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COMPROMISE ON CYPRUS
The SpectatorT HE London conference on Cyprus and Eastern Mediterranean problems opens on August 29, and the British Government will' once again be faced with the task of making up its mind...
GANGSTERS' PRIVILEGE
The SpectatorT HANKS appatently to the services of an informer— , that character who is seldom lacking in any Irish political drama—the Irish Republican Army has lost the haul of arms and...
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PEACEFUL' INVASION , S UPERFICIALLY at any rate Mr. Costello's attitude
The Spectatortowards the violent 'liberators' of the IRA and Mr. Nehru's towards the non-violent satyagrahis who invaded Goa at the weekend are not without their similarities. 'I shall use...
THE BUGANDA SETTLEMENT HE unanimous approval by the Lukiko (the
The SpectatorBuganda Parliament) of the new Constitution decided upon at the recent London discussions removes one of the last obstacles to the return of the Kabaka, and marks the closing...
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Portrait of the Week
The SpectatorN EWS from all quarters of the world this week has been more remarkable for sensation thah for significance. It is true that the slow de-freeze in the cold war con- tinues with...
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Political Commentary
The SpectatorBY HENRY FAIRLIE 6 E they still going on?' asked a friend of mine when I R I told him that I had been last week to address a Fabian Summer School, and I must confess that as I...
A Spectator's Notebook
The SpectatorTHE RUSSIAN announcement of the release of , 640,000 men from the forces is another of those acts which go over well in the West, without amounting to very much. The Russian...
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MR. MICHAEL FOOT, I see, has been congratulated because he
The Spectatorhas decided to remain as the candidate for Devonport, where he was defeated at the last General Election, instead of seeking another (and safer) seat. This seems to me to show...
`DISMISS all the stories of American Service men being tortured
The Spectatorby the Chinese,' said the Daily Worker's diplomatic correspondent on Monday. His authority for this was the Washington Post. But the WP as quoted by him said that few prisoners...
THOMAS MANN had his fame here, of course, but it
The Spectatorwas always tempered by a slight suspicion which I (although an admirer of Mann) never found surprising in my compatriots. His genius flowered from the conflict between his...
NEWSPRINT INTELLIGENCE
The Spectator'AT LAST the Government decides to end the control of newsprint. That is welcome news, long awaited.'—Daily Express, August 15. `SURELY HE [Mr. Thornycroft] must have second...
SAMUEL DERONDA has been so flattered by the attention he
The Spectatoris receiving from Mr. John Wain in another part of this paper that he has written from Reigate and enclosed a poem for the delectation of the Spectator's readers : And what for...
I SAID last week that I thought our policemen are
The Spectatorwonderful. Except, of course, when they are pursuing me. I had to drive the other evening to a place near Fenchurch Street Station, a part of the city with which I am rather...
On Inconvenient Allies
The SpectatorBY CHRISTOPHER HOLLIS I AM not at all concerned in this article to deny the diffi- culties of foreign policy, nor to argue what our foreign policy ought to be. I am not at all...
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The American Discovery of Spain
The SpectatorBY JOHN MARKS / N the depths of the country we came across this . young American, blond, tall, as unmistakable as his jeep, with its astronomical number, parked—literally—amid...
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In the Morgue
The SpectatorBY J. SMITH ROBINSON W HEN I first joined that stout old survival the Morning Intelligence, they put me in the morgue. In other words, I had to look after the obituary notices....
Problem for Evangelists
The SpectatorBy THE REV. SIMON PHIPPS OW shall they hear without a preacher?' wrote St. Paul, and his words express one of the most urgent problems facing the Church of England—the shortage...
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A SPECTATOR COMPETITION FOR SCHOOLS
The SpectatorTHREE prizes of eight guineas each are offend for the three best original descriptive reports (between 500 words and 750 words) of any notable event occurring between July 1,...
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Strix
The SpectatorA Quest for Corpses J UST over fifteen years ago a rumour swept through the British Isles with astonishing speed. It was to the effect that very large numbers of dead German...
