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SPRING NUMBER
The SpectatorPatrick Campbell Monica Furlong Penelope Gilliatt William Golding Robert Graves Stephen King-Hall Roy Jenkins Marghanita Laski Raymond Postgate Steven Runciman Richard Wollheim...
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— Portrait of the Week— AT VEREENIGING ('place of reconciliation')
The SpectatorAfri- cans demonstrated against the pass laws and were mown down by South African police armed with sub-machine guns, sten guns and rifles. London undergraduates demonstrated in...
The Activist
The SpectatorM R. BEN-GURION'S Visit to America to re- ceive a degree at Brandeis University, even though there was a war scare in the Middle East, has been hailed as a striking indication...
LAW AND DISORDER
The SpectatorT HERE asjust an outside chance, we said last week, that the slide into anarchy in South Africa can be averted. That chance has now be- come slim indeed. When a Nationalist MP...
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L'Etat, c'est MOi
The SpectatorW FIEN President de Gaulle put down the rising of Europeans in Algeria a couple of months ago, he spoke on television of `the man- date the people gave me.' But the mandate the...
A Cat's Life
The SpectatorR EADLRs of the NCIVN ChrOnide on Monday were surprised and alarmed to read, as the introduction to the main news story, that 78 per cent, of the people of Britain want a return...
Beneath the Harrow
The SpectatorT HE result of the Harrow .by-election. cheering though it was to the Liberals, does not really alter their position. The earlier trend to push Labour into third place in Tory...
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In Good Faith
The SpectatorT• R. M. CREIGHTON writes: T HE Kenya African elected members have been blamed for intransigence, provocative- ness and bad faith in their refusal last week to accept...
THE BBC have sent us a detailed reply to our
The Spectatorcriti- ctsms of their Yugoslav services. We are anxious to print it in full, but as it is nearly as long as our memorandum was, we have been compelled to hold it over until NEXT...
Towards Racial Equality
The SpectatorBy RICHARD H. ROVERE NEW YORK T HE Congressional manceuvring over civil- rights legislation is so complex that it defies elucidation in any reasonable number of words....
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Jemenfous
The SpectatorBy BERNARD LEVIN Berlin is a brave city. No doubt some of the taxi-drivers who won't cross The border are wanted for various kinds of echt-Deutsch beastliness; but a fortnight...
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Doctors, Railwaymen
The Spectator—and the rest of us By BARBARA WOOTTON H ow, in this complicated modern world, should one decide how much who should be paid for what? Curiously enough, that question seems...
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Government by P.R.
The SpectatorFrom SARAH GAINHAM BONN D IPLOMACY by personal contact and govern- ment by public relations, develop apace. It seems doubtful that anything real is achieved by the busy...
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The Kenya Gamble
The SpectatorBy SIR STEPHEN KING-HALL W HEN the news came over the wireless that the Conservative Party had won the General Election, much champagne was con- sumed in Nairobi and the White...
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eenuitliti) it a5 emiitlicb 11J ot
The SpectatorBy PATRICK CAMPBELL N A,' I exclaimed, only the other evening, unexpectedly closeted with a klatsch of East German film-makers, `das ist ja komisch, nicht?' It seemed to have...
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The Churches
The SpectatorSackcloth and Ashes By MONICA FURLONG I BESEECH your Reverence, let us all be mad,' Teresa of Avila wrote once to her confessor, 'for the love of Him Who was called mad for our...
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BERNARD LEVIN IN MOSCOW Sin,--This was a sad disappointment. Perhaps
The Spectatorwe expected too much, Truly there is not much to be witty and humorous about in Moscow. The article will give much joy, however, to the Communists and I expect to see it...
FIRE HAZARD SIR,—Scares about minor dangers, lethargy about big ones,
The Spectatoris a growing national disease, The latest is the panic about oil stoves. Since man discovered fire and houses and brought one into the other some risk has been the price of...
am glad to see from Mr. Carleton Greene's letter in
The Spectatorlast week's Spectator that he will be giving a detailed answer to the allegations made in the report you have published on the Yugoslav Service °f the BBC. Mr. Wiles's comments...
SIR,—Part of your indictment of the Yugoslav Ser- vice of
The Spectatorthe BBC appears to be that I was silenced by the hierarchy because of criticism of my broad- casts in the Yugoslav press. This is not true. They were criticised off and on—never...
