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ANOTHER ALGERIA
The SpectatorNTIL the Nyasaland Congress was outlawed and its leaders arrested, and the troops opened fire in Blantyre, the Nyasaland riots were oddly lacking in real violence. It seemed...
—Portrait of the Week— WHEN ONE DOOR SHUTS, another opens.
The SpectatorThe amnesty terms for members of EOKA were pro- mulgated, the line was drawn beneath the last item in the Suez account, and in Central Africa violence flared, states of...
ORDERS ARE ORDERS
The SpectatorI N Bournemouth Mr. Nigel Nicolson and in Norfolk Sir Frank Medlicott are being frozen out of the House of Cpmmoits at , the end of this Parliament, while in Belfast strenuous...
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Manufacturing Martyrs
The SpectatorBy T. R. M. CREIGHTON T HE strong measures taken by the Southern Rhodesian Government—mobilising reserv- ists, declaring an emergency, and making the Southern Rhodesian...
The Steel Inquiry
The SpectatorLast November the Spectator set up a Commission, under the chairmanship of Mr. D. N. Chester, Warden of Nullield College, Oxford, to inquire into the advan- tages and...
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On the Soviet Switchback
The SpectatorBy CYRIL RAY Moscow As I was strolling along the Nevsky Prospekt A phrase I have long waited to be able to begin an article with—two Leningrad lads accosted me with broad...
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Westminster Commentary
The SpectatorTHERE is only one thing I like better than a good, juicy row after Question Time, and that is two good, juicy rows after Question Time. And on Monday my fav- ourite dish was on...
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THE IDEA Is all the odder in that Lord Altrincham
The Spectatorcombines it with the idea that the Commonwealth `should stand for definite principles—anti-racial- ism, parliamentary government, universal suffrage,' etc. Even if he is right...
* * *
The Spectator'CARE TO MEET YOUR SUB-CONSCIOUS?' asked the heading in the Sunday Express. Though not very confident that an introduction effected by that paper would necessarily lead to a...
A Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorON ANOTHER PACE Brian Inglis has contributed an article on the Black Diaries of Sir Roger Casement. In order to write this article, he has, I think, in- fringed the Official...
THE SHAMELESS WAY in which the International Civil Aviation Organisation
The Spectatorputs American interests before technical interests was well illus- trated when the United Kingdom delegate had to withdraw the proposal that the short-range navi- gation system...
IN AN ILLUMINATING article in the current number of the
The SpectatorNational and English Review Lord Altrincham discusses the reactions to his speech last month, in which he suggested that the Queen should reside in, rather than merely tour,...
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COLLECTING BUTLER ISMS has become a favourite sport among politicians
The Spectatorand students of the House of Commons. A Butlerism is an innocent, off- the-cull compliment which is intended to decorate the recipient •Ke a medal but which, when pinned to his...
Advertising Must Advertise
The SpectatorBy ENO( H POWELL, MP W I-I m ‘A. , liN my generation carne out of the war into politics in 1945-46, laisser - faire was a very dirty word indeed. If anyone threw it at the Con-...
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Saintly Sinner
The SpectatorBy BRIAN INGLIS T HAVE been reading a copy of The Black 'Diaries,* an account of Roger Casement's life incorporating some of his private and public writings. In it are printed...
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Theatre
The SpectatorThe Hand that Cradles the Rock By ALAN BRIEN ALL gall is divided into three parts. So it is not surprising that there should be three kinds of dramatic critic. Mr. Alan Dent a...
Roundabout
The SpectatorStearn-heat THE NEEDLE on the wall pointed to 110° Centi- grade; imperceptibly it crept up to 115. The white-coated attendant reached them, the two sweating forms on the...
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Television
The SpectatorA Surfeit of Generals By PETER FORSTER The way in which heroes, like Stirling and Cheshire, have turned since the war to good works is clearly a promising subject, one that...
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Cinema
The SpectatorShabbiness in the Sun QUIGLY By ISABEL A Matter of Dignity. (Curzon.) IN spite of the weather (which, if you are talking of the most basic forms of poverty, means you can...
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Consuming_ Interest
The SpectatorA Dinner of Herbs By LESLIE ADRIAN Because the flavour of herbs comes from the volatile oils, which arc released by crushing or cooking, all herbs are at their most effective...
Art
The SpectatorWhatever is Well Made By SIMON HODGSON IT has been suggested in these columns that portmanteau ex- hibitions of furniture, painting, silyer, china and glass are best confined...
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A Doctor's Journal
The SpectatorSmoke in the Air By MILES HOWARD A distinguished medical statistician, Dr. Percy Stocks, has now produced some fresh evidence on the relationof mortality from cancer and bron-...
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Thr ipp ertator
The SpectatorMARCH 8, 1834 A suanlar of great public interest and importance— that of impressment of seamen—was discussed on Tuesday. Mr. BUCKINGHAM, in a speech which has been justly...
The Striggle Naught Availeth
The SpectatorBy STRIX I, for instance, would very much like to read a learned treatise oti the Houlihans of Southwark; for it is to this family (I discovered from a general knowledge quiz in...
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And Now Nyasaland
The SpectatorRev. Kenneth MacKenzie, C. T. Leys Is the Foreign Office Necessary? Anthony Hartley Camay Soap J. H. Trower, Francis Noel-Baker, MP Bagehot Richard Woliheim The Great Ship Lord...
SIR,—Last week Taper commented on Christopher Mayhew's admirable Bill designed
The Spectatorto relegate ad- vertisement 'plugs' to the spaces between programmes on commercial television. He also mentioned my short intervention which followed and which con- tained a...
