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NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorI T was in accordance with a policy that has been emphatically stated by General de Gaulle that the French should raise objec- tions to the creation of central administrative...
Two Methods in Germany
The SpectatorGeneral Eisenhower's second monthly report on the Military Government in Germany (for August) deals with political, economic and social questions. It is concerned mainly with...
Weakness in Java
The SpectatorThe situation in Java requires handling with more firmness and decision than has yet been revealed either by the British or the Dutch authorities. On the military side the Dutch...
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Rulers in Argentina
The SpectatorPower in Argentina rests on a balance of forces which are not easily comprehensible to people who live under orthodoidemocracy. Colonel Peron, who resigned last week, maintained...
Housing Predictions
The SpectatorMr. Aneurin Bevan's speech on housing on Wednesday in no way detracted from his reputation as a rhetorician, but it hardly satisfied the expectations aroused by the promises...
Agitators and the Dockers
The SpectatorOctober ath (Thursday) was the day fixed for the, renewal of national negotiations on the dockers' claim, and up to the last moment the leaders of the unofficial strike movement...
Controls—for Five Years
The SpectatorThe Government having stated insistently that they do not desire "controls for controls' sake," it is astonishing that they should i have taken precisely the course which...
Working Parties in Industry
The SpectatorThe enterprising spirit in which Sir Stafford Cripps is pressing on with his plan for setting up "working parties" in industry is meeting with a good response. He started with...
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ATOMS AND POLITICS
The SpectatorHAT the debate in the House of Lords on Tuesday on the atomic bomb should be inconclusive was inevitable, for the overnment is known not to be in a position to announce its •...
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One problem that demands some solution is Questions. Question- time
The Spectatoris an invaluable feature of the House. It is about the only chance the private member gets nowadays of making his voice heard at all on subjects of his own choosing. It often...
In the days of M. Molotov a glimpse at the
The SpectatorRussia of Nicholas I has its charms. In his posthumous book Water Under the Bridges published this week,. Sir Nevile Henderson, our last Ambassado at Berlin, tells how when he...
A SPECTATOR 'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorP ARLIAMENT is getting into its stride. The opening sittings, in August, were unreal. There was the ceremonial of the royal opening, there was the universal relief and rejoicing...
Cambridge, by the way, is considerably worried about gowns. So
The SpectatorI understand, is Oxford. The trouble is that there aren't any, o at any rate not nearly enough. During the war the demand was small that the supply was equal to it. Now it is...
Now that General Eisenhower is being publicly mentioned as a
The Spectatorpossibility for the Secretary-Generalship of the United Nations, the zhances of so admirable an appointment being actually made are worth weighing. No one living, probahly,...
The secret history of the war is being disclosed bit
The Spectatorby bit. Th story can be told now, —it is, I believe, to be at least touched o c in a semi-public document—of how the Cambridge Union wa suddenly commandeered for a week in the...
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A PALESTINE PLAN
The SpectatorBy G. R. DRIVER M UCH has been written for and against the Zionist claim to Palestine, and there are now settled there some 5oo,000 Jews (as against t,000,000 Arabs) who can no...
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PUBLICITY FOR BRITAIN
The SpectatorBy B. 1FOR EVANS T HE announcement that the Government is to take a decision on the future of the Ministry of Information should draw attention to the complex problem of the...
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PARIS DEPARTURE
The SpectatorBy GUY HADLEY I N a few days time I shall be leaving Paris to be demobilised, after spending over a year there with a Military Mission. To a Londoner like myself, the most...
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AVIATION AND APATHY
The SpectatorBy NIGEL TANGYE T HE prospect for British commercial air transport is bleak indeed, unless public opinion is roused to take an intense interest in its development. Relative to...
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MANY people in Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Holland. Norway and
The SpectatorSweden are anxious to know more about what is happening in world affairs and particularly the British vicw on the subject. Unfortunately the blocking pf currency in most of the...
BACK TO THE COLLEGES
The SpectatorBy A CAMBRIDGE TUTOR T HE last fortnight has opened a new era in the life of both our ancient residential Universities—the era of post-war problems in their most. acute form....
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Now that we live in an age in which tags
The Spectatorand labels, denoting either approval or disapproval, are attached to every - packet of experience ; in an age in which the actual content of experience is of less importance...
MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON N OW that demobilisation is in full swing and that the age and service groups of the Bevin scheme are being released with commendable rapidity, there are two...
And yet, when I studied carefully the provisions of Notice
The Spectatorto Exporters No. 6, something of my initial irritation revived. I dis- liked being called an " exporter " when I was nothing of the sort. I disliked my dear little carbon copy...
I have experienced this week an instance of what I
The Spectatorfirst identified as red tape. I had despatched by reg i stered post, for the consideration of a publisher in New York, a carbon copy of a book which I had just completed. This...
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ART
The Spectator" Surrealist Diversity." At the Arcade Galleries. LITHOGRAPHS FOR "SCHOOL PRINTS, LTD." To the expert astringency of Ben Nicholson's "reliefs," reviewed last week, the...
THE THEATRE
The SpectatorHamlet." At the Arts. — " Fine Feathers." At the Prince of Wales. WE have seen so many good Hamlets recently that I confess I went with little alacrity to this new production...
THE CINEMA
The Spectator"State Fair." At the Gaumont.—"Journey Together." At the Odeon.—" The House on 92nd Street" (not fixed). A SHORT memory is an asset to the filmgoer. Hollywood once made a film...
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SCHOOL HOLIDAYS
The SpectatorSta,—Dr. Shackleton Bailey is greatly daring in arguing for an abbrevia- tion of secondary school holidays in future. Whether he is right or wrong on that point I do not know,...
SIR,—In regard to Dr. Shackleton Bailey's article on school holidays
The Spectatorin The Spectator on October lath, we would like to say that from the public school boy's point of view his statement that there is one whole holiday a week, apart from Sunday,...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR THE CONFERENCE DEADLOCK
The SpectatorSta,—I would like to express my profound agreement with the comments in your leader of October 12th on the London deadlock. As you say, the difference is fundamental. This need...
A CITY OF NATIONS
The SpectatorSIR, —You have referred in your paper to a suggestion regarding a City of Nations to be founded, on the territory of which the future inter- national organisations may be...
SIR,—Three practising Grammar School teachers feel that it ill-behoves a
The Spectatorretired Headmaster to suggest a shortening of school holidays for the weary members of the profession who are still carrying on. Only those actually doing the teaching can...
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- LORD KEMSLEY'S NEWSPAPERS
The SpectatorSul,—The list of newspapers which your contributor " Janus " sets out as being under my control fs inaccurate in the sense that it is incomplete. That, no doubt, is pure...
BELSEN TRIALS
The SpectatorSut,—Various incidents in the administration of British justice during recent years make one question whether the almost fanatical pursuit of fairness has not at times involved...
SPENDING AND HAVING
The SpectatorSta,—Your contributor, W. G. Moore, quotes a sentence we often hear: "If they can spend millions a day on a war, why can't they do it for the things we need in peace?" and says...
THE TEACHING OF JESUS
The SpectatorSIR, —In the course of Canon Cockin's interesting review of The Philosophy of Jesus he writes: "It would be hard to find a more typical illustration of the liberal...
DEMOBILISATION
The SpectatorSus,—Amid the rejoicing over the so-called " speed-up " from the Forces it seems to have 'escaped attention that the proposals are in the nature of a "slow-up" so far as the...
SIR,—Reading your leading column in the issue dated October stb,
The Spectatorcon- cerning demobilisation of the Forces, I must disagree very strongly with your statement: "the acceleration is to be effected without abandoning the fundamental principle...
ADVERTISED POSTS
The SpectatorSus,—Before the war I was a schoilmaster. I am now a Territorial Army officer and have nearly spent over three years in India and Burma, nor do I expect to be repatriated until...
THE FALLING BIRTHRATE
The SpectatorSits,—In all the articles and correspondence which have dealt with the falling birth-rate one aspect has not, as far as I know, been touched upon. It is rather an elusive thing...
DRINK AND THE STATE
The SpectatorSia,—In his condemnation of both the national and private sale of alcoholic drinks to the public, Mr. Cecil Heath writes that the making of any profit out of drink—in other...
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ISLAND CENSORSHIP
The SpectatorSIR, —In the article on the ," Future of Malta h " Canon Nicholls refers to a "notorious occasion (when) a parcel of books . . . was quietly destroyed by the post-office...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorAN astonishingly gloomy account of English villages is sketched in an else charming little book by Mr. Orwin, who sees salvation for rural England only in much larger villages,...
