, not rare, when Members behave like schoolboys from a Frank...
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Out of the Headlines
The SpectatorBy T. R. M. CREIGHTON C ENTRAL AFRICA has vanished from the C headlines almost as suddenly as it appeared in them. In the Federation all representative in- digenous leaders...
Printing Dispute
The SpectatorTHE current dispute between printing trade unions and the Master Printers has led to a limitation of overtime working. Some readers may find that, during this dispute, copies of...
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Westminster Commentary
The Spectator`WHAT I would really like,' said the Minister of Housing and Local Government in the Divi- sion Lobby, 'is a department where one could think.' A scep- tic might wonder exactly...
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A Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorTHE OBSCENE PUBLICATIONS Bill, after negotiating more, and crueller, fences than any at Aintree, is in danger of being disqualified (though not for boring) at the last moment....
SIX MONTHS AGO, the German newspapers were complaining about the
The Spectatorcoolness of London's welcome to their President. I hope they notice what a success the Mayor of Berlin is having, on television and at his press conferences. Having a pretty...
THE MOST IMAGINATIVE SUGGESTION in the Arts Council's report on
The SpectatorHousing the Arts in Great Britain is that Inigo Jones's Banqueting House in Whitehall should revert from its present dingy use as a services museum to become a setting—as it was...
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'THE COUNCIL REJECTED the complaint that the article was an
The Spectatorunjustifiable intrusion into the private life of an individual . . . and declared that in its opinion the People had performed a public service.' Perhaps, on the occasion...
IT DOES NOT MATTER very much whether the present plans
The Spectatorfor TV coverage of the General Election are or are not legal : they are too feeble to worry over. Neither the BBC nor the ITA likes them, for the obvious reason that they are...
I WOULD NOT BLAME the press, though—as I heard people
The Spectatordoing last week—for going into such detail about the illness of Mr. Dulles. The breakdown of the convention whereby certain illnesses were never described in the press (some,...
QUESTIONS IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS on Case- ment failed
The Spectatorto elicit the answer to the question I posed a few weeks ago: is it, or is it not, an offence against the Official Secrets Act to have a copy of The Black Diaries? But as Mr....
Come Here Till I Tell You
The SpectatorMr. Smyllie, Sir By PATRICK CAMPBELL W HEN, in these trying times, it's possible to work on the lower slopes of a national newspaper for several weeks without discovering...
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No Time for Reading
The SpectatorBy KENNETH ALLSOP W RY don't people read more? Do they hate or fear books? Do they even know that there are books? So far as I know the publishing trade has made no serious...
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The End .of County Cricket?
The SpectatorBy KENNETH GREGORY C OUNTY cricket, like the provincial music hall, is an anachronism—the main difference being that music halls are not subsidised by football pools. To state...
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Theatre
The SpectatorAll's Well That Ends Well By ALAN BRIEN All's Well That Ends Well. (Stratford - upon - Avon.) Dark Halo. (Arts.) Ar Stratford-upon-Avon this week there was a revival of a...
Roundabout
The Spectatorcan writer, looks like a ■ decided to disguise him- self self as a retired English colonel. The Russian Jew who has camouflages a The moustache mild authority. eyes bulge with...
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Records
The SpectatorMethod Singing By DAVID CAIRNS Personally I am prepared to forgive Madame Callas everything, even the witless pomposity of her television pronouncements about her Art. I will...
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Die Fledermaus
The SpectatorTo judge by the first two nights of Die Fleder- maus, the audience at the Coliseum is a musical- comedy audience. It waves to its friends, eats chocolates noisily, welcomes each...
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Consuming Interest
The SpectatorWarm Comfort By LESLIE ADRIAN The Institute of British Launderers (1.6-17 Lancaster Gate, W2 : Paddington 2454) will supply anyone who telephones or writes to their public...
Cinema
The SpectatorAll's Welles By ISABEL QUIG•LY Compulsion. (Carlton.) — Some Came Running. (Empire.) Kicks is a loose translation of their attitude. The boys are Nietzscheans, and believe in...
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A Doctor's Journal
The SpectatorA PS on Psi By MILES HOWARD THE New Yorker, thinking it was time someone took a look into Psi, sent one of their men —Kevin Wallace—to scan the field. Psi (in case you were in...
The 6pettator
The SpectatorAPRIL 26, 1834 THE House-tax is to be abolished; and as it is grossly unequal, and the Whigs lacked the sense and spirit to equalize it, in such a manner as to give it the fair...
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Silence and the Sabre-Toothed Tiger
The SpectatorBy STRIX 7 1 11E dictionary's definition ('abstinence from 1 speech or noise') suggests that our forebears regarded silence as a man-made commodity, a preserve which the...
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BOURNEMOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA SIR,—In your issue of April 3 you
The Spectatorpublished an article entitled 'Bournemouth on a Shoestring,' by Mr. David Cairns. A statement made in the article con- cerning the part played by a 'few rich patrons' in the...
ANSWERING THE TELEPHONE
The SpectatorSIR,—In contrasting American DDD (Direct Distance Dialling) with British STD (Subscriber Trunk Dial- ling) Leslie Adrian fails to mention some points in favour of this country's...
And Now Nyasaland Gillian Solly.
The SpectatorDr. Monica Fisher Answering the Telephone T. A. O'Brien Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra Kenneth Matchett Beer and the Budget R. E. Langhant Telling the World Norman Tiptaft The...
SIR,—Accustomed to being called' 'rabid red' and 'left Liberal' here,
The Spectatormay I defend myself on the other side from my friends in England? The Rev. K. MacKenzie doesn't like the Examiner's view of the economics of Nyasaland. But it makes sense to us...
