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HUNGARY AND NATO
The SpectatorIF HE complete impotence of the Russians and their few Hungarian puppets in face of the general strike called by the Budapest central workers' council proves the truth of the...
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CYPRUS AND THE PACT
The SpectatorO NE effect of Soviet intervention in Hungary seems to have been to impress both the Greek and Yugoslav Govern- ments with the importance of continuing a collaboration which...
Spectator Competition , for Schools
The SpectatorThe Spectator offers three prizes of eight guineas each In a competition open to boys and girls at school in the United King- dom. Entries should be in the form of An original...
STERLING RESURGENT
The SpectatorA DRAMATIC rush for sterling took place in the foreign CV exchange markets of Europe and America on TuesdaY , following the disclosure of the arrangements for this country to...
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Political Commentary
The SpectatorBy our Political Correspondent ou might imagine that Ministers here would have had Y their sleep disturbed wondering what Guy Mollet is going to say next. Sir Anthony Eden had...
Portrait of the Week
The SpectatorA PROFITABLE week has been spent in the West, repairing the breaches in the Anglo-American and C ommonwealth alliances. The resignation of Mr. Hoover as American Under-Secretary...
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ON SUNDAY the Free Speech team on commercial television w 99
The Spectatornot allowed to discuss Suez because of this week's debate on 0, subject in the House of Lords. The fourteen-day rule, whi t ; " prevents wireless and television discussion of...
A Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorTHE IRISH HAVE long been expecting an outbreak of terrorise' by the extremist republicans; what they did not foresee ' 0 the form it has taken—scattered raids around the Border....
AS NONE OF the 145 South Africans arrested last week
The Spectatoron vagu e allegations of treason have yet had precise charges formulat ed against them (and indeed are unlikely to do so until after P4 l preliminary hearing is over), it is...
GERALD HAMILTON'S review in this issue of Princess Mar c Louise's
The Spectatormemoirs was, of course, written before the news o f her death. Much more could be written about her life's woo —in social service, in colonial relations, and for charities; l a...
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CARDINAL NEWMAN'S autobiographical writings are reviewed on another page by
The SpectatorMr. Christopher Hollis. This extract from the book is perhaps worth recording : October 1817. A.C.N.XIII. Me invitat Hollis vinum compotare secum. Heu! nunc omni cura et...
T HE DEBUT OF Minou Drouet in London has led me
The Spectatorto read S me of her poems during the last few days. I was un acquainted with them before, and, after looking at them tor a bit, came to the conclusion that, strictly on internal...
Cementing the Commonwealth
The SpectatorBY J. GRIMOND, MP URING the years when an Israel-Arab war seemed ) all too likely there was no Commonwealth policy adequate to meet the situation. When Israel was known , t ° be...
A BOSTONIAN and the son of two amateur painters, Mr.
The SpectatorHerter may be expected to show a more sophisticated under- standing of the European scene than Mr. Hoover has done.' (Pile Times Washington Correspondent.) Quite . . . * * *
`NOW THE TORIES are neither hated nor feared . .
The Spectator. they do not merit the trouble of a kicking. . . . History will recall of them that they were without courage, without principle, and without honesty.' (The Spectator, April 4,...
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Morals and Majorities
The SpectatorBY RICHARD H. ROVERE New Y (0 T HE 1957 automobiles were put on display at the Ne w York Coliseum a few days ago, and Vice-Presiden t Nixon was invited up to address a banquet...
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Any Questions ?
The SpectatorBY ANGUS MAUDE, MP They never had any kind of system, right or wrong, but only invented occasionally some miserable tale for the day, in order meanly to sneak out of...
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City and Suburban
The SpectatorBY JOHN BETJEMAN M ANY of my generation reacted against Gilbert and Sullivan, the organised encores, the clearly enunei' ated Punch-style jokes, the tunes that sounded to us...
The gapettator
The SpectatorDECEMBER 17, 1831 THE OLD BILL AND THE NEW BILL ON the morning after Lord JOHN RUSSELL'S development of the old Reform Bill, the Times exclaimed, "Pass it, Pass it!" and a few...
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Elephants and Essays
The SpectatorT HERE are moments, and this is one of them, when I think almost wistfully of examinations. As a lad, I was very good at these horrible things. I never quite attained the...
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SIR,—On behalf of the Association for Pro- fessional Psychotherapists may
The SpectatorI express grati- tude to the Spectator for publishing the two brilliant articles by Brian Inglis on 'The Com- ing Crisis in Medicine.' His description of this crisis, which has,...
Letters to the Editor C risis in Medicine Dr. John R.
The SpectatorWilson, Penelope Balogh, A Physician J erusalem R. Kennard Davis Vi ctims of Apartheid Canon L. John Collins C onscience and Constituents D. A. Schofield Q amebooks R. Lindley...
