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IS BRITAIN FINISHED ?
The SpectatorD. W. Brogan opens a New Series COMPTON MACKENZIE The Influence of Reviews JOHN ARLOTT : Football History JAMES POPE - HENNESSY : Another London Sketch CHRISTMAS QUESTIONS
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All Eyes on Ike
The SpectatorThe question which emerges, still unanswered, from Presi- dent Eisenhower's series of meetingS with congressional leaders on the legislative programme to be presented in January...
Le Sport
The SpectatorM. Pierre Montel, the candidate who split M. Laniel's vote in the ninth and tenth ballots for the election of the French President, told the editors of " Who's Who in France "...
NEWS OF THE WEEK HE whole - point of President Eisenhower's
The Spectatorproposal for an international pool of atomic energy materials is its avoidance of the big and explosive subjects—dis- armament, banning of atomic weapons, international...
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The National Art Collections
The SpectatorThe Bill, at present before Parliament, to modify the administration of the National Art Collections has roused a good deal of opposition. Nobody has contested the purely...
Informers and Agents Provocateurs
The SpectatorThe Secretary of State for Scotland said last week that he was satisfied that in the Edinburgh " conspiracy case " no use had been made . by the police of agents provocateurs...
Aircraft and Accusations
The SpectatorThe immoderate criticisms of the quality of workmanship in British aircraft made by Mr. B. S. Shenstone, chief engineer of British European Airways, have presented the public...
Beria Arraigned There is an echo of the thirties in
The Spectatorthe sudden announcement from Moscow that the case against Beria is complete, accom- panied by a vicious whipping-up of the " people's fury " against him and his six former...
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WESTERN CHRISTMAS
The SpectatorT HERE is a temptation today to celebrate Christmas as a feast of the West. In a sense it is right to do so. The Western World owes its whole character to its Christian origins,...
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A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorE XTRACTS from the journal of The Devonshire Regiment, which show that in its 1st Battalion there has been a certain amount of inter-company rivalry about the number of ,Mau Mau...
Death and Duty
The SpectatorBut there is a• big difference between a few men being occasionally brutal and a whole unit being systematically bloodthirsty. It is this charge to which evidence like that in...
Spectator Competition for Schools
The SpectatorThe Spectator offers three prizes, each of books to the value of eight guineas, for articles to be written by boys and girls in schools In the United Kingdom. Entries should be...
Puzzle Corner
The SpectatorI assume it was professional jealousy which caused the pundits who compile the Spectator's " Christmas Questions " ' to reject my well-meant offering. Here it is : The words "...
Motto for a Marxist Cracker
The Spectator" Capitalist society is basically hostile to the needs of children." The Daily Worker, Dec. 21st. STRIX
Down with Culture •
The SpectatorThere is only one odd thing about a letter which takes me to task for some half-forgotten reference to Philistines who object to the State subsidising art. The writer expresses...
Mr. Prie,stley'a Miinchausens
The SpectatorOn the last Sunday before Christmas the Sunday Times makes a practice of inviting various eminent people to say what books published during the year they have liked or admired...
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The Course of Empire
The SpectatorBy D. W. BROGAN, I N the last number of Time magazine to reach me, one of the main foreign stories is headed " Great Britain—Decline or Fall ? " and it is illustrated by a map...
IS BRITAIN FINISHED ?
The SpectatorHas Britain come to the end of a period of power, influence and respect in the world ? A new series of articles in the Spectator offers answers to this question. Each article is...
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Botany Bay
The SpectatorBy J. P. B OTANY BAY is to Australia what the Tower of London is to England or (more accurately) what Plymouth Rock is to the United States. There, one can truly say, it all...
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A Displaced Monument
The SpectatorByJAMES POPE-HENNESSY . I T is a rather disturbing experience to set off to visit a monument one has often seen in the past, and to find that it simply is not there. This...
The above article is the latest of a series on
The Spectatorpost-war London contributed by Mr. Pope-Hennessy to the Spectator. The whole series Is to be published in book form by Messrs. Constable.
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CHRISTMAS QUESTIONS
The SpectatorSet by Six Fellows of St. John's College, Cambridge 1. What were the names by which the following were known before they succeeded were elevated or to peerages ? a. Lord...
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Odd Man Out
The SpectatorYou have remembered all your friends — except one. He, of course, remembered you. It's embarrassing and you want to do something about it. Well, with the best will in the...
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ART
The SpectatorDARK is the northern night, silent the forest under snow, lonely the lake, hard-won the livelihood. Dark too are the tones of " Finnish art : still, cold and hard, yet with an...
CINEMA
The SpectatorTrouble in Store. (Dominion and New Victoria.)—All the Brothers were Valiant. (Empire.) As the Spectator goes to press early this week I shall not be able to review the newest...
CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorCHAMBER MUSIC Now that the old Queen's Hall is being rebuilt, it is to be hoped that the need for a smaller hall, suitable for chamber music, will be borne in mind. Two visits...
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In the opening paragraphs of several of the Sherlock Holmes
The Spectatorstories reference is made to imaginary cases which the public never actually had a chance to read, e.g., the whole story concerning the politician, the lighthouse and the...
Thanks for Everything
The SpectatorCompetitors were invited to submit a "drank you" letter for an embarrassing Christmas present, as written by any one of the following: Queen Victoria, Rev. Sydney Smith, Lord...
THEATRE
The SpectatorA London Actress. By Emma Litchfield. (Arts.) THE fierce rush of life on the West End stage has left only one play to notice this week, but, I am glad to say, it is solid stuff....