BAGEHOT
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. Alastair Buchan and Mr. St. John-Stevas challenge my views on Bagehot. 1. Mr. Buchan accepts my statement that Bagehot didn't 'have much time for theory' as far as...
qtr
The SpectatorSIR,—Your leading article on Nyasaland sends a shaft of light into this area of habitual doubletalk. But is there not a danger that your correct insistence on the need for...
CAMAY SOAP
The SpectatorSIR,—The statement made about Camay on February 24 in the House of Commons, as reported in your issue of February 27, is privileged but quite untrue. Camay is a high-quality...
IS THE FOREIGN OFFICE NECESSARY?
The SpectatorSIR,—Despite the Warden of New College's uncer- tainty as to what I want in the way of Foreign Office reform, I should have thought it emerged pretty clearly from my article...
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THE CASE AGAINST THE ARCHITECT
The SpectatorSIR,—Your correspondents, Mr. James K. Scott and Mr. F. L. Jackman, seem to be so angry because haVe dared to criticise part of the work of some architects that they have not...
CHANCELLOR FISCAL
The SpectatorSIR,—How right is your plea for an imaginative reform of our taxes, or at least a further step in that direction! Particularly I welcome your support for reintro- ducing legacy...
SIR,—ITV has surrounded itself with such a dense smokescreen of
The Spectatorexpensive public relations that Taper can perhaps be forgiven for losing his way in it. Most of the programmes he quoted last week as not being interrupted by commercials are...
S1R,—Strix, in his recollections of the maiden voyage of the
The SpectatorQueen Mary, says nothing of the row that had raged beforehand over the designs for the decora- tions of its principal saloons. These were com- missioned from Mr. Duncan Grant,...
FRANK HARRIS
The SpectatorSIR,—In the matter of Mr. Michael Foot's attack on Mr. Waugh for his criticism of Frank Harris, is it not possible that Shaw was paying hush-money to are un- principled rogue?...
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ENGLISH NEO-CLASSICAL ARTISTS am studying the writings of the principal
The SpectatorEnglish neo-classical artists, in an attempt to analyse this aspect of eighteenth-century taste. I um particu- larly anxious to trace manuscript letters, journals and any other...
SIR,—It is no surprise to me to have to correct
The Spectatora flat mistake of fact on the part of Dr. Leavis, for one no more expects accuracy from him than one would sensibility or sense. But one should ,get one's facts right, and the...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorOdysseus Redivivus By HUGH LLOYD-JONES HE Cretan poet Nikos Kazantzakis died in I 1957 at the age of seventy-four. During an exceptionally active life, divided between writ-...
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Wildest Kenya
The SpectatorKENYANS are traditionally supposed to be the 'wildest' of the various white settler groups in Africa; and reading The flame Trees of Thika one can understand how the tradition...
True Confessions
The SpectatorHERE we go again. Two more Western ex-Com- munists have succumbed to the urge to tell the how and why of disillusion to a public which by now must surely have reached saturation...
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Furnished Rooms
The SpectatorDomestic Interior and other poems. By Laurence Lerner. (Hutchinson, 15s.) Intentions and Versions. By Julian Cooper. (St. George's Gallery, 5s. each.) POEMS (except in...
American Dilemmas
The SpectatorMR. BEWLEY'S critical studies of five American novelists are united by the thesis that all five— Cooper, Hawthorne, Melville, James, Fitzgerald —represent facets of a peculiarly...
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Missing Dates THE autobiographical Education of Henry Adams is weighty,
The Spectatorpessimistic and brilliant. Its inner truth is so obvious that the average English reader un- questionably relies upon it for his knowledge of the unusual American who wrote it....
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Odours of Sanctity
The SpectatorDays and Moments Quickly Flying. By Perry Madoc. (Collins, 13s. 6d.) THE late Joyce Cary was much concerned with the various ways in which man could be 'pos- sessed'; it is an...
Trade and the Flag
The SpectatorThe Eastland Trade and the Common Weal in the Seventeenth Century. By R. W. K. Hinton. (C.U.P., 32s. 6d.) DR. HINTON has written a well-documented study of the Eastland Company...
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The Rule of Taste
The SpectatorA- History of Japan to 1334. By George Sansom. (Cresset Press, 63s.) A- History of Japan to 1334. By George Sansom. (Cresset Press, 63s.) THIS is the first of three projected...
DOLDRUMS EUROPEAN TRADE
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT THE tedious fustian of the inter- national civil servant does not prevent the stodgy tenth annual economic report of the OEEC striking home its lesSon:...
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COMPANY NOTES
The SpectatorL ONDON BRICK'S chairman, M r. A. T. War- boys, in his annual statement last May, made quite an optimistic forecast concerning a better demand for • the company's products which...
INVESTMENT NOTES
The SpectatorB y CUSTOS T ilE Financial Times index of industrial equities is now 4 per cent. below the top and the market is moving into a secondary reaction in a long-term bull movement....
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SOLUTION OF CROSSWORD 1,032 ACROSS.--I Gatlin:. 4 Chattels, 9 Impels.
The Spectator10 Ballarat, 12 Everyman. 13 Esther. 15 Said. 16 Spectacles. IS Tantamount. 20 Agar. 23 Amalfi. 25 Stricter. 27 Walk- over. ,28 Salome. 29 Yattered. 30 Cogent. DOWN. — I...
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1,034 Solution on March 20
The SpectatorACROSS II Result of investigation about the drink? (6) 4 Fashionable tint of Helen's hair (8) ' • 9 The gentleman's gentleman leads at a ball (6) 10 Sporting character out...
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Questionable Answers
The SpectatorThe usual prizes were offered for two plausible parliamentary questions along with appro- priate answers which would be startlingly incongruous or agreeably amusing if...