A Spectator At Cambridge Sir,—may I Be Permitted A Brief
comment on the introductory remarks of Mr. Lysaght's most realistic review of Cambridge? He stresses the apathetic and self-seeking nature of the students, and offers the dis-......
The Riddle Of Dallas
SIR.—We were surprised that the Spectator should give publicity to the article 'The Riddle of Dallas' Mr. Brienberg's selectivity among facts long avail- able to the public......
The Psyche Unchained Sut,—the Hard Core Of Fact In...
research is only found by going to the original source. Mr. Norman Kilgour has clearly only consulted the notes made eighty years ago for Sidney Colvin's biography of Keats, and......
Blank Holidays Slit,—travel Agents Are 'like Retailers,'...
1. You must buy cigarettes or a refrigerator through a retailer; hotels and transport organisa- tions will gladly sell to you direct, which is the real answer to those with......
Sir,—mr. Moraes Writes As If Sex In Oxford Were Something
new, and as if its practice were confined to men's colleges only. Between 1926 and 1929 I spent a number of happy nights in St. Hugh's College, walking in the front door and......
Opus Del Sir,—your Correspondent Mr. R. A. P. Stork Sug-
gests that I gave an inaccurate impression of the Opus Dei in my article on Spain. Naturally I accept his denial that his association 'is limited to the professional classes.' 1......
A Future For The Cinema
SIR, — Mr. Cameron's latest article comes very close to the basic problem of the cinema, namely lack of communication between film-makers and audience. Despite thirty years'......