12 SEPTEMBER 1946

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NEWS OF THE WEEK

The Spectator

T HE Government's statement on the seizure of various London buildings by squatters at the instigation of the Communist Party is not a syllable too strong. Nothing but 4 ` a...

The Palestine Talks

The Spectator

All that can be said at the moment about the talks in progress between a British delegation headed by Mr. Bevin and representatives of the Arab League is that something worth...

The South Tyrol Accord

The Spectator

The agreement freely reached by direct negotiation between Italy and Austria over the South Tyrol is the best fruit the Paris Con- ference has yielded so far—if . indeed' it is...

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American Labour Troubles

The Spectator

There is as yet no indication of an early ending to the strike seamen affiliated to the American Federation of Labour which started on September 5th and has since resulted in...

Aspects of Bulgaria

The Spectator

The British delegate spoke not a whit too strongly at Paris on Monday about Bulgaria's preposterous claim to territorial aggrandise- ment at the expense of Greece. That a...

The Nation's Health

The Spectator

The long report, published on Thursday, of the Chief Medical Officer of the Ministry of Health, Sir Wilson Jameson, " on the state of the public health during six years of war,"...

Trade with Russia

The Spectator

The Trade Agreement with Russia announced by the Board of Trade on Wednesday is singularly welcome. It is the result of long and often trying negotiations, and Mr. H. A....

Power from the Atom

The Spectator

Attention to the destructive power of atomic energy must not be allowed to preclude consideration of its revolutionary potentialities when applied to industry. Sir Amos Ayre,...

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HOPE FOR GERMANY

The Spectator

T HE speech delivered by the American Secretary of State at Stuttgart last Friday will remain historic as a milestone in the process of German, and therefore of European,...

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The Soviet Government is, as has . been stated, proposing

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to appoint its Ambassador at Ottawa to the post of Ambassador in London. The agrement of the British Government has, of course, to be obtained in such cases,'and it has been...

There is no call to be unduly censorious over the

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B.B.C.'s incursion into the field of finance last week, but it must have resulted in at least a temporary diminution of a great many people's capital by a considerable sum....

Dizzied, evidently, by the return from holiday I expatiated last

The Spectator

week on the " Tradeston" by-election. But" there was no such thing. It was Bridgeton, where the vacancy resulted from the lamented

Two slight collisitins of the Press with the Church are

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reported this week. In one, a vicar was bound over on a charge of what was evidently a purely nominal assault on a journalist who was pursuing his professional activities at a...

A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK .

The Spectator

W HATEVER may be said of publicity at diplomatic conferences generally it is quite obvious that publicity at Paris is doing far more harm than good. Some4delegates—if not a...

The success of the Italian and Austrian representatives at Paris

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in reaching an agreement on the South Tyrol puts the regulars of the Peace Conferette t e to shame. But some of them, notably Mr. Bevin, will not mind that when so happy a...

The Labour Party is no doubt congratulating itself on the

The Spectator

re- quisition of its latest recruit, Sir Ernest Simon... It has reason to, and it would not be surprising if it was soon finding him a seat and giving him office. Sir - Ernest...

When someone has had L3,000 stolen from him (or, as

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in this case, her) it is perhaps a little harsh to observe that he (or she) almost deserves it. But that is the almost inevitable comment when you read that a lady has had that...

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BACK FROM BIKINI

The Spectator

By FRANK BESWICK, M.P. T HE primary purpose of the Bikini tests, as stated in the directive to Admiral Blandy, was " to determine and measure with pre- cision what happens at...

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NORWAY RENASCENT

The Spectator

By T. K. DERRY "ORWAY and France the Brokers of the Peace Conference " N - a large claim to make, even on a newspaper placard, for a people of less than three millions. It is...

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POLITICS IN TURKEY

The Spectator

By MALCOLM - BURR Istanbul TATURK, on creating his republic twenty-three years ago, soon discovered that in those days a second political party was i l ly a vent for vengeance...

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A.O.S. POSSIBILITIES

The Spectator

By GRAHAM WATSON N O one who, in the past, has looked for a job will easily forget the attendant humiliation. But the past is fortunately the past, and now an organisation has...

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GOLDEN ORIOLES

The Spectator

By ANTHONY BUXTON N most springs, generally in March, letters appear in the papers I reporting golden orioles in various parts of England. I believe that most of the birds...

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MARGINAL COMMENT

The Spectator

By HAROLD NICOLSON I N order to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the death of Paul . Verlaine, the Centaur Press have published a charming edition of his " Poemes...

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THE CINEMA

The Spectator

" Zero de Condulte " and " Children on Trial." At the Academy. SomE years before the war, by the enterprise of Mr. Fairfax Jones of the Everyman Cinema (now happily reopened),...

THE THEATRE

The Spectator

But for the Grace of God." By Frederick Lonsdale. At the St. James's. Vuituns, one has the impression, are neither as plentiful nor any- thing like as strong on the wing as...

ART

The Spectator

THE Tat; having celebrated its reopening with justifiable. joie-de- vivre (to remain a lasting feature of its policy, one hopes), is now showing pictures from its permanent...

MUSIC

The Spectator

•• La Traviata." At Covent Garden Opera House. —The Promenades. THE San Carlo Opera Co. of Naples whicll has given so much new and unexpected pleasure to so many members of our...

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CIVIL SERVICE MARRIAGE BAR

The Spectator

Stn,--We have read your note of August 23rd on the Civil Service marriage bar with interest. On March 8th, 1945, we received, as members of an all-party deputation representing...

