Page 3
AT THEIR PERIL
The SpectatorW HAT is the Commonwealth and what do we really want for it? Those are the two questions which the Commonwealth Prime Ministers must constantly brood upon during the next two...
Portrait of the Week— WHILE U THANT, in the Annual
The SpectatorReport to the UN, was repeating his belief in one nation, one vote, America and the Soviet Union shadow-boxed the world over and this time the West was seen to be doing more...
Page 4
Fair for All?
The SpectatorA WAKE or die—the Trades Union Congress this week has its future in its own hands alone, and the 1962 Blackpool conference will be remembered either for dragging the TUC groan-...
Dazed Rabbits
The SpectatorFrom SARAH GAINHAN I W E live and learn. When 1 was a girl , I-- with most of my countrymen—was sure the Germans ought to resist with force th e tyranny under which they lived...
IF YOU KEEP THE SPECTATOR when you ha‘e read it
The Spectatori s week, you may like to know that there is a comprehensive index to it, published twice a year The index costs 5s. each issue, and that for the six months January- Jane...
Page 5
An Asian Tragedy
The SpectatorFrom CHANCHAL SARKAR NEW DELHI AN Asian would look at another Asian country . A . with an understanding quite different from a non-Asian's. An Indian, for instance, looking at...
Page 7
C. D. Notley I don't know much about advertising but
The SpectatorI could see after only a brief encounter at a crowded cocktail party with C. D. Notley, who died last week, why he was such a force in his world. Good advertising was putting...
All My Own Work These exceedingly Scottish remarks would probably
The Spectatorhave flattered rather than offended Rintoul. But the entry for the following day shows Hunter's patience sadly strained: Came home at nine and was rather annoyed to have Mr....
Who's Next?
The SpectatorNot for the first time Laurence Scott, managing director of the Guardian, has proved that a news- paper tycoon can still tell the truth. The paper which he read to the Economics...
Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorTH E Prime Minister has been busy preparing he ground for the delicate discussions with his Commonwealth colleagues which begin on Mo nday. By that time he will have had long...
The Beau Ideal We are, as readers may on occasion
The Spectatorhave noticed, not a little proud of our founder, first editor, and distant father-figure, the radical R. S. Rintoul of Dundee. Journalists are much of a muchness in some...
Page 8
What Are We Here For?
The SpectatorFrom JOHN COLE BLACKPOOL A TOTAL of 987 delegates have been meeting at Blackpool this week in the 94th Trades Union Congress, but only thirty-five of them really matter. More...
The Hunt's Away For much of the past month I
The Spectatorhave been sitting in a cottage on the edge of Exmoor, high above the coils of dense foliage that screen the course of the Exe, and in that (for England) remote stronghold I...
Page 9
Too Late to Hedge
The SpectatorBy T. R. NI. CREIGHTON W HY. when delay is so dangerous, does Butler hedge? This was the question I heard most often from liberal Europeans and, sometimes in less polite...
Page 10
Cuba: Castro and Communism
The SpectatorBy ALFRED SHERMAN el ASTRO himself has put an end to tiresome V./arguments about whether his regime was Communist, so one can begin right away with the question of what kind of...
Page 11
Gra . dus ad Parnassum By WILLIAM - GOLFING I T is perhaps fortunate, as
The Spectatorwell as understand- ' able, that I have never held a position of authority in the educational world. Faced with an experiment or a new process in teaching I find myself wholly...
Page 14
BRITISH VOLUNTARY SERVICE
The SpectatorStu,—Concern about recent developments in Volun- tary Service Overseas is not of a kind that can be allayed by a conducted tour of the office. The Acting Director and his...
The Earl of Sandwich's Crew Norman L. Smythe, Francis Beckett,
The SpectatorP. M. T. Sheldon-Williams, John Antony British Voluntary Service M. McCaw, E. F. G. Haig Thalidomide Babies Quentin de la Bedoyere The Ideal Editor Frank Singleton The Common...
S1R,—As a worker in VSO HQ I have the great
The Spectatorprivilege and pleasure of corresponding with some scores of volunteers all over the world. So I was partly amused and partly disgusted by the letter you printed from Mr. M. M....
Stn,—The Forward Britain Movement is not walking backwards for Christmas
The Spectatoror any other season. It is the Spectator, arm in arm with fellow-smearers the Mirror and the Mail, that wants to lead Britain into the backwater of Europe. Briefly, our...
SIR,—It is perhaps presumptuous of me to follow two such
The Spectatoreminent critics of Henry Fairlie as Graham Greene and Lord Boothby, but his current attack upon the Earl of Sandwich has at last brought my typewriter to the boil. May I, as one...
THALIDOMIDE BABIES Sm,—Queequeg asks what conceivable argument there could be
The Spectatorfor denying the remedy of legal abortion to the mother of a thalidomide baby, It is the same argument whereby we can never assume the right to take innocent life without fear of...
