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Portrait of the Week— ' MISTER THREE PER CENT . —alias Brother Brown—
The Spectatorset the election campaign alight with a reported Promise drastically to cut mortgage rates. By con- trast the Labour Deputy Leader complained that the Sunday Express had put...
Forward from Beveridge
The SpectatorTN the Conservative Manifesto an unex- citing phrase clothes one of the key de- cisions : 'we therefore propose to institute a full review of social security arrangements so...
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The World and the General
The SpectatorFrom DREW MIDDLETON O N the face of it, General de Gaulle's junket around South America is an ambitious enterprise in public relations. He is selling France's policy of...
Quebec and the Queen
The SpectatorCHRISTOPHER HOLLIS writes: Raids by schoolboys on Canadian military armouries were alarming, if absurd. Public opinion was shocked by the killings last summer and they probably...
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Election Commentary
The SpectatorMeanwhile, Backstage . By DAVID WATT H OWEVER boring the national campaign may be—and this one threatens to be the most boring in living memory—there is always genuine....
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The Day of the Dons
The SpectatorSome years ago I referred to the Labour Partyi" leadership as 'a consortium of middle-aged donsA' Now almost daily one sees pictures and careeso: snapshots of Mr. H. Dumpty and...
Each Way
The SpectatorIf the pollsters aren't careful they'll talk therh - selves out of a job. The headline and the first part of the Sunday Telegraph story gave the Tories a lead sufficient for a...
A Participant's Notebook
The Spectatorevery question, for example, on the experience of his Shadow Cabinet he will reply, 'Let me , first say that many of us were negotiating (and, may I add, not without success)...
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Extremists Politicians and lovers long ago discovered that there are
The Spectatorpractically no new words to describe their policies or their passions. Everything has been said before. So in this election we are all modernisers, growth merchants, prosperity...
Marginal Reports
The Spectator1—A Minister Under Pressure By ALAN WATKINS I snout]) judge this city,' said the Elizabethan Sir John Harrington, 'to be another Utopia.' Norwich today may fall short of Sir...
Tailpiece At my adoption meeting tiny election agent concluded his
The Spectatorinstructions to the members with an invitation to take a bundle of posters and car-stickers before they left. 'We want,' he said, 'to see our candidate plastered all over the...
Taxi
The SpectatorI am quoted, accurately, of course, by a news- Paper as having said, 'Those who are sincere, devout unalterable Liberals ought to vote Liberal. If they want to stand on the...
2—The Member for Gower Street
The SpectatorThere are some constituencies—Norwich South is one of them—where the local politicians can build up a coherent picture of their support, area by area. One ward is 'solid for...
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View from the Left
The SpectatorSitting Target ? By DESMOND DONNELLY (Ex-MP, now Labour candidate, for Pembroke) f rlitiY . VE had it!' said the roadman to me on 1 the A40 road to Haverfordwest. By 'They' he...
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The Press
The SpectatorLost Weekends By RANDOLPH S. CHURCHILL rT 9 HE Weekend Telegraph is not alone in facing serious distribution problems. Foreign sub- scribers to the Observer (who I believe are...
Election TV
The SpectatorThe Entertainers By J. W. M. THOMPSON H iGII-MINDED outrage seems to be the propel mood. 'Both the BBC and ITV have been reduced to a state of cringing terror at the thought of...
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The Warren Report
The SpectatorReasonable Doubt Front MURRAY KEMPTON NEW YORK 1-11EF Justice Warren's report on the murder of President Kennedy destroys most of the assumptions that were the basis for the...
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Bangs and Whimpers
The SpectatorIf lesser breeds, without the law Should dare to launch a nuclear war And loose the Monster that shall be The end of all humanity. l'm sure that it is only fit That Britain,...
The Witnesses
The SpectatorThe odd thing about the Warren Commission's report is that it is so full of life. There are so many characters in it. I think this arises from the way so many of the witnesses...
The Whole Truth ?
The SpectatorWhat the soldier said is not admissible evi• dence, as every good litigant knows: but we may at last be on the point of finding out what he did say. A couple of law- reform...
A Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorI CANNOT help feeling that the press is being a bit pompous about the daily news conferences given by Mr. Wilson, Mr. Maudling and Mr. Grimond. The association of lobby journ-...
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Expansion This is no time, it occurred to me, to
The Spectatorreceive a document headed ,`Quintin Hogg Centenary' —but there it was, and, of course, it came from the Polytechnic; and it is not the most recent Lord Hailsham who is being...
