7 OCTOBER 1960, Page 23

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Clifford Curzon

wit h The New Symphony Orchestra of London ,onductod by Enrique Jorda ACL 102

FAMOUS OFFENBACH OVERTURES

Ornheus in the underworld; The Grand Duchess of Gorolstein; Ireton; Bluebeard: Le marque aux lanternes

The London Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Jean Martinon

ACL 104

Brahm, SYMPHONY No.3 IN F MAJOR The Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam conducted by Georg Szell ACL 103 Ir DIVERTIMENTO No. 17 IN D MAJOR Members of the Vienna Octet ACL 105 AiEll 12" LONG PLAYING .]CLUBS HIGH FIDELITY RECORDS

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"Our enjoyment was much more complete" "My wife and I went to Dieppe as we had done the year before. Between this year and last we had started the Linguaphone Course. Need I say that the difference in our French between the two years was remarkable and our enjoyment was much more complete." 1. G. H., Chislehurst • —• LINGUAPHONE FOR LANGUAGES (Dept. 034).

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Address

To the Linguaphone Institute (Dept. 1134) Linguaplione House, 207, Regent Streel, London, W•I Please send me, post free, your 20npage book about I inguaphone and details of the Week's Free Trial Offer. carry them but I hadn't seen a civilian version until the other day. The Key-Leather Co. (5, Urswick Road, E9) has produced a booster made of 8 ft.-long cables which you attach to flat and live batteries. Whilst boosting the flat batter,y the engine of the feeding car can be kept running to avoid damage to its own battery. I think the cables could be a little longer in case the car with the flat battery is awkwardly placed--with 8 ft. of cable the two cars have to be pretty close to each other—and 39s. 6d. sounds a bit steep for two lengths of cable with clips on the ends, but the whole thing fits neatly into a small box and it's a very reassuring piece of equipment to have tucked away in the boot.

Postscript . .

IT is a matter for amused exasperation to people like me, who often ap- plaud their motives, that the methods of humane and reforming organisa- tions are always so madly and maddeningly inefficient. I am not at all surprised that the Bertrand Russell-Michael Scott group, which wants to begin non-violent civil disobedience against nuclear war (that's how they put it : I think they mean against the British Government's defence policy), should have sent one of their preliminary letters, in- tended for potential supporters and to be kept confidential, to the wrong Mr. John Connell. I shouldn't have been surprised if they had sent it to Mr. Randolph Churchill. Mr. Connell was quite right not to feel himself, as he puts it, 'bound by any idea of confidence,' for he con- siders the proposed action to be illegal and im- proper: feeling so, he is justified in divulging the contents of the letter to the press, as anyone is who is invited, however confidentially, to take part in the commission of a crime.