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NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorN EWS about the internal situation in Italy is scanty, but there is every sign that for the moment at any rate Marshal Badoglio means what he says when he announces that the war...
The Future of China
The SpectatorIn his broadcast last Sunday Dr. Soong, the Chinese Foreign Minister, spoke not only of China's war problems but also of the future which her statesmen and economists are...
The Commonwealth Conception
The SpectatorTeachers attending the course on British Empire subjects at York were rewarded with a thoughtful, constructive and timely inaugural address by Mr. Amery on Monday night. After a...
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A Policy for Agriculture Two motions were recently tabled in
The Spectatorthe House of Commons stressing the urgent need of a Government declaration of post-war policy on agriculture. Up to now the responsible Minister has been at a disadvantage when...
Canada's Third Party
The SpectatorFederal elections in Canada by no means always follow the same lines as those in the provinces, but the results of the Ontario elections are so striking that they can scarcely...
Doctors and the State
The SpectatorSince no national health service scheme can be worked except through the medical profession it is important that the Government in laying its new plans should have the backing...
Turkey's Non-Belligerence
The SpectatorIn the Turkish newspaper Vatan Husein Jahit Yalchin has exposed the meaninglessness of German suggestions that Britain is pressing Turkey to abandon her neutrality. In fact the...
Fire Guard Orders
The SpectatorOne of the factors which have made heavy air-raids on this country unprofitable to the enemy is the existence of a well- organised fire-watching system. Our recent comparative...
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CONCLAVE ON VICTORY
The SpectatorO N the day when one Anglo-American meeting—in Sicily, between General Montgomery's Eighth Army and General Patton's Seventh—was announced, the announcement was also made -of...
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A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorT is inevitable, I suppose, that we should all be speculating on I how long the war in Europe will last, and doing that, I hop; with a firm resolve to keep an instinctive...
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THE WATERSHED OF THE WAR
The SpectatorBy STRATEGICUS T is just over a month since the Allies invaded Sicily and only I a few days more since the Germans launched their heavy attack upon the Kursk salient ; but what...
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THE SIZE OF LONDON
The SpectatorBy SIR ERIC MACFADYEN D O people want to live on top of one another? The L.C.C. seem to assume that we do, to judge from their 50-years plan for London. In many ways the plan...
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THE TRIPOD OF PEACE
The SpectatorBy WILSON HARRIS The fact that Mr. Lippmann is writing primarily for his own countrymen about his own country's foreign policy does not appreciably diminish the importance of...
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THE 96-HOUR MOTHER
The SpectatorBy HONOR CROOME A S I write, Two Months sleeps in his pram, Not Quite Three mauls some plasticine on the porch, Seven plays with her gang in the garden, and Ten is, I hope,...
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MARGINAL COMMENT •
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON T HE other day, in a garden near my home, we held the village fête. Notices in red and blue chalk were hung along the drive indicating with crude arrows...
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THE THEATRE
The SpectatorMR. JAMES &urges new play is a great deal better than his The Holy Isle, which I reviewed here some months ago. To raise the Devil successfully, then to give him the best of the...
THE CINEMA
The SpectatorTHE quality which the .average film most often lacks is solidity. We cannot expect every week to see a masterpiece but there seems no good reason why the alternative should be...
Some New English Chamber Music
The SpectatorMUSIC IT was good to see a large audience at the Wigmore Hall for Mr. Gerald Cooper's concert of English chamber-music last Saturday. The new works in the programme were a Trio...
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PARENTS AS MANAGERS
The SpectatorLETTERS TO THE EDITOR Sta,—Hilda Oakeley has raised a very important point in urging that parents should be represented on the boards of managers of elementary sc hools. May I...
Sm,—In the letter which appeared in your issue of August
The Spectator6th Mr. Kiely seems to assume that Christianity is primarily if not entirely an ethical or moral system. I do not think that any accredited teacher of it would agree with him....
RELIGION IN SCHOOLS
The SpectatorSm,—Mr. A. P. Kiely does not believe in Christianity, and therefore he does not wish it to be taught in our schools. That is very right and proper, for no good can result from...