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EASTER
The SpectatorSut,—The Rev. Austin Lee says in your issue of April 17 that he does not understand Mr. Hollis's letter perfectly, but so far as he does he considers 'it unworthy of him. In my...
OUR OLDEST ALLY
The SpectatorSIR,-1 trust that there will be a wide •measure of protest against the offensive statement by Pharos in your current issue where he describes Portugal as 'our oldest (and...
THE NEW PAKISTAN Sta.,—I read with interest Mr. Rushbrook Williams's
The Spectatorarticle on Pakistan's land reforms. I feel it is only necessary to point out that the so-called reforms are not so far-reaching as this article might lead you to think. The...
TELLING THE WORLD SIR,—Mr. Michael Sissons, in your issue of
The SpectatorApril 17, writing from Tulane University, New Orleans, criticises what I said at an English-Speaking Union meeting in a recent tour in the USA. He objects to my account of the...
GRANTING VISAS
The SpectatorSIR.—Is your printer secretly in league with the Immigration Authorities in the matter of separating the sheep from the goats? By printing 'the' for 'her' in the final phrase of...
BEER AND THE BUDGET SIR,—A correspondent in your issue of
The SpectatorApril 17 suggests that the reduction in the beer duty was connected with the fact that the Colonial Secretary is a member of Her Majesty's Government. This allegation of grossly...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorProphecy Under Arms By SIMON RAVEN P URITANISM,' remarks Christopher Sykes early in his biography of Major-General Wingate,* 'is an abiding force in British affairs'; and...
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Big Liza
The SpectatorPortraits of a nd Personalities between Reform and Revolution. By Richard Hare. (O.U.P., 42s.) MR. HARE'S portraits . include writers, political theorists and agitators,...
All About Willy
The SpectatorSomerset Maugham: A Candid Portrait. By Karl G. Pfeiffer. (Gollancz, I8s.) I SHOULD not have thought it possible to write a totally uninteresting book on Somerset Maugham, and...
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Sorrows of Sociology
The SpectatorThe Idea of a Social Science. By Peter Winch. (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 12s. 6d.) Contemporary Sociology. Edited by Jacob Roucek. (Peter Owen, 70s.) The Curious Strength of...
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Serbian Legacy. By Cecil Stewart. (Allen and Unwin, 42s.) Cecil
The SpectatorStewart's Byzantine Legacy, which is a classic and has just been deservedly reprinted, concerned itself with Constantinople, Greece and Italy. His latest book reveals that the...
Ends of the Earth
The SpectatorRussia Explored. By John Brown. (Hodder and Stoughton, 16s.) An unusually and refreshingly objective and good-humoured second look at the Soviet Union (Central Asian republics...
The Most Beautiful Desert of All. By Philippe Diole. (Cape,
The Spectator18s.) Some men fall in love with the desert, as others fall in love with the sea. Philippe Diold loves both, and follows his books on under- water exploration with a strange...
In Deep. By Frank Baines. (Eyre and Spottis- woode, 21s.)
The SpectatorTo sea under sail. Sometimes the author writes amateurishly (`the lambent air was as pellucid as treacle'), but often he captures with considerable effect the wonder and...
Red Dust of Africa. By Sacha Carnegie. (Peter Davies, 16s.)
The SpectatorA cheerful, chatty expedition to East and Central Africa, by an author who is detached about black men and rather sardonic about the whites, who shot an elephant illegally and...
Shanks's Pony. By Morris Marples. (Dent, 25s.) 'Too rich, too
The Spectatorlazy, and too proud,' was why nobody in England walked, either for pleasure or for profit. So Pastor Moritz was told—and by an Englishman—in the 1780s. But pedestrianism as a...
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SOLUTION OF CROSSWORD 1,039 ACROSS. — 1 Fabians. 5 Temples.
The Spectator9 Trochee. 10 Tendril. 11 Diminution. 12 Chic. 13 Auk. 14 Spontaneous. 17 Fire- lighter. 19 Pas. 20 Arch. 22 Interprets. 26 Craters. 27 Chelsea. 28 Dimples. 29 Overrun. DOWN. —...
Man's Fate
The Spectator'THE fishing was carried out successful: except for the loss of the vessel,' is how Slocum's eldest son later described his parents' honeymoon trip in the ill-charted waters...
Blackest Whitehall
The Spectatorthe Spirit of British Administration. By C. H. Sisson. (Faber, 21s.) THE question about the Civil Service is whether it is worthily unique or merely uniquely old- fashioned. Out...
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1,041
The SpectatorACROSS 1 Noble examples of the illumin- ator's art? (8) 5 Mum's gone back to the labora- tory for a remedy (6) 9 Downing Street is so very UI (5, 3) 10 Thus return about an...
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Last Words
The SpectatorTHE most interesting new book of the week, The Centre of the Green, documents several forms of inadequacy. The four principals of this curious and intelligent novel are Charles....
Homage to Orpheus Britannicus
The SpectatorTHOUGH Purcell may not be in into as great a composer as Byrd, he was probably more richly endowed with creative genius than any British musician; both what he achieved and what...
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THE BUDGET AND EQUITY SHARES
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT MR. AMORY'S Budget has Under- written the bull market in British industrial equity shares. For this we must all be thankful. It is far better for a Stock...
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IN VESTMENT NOTES
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS rinHE Stock Exchange has been moving up I again in a fairly heavy volume of trading and even the gilt-edged market recovered a little from the shock of the LCC 5 per...
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COMPANY NOTES
The SpectatorT HOMAS TILLING has maintained the ordinary dividend of 131 per cent. for 1958 which may be a little disappointing to some; but there is an assurance from the chairman, Mr....