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SACRIFICE
The Spectator0 NE of the strongest objections of Victorian rationalists to the Christian religion was its alleged morbid emphasis on the idea of sacrifice. This objection, it must be...
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DIVORCE REFORM
The SpectatorT HE Report of the Royal Commission contains 'no discussion of what may be called the religious aspect of marriage and divorce.' This is a pity, perhaps, although it is...
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Democrats Divided
The SpectatorBy RICHARD H. ROVERE New York T HE defeat of Adlai Stevenson in last week's primary election in Minnesota appears to have been an event of enormous significance. It may change...
THE OBJECTIVE
The SpectatorT HE Economic Survey, 1956, is no more than an economic history of 1955. As such it is a remarkably outspoken criticism of the failure of Government policies last year. At the...
Rising costs have at last made inevitable an increase in
The Spectatorthe price of the Spectator. On April 6 it will be raised from 7d. to 9d. Rising costs have at last made inevitable an increase in the price of the Spectator. On April 6 it will...
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D-MARK DIPLOMACY
The SpectatorBy Our German Correspondent Bonn S LOWLY (and, which for Germany is new, discreetly) the Federal Republic is easing its way to the front in interna- tional affairs and claiming...
Portrait of the Week
The SpectatorO NCE again the main news of the week concerns the Middle East—that conglomeration of sand, nationalism and oil — though the result of the Grand National and M. Malenkov's...
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Political Commentary
The SpectatorBY HENRY FAIRLIE A T the very heart of the Establishment moves Robert Pl. Henry, the first Baron Brand of Eydon, a director of Lazards and a director of The• Times Publishing...
SPRING BOOKS NUMBER
The SpectatorNext week's Issue will Include Sir Leuis Namier on Walpole, and articles and reviews by John Ariott, Randolph S. Churchill, Glyn E. Daniel, Len Harvey, William Douglas Home,...
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A Spectator's. Notebook
The SpectatorGENUINE SCOOPS in the newspaper world are a rarity these days; so I was delighted to see last week that the Manchester Guardian beat everyone to the news of Serov's arrival. I...
'STOPPED in the straight when the race was his own'—even
The Spectatorif commentators had not forgotten their Kipling they would no doubt have felt that his comment, 'cur to the bone,' was hardly appropriate to last Saturday's saddest story. My...
ONE OF the unfortunate effects of the Burgess and Maclean
The Spectatoraffair was that it concentrated public attention upon the Foreign Office, which, considering everything, doesn't do too badly, and diverted attention from the Home Office,...
MATRIMONIAL INTELLIGENCE A ROMAN CATHOLIC priest will attempt to dissuade
The SpectatorViscountess Fitz Alan, 57, from her proposed marriage to Lord Fitzwilliam, six years her junior. He is Father Eugen Kennedy—Lady Fitz Alan's private chaplain. Sunday Express,...
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Judas's Service
The SpectatorBY CHRISTOPHER HOLLIS W HAT was it for which Judas Iscariot was paid? The straightforward answer is that he was paid thirty pieces of silver for identifying the Prisoner to the...
. THE SPORTING LIFE of Japan seems to differ from
The Spectatorours in certain respects. I have come to this important conclusion after reading a long letter from a friend of mine in Tokyo in which he described his experiences at an...
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JACOBEAN INTELLIGENCE
The SpectatorJames VI . . . made a profession of kingcraft, wrote books about it, lectured on it, and never managed to attain any degree of success In it.—A. P. Thornton, in History Today,...
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Atlantis My Happy Home
The SpectatorBy GLYN E. DANIEL T HERE have always been cranks in archeology and the increase in the popular interest in archeology in the last five years has naturally meant an increase in...
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City and Suburban
The SpectatorBY JOHN BETJEMAN M R. G. W. NOAKES is the official Magic Lantern Projectionist to the Albert Hall. He it is who erects the large screen at the back of the singers in Hiawatha...
