Page 1
Crisis in Abadan - Unless the Persian threat to expel
The Spectatorthe remaining British tech- nicians in Abadan is modified within the next few days it will either have to be complied with or resisted by force. The grounds on which forcible...
Cold Wind from Ottawa
The SpectatorThe news that Mr. Gaitskell gave on Tuesday of the state of the British dollar balance and of the possibility, which was discussed at the Ottawa Conference, of an increase in...
NEWS OF THE WEEK I T is too soon yet to
The Spectatorsay that the prayers of the nation for the King have been answered. The warning that anxiety must remain for some days holds good still. Not for a week or ten days more will it...
Page 2
Mr. Menzies' Referendum
The SpectatorThe result of the Australian referendum on an amendment to the Constitution which would make the enforced dissolution of the Communist Party possible leaves the Communists...
Three to Make Peace
The SpectatorThe combination of Oriental touchiness with Communist `Tigidity continues to bedevil the prospects of a truce in Korea, where early this week the Chinese delegate walked out in...
Victoria Falls Deadlock
The SpectatorThe Victoria Falls conference on Central African confedera- tion has not been a success in the sense of registering any visible progress towards a goal desired on the whole by...
Anxieties at Bonn
The SpectatorThe situation in Western Germany is difficult, and might easily ;become disturbing. For that there are three reasons. The pro- posal of the East German Prime Minister, Herr...
Page 3
TORIES AND UNIONS
The SpectatorF ' ROM the public calm and private bustle in which the parties are writing their election manifestoes One unmis- takable fact has emerged. The Tories intend to place great...
Page 4
Mr. Cox's party, to which I referred in prospect a
The Spectatorfortnight ago, was a great success. Mr. Cox, established in a far corner of the London Library's reading-room, ,held regal court while his admirers queued to pay him...
Mr. Dennis S. Larter, F.R.G.S., M.N.A.H.T., is appealing for The
The SpectatorSchool Fund. Let me tell you all I can. The idea is to raise 0,000 to help a schoolmaster to secure adequate premises for his school which was closed down in March owing to its...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK S YMPATHY is fortunately not exhausted by exercise.
The SpectatorShar- ing to the utmost, as it does, the anxiety of the Queen and the Princesses and Queen Mary, the nation can still, I hope, spare a thought for the doctors who are bearing so...
All the probabilities are that the Speech from the Throne
The Spectatorat the opening of the new Parliament will be read by the Lord Chancellor. But who will the Lord Chancellor be ? Quite possibly, of course, Lord Jowitt, as at present. But the...
Low is striking out a new line. He is to
The Spectatorpublish a strip cartoon (daily, I think) in the Daily Herald. The experiment will be watched with hope and interest by his friends and admirers, who have been genuinely...
Television imparts into a General Election new, interesting and attractive
The Spectatorconsiderations. Leading politicians, it seems, may not only be heard by millions, but seen by rather fewer millions. That involves what may be the quite momentous decision as to...
Page 5
The Uncrowned King
The SpectatorBy WILSON HARRIS T HE reign of King Edward VIII is unique in English history. It is not quite the briefest, for Edward y was on the throne for no more than ten weeks as a boy...
Page 6
Our Way With Youth
The SpectatorBy LORD ABERDARE* FTER the undisputed success of the recent Youth Rally in Berlin people are wondering what this country can offer its boys and girls Which will be as...
Page 7
What Turns Elections
The SpectatorBy HENRY DURANT* T HE number of people in this country who are really interested in politics is, as compared with many Con- tinental countries, rather low. Opinion poll results...
Page 8
Elysian Day
The SpectatorBy H. C. A. GAUNT (Headmaster of Malvern) T HE alarm clock broke silence at fifty-five minutes after midnight. Agamemnon, knowing it was five minutes too early, grunted and...
Page 9
IF YOU FIND ANY DIFFICULTY OR DELAY IN OBTAINING YOUR
The Spectator"SPECTATOR" Please write:— THE CIRCULATION MANAGER, "Spectator," 99 Gower Street, London, W.C.1.
