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to Salisbury and returned—to everybody's sur- USDAW conference has been
The Spectatorgenerally prise, including his own—with what appeared to hailed as a victory for Mr. Gaitskell. It may turn be a multi-racial agreement in his brief-case. The out to be; but...
TAKING THE CURRENT
The Spectatoradmonition : and as a result effected the transition thousands of Africans who had previously ing for him; a nationalist leader likes at least the those who wish to preserve the...
—Portrait of the Week
The SpectatorI HI' UNITED STATES' FIRST ATTEMPT to put a man into space was postponed because of bad weather, with Commander Shepard already in his space suit. and Bob Hope there to see him...
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Advertisement Tax
The SpectatorW HEN the Chancellor announced that he proposed to tax the revenue from televi- sion advertising, his hearers were under the impression that he expected the money to come out of...
Dock Brief
The SpectatorO NCE again the Port of London has been all but closed by an unofficial dock strike. And once again union officials and employers have trotted out the two familiar...
Out of Internment
The SpectatorO NE welcome piece of news from Belfast111$ reached us just too late for our Ulster mil ber deserves a mention this week; the release; the last of the internees. For a while...
Thirteen years ago this month, the State of Israel was
The Spectatorproclaimed: and the Arab refugees, who until that time had been simply displaced persons, • became people without a country; squatters on the borders of what had been their...
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Middle-Class Through and Through
The SpectatorFrom SARAH GAI:1 HAM VIENNA HE: neo-romantic melodrama in Algeria makes German politics seem even more s tolid and pedestrian than usual at the moment. The he psychic malady of...
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Chalk It Up
The SpectatorBy BERNARD LEVIN THE case of the 'chalk-working pit at Saffron Walden (it would be his constituency), and the actions of the Minister of Hous- ing in overriding his Inspector's...
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Christiansen and Beaverbrook
The SpectatorBy BRIAN INGLIS A PEW years ago I came back from holiday A to find a letter telling me to see Arthur Christiansen: he had liked some articles of mine, and wondered if I would...
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Britain and Europe
The SpectatorHARTLEY By ANTHONY I the recent mass of contradictory statements land rumours concerning Britain's possible entry into the European Common Market have done nothing else, at...
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Day of Dupes
The SpectatorBy ROBERT CONQUEST Most of the signatories seem to be critics or dramatists. It is difficult to think of any reason (or rather any reputable reason) why they should feel their...
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The Churches
The SpectatorNo Short Cut By MONICA FURLONG I F there are still Christians who are not sure of the value of ecumenicalism (as opposed to those who are not sure what the word means) then a...
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Asian Discrimination C. A. Gunawardene
The SpectatorWithin the Family? Professor C. M. Maclnnes, Michael Baume Printing and the Press R. S. Austin, Sir Max Betnrose Hospitals and Patients Lt.-Col. W. .1. Fletcher,...
Stn,—In his letter on magazine printing (April 21) Mr. Perry
The Spectatorimplies that the demise of many trade papers derives from the lack of an economic print- ing process in this country. The tenor of this argu- ment appears to me to be mildly...
WITHIN THE FAMILY?
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. Christopher Hollis states in the Spectator of April 14, 1961 (page 502), that 'It is indeed true that the only reason why Australia and Canada do not today find...
qtr
The Spectatoron the country as Mr. Muggeridge but also by Australians themselves, has once again been manifested in your correspondence columns. The White Australia policy is an economic...
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HOSPITALS AND PATIENTS
The SpectatorSIR,—I think Frank Hart refers in 'The Hospital Committee' (April 14) to an incident in which I was concerned. This was an interview at a hospital to which I accompanied a lady...
PARENTS AND CHILDREN
The SpectatorS:11,--Monica Furlong quotes a survey of parents' attitudes to their children's schooling, saying that they 'were concerned predominantly with the jobs their children would get,...
SIR,—Your leading article on April 21 argues that President Kennedy
The Spectatoris faced with 'a Soviet satellite nation ninety miles frcm the United States mainland. In such circumstances, it would be the duty, as well as the natural wish, of any American...
SIR,—Mrs. Catling's mortifying experience demon- strates many weaknesses not least
The Spectatorthat, in some cases, payment of fees makes all the difference and, sadly, many people believe that a high degree of skill can only be obtained in exchange for payment. Quite...
further training.—Yours faithfully,
The SpectatorMAX BEMROSE Universal Printers Ltd., 54 Wellington Street, Derby
SIR,— Whether Stormont or Westminster or both are to blame for
The Spectatorthe tragic proportion of perpetually unemployed in Northern Ireland, the remedy is un- likely to lie in the re-imposition of direct rule from London, for long historical...
THE PYRAMIDS
The SpectatorSIR,— Surely, M. 1. Finley, who reviewed Aldred's The Egyptians in your issue of April 7, knows that many Neolithic and Bronze Age peoples, other than the Egyptians, had a...
