Page 3
NO BENEFIT FROM BALLOTS
The SpectatorS OME hopes are being placed on the introduction of a compulsory secret ballot as an instrument of strike pre- vention—or of strike-breaking. They are destined to be...
Page 4
PEACE TALK
The SpectatorA S the two great blocs of global power prepare to make contact at Geneva, talk of peace rises ever more insistently into the air of East and West. In Moscow, Marshal Bulganin...
BUGANDA I T is most important that the two delegations from
The SpectatorBuganda now in this country to discuss the Kabaka's return and the new constitution which is to convert him into a constitu- tional monarch, should not return empty-handed....
To Save Scotland
The SpectatorT HE nationalist movement in Scotland is a weakly growth, but it has a root rather longer than is generally realised. Inspired by the Irish example, the first Scottish Home Rule...
THE ISRAELI OFFER
The Spectatorarea sounds the most promising that has yet been put forward. Earlier proposals have broken down for two main reasons: the Egyptians do not want to commit themselves to a...
Page 6
A COMPETITION FOR SCHOOLS
The SpectatorTHREE prizes of eight guineas each are offered for the three best original descriptive reports (between 500 words and 750 words) of any notable event occurring between July 1,...
Portrait of the Week
The SpectatorW HAT Disraeli in fact said was that he was on the side of the angels. But one can forgive Sir Winston Churchill for assuming that he said that he was on the side of the...
Page 7
Strike Intelligence
The SpectatorTliE NATION HAS WON.—Daily Sketch. LOCOMEN'S vicrom—Daily Worker. 1N EFFECT, IT IS AN HONOURABLE DRAW.—Daily Mail. EVERYONE HAS BEEN SPLENDID.—New Statesman.
Political Commentary
The SpectatorBY HENRY FAIRLIE T HE National Executive Committee of the Labour Party has just finished one of the more sensible meet- ings of its existence. It has appointed a sub-committee...
EISENHOWER IN 1956?
The SpectatorAn American Correspondent writes : T HE speculation about whether Eisenhower will run again is intense. Partly this is because of the assumption, generally unchallenged and...
Page 8
THE HULTON READERSHIP SURVEY, with its well-tended acreage of figures,
The Spectatormust be a magic garden to the statistically-minded. Even to me it offers much interest and information, especially when I compare this year's crop with those of the last two...
LAST WEEK, in answer to a boast by Lord Beaverbrook's
The SpectatorDaily Express that during May the Express had carried more adver- tising than any other paper, Lord Rothermere's Daily Mail boasted that that was only half the story, and that...
A Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorSOME YEARS AGO, when the omniscient Crawfie was about to unleash a fresh flood of detail about the private life of the Royal Family, the announcement boasted that 'only Crawfie...
'WHAT RELEVANCE, for instance, has a compulsory ballet to the
The Spectatorpresent strike of seamen? Obviously none.'—Observer's Political Correspondent, June 19. A hornpipe any good, then? *
WHEN I WAS DINING in Glasgow the other day the
The Spectatorwaiter brought me a tray of mustards. 'English mustard?' he inquired. and then corrected himself : 'British, I should say. One has to be careful these days.' But he looked at me...
PROFESSOR ARTHUR LEWIS'S ARTICLE, 'A Policy for Labour,' in Socialist
The SpectatorCommentary, has caused a good deal of excitement. The Manchester Guardian devoted much of a leading article to it, commending in particular its attitude to nationalisation and...
NINETY ON SUNDAY, Mr. Bernard Berenson remains as ener- getic
The Spectatoras when he first bought I Tatti, his villa at Settignano, fifty years ago, and the routine of his well-ordered life has changed little. His correspondence with friends all over...
Page 9
Behind the Scene in Buenos Aires
The SpectatorBy ALLANMURRAY . E VENTS have still to prove that President Per6n's power is finally crumbling as the upshot of last week's attempt to overthrow him. I write on Wednesday, when...
Page 10
Anglo-Norwegian Relations
The SpectatorBY T. K. DERRY K ING EDWARD VII paid a State visit to the Norwegian capital in March. 1908, two and a half years after his son-in-law's election to the throne. On the personal...
Page 12
Water
The SpectatorBY BERNARD FERGUSSON HAT I know about fluoridation could conveniently be written on a pin's head and still leave space over for advertising. But there is no doubt that we take...
Page 14
City and Suburban
The SpectatorA ST week I was in the sun-filled valley of the Trent, Derby- shire. The occasion was a fete for the restoration of Foremark Church, built in 1662, in a survival of the Gothic...