The Mill House Geese
The SpectatorBy MARION PICK G ' EESE may daunt a nervous person. They rush forward , with necks outstretched ; they surge around one hissing and pecking, and there is a general view that...
Page 10
UNDERGRADUATE PAGE Student Politics in Paris
The Spectator. By JULIAN CIUTCHLEY (Pembroke College, Oxford) HERE appeared some time ago in a news-reel some short but dramatic pictures of a student riot in Paris. For a brief moment one...
Page 11
MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON I OFTEN recur to the theme of young people being taught foreign language's. -I do so because I hope that my words may come to the ears or eyes of those...
Page 12
,, CINEMA -
The Spectator"The Lady With a Lamp." (Warner.) — " Cyrano de Bergerac." (Carlton.) THE old argument about whether historical films (or historical plays and historical novels for that matter)...
" Les Fausses Confidences." By Marivatnc.- 44 Baptiste." (St. James's Theatre.) "STYLISATION,"
The Spectatorof course. Unused to it, how can we pass judge- ment on it ? Thus the general reaction, accompanied by wonder and an amazed shaking of heads. But it is a false respect ; the...
CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorTHEATRE " Tamburlaine the Great." By Christopher Marlowe. (Old Vic.). WHEN one used to read this play the words were everything ; there was nothing else ; and the words,...
Page 13
MUSIC
The SpectatorOF all the improbable discoveries to be made in 1951 that of a modern Danish symphonist is the most improbable. That anything like Carl Nielsen's symphonies should have been...
ART
The SpectatorTim last Arts Council Festival exhibition is by no means the least. For showing at the New Burlington Galleries Mr. Brinsley Ford has selected more than 200 British...
Page 14
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 85
The SpectatorSet by Peter Townsend - There is an even more acute shortage of newsprint, and the national daily papers have grouped themselves into an association to effect fair...
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 82 Report by Lewis Petrie A prize
The Spectatorof £5 was offered for two long-felt-want-filler-devices which science has not yet invented but which the ordinary person really needs in this inodern age. If Spectator...
Page 15
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorDisappearing Clergy- Slit.-1 will try to deal with the main points raised by your correspon- dents. (1) Mr. - K. C. Stuart is worried because I refer to the priesthood as a...
Is Puritanism Outmoded?
The SpectatorSIR,—The Third Programme broadcast on this subject by Miss C. V. Wedgwood was able and stimulating. There is no doubt that the , Puritan outlook on life, which was dominant with...
Sui,—As there appears to be such difficulty in manning the
The Spectatorvacant charges in the Church, why does mother Church not turn to that great untapped source of supply, the women of the Church, and ordain them to the Ministry? The position of...
Toujours La Politique Sut—If the Spectator had set itself to
The Spectatordemonstrate its provinciality it •' could hardly have done so more thoroughly than by uttering one scornful sentence: "The question of State-aid for denominational schools is...
to maintain cathedrals and not parishes. And, though the ultimate
The Spectatorpurpose of both institutions i3 the same, the means employed are — radically different. Misinformed enthusiasm in the last century per- mitted the confiscation of a large...
Page 16
A West Country Composer?
The SpectatorSIR,—In answer to Dr. Vaughan Williams I should like to say that I omitted the name of Gerald Finzi from my West Country musitians through no disrespect for his muse but for...
"she *lopertator i§eptember 27th. 1,851
The SpectatorTHE invasion of Cuba, is finally suppressed. The leader has been publicly executed ; the Cubans have evinced no sympathy with him or his followers; the surviving Americans who...
Tito's Country •
The SpectatorSig—Having myself visited Tito's Country" in July, I was much inter- ested by Mrs. Barbara Castle's article which appeared in your issue of September 14th. While endorsing all...