CENTRAL AFRICA
The SpectatorSIR,—Democracy without dictatorship is the problem to be solved in the Central African Federation. To most people in England it appears too simple: democracy (one man, one vote)...
814, —As one of those who corresponded in your c olumns about
The Spectatorthe Yugoslav Service. I would like to s tate that I, for one, am not involved in any emigre, clique. My simple interest in the affair is that of any Englishman who wants to see...
11) 0 CI st I The BBC's Yugoslav Service Judi
The SpectatorGustincic and others, G hr n Central Africa Colin MacInnes Islational Theatres Monica Fisher A Bernard A . C. Alexander, Julian Jells, D. L. Clarke raves of Academe John...
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A RASPBERRY FOR THE TEACHER SIR,--11, as your correspondent maintains,
The Spectatorthe 'over- whelming majority' of teachers are `duds,' then we should accept the fact that the profession is at present grossly overpaid. Fortunately, not everyone would...
N ATIONAL THEATRES S nt ,- -For some time, several people I know have
The Spectator,given up an old childhood comfort, 'Monopoly,' and nave evolved a game which, for want of inspiration, t heY call simply 'National Theatres.' Would-be players need little more...
TORRID ZONES is very evident from his long and detailed
The Spectatorletter that your Mr. Childers is a stickler for pre- cision and legality; so could you please ask him to reply to the following question : Can we have a few illustrative...
GRAVES OF ACADEME
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. Frank Howes accuses me of failing to do my researches properly; but his own are barren. The names he gives of 'successful alumni of the London conservatoires' prove...
SIR,—Mr. Peter Forster's praise of Huw Wheldon's Orson Welles interview
The Spectatoron Monitor should not go unquestioned. It's all very well to say that this was 'one civilised person chatting to another,' but is this really what is wanted in a television...
SIR,—it is precisely such cant as Miss Baker's that has
The Spectatorconsistently held back the advancement of teachers to professional status and respect with all that that entails in conditions and remuneration. She ought to look at how other...
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Ballet
The SpectatorThe Time-Machine By CLIVE BARNES school outside of Russia that could even physically undertake the venture. Whatever its opponents may say of the Royal Ballet School, it is...
SIR, — In common, I imagine, with other readers I am beginning
The Spectatorto feel deluged under the charges and counter-charges of Messrs. Childers and Unna. Surely no country is beyond reproach in its affairs with other countries; every country at...
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Theatre
The SpectatorTuppence Coloured By ALAN BRIEN Follow That Girl, (Vaude- ville.) — The Dancing Heiress. (Lyric, Hammer- smith.) — Inherit The Wind. (St. Martin's.) This is the bait which...
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Television
The SpectatorThe Shame of Waste By PETER FORSTER Now the Sheriff enlisted a near-by group of actors to improvise sketches and give us some Method Lust : `Then perhaps we can Pin Lust Down,'...
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Cinem a
The SpectatorRomantic Sparks By ISABEL QUIGLY Les Enfants du Paradis. (Academy.) — Can - Can. (Metropole, Victoria.) — Summer of the Seven- teenth . Doll. (London Pavilion.)—Lift to the...
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SPRING BOOKS
The SpectatorBerenson BY RICHARD WOLLHEIM Y\ NE like myself was particularly marked out \Jfor being converted into a myth.' The Phrase occurs in one of the long encrusted sen- tences of...
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Hell-Mouth and Mac-Ninny
The SpectatorEnglish Political Caricature: to 1792, and 1793 to 1832. By M. D. George. (0.U.P., 140s.) DOES Vicky ever reflect, as he inks the Prime Minister's reproachful features on to...
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Dainty Baby's Marathon
The SpectatorTitE dust-jacket of June Havoc's autobiography carries a photograph of a standard film-star face, open-lipped and dewy as in a soap commercial, that seems no more relevant to...
An Adventure With a Lady
The SpectatorAs I watched, the animals that lived in her shoulders broke from their cages. They prowled in the room with its ivory carvings. They were lions! They roared, and I thought...
Twice of the Same Fever
The SpectatorNo one can die twice of the same fever? Tell them it is untrue : Have we not died three deaths, and three again, You of Inc, I of you? The chill, the frantic pulse, brows...
