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Progress in Kenya
The SpectatorFrom the point of view of the military and the police the situation in Kenya is improving. This is the first necessity, for before anything else can be done effectively order...
NEWS OF THE WEEK I T is very greatly to be
The Spectatorregretted that the Parlia- mentary Labour Party, by a narrow majority in a thinly attended meeting, should have • declined the Prime Minister's invitation to join in all- party...
Can Yalta Last ?
The SpectatorThe story that the United States Government have proposed to the British Government the .repudiation of parts—in par- ticular, secret parts—of the Yalta Agreement of 1945 is now...
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Transport Bill's Progress
The SpectatorThe Transport Bill, having had its third reading on Monday, left the Commons for the Lords a better Bill than it was originally, but still lacking some essential adjustments and...
Ebbw Vale and Delhi
The SpectatorIt is to be hoped that India will not develop the habit of inviting every peripatetic British politician who visits India to address the two Houses of the Assembly. It is to be...
Coal Runs Short
The SpectatorOn February 12th it was agreed between the National Coal Board and the National Union of Mineworkers that the wages of 320,000 day-wage men would be raised by 6s. a week, even...
More of Malan's Justice
The SpectatorA fortnight ago there was occasion to criticise here the unreasonable terms of the Criminal Law Amendment Bill, now before the South African Parliament, which is designed to...
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Atomic Speculations
The SpectatorAlthough, as we perhaps over-frequently remind ourselves, we live in an Atomic Age, few seem to be clear in their own minds about world trends in the development of nuclear...
Comfort for Farmers
The SpectatorMr. Churchill, in his speech to the National Farmers' Union on Tuesday, added his emphatic voice to those of, his own Minister of Agriculture and of the late Labour Government...
AT WESTMINSTER
The SpectatorT HE floods and foreign\ policy have continued to engage the House of Commons this week. The first thorough debate on the flood damage was arranged for Thursday and was...
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EAST OF SUEZ
The Spectator1 ? IHE Suez Canal is a vital link—it might better be said the vital link—between Europe and Asia for all but the lightest traffic. Aeroplanes can convey a human, but not much...
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The Simplified Spelling Bill jointly sponsored by Mr. Isaac Pitman
The Spectatorand Mr. Mont Follick might be regarded simply as one of Mr. Follick's frolics—the Member for Loughborough is a most amiable man, but the House of Commons has never consented to...
The tourist allowance, I observe, has been raised from £500
The Spectatorto £750. Unfortunately it is the Australian allowance, not the British. The latter remains obstinately pegged at £25. While that annoys me a great deal it should give pleasure...
The Shah has very rightly hurried to the scene of
The Spectatorthe Persian earthquake. He probably got there faster than the Indian District Commissioner who heard, while returning by sea from leave, of a serious disaster in the area for...
De mortuis nil nisi bonum, but the Bishop of Birmingham,
The Spectatorin spite of his seventy-nine years and the ill-health which has caused him to resign his see, has, it may be hoped, many pros- perous years before him. But it would be...
A SPECTATOR 9 S NOTEBOOK D R.- REUTER, the Burgomaster of West
The SpectatorBerlin, made a great impression on the various audiences he has addressed in London in the past week. Standing in the very front of the firing-line in the cold war (if cold and...
The Press Council is definitely to come into being. I
The Spectatorhave always thought such a body unnecessary, and I never liked the controversial spirit in which it was first proposed. But now that it is taking shape I wish it nothing but...
It will strike everyone as shocking that a completely innocent
The Spectatorman should be imprisoned for three weeks and get no more compensation than £5 out of the poor-box. Whether there is a prospect of more compensation from some other source I...
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The Informer and the Communist
The Spectator13, GORONWY REES 0 N August 3rd, 1948, Mr. Whittaker Chambers, then a senior editor of Time magazine, testified before the notorious Committee on Un-American Activities in...
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A Proust Gap Bridged
The SpectatorBy TANGYE LEAN F OR those of us who learnt to read between the two world wars, Proust's A la Recherche du Temps Perdu was a kind of optional university which we attended or...
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The Laity in the Church By THE BISHOP OF BRISTOL
The SpectatorT HE process of revising the Canon Law has inevitably brought into sharp prominence the question of the proper status and function of the laity in the government of the Church...
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King Baudouin Again
The SpectatorBy GAVINGORDON ' It was on the morning of Sunday, February 1st, that Belgians living away from the coast and the Scheldt heard of the break- ing of the dykes and the...
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IF YOU FIND ANY DIFFICULTY OR DELAY IN OBTAINING YOUR
The Spectator" SPECTATOR " Please write :-- THE CIRCULATION MANAGER, "Spectator," 99 "Gower Street, London, W.C.L
Tools and the African's Job
The SpectatorBy JOHNTAWNEY T HE demonstrator said, "So you see, gentlemen, the tractor more than replaces the horse," but the gentlemen did not quite see, for the horse had played no part in...
