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CALL TO ACTION IN KENYA
The Spectator, F rom time to time during the past year and more there have come statements from Kenya to the effect that the trouble is b eing brought under control. There was one on the...
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When the Sudanese elections last December ended in t victory
The Spectatorfor the pro-Egyptian parties, it was clear to everybod) except the Egyptians that this did not settle the questio r - whether or how the Sudan was ultimately to unite with...
Despite all the accumulating evidence of the element of cold
The Spectatorcalculation in the character, aims and methods of Senator Joseph McCarthy there still seems to be a widespread belief that public indignation about his activities will somehow...
It was said twice in this journal, first while the
The SpectatorBerlin conference was still in progress and then at its ending, that the real question was, and would continue to be, not whether Western Germany would rearm but how. The...
The ordinary man will agree with the Archbishop of York
The Spectatorthat all weapons of mass destruction ought to be condemned , but in fact until Russia changes its whole attitude to the rest of the world such arms will be cherished. This is...
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AT WESTMINSTER
The SpectatorT HE debate on the Berlin conference which occupied the House of Commons all Wednesday and Thursday has been the weightiest item of business before Parlia- ment since the...
p riests on the Rack The letter addressed to the Cardinal-Archbishop
The Spectatorof Paris inthe worker priests of his diocese carries this crisis fi ute Gallican Church a stage further. The dismissal of three D o minican provincials and the banishing from...
4 °Yal Commission on Homosexuality ? Homosexuality is today what venereal
The Spectatordisease was some decades ago, a forbidden subject which is forcing itself into d iscussion and becoming the subject of widespread public an xiety. Is homosexuality an illness or...
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BLOCKING THE SOUTH
The SpectatorT HE line through the middle of Europe which has been confirmed by the Berlin failure to unite the two parts of Germany is a line across which there is to be no retreat, but...
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How to Deal With China
The SpectatorThe Southern.Railway, when it existed as such, had a reputa- tion for being rather backward and old-fashioned. It is mildly ironic that today it should be so closely identified...
One thinks of rafters as old things, but the one
The Spectatorin which the men found a .303 bullet embedded was not old. It formed part of a porch which had been added on to a cottage when an extra room was built on soon after the First...
'A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorI . N at least twelve out of the sixteen Republics of the USSR the Soviet Communist party has been holding, with ,, an air of expedition if not of urgency, its annual co...
Th e Blue Riband of Fleet Street „I learn with rapture
The Spectatorthat there exist in the world of i f u_urnalisin two well-tested and widely recognised " readability ,-'11nulas,', the product of many years of research. The Fleisch...
a Although I shudder to think what would happen if
The SpectatorGunning Fleisch were turned loose on A Spectator's Notebook, it is ear_. _ since the papers which they find most readable are in fa ct read by most people—that a keen journalist...
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Cold War for Ever
The SpectatorIt can't go on for ever.' They will come to realise that Marx's prophecies were untrue.' Their economic system is so inefficient it will break down.' The rising standard of...
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Dear Auld Glesca, (and Edinburgh)
The SpectatorhY IAIN HAMILTON N a blue and white day once I saw Glasgow from the port side of an aircraft and Edinburgh from the starboard, and I realised then for the first time how...
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Ordination Machinery
The SpectatorWhen I decided to be ordained, I applied to a theological college and subsequently asked a bishop to accept me. I hope the bishop did right because in making the decision he did...
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CINEMA
The SpectatorThe Maggie. (Odeon, Marble Arch.) The Island Sinner. (Marble Arch Pavilion.) Hondo. (Warner.) HURRAY for '‘ another sparkling Ealing comedy! Directed with shrewd humour by ....
CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorTHEATRE The Burning Glass. By Charles Morgan. . (Apollo.) CHARLES MORGAN'S new play presents us wi th a familiar twentieth-century situation : the scientist with a conscience....
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SIR, —Dr. Sitwell's brand of Californian Syrup of Figs may have
The Spectatorpersuaded Mr. Hartley privately, but has not yet made him a peridot in public. Nor will she succeed until her ' crude hard hitting '—to quote the praise of Laura S. Deane—comes...
