Page 3
CLEAN HANDS
The SpectatorM R. KHRUSHCHEV's resounding defeat on the Congo issue at the United Nations ha , understandably exhilarated the West. Not since the collapse of the Berlin blockade have the...
— Portrait oi the Wee KHRLISHCHEV AND DR. CASTRO arrived in
The SpectatorNew York for the fifteenth General Assembly of the United Nations, and were pleased to see each other. Among the thirteen brand spanking new African States admitted (along with...
Page 4
Goodbye to Berlin
The SpectatorT rr HOSE of us who rely on the Guardian to provide sensible and detached comment on foreign affairs received a shock last week when it printed, as a leader-page article, 'A...
Classical Pattern
The SpectatorNow we must watch the classical colonial pattern being worked out in Southern Rhodcsal . One hour's rioting obtains more tangible conces' sions than months and months of...
Crosland v. Crossman
The SpectatorQ urrE the best of Encounter's series 'The . Future of the Left' is the most recent (and possibly the last, as the Left may have decided its own future by this time next month,...
Page 5
Nasser in New York
The SpectatorFrom MICHAEL ADAMS BEIRUT N asser nas travelled farther West than Yu goslavia, though he has paid visits in the past to I ndia and Pakistan. Bandung and Moscow. It b r...
In th e Chair THosE who remember the new Chairman of
The Spectatorj the United Nations Assembly when he was Irish Ambassador in London will be the first II) c ongratulate the assembly on the wisdom of its choice. Frederick Boland was an expert...
Page 6
NEXT WEEK Much has been written about what kind of
The Spectatorpeople live in the New Towns, and what kind of lives they lead. But less has been heard of the towns' history. Who thought of them ? Who planned them? And on what principles?...
The Grand Parade
The SpectatorBy BERNARD LEV1N THEY tell me that I quote Mr.' Mencken too often: a fig for them. 'Has the art and mystery of politics no apparent utility? Does it appear unqualifiedly ratty,...
Page 8
Our Man in Mexico
The SpectatorBy DESMOND DONNELLY, MP Mexico in 1960 is different in atmosphere from Mexico I956--which was my last visit. The difference is largely the product of the great new catalyst of...
In Suspense
The Spectatorever endured. The three weeks which elapse between the Trades Union Congress and th e Labour Party Conference usually have no special significance. But this year, after the...
Page 10
Co-Existentialism
The SpectatorBy ANTHONY HARTLEY M R. KHRUSHCHEV'S impending arrival in New York, accompanied by a downpour of Heads of State, appeared to illustrate once more his uncanny knack of making...
Page 12
The Unprosecuted
The Spectator. . Something Blue By PHILIP OAKES IXTY minutes from New York, Sunset Knoll a is a commuter's haven where satyriasis rages like the common cold. As half the community wives are...
Page 15
io Television
The SpectatorThe End of the Beginning By PETER FORSTER THAT, I wonder, would they like us to say about them? On the fifth anniversary of In dependent Television, what can its contractors a...
Page 17
'THE DETECTION OF SECRET HOMICIDE' SIR,—In 'Letter of the Law'
The Spectatorin the Spectator of September 9 Mr. Cline has commented upon my book The Detection of Secret Homicide and has stated that I have suggested in the book that all (his italics)...
CONTEMPT OF COURT ' SIR,—Even at this distance of time
The Spectatorand space I can- not forebear to reply to your comments upon my letter in the issue of the Spectator for August 26. First, I was neither extolling nor denigrating the present...
STRATFORD SIR,—On a visit to, Stratford-on-Avon recently it was astonishing,
The Spectatorand yet a pleasure, to find the theatre completely full although it was an ordinary weekday, when Twelfth Night was splendidly per- formed and therefore thoroughly appreciated....
