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PARLIAMENT AND PEOPLE
The SpectatorW HEN Mr. Angus Maude was in the process of uprooting himself from Westminster, with the help of the Chiltern Hundreds, he recalled the public's curiously ambivalent attitude...
Portrait of the Week— POSTER DULLES DIED, At Geneva, his
The Spectatorsuc- or made the West's opening bid for a Berlin • dement, which Mr. Khrushchev, stumping bania, said that the West didn't really want, any- ay. But Britain and the Soviet Union...
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John Foster Dulles
The SpectatorBy RICHARD I T was often said that John Foster Dulles spent fifty-odd years of his life waiting to become Secretary of State. 'Dulles was trained for diplo- macy as Nijinsky...
GOING ON HOLIDAY?
The SpectatorYou might be unable to buy the Spectator when you go on holiday, as newsagents do not carry surplus stock. To make sure of receiving your Spectator send us your holiday address...
All Black All White
The SpectatorBy JOHN T FIE decision of the Rugby Union, the body controlling our obsessional winter sport, not to include Maoris in the team to visit South Afrjca next year has provoked...
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Taking Stock
The SpectatorT HE work of the Foreign Ministers being broken this week by their departure for Wash- ington, it is convenient to take stock; after over a fortnight of activity, it can be said...
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Westminster Commentary
The SpectatorOn Being a Member of Parliament By DAVID PRICE, MP (T APER is on holiday.) Tuts week Parliament has not been sitting. The Whitsun recess runs until June 2. I suppose that the...
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LORD SHAWCROSS and others are busy, I hear, in the
The Spectatorpreparation of a draft Bill to reform contempt of court procedure, on the lines proposed recently by the British section of the Iiiternational Com- mission of Jurists. That...
THERE ARE—as correspondents have been telling me—illogicalities about the Master
The Spectatorof Arts degree: Oxbridge is not the only culprit. But I still do not like a system which gives what is widely thought to be a higher degree for money, not for merit. True, at...
PnaLinmENT had not been in recess there should have been
The Spectatorsome interesting comment on Lord 1 ‘'Ialvern's latest utterance. Addressing the League ( If Student Parliamentarians in Bulawayo, he otivised them to ignore views expressed at...
A PUBLIC . RELATIONS FIRM has sent me a document setting
The Spectatorout the reasons why ice-cream manufac- turers, though they would prefer to use nothing but British dairly products, find themselves com- pelled to use substitutes. Two factors,...
SOME PEOPLE, according to the retiring president of the Newsagents'
The SpectatorFederation, look upon mergers in the publishing trade with apprehension; but he feels they will ultimately be to the newsagents' good. 'When publishers decide to stop old num-...
IT MAY SOUND ILLOGICAL, then, for me to defend the
The Spectatorsoup manufacturers for using the term 'mush- room' when they mean other varieties of edible fungi; I see that Major Stewart in our cor- respondence columns calls this 'coarsely...
A Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorIT IS A WRY JOKE Of Fate to bring a crisis in Uganda hard on the heels of the beginning of the dourly intractable emergency in Central Africa. None of the issues involved are...
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AN UNUSUAL and courageous theatrical experiment is due at the
The SpectatorScala Theatre next week. This is The Borderline, a 'play in music,' after the American style, by Wilfrid Mellers and David Holbrook. The story, which explores childhood through...
The British Radical in 1959
The SpectatorBy PHILIP TOYNBEE Prim radical and the conservative mentalities I have survived through all changes of English history, although the issues which divide them have continuously...
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Paris Notebook
The SpectatorBy CYRIL RAY I T was a year exactly since I had last been in Paris. That was the weekend that the trucks of the armed police were parked nose to tail in the bosky alleys off the...
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Orde Wingate and his Critics
The SpectatorBy SYBIL WING ATE A rRIEND discussing with me the other day the reviews that have appeared of Mr. Christo- pher Sykes's biography of my brother; Orde Wingate, remarked that...
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Berlin
The SpectatorBy CHRISTOPHER HOLLIS I . DO not suppose that there has ever been a military occupation so wrapped up in curious paradox as that . of Berlin. In theory, here are four...
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Roundabout
The SpectatorA PIGTAILED four-year- old in a red sailor suit resolutely pushed the stuffed dog towards the nursery door. 'No, dear,' said her father with false brightness, The child...
Opera
The SpectatorDramma Giocosa By BERNARD LEVIN FLORENCE FOR goodness' sake don't tell Khrushchev, but if he pressed the button tomorrow there would be no reaction at all from the direction...