THE ELECTRICAL FUTURE
The SpectatorSta,—Dr. Percy Dunsheath's article on the electrical future in your current issue prompts me to inquire whether the attention of electrical experts has yet been turned to the...
PERIL I/4 PALESTINE
The SpectatorSiat,—I have been much interested in the article in your number of August 31st entitled ' Peril in Palestine," by Brigadier Stephen H. Longrigg. There is one point which never...
The Surest Apple
The SpectatorControversy as to the best apple (Cox always excepted) can never be settled ; but it seems that of apples immune to frost, Edward VII excels others, chiefly thanks to its...
A Whitewashed Weed
The SpectatorOne of the most highly honoured of plants by the modern school of gardeners is the once scorned nettle. The leading authority on fruit trees, for example, the highly...
FIRST CATCH YOUR MAID
The SpectatorSnt,—Mr. Gardner in his witty article was concerned with the problem of swinging cats, and the inevitable indignity to that proud and reserved creature. Surely, the old saying...
A Rabbit Acrobat Harvest, and haysel, are dangerous events for
The Spectatora good many animals, and there are some hair-raising escapades. The other day, for example, a young rabbit was tossed on to the canvas moving platform as the blade of the...
• THE B.M. READING ROOM SIR, —Apropos Janus's plea for reopening
The Spectatorthe British Museum or some part of it, may I put in a special word for students in the reading room? I have recently been granted a ticket to carry on research and labour in the...
In My Garden
The SpectatorThe best berries at present on show are on the loaded boughs of a wilsonae barbery, the best of all the dwarfs. Blackbirds, which cleared the mountain ash before the berries...
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BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorLively Disputations Essays on the Eighteenth Century. Presented to David Nichol Smith (Oxford University Press 21s.) THIS admirable volume consists of eighteen essays,...
Greece Yesterday
The SpectatorGreece. By A. W. Gomme. (Oxford University Press. 3s. 6d.) " WE have never before known so much about Greece "—this 'remark was made to me by a British officer while the German...
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The Church in the Pacific
The SpectatorTins is one of the few books which everyone without exception ought to read. In 1938, van Dusen was a typically liberal American theologian with a conventional interest in...
A Candid Diplomat
The SpectatorIN some respects Sir Nevile Henderson has been hardly judged. He was sent as Ambassador to Berlin in April, 1937, and conceived it as his supreme duty to avert, or at the least...
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Fiction
The SpectatorPeony. By Keith West. (Cresset Press. 8s.) Gin and Bitters. By Jane Lane. (Dakers. 10s. 6d.) Peace with Honour. By Derek Walker-Smith. (Chapman and Hall. 9s. 6d.) Vagabond...
The Medical Saga
The SpectatorA History of Medicine. Douglas Guthrie, M.D., F.R.C.S. (Nelson. 30s.) To write a history of Medicine, from its vague prehistoric begin- nings to the present day, that is at...
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' THE SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 345 [A Book Token for one
The Spectatorguinea will be awarded to the sender of the first convect solution of this week's crossword to be opened after noon on Tuesday week, October 30tis. Envelopes should be received...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 343
The SpectatorFIOL:EN ZIL'E E TOP ,HAIIL R.4 No q E 'A r... T Ft IV HAUT II E _._ n 12ll.A L L E - E ` T . -1 . ,)14‘111 Ec , .c ELia ._ m , ex r 0 P L . E C L , 13.1 SIESaMERIL4 S INEW E...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBY CUSTOS WrrHour in any way modifying its views on the general principle of nationalisation the City has accepted the Government's scheme for bringing the Bank of England...
CHANGE OF ADDRESS.
The SpectatorSubscribers are reminded that notification of change of address should reach the office of The Spectator seven clear days before the alteration is to take effect.
Shorter Notices
The SpectatorVenice : An Aspect of Art. By Adrian Stokes. (Faber and Faber. 10s. 6d.) LOVERS of art know that a book by Mr. Adrian Stokes will be worth reading, for he is no conventional...
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COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorODEON THEATRES SUCCESS OF BRITISH FILMS THE eighth annual general meeting of Odeon Theatres, Limited, was held on October Toth in London, Mr. J. Arthur Rank (the chairman)...