Page 1
NEWS OF THE W EK
The Spectatori) T HE conclusion of peace between the rival factions in Greece on Monday, and the abolition of martial law, were fitting preludes to the unexpected and spectacular appearance...
The World T.U.C.
The SpectatorThe debates of the World Trade Union Congress held last week and this week have ranged over a vast field of international problems, for the most part political rather than...
Belgium's New Government
The SpectatorThe Socialist M. Van Acker has succeeded in forming a new Government in Belgium, in which members of the Catholic Party and the Communists will be included. M. Pierlot held the...
Page 2
Germans in Argentina
The SpectatorSpeaking at the World Trade Union Conference last Saturday, Mr. V. L. Toledano, of the Latin-American Confederation of Labour, sounded a vehement warning about the continuance...
Requisitioned Land Bill
The SpectatorIn moving the second reading of the Requisitioned Land and War Works Bill Sir John Anderson did much to allay the storm of apprehension that has been aroused, though it is...
United Air Forces
The SpectatorLord Trenchard initiated an important debate in the House of Lords on Tuesday on the part that should be played by air forces in the prevention of war. His remarks were...
The Advancement of Learning
The SpectatorIt may well be that the same enlightenment which today compels the State to come to the financial support of the Universities may also stimulate more individual benefactions. On...
The Remand Home Report The report of the committee appointed
The Spectatorto enquire into the charges made by the Chairman of the Tower Bridge Juvenile Court against the conduct of the L.C.C. remand home at Marles- ford Lodge is a judicial and...
Page 3
" MURDER"
The SpectatorJ HIS is Murder," is the o ffi cial German - comment on the declarations of the Crimea Conference. The German pro- pagandist is unerringly accurate. So far as German Nazism and...
Page 4
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK'
The SpectatorT is possible to sympathise with the Polish Government in Londcn 1 in its disappointment over the decisions of the Crimea Conference regarding Poland, and yet to ask what it...
Page 5
CRIMEAN STRATEGY -
The SpectatorBy STRATEGICUS T HE military decisions of the Crimea Conference provide an entirely new background for the final phase of the war. The outlook for Germany has now been...
Page 6
ANGLO-SAXON TENSIONS
The SpectatorBy REINHOLD NIEBUHR [This article was written before the announcement of the results of the Crimea Conference, which will, it may be hoped, do something to relax the tensions of...
Page 7
FRANCE SETTLING DOWN
The SpectatorBy D. R. GILLIE The Government stepped into a situation at the end of August in which the real power was held locally by committees of libera- tion, linked loosely to the...
Page 8
THE NEW MODEL ARMY
The SpectatorBy S. H. F. JOHNSTON T HREE HUNDRED years ago, on February 17, 1645, the ordinance providing for the formation of a " New Model " army was finally passed. The germ of the idea...
Page 9
COMPARISON
The SpectatorI COULD compare you to a thousand things That make this world a wonder and delight: The butterfly that flits with jewelled wings From leaf to flower, the friendly stars at...
NEAR EAST THINKERS
The SpectatorBy PROFESSOR W. J. ROSE In the short time at my disposal I was able to visit one " quadrant " of this vast area, whose north-south line is more or less Aleppo- Khartum, and...
Page 10
MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON T HE Foreign Office have for generations adopted what might seem a singular system in moving their employees from one post to another. The man who, after ten...
Page 11
THE CINEMA
The Spectator" Together Again." At the Tivoli.--" The Thin Man Goes Home" and " Inside China To-day." At the Empire.—" The Man in Half-Moon Street." At the Cdeon. THE exiled American...
MUSIC
The SpectatorA French Conductor M. PAUL. PARRY,- the conductor of the Colonne concerts in Paris, has been on a visit to this country and last week conducted the B.B.C. and London...
THE THEATRE
The SpectatorEmma." At the St. James's. PURISTS, of course, object to the dramatisation of novels, and in theory I agree with them, but only in theory, since such efforts at original drama...
THE INDEX of Vol. x73 of "THE SPECTATOR" is now
The SpectatorREADY. One shilling and sixpence should be enclosed with instructions and addressed to INDEX DEPT., " The Spectator," Ltd., 99 Gower Street, W.C. s, England.
Page 12
SIR CHHOTU RAM
The SpectatorSue,—Too little attention has been paid in this country to the recent death of a really great plan. Sir Chhotu Ram died in the middle of last month. Half of my service was...
OUR YOUNG SCIENTISTS
The SpectatorStit,—The letters from Dr. Norman Sheldon and a "Young Chemist" in your recent issues raise a question of outstanding importance. The position of our country urgently needs a...