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THE STATE AND THE BBC
The SpectatorSIR,—Sir Compton Mackenzie's categorical statement that " the -BBC, however, is an instrument of the State " must mean either that he regards that body's charter as a sham, or...
SIR,—While I unfortunately missed ' Sir Compton Mackenzie's article on
The Spectatorthe Scottish Conspiracy Trial; the subsequent letters of Sir William Hamilton Fyfe and Mr. James Shaw , are not unworthy of closer inspection. Sir William can find some excuse...
TELE-SCOPE • SIR,—The TV contro4ersy suggests that there f is
The Spectatorsome general disquist as to its future: a longer view might reveal the urgency of considering another aspect of the problem. Smoking and mechanical entertainment already absorb...
Sta,—In commenting on a recent case in Scot- land you
The Spectatorreferred to " the extent to which England and Scotland are separate countries," the implication being that they are essentially separate. But to what extent are they really...
.Centers fo the Editor
The SpectatorSCOTTISH CONSPIRACY SIR,—My purpose in taking part in this correspondence, arising from Compton Mackenzie's recent article on the above sub- ject, is most certainly not to...
SIR,—Many of your , readers• who had not followed previous accounts
The Spectatorof the Conspiracy Trial at Edinburgh will have been confused by Sir Compton Mackenzie's Sidelight on the subject in your issue of 11th Decetfiber. Perhaps a little background...
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NOT PROVEN
The SpectatorSIR,—In practice there is really no difference— except in nomenclature—between a verdict of " not guilty " and one of " not proven." if a jury in England brought in a verdict of...
KENYA—ANOTHER VIEW
The SpectatorSIR,—Scores and blood money 'have apparently shocked public opinion. But why should this be so as there is nothing new in either ? During the last war all will remember the...
BY WANDLE BANKS
The SpectatorSIR,--Mr. James Pope-Hennessy's article under this title sent me back to John Ruskin, to re-read that stirring Ihtroduction to The Crown of ,Wild Olive in which he contrasts the...
A GIFT FOR PEDANTS
The SpectatorSIR,—May we suggest that Sir Carleton Allen's problem would solve itself if the idea of there being a " senior " partner in marriage was dropped, and husband and wife were...
Slx,—Enough of this male chivalry, and let us for a
The Spectatorchange hear a little of feminine modesty. These women have taken almost everything we possess, without a blush; even our very trousers. And now they want to march ahead of us on...
SIR,"---Surely the " delicate point of etiquette " on which
The SpectatorSir Carleton Allen seeks judgment depends neither on " formal status " nor " chivalry," as he suggests, but on ordinary good manners as generally accepted. if he and his wife...
LOVE FOR THREE ORANGES
The SpectatorSIR,—Why does Mr. Martin Cooper say on p.723: "After more than thirty years the music of Prokofiev's first opera, Love for Three Oranges, has reached this country via the Third...
ACCOMMODATION WANTED SIR,—May I crave the hospitality of your columns
The Spectatorin bringing to notice the great difficulties faced by such organisations as the one to which I have the honour to belong. In these days of high charges it is becoming...
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Compton Mackenzie
The SpectatorA REMARK of mine that a review in the Spectator had stimulated the circulating libraries into increasing their original subscription for my first novel evoked an Interesting...
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SPORTING ASPECTS
The SpectatorFootball History By JOHN ARLOTT T HE issue of a large and fifty - shilling volume, The History of the Football Association (Naldrett. 50s.) coincides with the ninetieth...
P E CTATRIX
The SpectatorFull Circle BY ELIZABETH JENKINS O UR long-continuing insensibility to social abuses is equalled only by the vehemence with which we redress the balance once we have been...
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A Magpie's Meal
The SpectatorA large gull that had been sailing about gathering its courage finally swooped down to the field for a piece of bread that someone had thrown over the hedge a moment or two...
Lawn Care
The SpectatorWhen the lawn is heavy and wet it will benefit by being aerated with a pronged tool or a hollow-tined fork. It should be thoroughly done at this time of year when the ground...
Country Life
The SpectatorThe rabbiting trade has been flourishing lately. I meet one or two teams of rabbiters setting out for the back country almost every morning or afternoon. The expeditions might...
The Little Trout
The SpectatorA farmer friend told me that the little dream running at the end of one of his fields used to have a large number of small trout in it, and I went down along the bank of the...
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BOOKS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorEase of Reference By J. D. SCOTT C OOD reference books are the sign of a self-conscious —i.e., of a truly civilised—culture, and England excels LI in them. To create a...
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It's a Crime
The SpectatorA Pocketful of Rye. By Agatha Christie. (Collins. 10s. 6d.) The Passionate Victims. By Lange Lewis. (Bodley Head. 9s. 6d.) Crows Can't Count... By A. A. Fair. (Heinemann. 9s....
Two Quiet\ Lives
The SpectatorTo the puzzled intellectuals of the twentieth century, the "reflective doer" appears as the apostle of human perfection; under each of Koestler's "thoughtful corporals" there...
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Company Notes
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS GOOD dividend news is keeping the share markets firm, if not very active. Con- stantly a company annbuncemult is made which reveals how cheaply a share has been...
SHORTER NOTICE
The SpectatorFleet Admiral King: A Naval Record. By Ernest J. King and Walter Muir Whitehill. (Eyre & Spottiswoode.. 30s.) THE Silent Service has recently been growing less silent. Of the...
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT THERE will probably be a good deal of table talk this Christmas about wages and inflation and I only hope that the most censorious will not be the most...