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DEADLOCK
The SpectatorT HE visit of the Soviet leaders to this country is nearly over. Soon the red flags will be put away, the plain- clothes policemen will go home to bed, and Pravda need no longer...
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AUTOMATION
The SpectatorD ELEGATES swayed by Communists.' So The Times head - line ran. And the Manchester Guardian had 'Communists in AEU gain a double victory.' But is this true ' ? A glance at the...
COLD TEA FOR BOAC
The SpectatorT HE British Overseas Airways Corporation is to have a .gifted amateur of aviation as its chairman and a charm- ing and urbane civil servant as 'its deli : My chairman at a time...
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Political Commentary
The SpectatorBy HENRY FAIRLIE T HE most important event of the week has been the fantastic dinner given by the Labour Party to Marshal Bulganin and Mr. Khrushchev. The sixty-odd guests...
Portrait of the Week
The Spectatorstill face many obstacles.' Mr. Bulganin admitted after the weekend; and hardly were the words out of his mouth than he and Khrushchev were up against a very formidable obstacle...
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A Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorA MONTH AGO I criticised the Home Office's attempt to prevent the Empire News from publishing the memoirs of the former executioner, Mr. Albert Pierrepoint. In the same week Mr....
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IT WAS DELIGHTFUL last Saturday to see the Vice-Chancellor of
The SpectatorOxford University take a rest from the everlasting roads controversy and bend his formidable charm on Messrs. Bulganin and Khrushchev. What with one thing and another, he had a...
WHATEVER USEFUL function coroner's courts perform, it is high time
The Spectatorthat some more reasonable and unified system of selecting, appointing, and paying the coroners themselves was arrived at. At the moment it is totally haphazard, with the result...
DOUBLE-DUTCH INTELLIGENCE
The SpectatorBERTHA, who is 20 now, is engaged to a Dutch cabinet-maker, Johan Bernardus Wolkenfelt. They have no marriage plans yet, however, because Bertha's parents think she is still too...
I HAVE JUST SEEN in a recent issu: of the
The SpectatorSoviet New Times an illuminating article about 'The British Literary Scene' by V. Rubin. Since there have been no new books from 'some of the best-known English writers like...
A CORRESPONDENT WRITES to tell me that he found himself
The Spectatorin a railway compartment recently with a neighbour's son, a boy of seventeen whose elder brother had left Cranwell shortly before. When he read out what I had written about the...
M R. J. B. PRIESTLEY seems to be making heavy weather
The Spectatorof his lecture tour of Canada. When the chief librarian of Toronto said at a luncheon there that Mr. Priestley would autograph conies of his books. Mr. Priestley not only...
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The Politics of Inflation
The SpectatorBY CHARLES CURRAN C ONTINUOUSLY since the end of the war, two questions have confronted every government in this country. Socialist and Tory alike. One is 'How do you get people...
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Not Wholly in Vain
The SpectatorBy LORD ATTLEE 0 all of us who took part in the Gallipoli campaign there remain very vivid memories. It stands out as an unforgettable experience. This is partly due to the fact...
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Capital in Agriculture
The Spectator13y JACK DONALDSON T HERE is a traditional reluctance amongst British economists to befriend the cause of an expanding agriculture. , The origin of this is easily understood,...
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Birthday Party
The SpectatorBY CYRIL RAY I T was long before I reached Stratford—it was in the Chilterns, somewhere in the Rothschild country—that 1 saw a contractor's board outside a desirable villa...
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City and Suburban
The SpectatorBY JOHN BETJEMAN I NOTICE that last week's Spectator was an `Irish Number.' This week I have some Irish notes. I have just come back from County Waterford. The sun shone all the...
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Cold Storage
The SpectatorIL OOKING for something in a drawer the other day, I came across an unopened envelope addressed, in my own handwriting, to myself. To be exact, it was not addressed; it only had...
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POLES IN EXILE
The SpectatorSig,—On the occasion of the visit of the Soviet leaders in this country, we think that our views on the issues involved should also be made known to the British public opinion....
ROGER CASEMENT SIR,—With regard to the review of mY Casement
The Spectatorbook by Mr. Brian Inglis, may 1 be allowed to make these brief points: (1) I don't agree that it is permissible to describe 'evidence' from Sinn Fein sources as...
THE 'SPECTATOR' EXPERIMENTAL COMPANY
The SpectatorSIR,—Many readers may recall the Spectator Experimental Company. It is just over 50 years since the*' Company was founded by the late Lieut.-Colonel Pollock—to be exact, the Men...
