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— Portrait of the Week- SEMEMBER CAME IN with a long - range
The Spectatorforecast of gales and frost from the Met. Office, Messrs. Wilson and Heath returned from their summer holidays, and in spite of the new half-cock end- of - August Bank Holiday,...
Four Conferences
The SpectatorMHE importance of the four autumn con- ' ferences (the TUC and the political parties) has increased very much in recent years. Full television coverage now trans- forms them...
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VIEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorSTRIKES Time for Trouble-shooters MAURICE GENT writes: Mr. Harold Wilson for at least once in his life seems to have acted first and thought later. This is normally the last...
NEXT WEEK
The SpectatorThe Germany of Tomorrow A Survey on the Eve of the German Elections Contributors include RUDOLF AUGSTEIN, SARAH GAINHAM, PROFESSOR GOLO MANN, D. C. WAIT, GORONWY REES and...
FRANCE
The SpectatorLiving in a Vacuum DON COOK writes from Paris: . It would be a little reassuring to think that President de Gaulle, as he paces his country garden at Colombey-les-Deux-Eglises...
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SCIENCE FICTION
The SpectatorThe Real _People BILL BUTLER writes: Burroughs would have been lost . . . Edgar Rice Burroughs, that is. Since the days of his novel The Warlord of Mars things have changed in...
THE PRESS
The SpectatorSales and Sex RANDOLPH S. CHURCHILL writes: When I was so rudely interrupted—to para- Phrase the immortal words of Cassandra im- mediately after the Second World War—I was...
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Mr. Schlesinger's Lesson
The SpectatorFrom MURRAY KEMPTON NEW YORK M R. ARTHUR SCHLESINGER'S memoirs of his service to President Kennedy seem to have been so roundly and so curiously denounced as to frighten Mr....
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Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorW ITH the announcement that the inquiry into the Evans case is to be in public one more victory is chalked and to those who have fought so patiently and so long to see that...
At The Oval An unkind correspondent wrote, a few weeks
The Spectatorago, that it was a good thing that I was not a selector. I disagree. I would make an excellent selector. To start with I would not pick Mike Smith as an Australian tourist, much...
The Rains Came Perhaps because I am more cussed than
The Spectatorthe other critics, I enjoyed the dour strokeless bat- ting against excellently tight bowling which was the story of the first two innings at least as much as the dash for...
A New Role for the 'British Ass'?
The SpectatorBy JOHN MADDOX I F the first tang of autumn is a remincitr to swallows to take themselves off, it is also a Sign to those of us who stay behind that the annual meeting of the...
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Kashmir The terrible comment on the fighting in Kash- mir
The Spectatoris that the situation will almost certainly have to get worse before it can get better. The United Nations, powerless to send in a peace force, finds that even its appointed...
Tailpiece Many unpleasant things were said at the last general
The Spectatorelection. One appeal was so nauseating that I filed it for future comment. Lord Gardiner, who within the week was Lord Chancellor, said at Brentford on October 13: What we can...
Pioneer It is the fate of brilliant young innovators to
The Spectatorbecome respectable institutions in their old age. Le Corbusier escaped this because of his own persistent inventiveness and because of some- thing prickly and sardonic in his...
AMONG SOVIET WRITERS-2
The SpectatorWhat Evashova Began By DESMOND STEWART I F Peridelkino, the writers' village, is pub-less, so almost is Moscow. Russian friends, report- ing that youth groups had spontaneously...
Bank Holiday Note Connoisseurs of the inspired misprint will not,
The SpectatorI hope, have missed the reference on The Times leader-pages on Monday to the problem of 'apparently frivial' disputes in industry. I like this word. I hope it is not trivolous...
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SETTING SUN—RISING SUN Japan: The Last Twenty Years
The SpectatorBy RICHARD STORRY M R. SIIIGEMITSU and his Foreign Office aides wore black top hats and morning coats. General Umezu and the other representatives of the Supreme Command were...
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LONDON PRIDE
The SpectatorLoop Line to Dartford By DAVID ROGERS W ATERLOO, London Bridge, New Cross, St. John's, Lewisham, Lee Green, Motting- ham, New Eltham, Sidcup, Albany Park, Bexley . . .' The...
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Disenchanted
The Spectator&I, —Although not a Labour party member I, like Mr. Pomeranz, voted for Mr. Wilson last time, so I qualify for the sticker Mr. Brien refers to, 'Blame me, I voted Labour.' In my...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorFrom: Roy Hattersley, MP, Vanessa Redgrave, Alan Whittaker, Charles Chenevix Trench, 1. M. Herring, Mrs. A. D. W raight, G. Van Praagh, R. B. Whitmore, M. L. Rosenthal....
Integration in Holland
The SpectatorSIR, —A lot is talked about the Dutch success in the integration of Indonesians in their society. What is overlooked, when trying to draw parallels with British immigrants, is...
The Man Who Was Shakespeare SIR,—May I correct at least
The Spectatorsome of the misrepre- sentations in Mr. Seymour-Smith's review of my book (August 6). He takes me to task because I have not 'stuck to facts' (what Shakespearian biographer ever...
The Old-Model VSO
The SpectatorSIR, —As a former member of the Colonial Service who, alas, failed to attain 'Establishment' status (not even an MBE) I am saddened by Mr. George Edin- ger's disclosures about...
The Larger Hope
The SpectatorSIR,— Having read Arnold Beichman's article 'The Larger Hope,' my eye went to the War On Want advertisement on the opposite page: . . Would any of us willingly stand by and...