Page 16
Strix
The SpectatorMeditations at Macbeth A T Stratford Miss Vivien Leigh's Lady Macbeth failed, signally, to please the first-night critics. I saw the play last week and thought her very good....
Page 17
In The Borders
The SpectatorBy Lord Dalkeith C HILDHOOD memories, though vivid and detailed, are often inaccurate. An immature judgement places too much emphasis on the trivial and a colourful imagina-....
Page 19
Out of the Huddle
The SpectatorBy C. A. OAKLEY A N unemployment percentage that never falls much below 3 would not seem good to the industrial leaders of most parts of the United Kingdom. Those in the...
Page 20
The Artful Blend
The SpectatorBy COMPTON MACKENZIE LE T it be clearly stated before another sentence is written that the true whisky of Scotland is malt whisky distilled from a mash consisting entirely of...
Page 22
In Renfrew
The SpectatorBy IAIN HAMILTON T , HROUGH the damp Sabbath calm the ancient tram- car pitched and rolled on its westward voyage along the glistening road to Yoker Ferry, and the native...
Page 24
The Noblest Prospect
The SpectatorBy SIR WILLIAM DARLING, MP B OUT fifty years ago it was the practice of young Scots to make their way to London. I myself took the high road. It didn't begin then. Dr. Johnson...
Page 26
The Church of Scotland
The SpectatorBy The Very Rev. CHARLES L. WARR* O N October 2. 1929, after twenty years of conference, a union of the Established Church with the United Free Church of Scotland was solemnised...
Page 30
Scottish Writing
The SpectatorBy MORAY McLAREN L ITERATURE is the only form of . art in which, since her beginning as a nation, Scotland has consistently tried to express herself. Her men have painted...
Page 32
In The Highlands
The SpectatorBy NEIL GUNN W HEN the press recently made a drama of a Highland snowstorm some of the older inhabitants were em- barrassed, for they could remember worse storms that were...
Page 35
Sitt,—Seldom can a practised master of the literary snakes-and-ladders game
The Spectatorhave given himself away so completely as Mr. Kingsley Amis did last week. After two columns of virulent sniping at the 'highbrow travel-book' (I bet he doesn't talk about...
THE FREEDOM OF THE PRESS Sitt,—Mr. Randolph Churchill has had
The Spectatorthe effrontery to invent two arguments and to attribute them to me, in order that he may denounce them as 'remarkably fallacious.' To call the PROs' influence pernicious, as I...
WHAT HAPPENED AT VERSAILLES?
The Spectatoram quite amazed to find this ancient and temporarily successful hoax taken seriously at this date. It was originally con- cocted by the two ladies as a 'leg-pull' to see just...
99 Gower Street, London, W.C.1
The SpectatorEuston 3221 Letters to the Editor Is the Travel-Book Dead? John Davenport, Peter Green The Freedom of the Press Brian Inglis What Happened at Versailles? Walter M. Wigfield...
EGYPT'S DISMISSED OFFICIALS' SIR,—May I bring to your 'notice that
The Spectatorno indemnity has yet been paid to the British teachers, university lecturers and officials illegally dismissed without notice in December, 1951, by the Egyptian Govern- ment as...
IS THE TRAVEL-BOOK DEAD?
The SpectatorSIR,—There is often something rather engag- ing about Mr. Amis's utilitarian approach. I quite like the cheerful crash of brass tacks as he goes mulling around. 'His distaste...
Page 36
OIL POLLUTION
The SpectatorSTR,—Mr. John Bctjeman is not strictly accurate when he states in 'City and Suburban' (June 10) that none of the nations who signed the convention to prohibit and control the...
TELEVISION AND RADIO
The SpectatorOrr Sunday night the years of waiting were rewarded. The demolition by a collapsing ceil- ing of a panel in full panoply of tiaras and teeth represents one of the most magical...
THE RICHARD TAUBER STORY. (Marble Arch Pavilion.)—STRANGE LADY IN TOWN.
The Spectator(Odeon.) RICHARD TAUBER began his career as an opera singer, and having acquired a certain fame suddenly, and presumably profitably, turned his attention to operetta and the...
Contemporary Arts
The SpectatorTHEATRE AT first sight this notion of presenting not a straightforward adaptation of Moby Dick, but a...rehearsal for such an adaptation, seems only an ingenious device to...