Letters to the Editor
The SpectatorThe 'Spectator' on Eire St. John Ervin, Poles in Exile Dolega Modrzewsk, and otheri The 'Spectator' Experimental Company Bernard Raperport Roger Casement Rene MacColl See...
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THE 'GLOUCESTER JOURNAL'
The SpectatorSIR,—The first issue of the Gloucester Journal appeared on April 9, 1722. Before that date there were thirty-six provincial newspapers published, and of those only six have...
THE 'CAMBRIDGE REVIEW'
The SpectatorSIR,—Your description (page 527, Spectator of April 20) of Professor T. D. Williams as 'one of the founders of the late lamented Cambridge Review might just possibly cause a...
SEE WHAT 1 MEAN?
The SpectatorSIR,—I at least do not see what Mr. Hancock means in his letter of April 13, nor would I suggest that it is in accordance with the standards one has come to expect from the , s...
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Contemporary Arts
The SpectatorCash and Courage THERE now seems to be a widespread feeling that the financial situation of the arts in Great Britain is past praying for. As inflation deepens and economists...
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T. N. P.
The SpectatorTHE visit of the Thatre National Populaire to London brings before an English public for the first time a theatre which has become an insti- tution in. Paris and in the French...
1 - r is at Stratford-atte-Bowe, not Stratford- upon-Avon, that one of
The Spectatorthe best-written Elizabethan plays is now on view. Theatre Workshop, whose resources could scarcely be more limited, are to be congratulated—on the choice of play, on a highly...
Realism and Reality
The SpectatorAT the South-East London Art Gallery, wh ere the words 'The Source of Art is in the Life Q.( a People' are written on the floor in parrInen is an exhibition—'Looking Forward'...
IT is not entirely Mr. Emlyn Williams's fault if his
The Spectatorperformance as Shylock does not domi- nate our memories of this most agreeable pro- duction, for in Miss Margaret Webster's hands the familiar play provides more counter-...
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Mixed Bunch
The SpectatorWESTERN, musical, thriller, and potted musical biography—the week's films, all from Holly- wood, all in colour, are as representative a bunch as you could wish. To begin at the...
Public Faces
The SpectatorIF the theatre is life's mirror, and the cinema its camera, then one may, perhaps, argue that television is its pair of field-glasses. That may explain why the plays that we see...
Qrbe Opertator
The SpectatorAPRIL 30, 1831 IN London there are a thousand aristocrae ic '' n ' great and small, each of which is monopoly, and on a system of grades, wi lt ' j teaches men to crawl and...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorChurchill as Historian BY HENRY FAIRLIE L ORD SALTER has recalled that he once heard Lord Haldane remark of Sir Winston Churchill: 'So clever, so brilliant; a pity he has never...
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Portrait of the Author
The SpectatorbYLAN THOMAS IN AMERICA. By John Malcolm Brinnin. (Dent, 18s,) Alt s title, as well as the press quotations which followed its earlier American publication, had indicated that...
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Apocalyptic
The SpectatorTHE LISBON EARTHQUAKE. By T. D. Kendrick. (Methuen, 210 Tuts account of one of the greatest natural disasters to o vert a European city makes comforting reading, for it shows...
Himmler's Table-Talk
The Spectatortch MR. CRANKSHAW spares his readers very little in his gr ues h a, book Gestapo. It is the latest in the series of books whic" h „ come out year after year since the war to...
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We Never Know
The SpectatorTHESE two books taken together pose the problem of popular exposition in an extreme form, and do not solve it. Professor Webster's publishers claim that his book is of interest...
From Their Experiences
The SpectatorTHE PIT AND THE CENTURY PLANT. By Pati Hill. (Gollane -, 1 CRISIS COTTAGE. By Geoffrey Willans. (Michael Joseph, 12s. ,.0 IN the 1940s the American musical comedy went rural...
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Pablo Casals
The SpectatorCo N , h, ° Pening chapters are autobiography, cast with a completely tol;"loral effect in the form of answers to often ridiculously thetlived questions. Although much that is...
. "NE F.... , Philosophic Visions 1,,,,,.- ,, i IN EDEN. By Edwin
The SpectatorMuir. (Faber, 10s. 6d.) [ co 410 1 : . N1 um is not the kind of poet whose latest work invites 10 b e ris ons with his earlier; one does not expect his recent poems ail...