1 Going, Going . . • •
The SpectatorSIR,—Three weeks ago it was "The Disappearing Clergy." Last week "The Drsappearing Horse." I look forward with interest to the next article in this series.—Yours faithfully, `...
Backs and Affronts
The SpectatorSIR,—In company with thousands of other admirers of Janus I have always regarded him as, quiffs , " rightly, a stickler for the correct use of the Englishianguage. I was...
Page 18
Nature's Excess The year has been notable for two conspicuous
The Spectatorexamples of nature's overplus. There are diminutive forests of the scarlet-knobbed clubs of the wild arum in every ditch, wood, thicket, hedge and waste. Assembled in such...
The Espalier
The SpectatorAbout two-thirds of my apple and pear trees are now cordons and espaliers, and in a bounteous year what an overwhelming vantage they possess over standard trees! Their...
Crane-flies
The SpectatorThe other visitation is the crane-fly or daddy-longlegs, which moves in hosts over meadow and lawn and at night invaded houses all through .September, presumably driven by one...
In the Garden
The SpectatorFigs are always problematical in a garden, unless one goes to the considerable trouble of building a brick container round their roots on planting. Otherwise, the fig will only...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorI HAVE heard to my astonishment that many orchards in Kent, Cornwall and parts of Hampshire have a crop of apples which, compared with last year's, is as penurious as are our...
Page 19
Reviews of the Week
The Spectator• The Worm at the Root Leslie Stephen. By Noel gilroy Annan. (MacGibbon and Kee. 2ss.) Mn. Ar■iNik has written a study - iii intellectual ecology. "It is worth while," he says,...
By What Law?
The SpectatorDID any responsible person in England really desire the trial of Field-Marshal von Manstein, at the age of 64 and after five years of delay ? The vast majority of the British...
Page 20
Medical Men
The SpectatorDoctors by Themselves. An Anthology compiled by Edward F. Griffith. (Cassell. 2 IN spite of a rather dusty remoteness in many of the extracts, Dr. Griffith's well-arranged...
Page 22
Totalitarian Hollywood
The SpectatorHollywood, The Dream Factory. By Hortense Powdermaker. (Seeker and Warburg. 18s.) DR. HORTENSE POWDERMAKER, who has written a book on the Stone Age culture of the Melanesians...
The Jewish Predicament
The SpectatorTHESE three books illustrate a problem that has faced many Jews in the century and a half since the ghetto, walls fell—that of the quest for a faith to replace' Jewish...
Page 24
Vulgar Eloquence
The Spectatorit Dictionary of Americanisms on Historical Principles. Edited IT is just a little over a hundred years since John Russell Bartlett published his Dictionary of Americanisms : A...
Page 26
The Land of Gwent
The SpectatorMonmouthshire. By Olive Phillips. County Books Series. (Hale. is.) THE County Books Series has maintained so high a standard of authorship and production. that it r haS earned...
Baroque Pamphleteers
The SpectatorHobbes and His Critics. By John Bowie. (Cape. /Os. 6d.) I KNOW nothing of the book-trade, but I should not expect a study of the seventeenth - century critics of Thomas Hobbes...
Page 28
Fiction
The SpectatorMy Son is Mortal. By Ethel Vance. (Collins. los. 6d.) So many books—so little space to praise them. Or perhaps appraise would be a fairer word, for there's no pretending that...
Page 30
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS NOT since devaluation have stock markets been given such a powerful stimulus as they have received from the announcement of the election date. The immediate...
Page 31
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 643
The Spectator. 1 . RnE P141104141 rPnmhtiol_rin rmisimilrltri grin raw k;Ton 13 11 19 - runrm nom. • pi 11M1131711113r2M frEr . Anna Rionmarinam 643 IS ALFRED FRANCIS, ESQ., 3, The...
THE " SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. 645
The SpectatorIA Book Token for one guinea wall be awarded to the sender of the first correct !elusion opened after noon on Tuesday week, October 9th, addressed Crossword, 99 Gower Street,...