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The Singleton
The SpectatorI LISTENED the other day to two men arguing about giants. One was an old man, and he maintained that the reason why, when we look about us, we see no giants is because giants...
gig *pErtator
The SpectatorAPRIL 2, 1831 EVILS OF WAR.—One of the Paris Papers calls upon the French Government to stop the further progress of the Austrians in Italy, on the irresistible ground that...
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MOTHER OF GOD
The Spectatorthe course,of his review Canon Vidler has the following: 'Roman Catholic writers no longer claim explicit evidences for it [Marian doctrine] in the Bible. They admit there was...
LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOYALTIES SIR,—It is a pity that Mr. Betjeman's
The Spectatorindict- ment of local councils (March 16) appeared merely as a kind of postscript to his protest about the goings-on at Thorpe. It is not really extraordinary that local...
Letters to the Editor
The SpectatorAfrican Culture Henry C. Oguehi Arabs v. Israel Neil Hughes-Onslow Local Government Loyalties Thomas Harper The Munnings Exhibition Thomas Bodkin Mother of God Martin Price...
hesitate to criticise the eminently sound views of Mr. Windsor
The SpectatorClive on the Middle East, but, like so many, he assumes that, in any future war, the Arab armies will automati- cally defeat Israel. Those with post-war experience of the Middle...
THE MUNNINGS EXHIBITION
The SpectatorSIR,—In denigrating the art of Sir Alfred Mun- nings to the extent of a full column in your issue of March 23 Mr. Basil Taylor shows that his second thoughts were not for the...
GLOUCESTERSHIRE'S LAUREATE
The SpectatorSIN—A year or two ago, after I had recited several of F. W. Harvey's poems to a village hall in Gloucestershire, an old salmon• fisher- man rose to his feet to ask, 'Tell 1, be...
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SIR,—The Laski phrase quoted by Brian Inglis (March 2) was
The Spectatorslightly different: I heard it used by Laski in Dublin at the College Historical Society. He appealed to an earlier speaker, a Professor of History, who had made a facetious...
Contemporary Arts
The SpectatorSocial Realist CONTINUING its admirable series of retrospec- tive exhibitions, the Whitechapel Gallery is showing the work which Josef Herman has accomplished since he came to...
THE PRECEDENT
The SpectatorSta,—,Obscured in turn by the remoteness of its locality and the rival sensation of the South Uist Rocket Range, the Balelone- Balmartin dispute has proceeded discreetly to a...
SIR,—TO help those of other nationality who hope to understand
The Spectatorthe British, I offer two quotations of opinion on the result of the Grand National. From the Sunday Express: 'Said Lord Rosebery, "This is one of the most terrible things I have...
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Personality Parade
The SpectatorIT must not be supposed that a television critic watches his screen, afternoon in, evening out, throughout the week. If he did, he would soon cease to be a television critic and...
Cinema
The SpectatorROBERT ROSSEN'S Alexander the Great is something entirely new and wholly different in intention as well as in result from the general run of mammoth pseudo-historical efforts on...
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Performance Pieces
The SpectatorONE BRIGHT DAY. By Si g mund Miller. (Apollo.)—A LIKELY TALE. By Gerald Savory. (Globe.) , PERSONALLY, I like problem plays. The casuistry of the sta g e can both provide and...
Edmund Rubbra
The SpectatorTwo new concertantc works by Rubbra have been introduced at the Festival Hall recently. Last week his Piano Concerto was g iven its first performance by Denis Matthews, and a...
Hit and Miss
The SpectatorLess than four minutes lon g , Entree Japonaise, Frederick Ashton's dance morsel served' up by Mar g ot Fonteyn at the Covent Garden Gala performance on Thursday. proved a...
Relpinff Readers Overseas The Spectator will gladly arrange for hooks
The Spectatorpublished if ! Great Britain and reviewed or advertised in the paper's columns to he sent to maders who cannot otherwise obtain them. Orders must be accompanied by a remittance...
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BOOKS
The SpectatorSolemn Old Soul BY ROBERT BLAKE T HERE is probably no one—with the possible exception of Mr. Frank Richards (the creator of Billy Bunter)— who has written as much as Professor...