Jockeying for Power
The SpectatorBy KEITH KYLE T wo extreme results could come from the Nigerian general election, the first since in- dependence, which must be held before the end of the year. The Sardauna of...
In a provincial hotel the other evening I went to
The Spectatorthe 'television room' to look at a much-adver- tised general election programme. The darkened room was crowded—but with people absorbed in the rival show, a courtroom drama....
One wonders if the stags has been reached where the
The Spectatorhedgehog is having to tackle more than that with which it can cope. — From a nature article in a Hertfordshire paper. The English language, too. has quite a lot up With which it...
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DYLAN THOMAS SIR,—Mr. Vernon Watkins is mistaken if he thinks
The SpectatorI am one of those who believe that Dylan Thomas 'aimed at baffling people or at obscure utterance.' I am not being vindictive about the Welshman,, who was a good poet and...
WITHOUT PENSIONS SIR,—Much has been said, in recent discussions on
The Spectatorplatforms and in the press, about the needs of old-age pensioners, but not a word has been uttered about the greater needs of the old people who were ex- cluded from insurance...
S1R,—Reasoned argument like 'Why Nationalise Steel?' by Edward T. Judge,
The Spectatorwill never impress a strictly dogmatic mind like Mr. Harold Wilson's. Everybody, including Mr. Wilson, knows that the British steel industry is under management of exemplary...
Sta,—May I refer to the leading article entitled 'Mr. H.
The SpectatorDumpty' which appeared in your issue for September 25? While we are in complete accord with the views put forward by Mr. lain Macleod I think it only fair to point out for the...
THE NATIONALISTS SIR,—I was horrified to read a letter from
The Spectatora D. Eirwin Morgan, who referred to the Scottish Nationalists as the Scotch Nationalists. I would not like other readers to think that the party is a hunch of inebriated...
1111h m t e Letters
The SpectatorThe Future of Steel Charles dePcyer Frederick Jellinek, Charles Hervey Without Pensions F. O'Hanlon The Nationalists James Loose Dylan Thomas John Tripp It's Not Just Makarios...
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THE COSTUME SOCIETY
The SpectatorSIR,—At a recent meeting at the Victoria and Albert Museum it was decided to form a Costume Society with the object of bringing together costume his- torians, museum curators,...
IT'S NOT JUST MAKARIOS
The SpectatorSIR,—Mrs. Emma Eyden asserts (September 18) that my explanation that the Turkish Cypriots initiated hostilities is ludicrously unconvincing and in support of her assertion she...
PRIESTLEY AT SEVENTY
The SpectatorSIR,—Quoodle, it seems, has always thought it a great pity that J. B. Priestley 'is so often presented as either Jolly Jack or the pipe-smoking Cassandra of the post-war world.'...
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Ring Round the Moon
The SpectatorBy DAVID CAIRNS THERE is an unmistakable air of work in progress about the new Ring at Covent Garden. This is no reason why the critics should keep their hands off it; the...
THE WAR THAT CANNOT BE WON Bilainkin (September 18), after
The Spectatortoo many Savoy strawberries, is making intestinal complaints. He doesn't like Tunku Abdul Rahman's `petty little kingdom.' OK—but the electorate do. They actually Voted for...
MEGATONS ON THE MOTORWAY
The SpectatorSIR.-1 entirely endorse the points made by Oliver Stewart relating to 'ponderomotives.' He says, how- ever, that there is nothing else 'that can be done Other than to impose a...
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All in Good Time
The SpectatorThis is not to disparage, for Maggie is a remark- able achievement It scores on almost every count: on the book, on the lyrics and music, on the sets and on the performances....
Arms and the Man
The SpectatorGuns at Batasi. (Carlton, certificate.)—A House is not a Home. (Plaza, `X' certificate.)—And So To Bed. (Cinephone, certificate.) WITHOUT many critical fanfares, Richard Atten-...
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Folksy
The SpectatorTHERE is one trade gap which no government, Conservative, Labour or Liberal will close: the 0 balance of payments in ' the matter of theatricalised folk-dance, where our...
The People in Between
The SpectatorBy HUMPHREY LYTTELTON 'IT is a great mistake to think that jazz is for young people.' On the face of it, this looks like some mis- chievous perversity from a Noel Coward...
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AUTUMN BOOKS
The SpectatorThe School of Brilliance BY A. ALVAREZ I N his time, Sartre has gone into the ring with nearly every literary form, except poetry : novels and stories, philosophy, esthetics,...
