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ZAMBIA'S HOLY WAR Harry Franklin ECHOES OF A REPORT Peter
The SpectatorHall on Buchanan THINKING WITH THE HEART Murray Kempton THE EXCLUSIVE BRETHREN Roger Gresham Cooke MP SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK Quoodle JOHN BULL'S FIRST JOB Robert Morley...
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THE 1964 BATTLE OF HASTINGS produced one death and seventy
The Spectatorarrests, after Mods and Rockers chose the resort for their August Bank Holiday fracas. Casualties may have been light by Hastings stan- dards, but the road death toll—at...
The Outsiders
The Spectator1 As"' year our causes celebres were mainly d I to do with sex and security. This year they are drawn from the world of business. Mr. John Bloom, the Ferrantis, and the...
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The Dispatch War
The SpectatorARNOLD BEICIIMAN writes from Saigon : I am unsure about a layman's right to intrude Aristotle into a discussion about the State of journalism. Risking all, I cite the...
Southern Rhodesia
The SpectatorI T would be perverse to criticise the High Com- missioner of Southern Rhodesia for seeking to persuade the readers of the Spectator and The Times that by the policies of his...
Market Lull
The SpectatorPAUL LEWIS writes from Brussels : It was grey and sultry in Brussels last week, but for the Common Market Council Mediter- ranean sunshine was already in sight. The Ministers...
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Zambia's Holy War
The SpectatorHARRY FRANKLIN writes from Lusaka: Dr. Kaunda faces the first test of his strength in dealing with the serious outbreak of violence in the Chinsali district of the Northern...
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Anglo-Welsh Lament
The SpectatorJAMES TUCKER writes: Provincial and a trend-follower, I once went to a Soho strip club when on a trip to London. A delightful girl willingly joined me over what Mr. Henry Brooke...
ECHOES OF A REPORT-2
The SpectatorThe Slow Progress of Buchanan By PETER HALL W HAT do we do about Buchanan? When the Mayor, Aldermen and Burgesses of the City of Bath read their Buchanan Report and heard its...
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The Rise and Fall
The SpectatorLord Sandwich, whom his Prep School knew As Master Victor Montagu, About the age of seven took The name of Viscount Hinchingbroke. And that in fact was still his name...
Thinking with the Heart
The SpectatorFrom MURRAY KFMPTON WASHINGTON VERY1HING Senator Goldwater has done E i since his nomination seems as deliberate a violation of the rules for political success in the United...
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The Exclusive Taylorites
The SpectatorBy ROGER GRESHAM COOKE, MP HAVE been overwhelmed by a flood of stories lof broken homes, strange family exclusions and suicides since I began delving into the activities of the...
Poor But Honest
The SpectatorBy CLAUD COCKBURN T an laughter and applause recorded when dwarf trips giant may be ill-judged. Perhaps the giant is good at heart, and the imp quite malign. But our resident...
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Flog 'cm!
The SpectatorWhat a fascinating piece Aunty's Special Cor- respondent turned in from Hastings. He (or perhaps she) went trotting about among the young invaders asking exactly the sort of...
The End of the Case Panorama, following its custom of
The Spectatortaking up Spectator debates, had this week a splendidly in- articulate item on public opinion polls. Do you realise, reflected Dimbleby, as if he just thought of it, that with...
The Guardians One reads a lot these days by various
The Spectatorself- appointed Cassandras about the dangers of `creeping totalitarianism' in Britain. Yet last week we saw a most important decision by the Court of Appeal in reversing the...
Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorReaders of the Spectator will need little re- minding who Vigne is. He is a former national vice-chairman of the South African Liberal Party and, till events made it impossible,...
The Smashing of a Party One thing the Prime Minister
The Spectatorand his Govern- ment are trying to condemn and prevent is the South African Liberal Party. Once again readers of the Spectator will be familiar with the growing success of this...
The Bomb in the Station But the arrests of the
The SpectatorLiberals are not all. There is the peculiar affair of the bomb planted in Johannesburg station on July 24. Side by side with stories of the search for Vigne and of further...
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UPHOLDING THE ESTABLISHMENT
The SpectatorBy THE BISHOP OF SOUTHWARK O N what was probably the last full day of this Parliament, the House of Lords debated the nation's hospitals and the Commons the eucharistic...
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John Bull's First Job
The SpectatorDoor to Door By ROBERT MORLEY `You'RE disappointed that it's a vacuum cleaner?' `Not exactly disappointed,' I told him . . . 'it's just that I thought, reading your ad-...
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Sia.—Mr. Leo Baron's well-meaning article contains a fatal flaw. The
The Spectatorfigures he quotes from the Labour Force Census, 1961, are (a) 421 Africans earning more than £720; (b) 869 Africans earning more than £480; (c) 8,258 Africans earning more...
MIXING IT
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. John Homer's piece on our special num- ber on the Thirties (Spectator, July 31) is really rather misleading and for the sake of those readers whom we cannot afford to...
HOMOSEXUALITY
The SpectatorSIR,--Ian Gilmour writes that Lord Devlin has been brilliantly demolished by Professor Hart in Law, Liberty and Morality. Lord Devlin buttressed his argument by examples from...
ik on Letters
The SpectatorMathematics of Southern Rhodesia E. R. Campbell, Edward Raikes Misquotation Sir Denis Brogan Mixing It Ian Hamilton Mixed Bathing Patrick and Monica Jenkin Homosexuality...
MISQUOTATION
The SpectatorSIR,-1 regret to see in last week's . Spectator that Leslie Adrian has transferred to Oscar Wilde—and spoiled—the best of American jokes: `Good Ameri- cans when they die go to...
MIXED BATHING SIR."—Hurrah for Leslie Adrian! It was high time
The Spectatorthat someone protested at the LCCs Victorian prudery about mixed bathing at the Highgate swimming are one of the statistician's typical pools. w e i.e. about half of us are...
