ON PAGE SEVEN Noel Joseph Conrad Skinner Fun—and Games
... ON PAGE SEVEN Noel Joseph Conrad Skinner Fun—and Games ...
... ON PAGE SEVEN Noel Joseph Conrad Skinner Fun—and Games ...
... CHRONICLE. FRIDAY, Page 9 Sport NOEL JOSEPH CONRAD SKINNER DOOKWORM TOURS THE STABLES ...
... NEWS CHRONICLE. FRIDAY. MARCH 1163 Page 7 Sport—Noel Joseph * Conrad Skinner * Pangloss ...
... LIBRARY Nostromo Joseph Conrad Conrad's greatest novel is Isere included in Everyman's Library on the of the centenary of his birth. New Introduction by Richard Code. 8/6 memiDENTimum The Coiketed Edition of the works of Joseph Conrad 21 voh. Each 9/6 ...
... ` , PnRTING CORNER . NOEL JOSEPH * CONRAD SKINNER * POOLS GUIDE Umpiring should GERMANS PICK YOUNG TEAMS be career FOR LONDON By MU. WOOLLARD WATCH the Germans. They are coming to the worid table tennis championsh:ps at Wembley next month as a rising ...
... CL Sport Noel Joseph * Conrad Skinner * ...
... ar-old ri-SCRAPBOOK Being a woman is a ter- • ribly difficult task. since it consists principally in dealng with men. Joseph Conrad. ...
... Mc/s VHF a—What Klnd of Art Schools? 6.4s—Haydn and Beethoven. Roberto Gerhard 'talk) 4.46 V.va'd: CM—Recollections of Joseph Conrad NETWORK THREE 464 m., 194 m. L 39 lEian Journey. LIN Science Survey i—ln Your Garden I.3l—Motoring and the Motorist ...
... content to be a Boy's Own Paper story told in proper theatrical terms. It is less satisfying when It more resembles a Joseph Conrad novel dramatised. The young . captain who causes the mutiny in this British freighter on a West African river is a Conrad ...
... 10-10-5 140 Laski 12-10-5 P. Cterpi 9-4 las . te t t; 7 *anatord a Last ger : Mar.nor's 051 i 7-10-9 (V Cry JAI 11 -2 Noel Joseph, Conrad Skinner and Rugby on Page 7 ...
... away. By now his engine was useless, the sail was torn. He reached Nassau—it took 47 days during which he read novels by Joseph Conrad and Somerset Maugham as a change from the navigation book. And he ran aground on a sandbank. The yacht was refloated. and ...
... later that he was wrong about some of his discoveries. And yet in letters to George Stun, Frank Harris, H. G. Wells and Joseph Conrad be could write true, shrewd and subtle criticism. Expert at low-brow bluster he would seek out and help unsaleable young ...