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Never Give Up •
The SpectatorVictoria R. I. By Elizabeth Longford. (Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 63s.) QUEEN Vicroata is one of our greatest national institutions. Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale her...
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Prophet with Honour
The SpectatorThe Genius of John Ruskin. Selections from his writings, edited by John D. Rosenberg. (Allen and Unwin, 45s.) THERE is no easy way through the immense forest of Ruskin's work....
Young Adam
The SpectatorDouble 0 Seven James Bond : a Report. BY 0. F. Snelling. (Spearman-Holland, 18s.) 0. F. SNELLING's Double 0 Seven sets out, or so the blurb claims, to explain the immense appeal...
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Cane and Derby
The SpectatorMR. CHAPLIN appeared in thirty-five Keystone Company films during 1914, almost all of them one- or two-reelers made in a week or less. Soon wonderfully famous, he continued the...
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Ten Years After
The SpectatorThe Making of a Movement BY ELIZABETH JENNINGS AFTER a decade of what has been widely tiknown, at least in literary circles, as 'The Movement,' it has become impossible—much as...
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THREE POEMS
The SpectatorThe Good Author for Bernard Malamud Contrary to the views A few days earlier Of a fading Irish poet Who flared into the room With Rimbaud round his shoulder But with hair and...
Conception is a Blessing
The SpectatorAfter three boys my belly Gave up; skin stretched; grew old; 1 stare at my flesh each morning: Beetles could hide in the folds. I feel the tiny creatures Propel themselves...
The Child Walks Around Its Own Grave
The SpectatorThe child walks around its own grave. He's surprised to see his own body Laid out, several feet below ground level. One of its hands begins to spread out of fear's grip. He's...
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The Freudian Schism
The SpectatorBy WILLIAM SARGANT PHE tremendous advances that have taken I place in psychiatric treatment in recent years should be better known to the general public. They should also know...
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Genocide is Boffo
The SpectatorONE would have imagined that after the gas chamber no further suffering could be inflicted on the six million Jews, but no, what we hadn't reckoned with was insult after death....
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Passage to India
The SpectatorMR. NAIPAUI. does not mention the most in- teresting thing about his first, and possibly last, visit to India. It may, indeed, easily escape atten- tion. I refer to the fact...
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The Terrible Drama
The SpectatorBY DAVID REES When the news reached Athens, for a long time people would not believe it, even though they were given precise information... . . And when they did recognise the...
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The Economy
The SpectatorMr. Maudling's Election By NICHOLAS DAVENPORT IF the Conservatives win this election it will be due entirely to Mr. Maudling. He has steadfastly re- fused to take the...
Investment Notes
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS D o the stock markets influence the opinion polls and not the other way about? It is certainly strange that the quiet, confident boom in Throgmorton Street seems to...
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Another Part of the Forest
The SpectatorMark Over By STRIX THERE is no close season for claptrap, as there is for pheasants; but as we flock to the hustings the tosh- words, flushed by armies of beaters in the...
Company Notes
The SpectatorBy LOTHBURY 1 HE latest report for the year ended April 3, 1964, from Furness Withy, the shipowners, is far more revealing than the previous one. Although not entirely...
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Afterthought
The SpectatorBy ALAN BRIEN `Now, isn't it the Venice of the West?' asked the old, unshaven Dubliner leaning against the wall of the Baggot Street Bridge over the Grand Canal. I could feel...
Consuming Interest
The SpectatorSmart Operators By LESLIE ADRIAN TOLERANCE of commercial double-dealing is bred in the bone with the British, no matter what they say about wily Levantines, cunning Asiatics...
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Chess
The SpectatorBy PHILIDOR No. 198 A. KISH (Christian Science Monitor, 1935) BLACK (9 men) WHITE (7 men) WHITE to play and mate in two moves; solution ,text week. Solution to No. 197 (Howard...
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SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1138
The SpectatorACROSS 1. A fish at home in the Amazon, no doubt! (6) 4. It is about time! (8) • 8. Ten years and more is degener- ate (8) 10. Good luck to those in favour of the sedentary...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD 1137
The SpectatorACROSS.--1 Ethelberta. 6 Odes. In Visor, It BulLscycs. 12 Settling. 13 Glance. 15 Mite. 16 Both. 17 Tibia. 20 Lusty. 21 Nark. 22 Anon. 24 Dclane. 26 Penchant. 29 Aldershot. 30...