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O p era
The SpectatorTrapping the Fox By DAVI I) CAIRNS IN a less self-consciously cultural epoch Francis Burt's Volpone, produced for the first time in Eng- land by the New Opera Company last...
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Art
The SpectatorAcademic Questions By HUGH GRAHAM The aims were, briefly, the establishment of a British School of Painting in both the literal and historical sense. Promising young...
Theatre
The SpectatorPlaying with Fire By BAMBER GASCOIGNE In style it's a modern Morality, a parable of appeasement. Biedermann is a respectable citizen (his name means Honest Man, and his...
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Records
The SpectatorHight by Name By JOHN HOLMSTROM Scofield, surely, could hardly be more unsuited to the part; everything in his voice proclairrls him wry and thoughtful. Indeed, for much of...
Cinema
The SpectatorConventional Warfare By ISABEL QUIGLY The Guns of Navarone. I WILL pay one crude compliment to The Guns of Navarone (director: J. Lee Thompson; 'A' certificate): during all...
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Ballet
The SpectatorDiaghilev, He Say By CLIVE BARNES " e ll) ‘‘, Quite suddenly during the past few weeks at Covent Garden, Beriosova has shown us a new kind of dancing. The always fascinating...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorYesterday the Struggle Y ROY JENKINS T w ENTry-Two years ago this spring the Spanish , Ci vil War ground to an end. At the beginning °` March, 1939, a Republican Army of...
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Aegean Dunkirk
The SpectatorGreek Tragedy, '41. By Anthony Heckstall- Smith and Vice-Admiral H. T. Baillie- Grohman. (Blond, 25s.) THIS new and often moving account of the heroic and disastrous Greek...
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t y 44 Conscience of the Revolution. By Robert y01,L E
The Spectatorwho have formed what they take to be ' Aei i ntellige n t . lgent views about international politics It d ' ° e. luetinfes accept a false impression of the ilocr, s , i m Lyiet...
Women and Children Last
The SpectatorIF, like redbrick candidates for a master's degree, sailors had to submit a thesis for their master's certificate, then Percival R. Kirby'3 study of the Grosvenor shipwreck is...
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Caged Men BOTH these books are about the last war
The Spectatorand both arc concerned with prison life. In other respects they have nothing in common. Colditz„ where Reinhold Eggers was in charge of security, re- sembles Fresnes, where...
Burning Questions t I a so Resistance, Rebellion and Death.
The SpectatorBy Alber t Camus. Translated by Justin O'Brie n ' ` ri alinat ran,%s on (Hamish Hamilton, 21s.)v THIS volume contains a selection from Camus' topical writings and was made by...
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ve Iv Mystical Life. By J. H. M. Whiteman. o i e ra1
The Spectator1,4 ' ( Faber, 30s.) a O. if,„ (h e Past comforting information about the the' i \ "Ilfe was dispensed from two sources. iii2reW t Lit 1 °Ettative but unexcitingly abstract...
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The Coast of Bohemia
The SpectatorThe First Bohemian. By Robert Baldick. (Hamish Hamilton, 21s.) HI NRI MURGER, who died just a hundred years ago, was a couple of decades junior to Alexandre Dumas the elder, who...
Atmospheres and OccasioP Go t h ic Hemingway. By Stewart Sanderson. Falp 1 , _, 111
The SpectatorTHE latest monographs in the Oliver arid: 1 ienee series have not been able to avoid the r' :ne ic r a l l 1sQ l herent in a brief general survey (endless Plo l marics,...
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Ordinary Idyll
The Spectator_.. s "etIteen on Sunday. By James Gafford. (Faber, r ks-onstable, 18s.) erSt°" ( Heinemann. 16s.) , a . .,1,: 1 !S GAREORD'S fi rst novel Camphor, which ,,d par ti "l i e Out...
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Macmillan's Economic Plan •
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT THE story I prefer to believe is that joining up with the European Common Market is only part of the Prime Minister's grand economic plan—the plan which is...
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Investment Notes
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS ( corr ection. is time for this bull market to have a little 1 correction. As one broker's report puts it, the mistake which a bull market makes is in not...
Company Notes
The SpectatorACHILLE SERRE, the dyers and cleaners, have reorganised and consolidated during the past year to some advantage. Their central factory at Walthamstow now takes work from all...
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Roundabout
The SpectatorThe Four Posts of Wisdom By KATHARINE WHITEHORN • ' 1 KNOW the difference between heaven and hell,' As one might expect, there have existed at one time or another beds that...
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Consuming Interest
The SpectatorTaxi! By LESLIE ADRIAN COMMONWEALTH immi- grants to this country often arrive poorly equipped to deal with the first problem that faces them—getting across Britain to where...
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Postscript . • •
The Spectator'Twos on a Monday morning, and in the year of 1884 That a fire broke out in Bailie Bradford's store, Which contained bales of jute and large quanti- ties of waste, Which the...