Straight Furrow
The Spectatorrun sub-title, 'A history of psychoanalysis and the American Drama,' increases fears aroused by the title; and the preface, revealing that the material was 'first gathered and...
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New Novels
The SpectatorJUDGING by results, certain popular American novelists might plausibly claim that they had rallied under a leader with the slogan, 'Come, let us make lust ludicrous!' Is it now...
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Lyric and Satire
The SpectatorSi IF the poems in Patric Dickinson's T lje o r of 7'hings (Chatto and Windus, 7s. 6d) h ., elicit wild enthusiasm, they never cau50 on through poor taste or bad Craf tS 1 t...
Cinder Heap
The SpectatorT. E. HULME had a genuine originality, even if it was limited and also somewhat objection- able in kind. His impact on the Pound-Eliot generation, and thus on all of us, came...
A Traveller in Italy
The SpectatorTHE 'Eagle Argent' of Donald Hall 5 (Eagle Argent; Methuen, I8s.) refers l e) arms of Abruzzo, that relatively unhaa ri part of Italy north and east of Montees s Mr. Hall is an...
Local History
The SpectatorLiKE Its predecessor, Medkeval Lincoln, J. W. F. Hill's Tudor and Stuart Lincoln (C.U.P., 32s. • 6d,), is an admirable example of local history written in a non-provincial way....
Half-Dozen
The SpectatorTHE latest addition to the 6 Great O r 6 Great Poets, by Aubrey de San ° (Hamish Hamilton, 10s. 6d.), makes claim to profound, original scholarship , does it try to compress too...
Chinese Art
The SpectatorVALUABLE though the Pelican histories of art certainly are, there might, perhaps, be a reconsideration of their form and pattern. The Art and Architecture of China, by Laurence...
Soviet Duplicity
The SpectatorWHEN The Dialek Affair, by Stewart Thomson (Allan Wingate, 15s.), came to me for re- view I thought to myself, 'Here's just another of the many books that have been written...
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CITY DOUBTS ON THE BUDGET
The SpectatorDAVENPORT : 11 By NICHOLAS °Ile en ough disinflation to cause a fall in tidustrial equities. After all, he had gone ril r t ° ° Pe, I imagine, could have been more r Prised...
COMPANY NOTES
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS THE sharp rise in ordinary shares which followed upon the Budget had its origin, as I have explained, in the technical posi tion of an over-sold market. At the begin-...
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JACKDAW TRAGEDY
The SpectatorHouse-hunting is not only a problem for humans. Birds seem to have the same trouble, and some of them face it every spring. I have been watching a pair of jackdaws trying to...
DRESSED TO KILL After the 1914-18 war a number of
The Spectatorfarm workers wore old army tunics. They made satisfactory working jackets even if they didn't quite blend with more conventional clothing. One looked at those tunics, tattered...
APHIS REMEDIES
The SpectatorAphis of one sort or another is the night- mare of many a gardener, for greenfly and blackfly are to be found on all sorts of plants and trees. Nicotine and derris are among the...
Country Life
The SpectatorBY IAN NIALL tI ,ERE is some official concern, I read, about 'e security of rabbit hutches. It may be that i careless and irresponsible person will g ild loose his tame rabbits...
Chess
The SpectatorBy PHILIDOR No. 47. .1. HARTONG • BLACK (5 men) WHITE ('I men) WHITE to play and mate in two moves: solution next week. From 'Selected with Comments' in The Problemist,...
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SPECTATOR COMPETITION 1% 1 ° . 31
The SpectatorSet by R. Kennard Davies A schoolboy of my acquaintance s ta i ,,1 in an examination that Charles 1, 1 4 married to 'Catherine of Uganda. petitors are asked to imagine that...
The Journalist Defined
The SpectatorSPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 321 Report by A. M. 0. S. A prize of six gidneas was offered for a definition of 'journalist' as it might be or might have been described by any one...
Solution to No. 883 P as The winners of Crossword No.
The Spectator883 ore: MRS. WHITSFIELO J eG Victoria Road, Penarth, Glam., and Miss. WITHLRINOTON, Sum Hayward's Heath, Sussex.
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 885
The SpectatorACROSS 11 Stirred ale would make the bird pink 4 1)1 : e is apparently short in the old cinema (8), 9 'To-day the Roman and his trouble are ashes under -' (Housman) (6). 10...