A PSYCHIATRIST'S CHOICE
The SpectatorSIR,---The author of this article has yerfermed a great service in drawing attention to the advances in the treatment of insanity by physical methods which have occurred in the...
Sia,—In her letter published in last week's Spectator Dr. Edith
The SpectatorSitwell refers to ` . Little Mr, Tomkins ' as ' a wearisome person.' She also speaks very kindly of my novel Lucky Jim.
The discussion which has almost choked a critical argument puts
The Spectatorone in mind of T. J. Hogg who wrote that his friend Shelley was not only " great as a poet " but " pre-eminently a lady's man." Now although we deride the old lawyer for his...
The Sleeping Beauty. (Royal Opera House.) THE consummate artistry of
The SpectatorMargot Fonteyn's dancing remains as clear and certain as when she last appeared in London before the long American tour. In Tuesday night's 'welcome home' performance of The...
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writer of this article says: " No l e - a r !asing number of
The Spectatorpatients are provenly v ing mental hospitals because of an increasing Use of psychoanalytic methods." men la does not surprise me except inasmuch he writer would appear to think...
SIR,—There is a high degree of probability that each emotion
The Spectatoror thought causes, or at least is associated with, a change in the body, in particular in the brain, and it is equally probable that physical or chemical alterations in the body...
GENERAL TEMPLER
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. Peterson says, In the last twenty of these years [1921-52] Dr. Purcell has only once held a post which was not specifically connected with the Chinese.' If he will...
PARIS TOUJOURS PARIS Sta,-1 have noted with some concern the
The Spectatorarticle on Paris which appeared in the Travel Supplement of the issue of. January 29th. I hive no doubt that it was written light- heartedly and not intended to be taken too...
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CHEMICAL WARFARE SIR,—You have probably seen the correspon- dence in
The SpectatorThe Times protesting aga nst the decision of the Kent County Council to spray hedgerows and verges with selective weed killer, A great. many people living in the country,...
But in most cases an incumbent is pater/au/Was. And most
The Spectatorof the people who care at all wish him to be so. By all means let a celibate minister embrace poverty, or at any rate the ' insecurity' of the weekly wage earner; but if the...
NO PRIESTS FOR ENGLAND SIR,--May I endorse the suggestion of
The Spectatorthe Rev. Michael Gedge and of Mr. C. Archer Wallington that the Church of England should introduce a businesslike method of applica- tion for clerical posts to replace the...
THE END OF SCRUTINY
The SpectatorSitt, — It was with very deep regret that I learnt receetly that Scrutiny was to cease publication. Those of us who teach at universities remote from the centres of culture are...
SIR,—When 1 worked on the Western Morning News my colleagues
The Spectatorand I were always wondering why we sold so few copies between Land's End and the Isles of Scilly. Now Sir Compton Mackenzie has solved the problem by quoting from an unsuspected...
SIR,--There are some 2,600,000 people in Wales, of whom 1,800,000
The Spectatorspeak English only, while 50,000 speak Welsh only and some 750,000 speak English and Welsh. Are English-speaking parents aware of the proposal that their children (whether they...
SIR,—About two years ago the late Hubert Foss began to
The Spectatorcollect material for the official life of Constant Lambert, commissioned by Messrs. George G. Harrap and Co. Ltd., but most regrettably he became seriously ill be- fore getting...
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A Fair Bargain Yesterday when I went to the cottage
The Spectatorand looked out of the window at the kitchen garden, where we had enclosed a patch of curly kale and a few winter greens in a wall of wire-netting, I was surprised to discover a...
Country Life
The SpectatorTim thaw took place a while ago, and already, with the niilder air and a breath of spring on the land, it is possible to forget that we had snow no more than four weeks ago....
Buying Trouble
The SpectatorOld S. stopped me in the road yesterday to say a few words about property. I have never been sure just how wealthy old S. is. He talks about cottages bought and sold so glibly...
• SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 208
The SpectatortE ' Report by Allan M. Laing Competitors were invited for the usual prizes to let themselves go in a rhymed cure of any object or person they felt merited commination....
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 211 Set by D. R. Peddy
The SpectatorFor the usual prize of L5. competitors are asked to describe, in the Arm of an aircraft recognition lecture, a new type of aircraft. The lecture should cow such features as...