POST-WAR EMPLOYMENT
The SpectatorSm,—We cannot escape from regarding " The Industrial Choice," the subject of Professor Pigou's interesting article, as secondary. The outrage, not only to our feelings, but to...
INTERNATIONAL YOUTH
The SpectatorSix,—" Czechoslovak Soldier " has made an important point, with which I am sure Mr. Harold Nicolson will wholeheartedly agree. The problem is not only to overcome the...
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USEFUL EXAMINATIONS SIR,—I would like to add the following arguments
The Spectatorto those of Mr. Shackleton Bailey for the retention of an improved system of public examinations for secondary schools. r. My own experience in three very similar schools shows...
NEGLECTED CHILDREN Sm,—I have had so many interested and sympathetic
The Spectatorreplies sent me in answer to my letter of July 23rd that I should be very grateful if you could find room for me to answer the letter of July 3oth from Mr. Purton, Director of...
THE SUBMERGED GENERATION Sta,—If, as an unversed youngster now thinking
The Spectatorof my approaching absorption into His Majesty's Forces, I might take a little of your limited space, I should like to comment upon your correspondence from Sir Norman Bennett...
WAR-TIME MORALS SIR,—Dr. A. E. Moore is mistaken. The Founder
The Spectatorof Christianity condemned unchastity or promiscuity (" fornication ") in His teaching, and He specifically accepted the Jewish teaching on the same subject. There are no fewer...
THE CARLISLE SYSTEM Sra,—One questions very much whether Mr. Pickwick,
The Spectatorhad he knowledge of the State public-houses at Carlisle, would have paid such tribute to them as Mr. R. L. Reiss would have us believe. Mr. Pickwick would have missed the genial...
MR. BRIAN AND MR. EDMUND SIR,—Please convey my thanks to
The SpectatorMr. Dyneley Hussey for his expression of appreciation of my performance in the Barber of Seville contained in your issue dated July 3oth. Unfortunately, however, he attributed...
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Writers in Crisis : The American Novel Between the Two
The SpectatorWars. By Maxwell Geismar. (Seeker and Warburg. 16s.) BOOKS OF THE DAY America Growing Up Writers in Crisis : The American Novel Between the Two Wars. By Maxwell Geismar....
Apology for an Actor
The SpectatorJohn Philip Kemble By Herschel Baker. (Milford. 225. 6d.) SINCE his art dies with him, what is it in an actor that lives? Something does. Otherwise why should any number of...
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Last News from Japan
The SpectatorTokyo Record. By Otto D. Tolischus. (Hamish Hamilton. I2S. 6d.) Japan's Dreams of World Empire : the Tanaka Memorial. (Allen and Unwin. 4s. 6d.) THOUGH we must be near...
Time and Chance : The Story of Arthur Evans and
The Spectatorhis Forebears. By Joan Evans. (Longmans. 2Is.) Evans of Knossos I ALWAYS think of archaeology (fully aware of my indefensible prejudice) as a typical English occupation—almost...
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Prophecy in Past Tense
The SpectatorBrazil, Land of the Future. By Stefan Zweig. (Cassell. los. 6d.) THE practical British reader will be more than a little shocked by the exuberant enthusiasm and candid...
Fiction
The SpectatorEscape in Vain. By Georges Simenon. Translation by Stuart Gilbert. . (Routledge. 8s. 6(1.) Men in the Same Boat. By J. D. Beresford and Esme Wynne-Tyson. (Hutchinson. 7s. 6d,)...
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THE SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. 231
The SpectatorACROSS 1. Face crisis to make them. 8. Paid in pounds? just the other way about. - 9- " A goodly - rotten at the heart, 0 what a goodly outside falsehood hath! "...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 229 SOLUTION ON AUGUST 27th
The SpectatorThe winner of Crossword No. 229 is Miss 6 Compton Road, Winchester, Hants. M. E. SHAW,
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Shorter Notice The Quakers. By Otto Zarek. (Dakers. los. 6d.)
The SpectatorOF all Protestant denominations there is probably none that is richer in records of its origin and history or more careful in their pre- servation than the Society of Friends. A...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorENGLISH weather is, of course, unpredictable, a thing of shreds ant patches, of samples, of sudden sallies; but a few prophecies may be mach with some confidence. One is that...