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HOLIDAY QUESTIONS
The Spectator1. What were the names of? a. Sir Isaac Newton's dog. b. Don Quixote's horse. c. Dr. Johnson's 'very fine cat.' d. R. L. Stevenson's donkey. e. Tschiffely's two horses. 1,...
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City and Suburban
The SpectatorBY JOHN BETJEMAN I DO not like going abroad, and am ashamed to say I have never been to Venice. But so many cultivated people have talked to me about it that I have accepted an...
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DEEP FREEZE
The SpectatorS IR,—It is indeed comforting to read at last a paper which does not descend to the appalling depths of the 'peace in our time' hysteria that has streamed forth from the daily...
Letters to the Editor
The SpectatorThomas the Rhymer Deep Freeze C. J. Hewart, Realism in Art Commercial TV and the Press The Doomed Island Politics and the Co-op The Salk Vaccine Encoura g ing Contemporary...
SIR,—In your leading article on August 12, referring to the
The Spectatornew Russian attitude, you say : 'We do not suggest that the Russians neces- sarily have some diabolical trick up their sleeves.' I would suggest that the reverse is nearer to...
REALISM IN ART
The SpectatorSIR,— Bravol Mr. Basil Taylor. He has ex- tracted the nails from the rather rickety struc- ture of Socialist Realism, Social Realism and Realism, and left it lying low. Now...
COMMERCIAL TV AND THE PRESS Sta,—The recent PEP Report on
The SpectatorCommercial TV suggests that the provincial press may be hard hit when the full impact on press advertis- ing revenue is felt. Can it be that this is why Commercial TV...
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POLITICS AND THE CO-OP
The SpectatorSIR,—As a belated Victorian, with clear memories of those remote days when the 'Co-op' not only 'delivered the goods' in excel- lent style to its humble customers, but paid them...
ENCOURAGING CONTEMPORARY CRAFTSMANSHIP
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. Betjeman has by now established himself as the untiring champion of any build- ing of architectural merit which is in danger. I have always ascribed the severity of...
THE SALK VACCINE
The SpectatorSIR,—Doctor Byrne, in his article of July 22. entitled 'The Salk Vaccine Fiasco,' presents a rather distorted case against the Salk vaccine In the first place it is perhaps...
THE DOOMED ISLAND
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. Moray McLaren's concern over the proposed guided-missile station in South Uist is rendered fatuous, not because of his romanticism, but by means of the sheer in-...
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REALISM AND ABSTRACTION—II
The SpectatorI SUGGESTED in the first of these two articles that the word realism is now being so recklessly applied to such an inconsistent medley of works that it has become meaningless...
Contemporary Arts
The SpectatorTHE newish television parlour game, Who Said That?, is less a game of skill than an excuse for chatter. No one seems really worried by the quotations or where they come from;...
Cinema
The SpectatorCONFIDENTIAL REPORT. (Warner.) — FOOTSTEPS IN THE FOG. (Odeon, Marble Arch.) IF only there existed some irresistible force which could discipline Orson Welles's genius he would...
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Gramophone Records
The Spectator(RECORDING COMPANIES B, Brunswick; C, Columbia; Cap, Capitol; D, Dccca; H, HMV; M, Monarch; OL, Oiseau Lyrc; P, Parlophone; T, Tcicfunkcn; V, Vox.) POPULAR CLASSICS-2 : VIOLIN...
Vie Spectator
The SpectatorAugust 21, 1830 MONOPOLIES.—. . One instance is the monopoly of the press, which is the conse- quence of the taxes, disgraceful to a free and enlightened country, under which...
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A Summer Serial
The SpectatorSamuel Deronda By JOHN WAIN Samuel, an inconspicuous and handicapped boy, wishes to find some means of investing himself with sufficient glitter to attract Minnie Stroney away...
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AN IDEAL BIRTHDAY GIFT
The SpectatorWe will post the Spectator to any of your friends residing in any part of the world at the following rates: 52 weeks, 35s.; 26 weeks, 17s. 6d. In addition, a Birthday Greeting...