S IR, —It is difficult to be sure what Brian Inglis sees
The Spectatoras the coming crisis in medicine, but I understand him to believe that the nature of disease has altered recently, unobserved by the medical profession as a whole, whom he re-...
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Sue,—As a footnote to Strix on gamebooks- what on earth
The Spectatormakes him suppose that hardly anybody keeps one nowadays? May I quote the entry in that of one small boy: 'Total : 2 rabbits. Remarks: Shot well, but ran out of...
Contemporary Arts
The SpectatorScience and Plum-pudding ONE of the staring needs of television at this moment is a good science programme. With all the entirely correct rumpus that is being created by Dr....
SIR,—The wholesale arrests in South Africa of leading opponents of
The Spectatorapartheid are further proof of a growing disregard for Christian prin- ciple in human relationships. That there seems to have been so little sense of outrage in this country may...
FIFTY-SEVEN YEARS ON
The SpectatorSIR,—As a regular reader of the Spectato r since 1899, I would like to say that I wa s , amused to read that some of your ' 016 readers' are irritated and very distressed upon...
CONSCIENCE AND CONSTITUENTS
The SpectatorSIR,—I hesitate to cross swords with Mr. Nigel Nicolson on the question of a Member of Parliament's duty, but his letter in your edition of November 30 surely calls for some...
JERUSALEM
The SpectatorSta,—May I express the hope, which I feel sure will be widely shared, that when terms of peace between Jew and Arab come to be discussed, a final and worthy settlement of the...
THE BURNT PAPER
The SpectatorSIR,—What interests me, but seems never to be mentioned by anybody, about Lloyd George's despatch box and its contents is this : What reason or evidence is there that Lloyd...
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More Records
The Spectator(RECORDING COMPANIES: D. DeCat ; DT, Ducretet-Thomson; OL, Oiseau Lyre; T, Tclefunkcn; V, Vox.) BEETHOVEN: The new Eroica by Kleiber (D) is disappointing. His tempo in the first...
To the Life
The SpectatorGervaise. (Cameo-Polytechnic.) Red CUMENT'S Gervaise, the film version of Zola's L'Assommoir, should become a classic example of where—and how far— realism in the cinema can be...
Two Edwardians
The SpectatorIN recent years the picture of English art between 1900 and 1914 has been clarified by a number of exhibitions, several of them arranged by the Arts Council, and their present...
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Manners without Men
The SpectatorThe Way of the World. By William Congreve' (Saville.) THERE is, thank the Lord, no space here in philosophise about Comedies of Manners . Acres of newsprint would not have been...
A Slice of Life
The SpectatorDATES mean nothing : Dvorak was born in 1841, Janacek in 1854. Yet the elder Czech composer was of that century, the younger Moravian of this. No wonder it took Janacek so long...
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RELIGIOUS BOOKS
The SpectatorSpiritual Home BY HUGH MONTEFIORE 0 DI et amo.' It may seem a far cry from Catullus to the Church of England, but these words of the Roman poet sum up the sentiments of many...
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Only One Way Left
The Spectator'THE essence of a Bible prophet is not that he forecasts the future- It is that he fears in his bones what is going to happen if we don't recover God's design right now.'...
Tu es Petrus
The Spectator'En ce concerne l'Apotre Pierre et sa position dans l'Eglise du Christ, bien que le preuve monumentale du sejour et de la Mort de Pierre a Rome n'ait pas pour la foi catholique...
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The Private Newman
The SpectatorTHIS volume consists of Newman's Journal and the curious Memoir which at the end of his life he drew up from the Journal, speaking of himself there in the third person, for the...
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Singing the Creed
The SpectatorTHE IDEA OF REVELATION IN RECENT THOUGHT. By John Baillie. (O.U.P., 15s.) THE ABYSS OF TRUTH. By Nathaniel Micklem. (Geoffrey files, 8s. 6d.) • IT is not often that two...
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Bible Pictures
The SpectatorTHE BIBLE IN ART. THE OLD TESTAMENT. With an introduction by Marcel Brion. (Phaidon, 42s.) Ir is interesting and ironic that the history and mythology of a race whose religion...
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The Remnant
The SpectatorPASTORAL THEOLOGY: A Reorientation. By Martin Thornton. OGS. (S.P.C.K., 25s.) TEXTBOOKS of pastoral theology are only too often written by clerics who are not engaged in normal...
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Let Them Philosophise
The Spectator117 there must. be Tories and Christians, at least let them philoso- phise. This was the view of John Stuart Mill, expressed apropos of Coleridge. 'Even if a Conservative...