SIR,- -Henry Fairlie's article last week on the Albert Hall anti-Common
The SpectatorMarket meeting was the most vicious piece of woolly-minded democratic anti- democracy I have ever read. lithee Earl of Sandwich believes what he says, it would be to his...
Page 15
SIR,—As a journalist of over forty years' standing, who happens
The Spectatorto be working also in the field of public relations, .may I be allowed to reply briefly to Mr. Cyril Ray's diatribe against the latter? Able newspaperman though he is, Mr. Ray...
'PUBLIC ODIUM,' THE PRESS AND PROs
The SpectatorSI R , ` - What a pity Cyril Ray is not in public rela- ti ons. He seems such a natural for the trade, par- ticularly so far as the projection of the Ray image f ° es. Take his...
THE IDEAL EbifOR SIR,—Handicapped by a cloud of personal imperfec-
The Spectatortions, I still appreciated Mr. C. D. Hamilton's picture of the ideal Editor. May I suggest that what he was writing about was the direction of newspapers. Besides the Editor,...
THE COMMON MARKET
The Spectator8111 ,—Mr. Correlli Barnett writes: 'For. Britain to t urn her back on Europe and European problems • • • would be an act of political blindness and Moral cowardice, etc. etc.'...
The Edinburgh Festival
The SpectatorAfterwards By CLIFFORD HANLEY TT was well on towards midnight in the Festival 'Club bar, the dangerous time when the intel- lectual quips not only get louder and louder, but...
Page 18
Ballet
The SpectatorPackage Deal CLIVE BARNES By As we know from their folk-dance troupes, the Yugoslays are born dancers and many have found prominent places in the ballet companies of the...
Page 19
Music
The SpectatorThe Supreme Value By DAVID CAIRNS NIusicAux, the pattern of the Edinburgh Festival is now clear. The programmes are to be grouped round one primary and one secondary theme....
London Theatre
The SpectatorNiggards of Their Wealth B y BAMBER GASCOIGNE Infanticide in the House of Fred Ginger. (Arts.)— Love's Labour's Lost. (Regent's Park.) THE plot of Hamlet was tradi- tional and...
Page 20
London Cinema
The SpectatorSick for Home By ISABEL QUIGLY No, it isn't the subject that makes a film, any more than it makes a painting or a poem. I was tempted to think that, with a subject as...
Page 21
BOOKS
The SpectatorMass, Might and Myth By IRIS MURDOCH alvi not the polymath who would be the ideal reviewer of this remarkable 'book. To deal adequately with Crowds and Power* one would have...
Page 22
Evolue's Evolution
The Spectator`No African in the Congo has ever had the slightest idea of rebelling against authority—par- ticularly against the high authorities. Is there any group of evohres who on their...
Page 24
Breaking Point
The SpectatorDON'T know whether Mr. John Williams, the author of this book, has ever been employed by the Beaverbrook press or not. He might well have been—his style has all the forceful...
Page 25
After Blond Gods
The SpectatorMan and the Sun. By Jacquetta Hawkes. (Cresset, 30s.) Til ts book has already been tolerably we ll re- ceived. It's part popular science, part anthology, s e lective rather...
Mildew and Angels
The SpectatorJames Stephens : A Selection. Introduced by Lloyd Frankenberg. (Macmillan, 30s.) MY introduction to James Stephens's work came at a Dublin party , some years ago when a man...
Page 26
Boyars Will Be Boyars
The SpectatorThe Prodigals. By Petru Dumitriu. (Collins, 25s.) The Trial of Callista Blake. By Edgar Pangborn. (Peter Davies, 21s.) BEFORE, during and after the wars which are their most...
Backstairs Boy
The SpectatorTHE career of Ouvrard, the Ivar Kreuger of the Revolution and the Empire, deserves a goodbook. This isn't it. Written by a German business - man, it has the faults of amateur...
Page 28
Investment Notes
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS J UST when the gilt-edged market was really getting strong the Treasury, as usual, came out with a damper—a £500 million lap' issue of the long Treasury 51 per cent....
Economic Ends and Means
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT MR. F. T, BLACKABY, the new editor of the economic review • £ of the National Institute of Economic and Social Re- £ search, is a man of much common...
Page 29
Company Notes
The SpectatorR ECORD trading profits at £2.88 million against £2.56 million have been made by btternational Tea Co.'s Stores for the year ending April 28, 1962. A large increase in turnover...
Page 30
Roundabout
The SpectatorInspirations, Inc. By KATHARINE WHITEHORN THE history of invention is full of homely little anecdotes about Watt watching the kettle boil, Newton struck on the head by a...
Consuming Interest
The SpectatorShopper's Choice By LESLIE ADRIAN How much can you save in ordinary, everyday shopping if you hunt for bargains, watch out for 'special offers' and go to a market in a poorer...