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`White Mule'
The SpectatorSlit,—May I make a minor correction to my re- view of William Carlos Williams's White Mule (Spectator, August 20, 1965)? In .the second para- graph the description of Joe...
The Wandering Scholars
The SpectatorSIR, —The tragedy is that so few scholars wander into teaching. If this state of affairs continues, there won't be any scholars to wander. Nuffield Science Teaching Project,...
Middle-Class Economics
The SpectatorSIR,--I have recently been subjected to some passion- ate arguments in favour of higher pay for officers. The argument is that present scales are too low for the job and rank...
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THEATRE
The SpectatorSquelch The Passion Flower Hotel. (Prince of Wales.)— Entlyn Williams as Charles Dickens. (Globe.) T HE British musical is not unlike the mechani- cal nightingale of which I...
ARTS & AMUSEMENTS
The SpectatorIn the Caledonian Market-place By NEVILLE CARDUS N INETEEN Edinburgh International Festivals to date. It is a far cry back to the first glamoroug year of 1947, when the sun...
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CINEMA
The SpectatorMiddle-aged Spread What's New, Pussycat? (Odeon, Leicester Square, 'X' certificate.)—Nine Days of One Year. (Academy Cinema Club.) W ERE I national dictator of taste in the...
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THE SOVIET SCENE
The SpectatorThe New Revolution T HE rejection of the outside world by the Russians has always received attention. Per- haps the time has come now to pay attention to what they are...
ARCHITECTURE
The SpectatorSandwich Buildings 6L VINO above the shop' has all sorts of bour- geois overtones, but it is such a practical habit that many people who work in the City and West End of London...
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BOOKS The Romantic Miss Murdoch
The SpectatorBy MALCOLM BRADBURY TRIS MURDOCH'S reputation as a novelist is _thigh; but it is surely not as high as it was. The shift in critical opinion derives in part from what seems to...
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Today the Struggle . . .
The SpectatorBy ALFRED SHERMAN (Nutt image of the Spanish war has changed kf with the years. At the time, it seemed to exemplify the shape of things to come—political judgment day. When the...
Tak Aff Your Dram
The SpectatorREADING Mr. Hanley's highly entertaining and illuminating survey of his (and my) native land, I pondered the question: stands Scotland where she did? Celtic's recent match with...
The Liberal Wellington
The SpectatorThe Unpublished Correspondence of Mme de StaEl and the Duke of Wellington. Edited by Victor de Pange. Translated by Harold Kurtz. (Cassell, 25s.) A MAN may be essentially...
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Imperial Conscience
The SpectatorThe Round Mosaic. By Desmond Stewart. (Chapman and Hall, 21s.) The Sinews of Love. By Alexander Cordell. (Gollancz, 21s.) A True Story. By Stephen Hudson. (Dent, 253.) The...
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Here and Now
The SpectatorThe Shearers and the Shorn: A Study of Life in a Devon Community. By E. W. Martin. (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 40s.) The Sociology of Housing : Studies at Berins- field. By R. N....
Travellers' Tales
The SpectatorBATSFORD have courageously allowed two writers, William Gaunt on Oxford and Barbara Willard on Sussex (both 25s.), with lifelong knowledge and affection for their much de-...
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THE ECONOMY & THE CITY
The SpectatorWho Wants Deflation? Not the USA By NICHOLAS DAVENPORT TT must be great fun being a political corre- jspondent..Especially on a Sunday paper which requires the discovery of a...
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Company Notes
The SpectatorBy LOTHB.URY TISCOUNT ECCLES, chairman of West Cum- V berland Silk Mills, anticipates another good year, particularly regarding an increase in ex- ports to . all the company's...
Investment Notes
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS T HE launching of the huge £50 million 71 per cent loan stock by to (next week) comes conveniently at a time when many brokers are arguing that 'the cult of the...
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ENDPAPERS
The SpectatorAnother Part of the Forest FOR anyone over four feet in height it is not easy to walk along a single-track railway line with either grace or speed; and it is harder than it...
Charge or Overcharge?
The SpectatorBy LESLIE ADRIAN Take 'rebuilts,' for instance. A branded re- built accumulator is a kind of assembly kit, con- sisting of an old container (or perhaps a new one), a lid, and a...
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Bordeaux Breakthrough
The SpectatorBy BERNARD DENVIR AT times it is difficult to avoid the suspicion that M. Malraux regards culture in the same way that Clausewitz regarded war, as an exten- sion of foreign...
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1186
The Spectator9. Is this what made Richard tick? (4-5) 10. I give a perfect, hand (5) 11. Sodium and chalcedony make up an organ-stop (6) 12. Cain's upset after a farewell to the city (8) 23....
Economics Made Easy
The SpectatorSince austerity's a bore, Let's produce a little more. When we had a five-day week, Things all looked a trifle bleak, So, since they are in the red, Let's try working four...
• SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 1185
The SpectatorACROSS.-1 Pardoner. 5 Ashake. 9 Bachelor. 10 Snathe. 12 Landau. 13 Leap-frog. 15 Tribulations. 18 Crystal- gazer. 23 Pleasure. 24 Laputa. 26 Evaded 27 Worm-cast. 28 Seesaw. 29...
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Afterthought
The SpectatorBy ALAN BRIEN WHEN I was an essay- reader as a boy (when there were still essays to read and before I became the last of the rambl- ing egocentric essayists), journalists...
Chess
The SpectatorBy PHILIDOR 246. W. A. SHINKMAN (1st Prize, Huddersfield, 1877) BLACK (4 men) WHITE (5 men) WHITE to play and mate in two moves; solution next week. Solution to No. 245...