Grace and Morals
The SpectatorTHE HOPE OF GLORY. By H. F. L. Cocks. (Independent Press, ls. 6d.) THERE are plenty of modern problems of behaviour, hostile and disruptive to social order while unsolved, yet...
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Historical Geography
The SpectatorTHE BIBLE AS HISTORY. By Werner Keller. Translated from the German by William Neil. (Hodder and Stoughton, 25s.) This magnificent book is modestly described as an Atlas, but it...
Tr actanan Forerunners
The SpectatorTHE THREE HERMITS. By J. Baird Ewens. (Epworth Press, 12s. 6d.) EVERY Anglo-Catholic schoolboy knows that the Oxford, or Tractarian, Movement dates from July 14, 1833, when...
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The Bible, or Little by Little
The SpectatorNow that only a small minority reads the Bible seriously, there is a real place for an imaginative selection, whose brevity may commend it, and which may revive an interest in...
Four and Twenty Bishops
The SpectatorPAST FINDING Our. By G. R. Balleine. (S.P.C.K., 15s. 6d.) BORN in 1750 Joanna Southcott lived for forty-two years as an ordinary upholsterer before she began to hear a voice. It...
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Poetry or Pistol ?
The SpectatorBY ANTHONY HARTLEY p LAYS are made to be read. They are also made to be acted, of course, but to read them is the most acid test of their intensity and durability. The play that...
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Gift Books
The SpectatorENGLISH GARDENS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. By A. G. L. Hellyer. (Country Life, 30s.) FROM BLOSSOM TIME TO AUTUMN FROST. By Istray Homoki- Nagy. (Dennis Dobson, 42s.) AT this time of...
Success Story
The SpectatorTHE EARLY CHURCHILLS. By A. L. Rowse. (Macmillan, 36s.) DR. ROWSE'S book has been selected as the Daily Mail Book of the Month. How has this academic historian of respectable...
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Problem People
The SpectatorTHE STORY OF IRELAND. By Brian Inglis. (Faber, 16s.) MR. BRIAN INGLIS is a coming man of outstanding ability. I am not sure whether his book arouses in me more envy or...
Blood Royal
The SpectatorMY MEMORIES OF SIX REIGNS. By HH Princess Marie Louise. (Evans Bros., 30s.) This book reminds me of a jar of pot-pourri in a spacious Victorian drawing-room. Its fragrance is...
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New Novels and Short Stories
The SpectatorTHE exotic, in novels as in life, both scores and disappoints; it has its fictional hazards and its advantages. A man who knows some corner of life quite unfamiliar to the...
CoaaacrtoN.—We regret the incorrect titling of Nights of Madness , by
The SpectatorW. Macqueen-Pope, in Messrs. Hutchinson's announcement hat week.
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COMPANY NOTES
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS THE technical recovery on the Stock Exchange has been carried farther than most people expected. There have been a few good company reports to help the buying and...
THE POINT OF NO RETURN FOR MR. MACMILLAN
The SpectatorBY NICHOLAS DAVENPORT WHILE I am very glad that Mr. Macmillan did the main thing I advocated here on November 23, which was to draw immed- iately on the International Monetary...
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KIT INSPECTION
The SpectatorLooking over the parapet above the path to the lower village, I found myself with a bird's eye view of a tramp who sat with his back against the wall and took stock of his...
A BONFIRE
The SpectatorIt is advisable to burn matter that cannot for any reason be properly composted. Vegetable rubbish and old straw often harbour pests and all is not lost by consigning this...
Chess
The SpectatorBy PHILIDOR No. 80 G. W. CHANDLER (American Chess Bulletin, 1948) NVIIITE (5 rum) mate in two moves: solution next week. The composer is the new President of the British Chess...
Country Life
The SpectatorBy IAN NIALL THERE was a time when the Christmas turkey or goose provided work for a number of local casual workers in the country, and feathering sheds were occupied by all...
THE CUT
The SpectatorLittle Jack is a resourceful fellow who earns a shilling in whatever way he can. He sold me things on two occasions and I had reason to remember the purchases, for neither...
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SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 918
The SpectatorACROSS 1 Fish chowder that appealed to Thac- keray (13). 9 It runs from zygote to zygote (4-5). 10 Fish with a Carrollian flavour (5). 11 The girl with the stirrup cup (5)....
A prize of six guineas is offered for a sel
The Spectatorof six New Year Irresolutions. Not more than twelve lines of verse or one hundred words of prose. Entries, addressed 'Spectator Competitio n No. 357,' 99 Gower Street, London,...
Christmas Crackers
The SpectatorThe usual prize was offered for a set of three mottoes or couplets suitable for the crackers at a literary, 'U,' Anglo-American, Third Programme, 'olde-fashioned; or Spectator...