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BOOK
The SpectatorThe American Enigma BY D. W. BROGAN I HAVE chosen an ambiguous title deliberately, for it is my conviction that the widespread belief, or expressed belief, that the politics...
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Lars Porsenna, our Great Grandfather
The SpectatorTHE ETRUSCANS. By M. Pallottino. (Penguin, 3s. 6d.) THE word 'mysterious' is so often applied to the Etruscans that we are apt to think of them as remote from ourselves, whereas...
Beastly Business
The SpectatorGOING WILD. By Colin Wyatt. (Hollis and Carter, 21s.) DEEP SEA SAGA. By Anita Conti. (William Kimber, 18s.) To THE thrill of risking your neck at ski-ing, surf-boardipg, or...
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CRISIS or no crisis, it is difficult enough at all
The Spectatortimes to manage the British economy. Let us see what it involves. The difficulties must be opprzessing Mr. Butler, for not a word came from him after the Cabinet meeting on...
into balance-of-payments trouble if our domestic investment and consumption ex-
The Spectatorceed our physical resources, as they have done in the first half of this year. That is the first correction Mr. Butler is now try- ing to make. But can we secure a surplus on...
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SUPREME FOR CROSSWORDS
The SpectatorCHAMBERS'S TWENTIETH CENTURY DICTIONARY From All Booksellers 1376 Pages Ins. net A BBC PUBLICATION 4d. EVERY THURSDAY THE NEW SOUTH WALES UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY....
APPOINTMENTS VACANT
The SpectatorThe engagement of persons answering these advertisements mad be made through a Local Office of the Ministry vi Labour or a Scheduled Employment Agency if the appli- cant is a...
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FICTION-WRITING. We are specialist tutors. No sales-no fees. Students' work
The Spectatorappears in all markets. Prospectus free from Dept. B.23, British Institute of Fiction- Writing Science Ltd., Regent House, Regent Street, London, W.I. 'KNOW-HOW' means Writing...
BOYS' PREPARATORY SCHOOLS. Parents desiring vacancies and men and women
The Spectatorseeking teaching appointments, also Matrons and Assistant Matrons should apply to R, J. S. Curtis, M.A. (T.W.E.), lion. Secretary, Public Relations Committee In- corporated...
AUTUMN IN PARIS. Stay at Hotel de Bordeaux-Latin Quarter. 475-700
The Spectatorfro. nightly. H. & C., Bath, Cent, Hui. Re- cently modernised, English spoken. 28 rue de Is Msrsague Ste Genevieve, Paris V. Metro : Maubert-Mutualite, FORTRIE GUEST HOUSE,...
HAVE YOUR BEDDING REMADE by Heal's whilst on holiday 14-day
The Spectatorservice. Write for Remake Bedding Folder.-HEAL &,SON LTD., 196 Tottenham Court Road, London, W.I. IN PEACE as in war the Merchant Navy is vital to the National Life. Please...
STAMMERING treatment and nervous hesitancy. Course of 20 weekly postal
The Spectatorlessons. Write for 16-page prospectus free. Chas. Seymour, 'Speech, Potters Nurseries, Ash, Aldershot. SUPERFLUOUS HAIR, The Vandre Elec- trolysis Outfit removes every hair and...
'LEFEVRE GALLERY, 30 Bruton Street, W.I. SOME FRENCH AND BRITISH
The SpectatorPAINTINGS' Daily 10-5.30, Sats. 10-1. MODERN FURNITURE AND FURN- ISHINGS for bed-sitting-room by well- known designers.-HEAL & SON LTD., 196 Tottenham Court Road, London, W.I....
MALVERN, WORCS. MOUNT PLEA- SAN I' HOTEL, Superbly situated as
The Spectatora centre for touring or just relaxation and the enioyment of good food and veal comfort. Beautiful gardens. Under personal supervi- sion of Mrs. Tills How. Tel.: Malvern 1837....