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Ballet
The SpectatorSpanish Flu By CLIVE BARNES The Pilar Lopez Ballet Espafiol is for con- noisseurs, if that doesn't sound too dispiriting. Pilar Lopez is a big-boned woman with a Goya face,...
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Theatre
The SpectatorVirag and Virago By ALAN BRIEN Ulysses in Nighttown. (Arts.) AT first sight, Zero Mostel looks as though he will be disastrously wrong in the role of Leopold Bloom. The Ameri-...
Television
The SpectatorJust a Moment By PETER FORSTER TIM speed of the show deceives the mind. Youth Wants to Know, there is the Right to Reply, there are all the roundelays of four people stating...
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Cinema
The SpectatorThey're Only Human By ISABEL QUIGLY The Devil's General. (Cine- phone). — Pork Chop Hill. (Odeon, Leicester Square.) — The Hangman. (Gaumont.) — The Possessed. (Cameo - Poly.)...
Consuming Interest
The SpectatorBread By LESLIE ADRIAN BREAD like mother used to make will, before long, be as rare as home-brewed ale. The small BREAD baker, the individual craftsman with two or three...
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A Doctor's Journal
The SpectatorIn Defence of Dunces By MILES HOWARD How much of what appears to be dullness is really an emo- tional blocking or retardation? At the' university level a good deal of...
gopectator
The SpectatorMAY 31, 1834 THE King of Naples has projected a convenient mode of relieving his treasury from embarrassment. He pro- poses to sell a part of the property of the regular...
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Like It Here Scotland Yet The Destruction of .Glasgow Triple-Talk
The SpectatorSouth of Scotland Person from Putney • ROY THOMSON • HUGH MAcDIARMID ip DAVID MURRAY • NORMAN MAcCAIG • IAIN HAMILTON • R. H. WEST WATER Like It Here By ROY THOMSON I SM a...
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Scotland Yet
The SpectatorBy HUGH MacDIARMID T rumour of Scotland's death is, like Mark tsr Twain's, 'greatly exaggerated,' yet Scotland Past and Present* reminds me of nothing so much as Charles...
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The Destruction of Glasgow
The SpectatorBy DAVID MURRAY A FEW weeks ago, on May 1, a strong body of Tories rode into Glasgow from the back- blocks for the annual conference of the Scottish Unionist Association. Given...
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Thirteen Lines
The SpectatorThat boat has killed three people. Building her Sib drove a nail through his thumb, and died up by Bunged to thc eyes with rust and penicillin. One evening when the Flow was a...
Triple-Talk
The SpectatorBy NORMAN MacCAIG A L countries have their oddities, and Scotland is not short of them. One (not unique) is that its five millions or so of people have three languages to...
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South of -Scotland
The SpectatorBy IAIN HAMILTON r tic longer I live out of Scotland, the more vivid is my awareness of its own individual 't self. Or so I imagine. Even in my lyrically nation- a list...
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Miss Minnes
The Spectator'Miss M innes spends each winter with us here: October through to May.' In the lounge Miss Minnes sits and knots her hair • Through 'two borty,fingers, arid seems to cringe When...
Person from Putney
The SpectatorBy R. H. WESTWATER I tz a person from Putney, let us say, were to find himself in accidental association with any con- temporary Scottish artist—painter, poet, author or...
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Spreading Capitalism Ulster the Music-Makers Criminals in Cars the New
The SpectatorTowns Pullman Service ; The Battleship Potemkin' Mushrooms and Others aul Slickey aid-up M As kook Back in Anger' John Landell-Mills J. Watt, Brendan Behan R. B. Elwin Robert...
SIR, —Freud and his successors may have shown that reason plays
The Spectatoran insignificant part in the creation and sustaining of responsibility, as Brian Inglis argues. But the effect of the application of modern psychiatric theories is surely an...
THE MUSIC-MAKERS
The SpectatorSIR,—While it was gratifying to find so much space in your columns devoted to Mr. Vaughan's account of the work of the National Federation of Music Societies, it seems desirable...
84 t , -- Maybe. as Pharos remarks, Carson 'would have tissumed that
The SpectatorUlster Members would have made their Mark in the Commons as Ulstermen.' The fact remains that he was about as much an U lsterman as I am. , He came from Dublin, like myself, and...
THE NEW TOWNS
The SpectatorSIR,—I was shocked to read the letter of your cor- respondent Nicolas Hill (May 1). He must be a most unhappy man for he takes such a jaundiced view of life in our New Town, and...