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Compton Mackenzie
The SpectatorO N January 1st, 1865, Queen Victoria commanded the following letter to be communicated to each of the leading railway companies which had their stations in London: What would...
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MOTORING
The SpectatorWealth on Wheels By GORDON WILKINS I N the social revolution which is taking place in Britain, certain success symbols are achieving acceptance, while others, once admired and...
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Schools Competition
The SpectatorB OYS and girls in schools in the United Kingdom were invited to write a Spectator Leading Article, or a Middle Article, or a Review Article on any book which had appeared in...
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BOOKS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorO'Neill in 1954 By GERARD FAY In those days the creative man had to create at the top of his voict. It was a necessity, not a fashion, in the Twenties, which was essentially...
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Parliamentary Intelligence
The SpectatorMembers of the Long Parliament. By D.Brunton and D. H. Pennington, with an Introduction by R. H. Tawney. (Allen and Unwin. 21s.) Tins is one of the most useful books to appear...
The Status of Mendelssohn
The SpectatorMendelssolin. By Philip Radcliffe. (Master Musicians. Dent. 83. 6d.) THIS volume is a welcome addition to the Master Musicians ' series. Mendelssohn's stock has been low and...
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Mr. Hoover's Apology
The SpectatorThe Memoirs of Herbert Hoover. The Great Depression, 1929-1941. (Hollis & Carter. 30s.) MR. HOOVER is one of the most eminent Americans and his account of his stewardship as...
The Spirit of Sicily
The SpectatorThe Golden Honeycomb. By Vincent Cronin, (Hart-Davis. 16s.) This is much less a travel book than a study and contemplation of the whole spirit of Sicily, and as such it is a...
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• New Novels
The SpectatorLIKE The Palm-Wine Drinkard, its predecessor, My Life in the Bush of Ghosts is a kind of writing difficult to define and even to describe. At the age of seven, its narrator...
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Iraq, 1900 to 1950. By S. H. Longrigg. (Oxford University
The SpectatorPress. 25s.) AT a time when the weakness and instability of the Arab states is causing a dangerous vacuum in a vital area, the specialist will welcome Brigadier Longrigg's...
THERE is a strong tendency for readers of the works
The Spectatorof James Joyce to develop into e students of Joyce.' For .their benefit a considerable apparatus of notes, textual commentaries and systematic elucidations has grown up. Messrs....
DEFOE is, besides much else, among the enthralling writers, and
The Spectatora criticism of the new Falcon selection is that Mr. Manvell gives us no summary of the situation in which apy particular piece of prose or dialogue finds its place. So the...
Latin America : A Personal Survey. By Sir Ronald Fraser.
The Spectator(Hutchinson. 12s. 6d.) IN the writing of this Latin American survey Ronald Fraser, author of the novel Circular Tour, and Sir Ronald Fraser, the former Board of Trade official,...
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THE other case is GEORGE BRETTLE which is presenting its
The Spectatorordinary shareholders with one new share for every two. This Derbyshire company manufactures hosiery and under- wear and, thanks to its sound policy of ploughing back enough...
I CALLED attention to the new outlook for tea shares
The Spectatoron January 15th. This week at the auctions the price of common tea has risen to a new high level of 4s. 4,id. a lb. Blenders have been caught short by the persistent demand from...
By CUSTOS
The SpectatorrHE " one-for-one " share bcinus declared by IMPERIAL CHEMICAL INDUSTRIES, at which 1 hinted two weeks ago, dwarfs all other bonuses by its size—over £70i millionS--but, even...
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT WHEN a City Father take* advantage of a company meeting to deliver a lecture to the nation on social ethics I usually start to blush. I found it...
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Solution to Crossword No. 769 Solution will be published on
The SpectatorMarch 12th The winner of Spectator Crossword No. 769 is Mits. I. HEyw000, 17 Chase Way, Southgate, London, N.14. Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary, New Version, is...
Tic a prizes are awarded each erk a book token
The Spectatorfor one guinea and a cool' of Mr De Luxe edition nl Chambers's Taentieth Cen- tury Dictionary. I hese will be awarded to the senders of the frif Iwo earreri salailusis opened...