THE LIMITATIONS OF NATO
The SpectatorSIR,—Sir Stephen King-Hall has misunderstood the nature of my dissent from his view that large-scale nuclear war would necessarily follow the use of tactical nuclear weapons by...
t S . 14 . -- - At the risk of being thought dreadfully sec- ti rtan '
The Spectatorm ay Protest against Monica Furlong s . Christians.' use of such expressions as 'The Church and i s Sill must know perfectly well that there s„ Bo such thing in England as a...
SIR,—In his notice of my book The Desert Generals, Christopher
The SpectatorSykes makes some points which do not seem to me altogether well founded. May I ask him: 1. On the most generous view, what political re- ward can he see resulted from or could...
The Churches
The SpectatorT he Rev. E. Benson Perkins. I. F. Lethbridge T h e 1- .;'esert tio Generals Correlli Barnett imitans of NATO A. R. Nicholson °Ilt emP Stratiord t of Court L. J. Blom-Cooper...
Page 19
SIR,—Postscript to Leslie Adrian's comments on Foyle's service : Me:
The SpectatorHave you a copy of Fings Ain't Wot They Used T'Be? Assistant (icily): Things Aren't What They Used To Be? Is it a war book? Me (humbly): No, it's a play. Assistant : Oh, then...
C017 ENT GARDEN
The SpectatorThank you for drawing attention to the un- c of Covent Garden's subscription scheme, of , 1 1 seems to proceed from a completely false idea the tn a o ra ve habi ge ts and...
SIR,—Leslie Adrian raises my blood pressure to a dangerous level
The Spectatorin his closing sentence last week, referring to one of the most respectable and oldest trades that exist—the Stationery Trade! I would like to lead Mr. Adrian towards a copy of...
AFTER WOLFENDEN 0 uir t ,--- As I have just finished a novel
The Spectatorlargely con- cerned with the present distributive difficulties of the Meat trade in Pimlico, I was very pleased to have n al' of my own dramatised comments justified by `Y...
SIR,—That so experienced a critic of public and commercial services
The Spectatoras Mr. Leslie Adrian should be prepared to publish the results of a survey based on five telephone calls on a Friday morning in mid-September is surprising. The glory is, for...
Page 21
Theatre
The SpectatorStage Irish By ALAN BRIEN The Playboy of the Western World. The Scatterin'. The Krcut- zer Sonata. The High- est House on the Mountain. The Voices of Doolin. (Dublin Festival.)...
Page 22
Jazz
The SpectatorBlack Supremacy wagens scuttle in close-up along the clover-leaf junctions of a Negro tenement gas-cooker; in a white pets' beauty parlour a poodle is crimped and combed. Black...
Page 23
Ballet
The SpectatorFuture Indefinite By CLIVE BARNES LONDON BRIDGE, they say, is falling down, and some of them are saying much the same thing about London's Festival Ballet. Certainly its...
Page 24
Cinema
The SpectatorSuburban Sex By ISABEL QUIGLY Strangers When We Meet. (Odeon, Leices- ter Square.)—Jazz on a Summer's Day. (Cameo-Poly.) SUBURBAN adultery — or the flinging of respectable...
Page 25
AUTUMN BOOKS I
The SpectatorKing of Shaft BY JOHN COLEMAN L S. CA - roN has cropped up again. You may ,or may not remember him from Lucky Jim as the shifty, spurious academic—an epistolary Presence,...
Page 26
Brooklyn Heights
The SpectatorThis is the gay cliff of the nineteenth century, Drenched in the hopeful ozone of a new day. Erect and brown, like retired sea-captains, The houses gaze vigorously at the...
Page 28
Passing Order
The SpectatorA Tourist in Africa. By Evelyn Waugh. (Chap- man and Hall, 16s.) READERS of the Spectator will know that A Tourist in Africa is Mr. Waugh's brief and un- emphatic account of 'a...
Credentials
The SpectatorA COLUMN such as this is no place for finicking classifications, but since anyone at all these days thinks himself qualified to write about his travels, we are entitled to draw...
Page 30
Is It Peace ?