ANGLO-DANISH RELATIONS

The Spectator

Sts,—The Danish subscribers of The Spectator note with much interest and satisfaction the articles and letters to the Editor dealing with Anglo- Danish relations and the South...

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

The Spectator

A VOICE FROM GERMANY Sm,—Since my return from Germany I have received from one of the Germans I met there the following letter, for which I hope that you will find space. The...

THE ACHIEVEMENTS OF U.N.R.R.A.

The Spectator

Snt,—Mr. Henn, in reviewing the lessons from the working of U.N.R.R.A. (The Spectator, August 3oth), reveals a remote acquaintance with its pur- pose and _ methods. A...

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Snt,—Your sweeping condemnation of Russia for her espionage activities in

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the countries of her Allies is not without justification. But you ought to state also the other side. If Russia regards Britain and America as possible enemies in a future war...

THE SOVIET SYSTEM-

The Spectator

SiR,—Mr. Havelock in your issue of September 6th tells us that in this last war the Russians fought " better than they have ever done," and attributes this to the Soviet system....

WORLD-WIDE FIFTH COLUMN

The Spectator

Sta,—As a description of the facts your article on a World-Wide Fifth Column is substantially correct. But your conclusion that organised Labour is the body best fitted to deal...

PLANNING AND HERRINGS

The Spectator

Sm,—Two passages in adjoining paragraphs in your Notes of the Week in The Spectator of August 30th make strange reading when taken together. In one paragraph you say: " The...

Sta,—In Exmouth, at to a.m. this morning, I tried to

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buy some herrings, but was refused on the ground that I had come too late to get things in such short supply. At Teigrunouth, six miles away as the fishing-boat sails, 40,000...

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'In My Garden Those who make apple jelly of the

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abnormal number of windfalls, victims to recent gales, may care to be reminded that no flavouring so delicately enlivens this often dull conserve as a leaf or two of the scented...

FABER GALLERY REPRODUCTIONS

The Spectator

SIR, —Mr. M. H. Middleton in his critical though not unfriendly review of the second four books in the Faber Gallery asks: " What does one say about such picture books?" One...

Remedial Mice and Spiders It seems that among remedies the

The Spectator

mouse takes a very high place in local practice. It was held (in Huntingdonshire, as I wrote last week) to be a cure for' measles. Apparently, it is also appreciated in...

PRAYING FOR RAIN SIR,— Surely even professed Christians must regard with

The Spectator

dismay the Arch- bishop of York's demand for prayers for seasonable weather to be offered in the churches. This is a retrogression to the age of superstition, and as now most...

COUNTRY LIFE

The Spectator

An adjacent wheat-field, from which the produce was safely stacked before the bad weather grew yet worse, was most thoroughly gleaned, and the amount sb recovered was scarcely...

Canal Revival There - seems to be some real hope of a

The Spectator

revival of our canals, destroyed by the railways ; and no one would benefit more surely than the farmers and those who desire undamaged food. A deal of soft fruit simply will...

JANUS AND STRIX

The Spectator

SIR,—I pray you, do not assent to the somewhat cool suggestion that Janus should be superseded by Strix, although the latter is a very agreeable writer. As one of your readers,...

Mushroom Weather Except perhaps for the worms, which have ploughed

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our •lawns, and it may be the well-fed thrushes that have sung exuberantly, the one living thing that seems to have enjoyed the recent weather, in spite of the low temperature,...

EXPERIMENT IN FUEL

The Spectator

Sm,—The experiment in fuel may be good politics, and so far, of course, it has been a necessity, but for the unfortunate city-dwellers in Eire it has been a severe trial during...

The Spectator

Page 16

America's New Testament

The Spectator

The NeW Testament. Revised Standard Edition. Translated from the Greek, being the version set forth A.D.1611, revised A.D. 1881 and A.D.1901, compared with the most ancient...

BOOKS OF THE DAY

The Spectator

The Discovery of India WHILE Pandit Nehru was interned, along with his fellow members of the Congress Working Committee, in Ahmadnagar Fort, he set himself the task of...

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A New Literary Review

The Spectator

The Mint. Edited by Geoffrey Grigson. (Routledge. 8s. 6d.) A FEW months ag o the Director of the National Gallery, writing in The Times on the present medley of styles of...

The New Aristotle

The Spectator

Tim study of politics in England owes a very great debt to Ernest Barker. A natural teacher and expositor, he has devoted a life- time to the selfless but invaluable mission of...

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Our Climate

The Spectator

ON the way home 'from the East in winter, it is no uncommon ex- perience somewhere between Gibraltar and the Channel to pass under a lid of stratiform cloud, through which we...

Fiction

The Spectator

Feint variously up - to - standard entertainments trais week, all easy to read if you like, and all quite easy to forget — and one good, sophis- ticated hovel, malicious and...

Triste Espana

The Spectator

ANOTHER book on Spain, and at such a price! What are war-weary English readers to make of it? They may be partly responsible for the present state of affairs in Spain, but need...

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tt THE SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. 392 [A Book Token

The Spectator

for one guinea will be awarded to the sender of she first correct sc;laion of this week's crossword to be opened after noon on Tuesday week, Cep:ember 24th. Envelopes must be...

SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 390

The Spectator

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FINAN,_g AND INVESTMENT

The Spectator

By CUSTOS Wrrilout wishing to advocate anytiling but a cautious investment policy—I do not think this is a time to be fully invested—I am im- pressed by the behaViour of the...