Hyde challenges me to show how his :ltons contributed to
The Spectatorthe continuance of religious 'igotry and intolerance in Northern Ireland. I sub-, Mil that his own letter does this. He, claims that during his election campaigns he .t ought...
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MUSHROOMS AND OTHERS
The SpectatorSta,—If, as Pharos says, the English accept boletus edulis as just another mushroom, it is evidence Of their inability to distinguish finer shades of taste in the dishes that...
PAUL SLICKEY
The SpectatorSIR,—Alan Brien's 'rough guide that anybody who CO enjoy the Spectator would get a kick out of Po i Slickey makes it difficult for those who like you; magazine for such...
PAID-UP MAs
The SpectatorSIR,—Congratulations to Pharos on voicing his dislik e of the Oxford and Cambridge MA degree in a lcs boorish manner than he did the week before; but the wider he opens his...
'LOOK BACK IN ANGER'
The SpectatorSIR,—If we are not careful all amateur productio rd of Look Back in Anger are going to be the fir st ,' During rehearsals for its amateur production here ht s ' September, Unity...
'THE BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN'
The SpectatorSIR.—I'm sorry that Mr. Bowness is still coming out with that hoary old chestnut about The Battleship Potemkin being the world's greatest film. I never remember to have heard...
PULLMAN SERVICE SIR,—In your issue of May 22 you published
The Spectatora letter from Mr. Vivian Ellis under the heading 'Pullman Service.' In this, Mr. Ellis referred to the service between Plymouth and London as a Pullman Car Company service. He...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorJohn Highlandman By NEAL ASCHERSON r r HE West Highlands of Scotland are immut- able. Ever since the human race settled there they have looked the same, and they have forced...
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The Lie of it All
The SpectatorTHE subtitle of Flight and Pursuit is 'a venture into autobiography,' and in the introduction the author further describes it 'as an examination of the structure of my being.'...
Justified Dukes
The SpectatorA Silver-Plated Spoon. By John, Duke of Bed- ford. (Cassell, 21s.) A Peer Behind the Curtain. By John Godley, Lord Kilbracken. (Gollancz, 18s.) THE Duke's publicity has been...
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Part of a World
The SpectatorMR. JACOBSON, who is familiar to many as an excellent South African novelist living in Eng- land, here describes the year he spent in Palo Alto, California, on a fellowship at...
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Hallo to Hollywood
The SpectatorTHE only place Gavin Lambert has allowed him- self irony in his devastatingly deadpan 'scenes of Hollywood life' is in his titles. The Slide Area is both those sections of the...
No Such Things
The SpectatorThe Anatomy of Puck. By K. M. Briggs. (Rout- ledge and Kegan Paul, 30s.) 'WHEN I was a child,' wrote Aubrey, 'and so before the civil wars, the fashion was for old women and...
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The Meaning of Bandits
The SpectatorDR. RUDE' has lately shown how much a sensitive researcher can discover about city mobs in his- tory. But there are other forms of primitive politi- cal activity about which...
Creole Mumbo
The SpectatorNew Orleans Sketches. By William Faulkner. (Sidgwick and Jackson, 15s.) HERE is a collection of the bulrushes in which the infant Faulkner was discovered; and most of them, for...
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THE CASE FOR EQUITIES
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT And for good reasons. . In the first place, present income yield is not the true basis for comparison between the two. I was surprised to see recently the...
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INVESTMENT NOTES
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS "TIHE same pattern prevails in the security I markets—very dull gilt-edged, very firm industrials and buoyant gold shares. The gilt- edged market has not been helped...
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COMPANY NOTES
The SpectatorS HAREHOLDERS in the Legal and General can look forward to the end of 1959 when (to quote the chairman) there will be a full review of the Society's affairs. Having recently...
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SOLUTION OF CROSSWORD 1.044 ACROSS.-1 Blue-gown. 5 Mob - cap. 9 Garitoyle.
The Spectatoril.i Casual. 12 Mason. 13 Adorn lion. 14 Hard-favoured. la Weigh-bridges. 21 Dog-violer 23 Heath, 24 Ionise. 25 Columbus. 26 Grants. 27 Agrestic. DOWN.---1 Bigamy. 2 Unrest, 3...
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1,046
The SpectatorACROSS Graduate surrounded by hoods I10) 6 Fictional Sergeant who might have needed it hand, too, on occasion (4) 10 One dog ticket, please! (5) II Weakness that Robert Burns...