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Mad Hatters
The SpectatorMR. ST. JOHN-STEVAS'S book is a hilarious guide to Wonderland. Mad Hatters frolic through his pages—the late James Douglas, Sir William Joynson-Hicks, their modern counterparts,...
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Unreason and Words
The SpectatorIF this book, its translation, and its publication by a reputable publishing house, have any significance, it is as one more indication that anti-intellectualism is quietly...
Giuliano
The SpectatorGOD PROTECT ME FROM MY FRIENDS. By Gavin Maxwell. (Longmans, 18s.) `HE had just one thing wrong with him: he rather liked killing people,' observed an experienced American...
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Red-Hot Pokers ELLIOT PAUL, best known over here for his
The SpectatorWhodunits, has spent the paSt fifteen years in Hollywood where he has been employed as a script writer. It must he presumed that his services have now been dispensed with, for...
New Novels THE popular belief that 'beautifully written' and 'brilliantly
The Spectatorsatirical' would be bracketed second to 'poses the dilemma of our time' in any list of effective purchase-preventin g ta g s has nev e r been undermined. It does seem that,...
Forgotten ?
The SpectatorLAST AND FIRST IN BURMA. By Maurice Collis. (Faber, 30s.) THE story of 'the For g otten Army' seems safe at last in the care of Field-Marshal Slim, whose memoir has just...
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The Crusades
The SpectatorTHE Crusades have been a popular theme for historians recently. There were Grousset's three volumes and then three from Steven Runciman, and now here is the first volume of a...
Understanding Argentina
The SpectatorHERE, at last, is a book that disperses the fog of misundecstanding that surrounds con- temporary Argentina. George Pendle, the author of Argentina (Royal Institute of Inter-...
Some of the Evidence
The SpectatorEVEN the most devoted supporters of Mau Mau will not derive much useful aid from Law and Disorder : Scenes of Life in Kenya, by Peter Evans (Seeker and Warburg, 18s.). It is a...
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COMPANY NOTES
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS medium-to-long loans in the capital mar- ket. It has even been borrowing 'short' to THE market in industrial equity shares, after its recovery, has become irregular...
HOW TO REDUCE BANK RATE
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT ONCE again borrowing rates have been put up against the local authorities by the Public Works Loan Board. Loans for over fifteen years will now cost them...
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SPARROWS NESTING
The SpectatorMost house sparrows are content to build in cavities under the eaves and such places, pack- ing their bits of grass and feathers in to make it snug within, but some years ago we...
Country Life
The SpectatorBy IAN NIALL I OFTEN wonder what that very worthy country- man William Cobbett would make of the agri- cultural scene today, could he return to travel the roads and inspect the...
DE MORTUIS
The SpectatorWe all have our measure of grief at one time or another, and the speaker was apparently telling of his personal loss. Unfortunately I missed the first part of the conversation,...
Chess
The SpectatorBY PHILIDOR No. 43. A. M. SPARKE WHITE to play and mate in two moves: solution next week. BLACK (10 men) Solution to last week's problem by Larsen: Kt-K 7! 1 . . . Q x Kt ch;...
DWARF PEAS
The SpectatorDwarf peas are popular mainly because there is little or no difficulty in cultivating them. They need very little space, for they can be grown as close as two feet between rows,...
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SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 320 Set by D. R. Peddy Under-cover-man
The Spectatorstories of the 'I Was a Communist for the FBI' type could be extended beyond the background of the cold war. A prize of £5 is o f fered for an extract from a novel or film...
SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 881
The SpectatorACROSS '1 Marine engines in the tool-box (12). 9 It keeps its distance and isn't seen in company (9). 10 Thirty points of animosity (5). 11 Shortly Valentine will get round...
The winners 01 the Crossword No. 879 are SIR RAYMOND
The SpectatorFITZOERALDI 2 Merlin Drive, Bullsbridge, Dublin, and MRS. WEMYSS, Larch Grovi. Balerno, Midlothian,
An Egg for Easter
The SpectatorA prize of £5 was o f fered for the best poem on Easter, in the manner of Herbert and shaped like an Easter egg. Fittsr of all, congratulations to nearly all competitors on the...