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Pro Colon
The SpectatorAlgeria in Turmoil. By Michael K. Clark. (Thanes and Hudson, 35s.) WE have long been accustomed to the spectacle of British and American journalists becoming Passionately...
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Tied Up and Locked In
The SpectatorHoudini. By William Lindsay Gresham. (Gotlancz, 21s.) THERE are, Mr. Gresham tells us, people known to the spirit medium trade as 'shut eyes'—people whose yearning to believe...
Memorial to Murray
The SpectatorAn Unfinished Autobiography. By Gilbert Mur- ray, with contributions by his friends. Edited by Jean Smith and Arnold Toynbee. (Allen and Unwin, 25s.) GILBERT MURRAY did not...
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Gibbon
The SpectatorBy STEVEN RUNC1MAN I N these days, when academic pundits are apt to tell us that narrative history is 'out' and that scholars should not concern themselves with fine writing,...
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Style and The Man
The SpectatorHouse of Many Rooms. By Robin White. (The Bodley Head, 13s. 6d.) THERE is a good deal to be said for Mr. Nabokov and most of it was, quite recently. But apart from the...
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Fifth Season
The SpectatorF ootball Ambassador At Large. By George Ray- nor. (Stanley Paul, 12s. 6d,) is a fifth season, the football season. From "'lust to late spring the round ball rolls across...
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Period Pieces
The SpectatorMR. O'BRIEN counts fifteen volumes of criticism among Gide's works, and Pretexts is put together from four of them. It squarely presents Gide as a critic, though it couldn't be...
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Best Ambassador
The SpectatorPHILIP KERR, 1 1th Marquess of Lothian, was a v ery difficult man to categorise. Today the aver- age informed reaction to his name would prob- a bly be to recall that he was a...
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In Retreat
The SpectatorBy WILLIAM GOLDING T N 1942, Mr. Raleigh Trevelyan was exploring the loft of the Essex house where he lived in Great Canfield. The place had been noticed as the village of...
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APPLYING THE BRAKES
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT To everyone's dismay the warning has gone out from head office—see the Prime Minister's speech to the con- ference of Conservative trade unionists—that the...
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INVESTMENT NOTES
The SpectatorT H E equity share index has now recovered a third of its fall and if the IMPERIAL ( 1 1 .EMR AL dividend turns out to have been fully ° R 'scounted it will not do much more...
COMPANY NOTES
The Spectator?THIS year is the seventy-fifth anniversary of Jeyes Sanitary Compounds Co. Ltd. The trading profit for the year ended December 31, 1959, shows an increase of £92,618 over...
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Roundabout
The SpectatorPink Diamond By KATHARINE WHITEHORN used fictionally : Ruby in Ruby Gentry, Sapphire in THE fascination of jewels must have something shady about it. Look at the way jewel...
Design
The SpectatorMan is Soft By KENNETH J. ROBINSON WELL remember Sir Christopher Wren once say- ing . .' The remainder of the sentence was lost in a great bellow of surprised laughter. The...
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Th
The Spectator,ought for Food COte d'Azur By RAYMOND POSTGATE HAVE come back from a short holiday in the South of France, in the Riviera area, and I noticed some changes there which ought...
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Wine of the Week
The SpectatorHAVE been making th e acquaintance of some of the much-trumpeted 1959s, a ' tasting given by Lebegti! of a wide range of clarets and some of the noblot burgundies, red and...
Consuming Interest
The SpectatorComing Clean By LESLIE ADRIA'N IT was a year before I could pluck up the courage to have my new suede jacket cleaned. Fearing that the cleaning process would leave *ti my...
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1082
The SpectatorACROSS 1 Is it possible to find work for the stoersman? (7) 5 The reveller's got a skinfull (7) 29 9 Right for a long time (5) 10 Do performers on these get paid on a sliding...
SOLUTION OF CROSSWORD 1080
The SpectatorACRO5S.---1 Pallas. 4 Barbecue. 9 Reason. 10 Decadent. 12 Interval. 13 Idolon. 15 Enid. 16 Sobersides. 19 Prefecture. 20 Afar. 23 Perish. 25 Environs. 27 Londoner. 28 Metier. 29...