PRAIRIE LIFE
The SpectatorLETTERS TO THE* EDITOR Sta,—Here on the Pacific Coast, after spending fifty years as a missionary in the prairie provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, I receive The...
Page 13
THE PALESTINE MANDATE
The SpectatorSIR, —Mr. Hammersley's letter is refuted by facts. He says there are "over half a million Jews in Palestine " ; that "it is possible to say that the problem of Jewish...
COST OF LIVING
The SpectatorStu,—I see you say in your article on war gratuities that the cost of living will be appreciably higher than it was in 1919. May I point out that it is now 102 points above the...
AFFIRMATION OR OATH ?
The SpectatorSIR, —Why should it be necessary to take the oath or nuke an affirmation at all? It should surely be enough for the Clerk to say that perjury is a penal offence and to state...
CLICHES
The SpectatorSta,—Having read.in a dozen periodicals, high and low, this week anent the , war that "anything may happen at any moment " it was with relief that I turned from such bathos and...
, THE TEACHER'S REWARD
The SpectatorSm,—" Paterfamilias " appears to suffer from what is an understandable misapprehension to those unaware of the details of the proposed new Burnham scales. Headmasters and...
MOLES
The SpectatorSIR, —Dr . Kitching invites me to answer some interesting questions about moles and their ways. I wish I could respond with confidence ; but my first-hand knowledge of that...
WRONG THINGS TO TEACH
The SpectatorSIR, —Constance Reaveley's article, in your issue of February 2nd, is very much to the ..point. Education should be for life in the fullest sense. Today it can rightly be said...
Page 14
IF THINE ENEMY HUNGER . . . "
The SpectatorSia,—In thinking about the appalling suffering of Silesian and other women fleeing through Berlin, I have been wondering how far these are women wholly under Nazi influence. My...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorNUMBERS of revolutionary ideas in the art and science of cultivation have been recently thrust upon us, as that trenching or double-digging is a 'mistake or at best a work of...
OPENCAST COAL PRODUCTION
The SpectatorSIR,—I read with interest the article on " Country Life" by Sir William Beach Thomas, and as one engaged on the production of opencast coal, I hasten to reassure him and readers...
FOUR ACRES AND WAR SERVICE
The SpectatorSIR,—We have here four acres of land. We have always tried, and more especially since the outbreak of war, to make it produce as much as possible. Here are our figures of stock...
Page 16
BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorSenatus Contra Populum THERE are a good many obstacles to an effective organisation of the coming peace, and Professor Colegrove has done his country- men a service by pointing...
A Philosopher Remembers
The SpectatorPersons and Places. By George Santayana. (Constable. 10s.) MR. SANTAYANA disclaims writing an autobiography, though appear- ances are against him. However, the title of the...
Page 18
The Past, Present and Future of English Food
The SpectatorThe English at Table. By John Hampson. (Collins. 4s. 6d.) To survey England's eating and cooking from Druid days to the present war is a formidable task. To condense that survey...
The Malayan Campaign
The SpectatorWho Dies Fighting ? By Angus Rose. (Jonathan Cape. 8s. 6d.) THE author of this book gives us a plain tale of what he saw and, heard, not a complete history of the Malayan...
Page 20
Our Seamen
The SpectatorOcean Odyssey is not the first collection of Merchant Navy stories to be published during the war, nor the first published in the hope that by informing public opinion the...
Fiction
The SpectatorHome is the Hunter. By Gontran de Poncins. (Gollancz. 7s. 6d.) Ladies May Now Leave Their Machines. By Diana Murray Hill. (Pilot Press. 7s. 6d.) The Sighing of the Heart: By...
Page 21
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 308
The SpectatorSOLUTION ON MARCH The winner of Crossword No. 308 is MISS Mattock Lane, W. 5. 2nd W. B. MCINTOSH, 31, •
" THE SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. 310 IA Book Token
The Spectatorfor one guinea will be awarded to the sender of the first correct s,'ution of this week's crossword to be opened after noon on Tuesday week, I- bruary 27th. Envelopes should be...
Page 22
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS SHOULD a banker be compelled to disclose his customer's posi- tion? This important question is raised, directly or indirectly, by Sir John Anderson's decision to...
The Australian Army at War, 1939-44. (H.M. Stationery Office. 9d.)
The SpectatorShorter Notices Tins short booklet is published for the Australian Army Staff and contains an impressive record of the services of the Australian army during the present war. No...
Dictionary of World Literature. Edited by Joseph T Shipley (Routledge.
The Spectator35s.) THIS scholarly compilation comes from the U.S.A. and seems to be something of a pioneer work. It is described as a dictionary of world literature, but it is rather a...