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THE SIXTH OF JUNE
The SpectatorSia,—My copy of the Spectator of June 5 has just arrived in New Zealand. I write to say how much I enjoyed fain Macleod's article on D-Day, especially his description of the...
WITHOUT DEGREES
The SpectatorSIR,—The Robbins Report indicates that one out of seven of our highly selected university entrants fails to complete his course. At present very little is known about why this...
WHO MADE COMPUTERS?
The Spectator1 R,—Alan Brien (July 24) includes computers in his list of American innovations which have eventually become domesticated here. In fact, seven men de- veloped the electronic...
Cunningham's Chances
The SpectatorBy CLIVE BARNES The episode, which is the opening of Winter- branch, is not entirely typical of Merce. Cunning- ham. But it emphasises the reasons why his London season has...
DRONES AND STINGS
The SpectatorSIR,—O n p. 101—`Tory Revival'—David Watt writes : 'fifteen . . . drones from the Government back benches will leap . . . with stings. unsheathed ready to defend their queen.'...
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The Backroom Mr. Reid
The SpectatorIn all the years I've known him, Norman Reid has never confided any private penchant or prejudice beyond his general absorption in twentieth-century movements in art. His is an...
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Carrying On
The SpectatorIt just shows how unfair life is, for about a month ago on the third circuit there appeared, very quietly, another Victorian space-travel movie called From Earth to Moon. This...
The Anti-Wagnerian
The SpectatorBy NEVILLE CARDUS In 1928 Bayreuth was still dominated by the traditional sway of Cosima. The general stage set-up for all the Wagner music-dramas more or less observed...
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The Music of Politics
The SpectatorBy MALCOLM RUTHERFORD Henry VI. (Stratford.) THE distance of John Bar- ton's adaptation of Henry VI from the original text has to be seen to be be- lieved. Watching the pro-...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorThe Irish Question By ROBERT RHODES JAMES ' N a memorable passage in the biography of his father, Sir Winston Churchill compared con- sideration of the first Home Rule Bill...
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Short Classics
The SpectatorThe Stories of Mary Lavin. (Constable, 30s.) Stories : Volume 2. By Morley Callaghan (Mac- Gibbon and Kee, 18s.) FROM her six books of short stories Mary Lavin has made a...
Status Seeker
The SpectatorMODERN poets, on the whole, make poor sub- jects for the biographer. If—in the words of Yeats- - they chose 'perfection of the work,' their lives are likely to have been as...
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Men of Standing
The SpectatorMade to Last. By John Kenneth Galbraith. (Hamish Hamilton, 16s.) PROFESSOR GALBRAITH is far from being my favourite economist, but in this little book he shows some surprising...
The Romantic Exile
The SpectatorBy RONALD HINGLEY p ustuart's letters* have never appeared in English before, and some readers may be Puzzled to find that a commodity labelled `Russian' can be quite so...
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Who Live in Mexico
The SpectatorThe Death of Artemio Cruz. By Carlos Fuentes. (Collins, 21s,) Daily Life of the Aztecs. By Jacques Soustelle. (Pelican, 7s. 6d.) THE first two books tell the story of a Mexican...
Again—Miller's Life and Loves
The SpectatorSome Faces in the Crowd. By Budd Schulberg. (Bodley Head, 16s.) Teeth, Dying and other matters. By Richard G. Stern. (MacGibbon and Kee, 30s.) THERE'S a story, possibly...
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The Economy
The SpectatorInsurance Investment and the State By NICHOLAS DAVENPORT THE parts of the City most anxiously awaiting the October election result are the board rooms of the life insurance...
Grey Flannel
The SpectatorThe Advertising Man. By Jeremy Tunstall. (Chapman and Hall, 30s.) Anvp.ansiNG is on the defensive. It has its self- appointed apologists, but their arguments are s uspect and...
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Investment Notes
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS T HE 'no-change' Bank rate, which appears to he Mr. Maudling's pre-election policy, stead- ied the gilt-edged market, though it remains friendless. It is worth...
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 1130
The SpectatorACROSS 25. 1. A formal flower of a rising in London (8, 4) 8. The pipes of Pan keyed-up, per- haps (4-5) 9. Where half of 2 takes a beating (5) 11. The chronicle of a pious...
Company Notes
The SpectatorBy LOTHBURY T HE results from Great Universal Stores are really outstanding, with a 14} per cent in- crease in the trading profit at £351 million. This is the biggest increase...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD 1129 ACROSS.-1 Badhat. 4 Appraise. 10 Doleful.
The Spectator11 Abounds. 12 Anticipate. 13 Once. 15 Eanling. 17 Chassis. 19 Spurned. 21 Looks in. 23 Chit, 24 Lighthouse. 27 Propose. 28 Glad eye. 29 Demonist. 30 Certes. Bedmakers. 2...
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Consuming Interest
The SpectatorAl Fresco By LESLIE ADRIAN THE open-air restaurant, like the open-air cinema, is foreign to British cities. For the reason, one has only to review the uneven history of the...
Another Part of the Forest
The SpectatorThis Other Eden By STRIX The noises made by aircraft get louder and louder, causing distress to more and more people. Skylines bristle with architectural eyesores. Rivers are...
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Afterthought
The SpectatorBy ALAN BRIEN ON August Bank Holiday Monday, our car suddenly stopped moving in a centre lane of a one-way street somewhere in the Willes- den wilderness. The mood of...
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Chess
The SpectatorBy PHILIDOR No. 190. DR. W. SPECKMANN (Deutsche Schachzeitung, June, 1964) BLACK (1 man) (WHIM (6 men) wiirtE to play and mate in two moves; solution next week. Solution to No....