The SpectatorBY RICHARD WOLLHEIM N his memoir of Ludwig Wittgenstein, Norman I Malcolm recounts how one day he and Wittgenstein were walking along the river in Cambridge when they saw a...
Page 32
Funny Peculiar
The SpectatorGoodness Had Nothing to Do With It. By Mae West. (W. H. Allen, 25s.) My Father, Charlie Chaplin. By Charles Chaplin, Jr., with N. and M. Rau. (Longmans, 25s.) As. Freud says in...
Page 33
Quest for Sebastian
The SpectatorThe Real Life of Sebastian Knight. By Vladimir Nabokov. (Wcidenfeld and Nicolson, I5s.) Where the Boys Are. By Glendon Swarthout. (Heinemann, 16s.) Where the Boys Are. By...
Page 34
Perversities
The SpectatorJean-Paul Sartre. By Philip Thody. (Ham Hamilton, 21s.) sh ry is r. ng be )(I he n- ns art ve ' Sc TY of of ell im ng is. g 5 let se a WHATEVER the fluctuations in French...
Page 35
Different
The SpectatorWs odd to learn that, of the bulk of these pages, a publisher's reader once wrote: 'I have read these chapters with very little interest and a good deal of disgust.' It's odd,...
Page 36
An Impossible Marriage ?
The SpectatorMarried to Tolstoy. By Cynthia Asquith. (Hutchinson, 30s.) THE bother with the story of the Tolstoys' mar- riage is that everything is on such an uncomfort- able scale....
Page 37
Compassionate, Distinguished, Moving
The SpectatorBy COLIN M AcINNES R ,, , , ,,„ IN i books—particularly novels—is an , , ungrateful task, because it demands quite , "Ri work (reading the things, perhaps even T \ h Ore than...
Page 38
They Died in the Spring. By Josephine Pa– l oy Thompson. (Hammond,
The Spectator12s. 6d.) Pleas 3li e straightforward, sober-sided novel in whic h ,, fi h g Colonel gets shot by sporting gun after 113 "0 infuriated the village (and especially the 1113 i be...
Killer's Payoff. By Ed McBain. (Board ri !':1 12s. 6d.) A prolific
The Spectatorand usually pretty Plat si ,bis American crime-writer back on form wi th d i t carefully matter-of-fact account of hoe' Se t policemen at his 87th Precinct cop-hous e :l e r...
It's A Crime
The Spectatorof British murders, murderers and murder to of this century, with a few counsel and ludic ii given an air of some sort of scholarship by b e „ t h arranged dictionary-wise,...
The Accomplices. By Leonard Cooper. ( 01 ;o
The SpectatorPress, 15s.) The special relationship that up between accuser and accused, pursuer' ' ,r• pursued, suspect and cop, even torturer an d ' a n d tured, has been explored in novel...
Page 39
Investment Notes
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS rritu. break in the Dow Jones index of Ameri- I can industrial shares to 588—down through the expected support level of 600—was a signal for the bears to sell. My...
The Gold Flurry
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT , _ m arding. In London the scramble for gold has be en so hectic that the price jumped this week ° a n equivalent dollar price of $35.251. Now if 1 '° 11...
Page 40
Roundabout
The SpectatorLicensed for Spirits By K ATHARINE WHITEHORN IF anyone noticed a strange blue light shinin g over Caxton Hall last week, it was probably the combined aura of the delegates to...
Company Notes
The Spectatory AST year Loyds Retailers acquired by an L. / exchange of shares Outram (Investments), a company manufacturing electrical goods and also trading as wholesale bakers. This...
Page 41
Consuming Interest
The SpectatorTaking to the Bottle By LESLIE ADRIAN I orsaft: 'knew a woman ■ %ho had a cupboard full of Welfare vitamin tab- lets amassed in the course of three pregnancies. 46:ct them,'...
Page 42
Postscript . .
The SpectatorLook now at only one, and by no means the most pathetic, of the sequels. A parson I know in East Anglia writes (I omit some of the proper and place names): 'Last Tuesday a man...