Page 37
PARIS FESTIVAL
The SpectatorFr is clear that in its second year of life the Paris International Drama Festival has al- ready become something of an enfant terrible for its Director, M. A.-M. Julien....
At the Marlborough Gallery is a fine double exhibition of
The Spectatorpaintings by Pissarro and Sisley, many of them from France and Switzerland. Behind the unassuming grace of impression- ists like these—second only to Monet and Alanet—there is...
JUNE 26, 1830 DEATH OF THE KING
The SpectatorHIS MAJES'TY'S sufferings are at length at an end; he died this morning, at a quarter Past three o'clock. The event, so long looked for, appears to have arrived at last with a...
Page 38
The Disguises of Walt Whitman
The SpectatorBY JOHN WAIN A N YONE who tries to get a clear picture of Whitman as a poet—or as a man, for that matter—has to fight through a maze of contradictions. When we first open his...
Page 40
George Washington
The SpectatorGEORGE WASHINGTON. By Douglas Southall Freeman. Vols. V and VI. (Eyre and Spottiswoode, 37s. 6d. each.) DR. Freeman died before his vast biography of George Washing- ton could...
Studia Generalia
The SpectatorTHIS admirable book suffers from an unfortunate title which mis- leads the reader, who is given a good deal more than the title implies. For by 'civic universities,' a useful...
Page 41
New Novels
The SpectatorMME. YOURCENAR'S recoastruction of an age and outlook in her Memoirs of Hadrian is ambitious enough to be judged by the severest standards. For it attempts that (in fiction)...
African Missions
The SpectatorTHE WAY TO ILALA : DAVID LIVINGSTONE'S PILGRIMAGE. By Frank • Debenham. (Longmans, 25s.) TiE WORLD OF ALBERT SCHWEITZER. A BOOK OF PHOTOGRAPHS. By Erica Anderson. (A. and C....
Page 43
WEED CONTROL
The SpectatorThe great secret in keeping a garden free from weeds or any land clean is one that good gardeners and farmers know. The weeds must be taken before they get a chance to seed....
Country Life
The SpectatorBY IAN NIALL 'I THOUGHT you might perhaps be interested in an extract from Sir Simonds d'Eurs's History of Parliament,' says Mrs. M. W. Acworth, of London, NW3. "On Thursday...
EZRA POUND'S MAQBERLEY. By John J. Espey. (Faber, 15s.) THE
The SpectatorCLASSIC ANTHOLOGY DEFINED BY CONFUCIUS. Translated by Ezra Pound. (Faber, 30s.) THE first thing that is likely to strike any ana- lyst of the poetic style of Ezra Pound is that...
OLIVE SCHREINER, HER FRIENDS AND TIMES. By D. L. Hobman.
The Spectator(Watts, 15s.) CENTENARIES bring out the worst in journal- i sts, which is understandable enough when Public taste draws so few distinctions between hero and villain, and Olive...
SQUIRRELS AND SISKINS
The SpectatorWhere large areas have been planted with conifers, the bird and animal life that goes with these trees thrives. One of the hopeful things is that the red squirrel stands a...
CARVED MESSAGES •
The SpectatorThere lurks in all of us a thought for the briefness of earthly life and a desire to leave something of ourselves for posterit?. A.B. carves on the tree the legend that he loves...
Page 44
Chess
The SpectatorWHITE. 10 mon. WHITE to play and mate in two moves; solution next week. Solution to last week's problem: Q-B 2. Fine mu- tate, White aban- doning original 1 'battery' with...
Page 45
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT Even so it would be difficult to account for the sensational rises which have just occurred in some of the 'blue chips' if American buying had not taken...
COMPANY NOTES
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS A FURTHER sign that the bull market had come back to stay was given by the turn- over on Monday when the dealings marked rose to over 18,000 against 13,000 at the end...
Page 46
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 840
The SpectatorACROSS 1 Does the university athlete get a special summons? (8) 5 'All alone on Airly — With his baby ofi my knee' (Kingsley) (6). 9 A hundred go to the hill to get mixed gin...
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 280 Set by D. R. Peddy The
The Spectatorconditions prevailing in the arith- metical problems of our schooldays, with their aircraft/train speeds, their men dig- ging trenches, and hens laying an egg-and- a-half in a...
Electroneloquently Yours
The SpectatorSPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 277 Report by Tom Bowling An electronic brain has written a love letter beginning, 'Dearest Sweetheart : You are my avid fellow being. My affection...