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UNDERGRADUATE PAGE
The SpectatorIn Search of a Home By A. J. COOPER (Wadham College, Oxford) T HE Delegacy of Lodgings is a forbidding building, full - of doors and corridors. It was from this, a week before...
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OPERA
The SpectatorNelson. (Wigmore ON the face of it one would hardly expect a" concert-reading " of a new opera to give a fair or even adequate idea Of its quality ; and it seemed a doubtful...
THE temptation, after this production, is to say that it
The Spectatoris the play itself which is of no importance : but that would be unwise, for it has its moments. Tennents have had it knocked into three acts, relieved of some of its painful...
Rain. By. John Colton and Clemence Randolph. (Embassy.) Tins is
The Spectatora wet, sweaty production of the play based on Somerset Maugham's damp, hot story about the tart from Honolulu who falls into the clutches of a Bible-punching missionary on a...
CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorTHEATRE The Shrike. By Joseph ICranun. - (Princes.) THE captive is always likely to be an interesting and appealing figure on the stage. Put a, man in manacles and—unless you...
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CINEMA
The SpectatorThe Little World of Don Camillo. (Continentale and Rialto.) The Virtuous Isidore. (Curzon.)—Rough Shoot. (Odeon.) As a legacy from the French Film Festival there has been left...
DRAWINGS AND PAINTINGS
The SpectatorDrawings for Pictures. (Arts Council Gallery.) ROGER FRY'S child thought and then drew a line round his think. "Let this be plain to all," said Michelangelo ; "drawing consti-...
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FURNITURE
The SpectatorIT is to be hoped that no intelligent foreigner will stray into the exhibition of British furniture that fills the vast spaces at Earls Court. How could one possibly convince...
PIANO AND VOICE
The SpectatorApollo Society Recital. (Recital Room, Royal Festival Hall.) Ti - man are thousands of poems in the English language, yet in every programme of spoken poetry the same ones...
PHOTOGRAPHY
The Spectator• To celebrate its centenary, the Royal Photographic Society is staging a double exhibition. Some forty cases of early apparatus, documents and records are on show at the...
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Sporting . Aspects Games of Chance
The SpectatorBy J. P. W. MALLALIEU ivi y mother, if she coulAave had her way, would have banned all games of chance. Like drink, Isadora Duncan, Socialism and Conservatism, games of chance...
THE NATION'S HEALTH
The SpectatorIn view of the importance of the nation's health, and the interest properly taken in it by the public, "The Spectator" offers three prizes of f15 15s. for the best article on...
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SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. is8
The SpectatorSet by Allan M. Laing One of Samuel Butler's best-known notes is : " It was very good of God to let Carlyle and Mrs. Carlyle marry one another and so make only.two people...
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. Iss Report by D. R. Peddy
The SpectatorClio, Muse of history, is checking her records for accuracy, and has asked for evidence on certain matters. A prize of £5 was offered for a frank statement by one of the...
The Apertator, jfebruarp 19th, 1853
The SpectatorON the 10th instant, the now ancient vacancy occasioned among the Royal Academicians by Turner's death was filled up by the election of Mr. Frith; an artist than whom none...
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Cheeseparing
The SpectatorSta,—Thank you for your forthright criticism of the ten-per-cent. reduction in the grant for adult education and Workers' Educational Association recently announced by the...
Cost of Living
The SpectatorSut,—With regard to the elaborate new cost-of-living index, for which data are now being collected, no one seems to have pointed out that it may encourage continuous monetary...
The McCarran Act
The Spectatorhave only just seen your issue of January 2nd, with its com- ments on the McCarran Act. I think, although I have only been in the U.S.A. for three weeks, that this is one of the...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorA National Distress Fund? Sta,—As a band of men who meet regularly for the sole purpose of finding ways and means ot helping those in need whether they are far or near, the...
The United States and Consultation SIR, —Mr. Noel-Baker's article is a
The Spectatorvery great help, and it is especially welcome because there were very few leading articles about the debate. But the question whether we have a right to be consulted by America...
Central African Federation
The SpectatorSta,—I do not think that Mr. Vernon Bartlett in his article on the Federation plan faces squarely the question put in your own editorial note: Should the scheme be forced...
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SIR,—J. P. W Mallalieu has rather missed the point in
The Spectatorhis article on Rugby for All. He states that he would like to see the Rugby Union adopt the rule that forbids a player to kick the ball full pitch into touch except from a...
Bach on the Piano
The SpectatorSIR,—With regard to this question of the interpretation of Bach on the piano—no matter how many people may claim to like " Bach " played on the piano, and "prefer" it to the...
Rugby for All
The SpectatorSIR,—I am glad to be able to agree with something in Mr. Mallalieu's article, entitled Rugby for All, namely that there should be a Rugby Union "rule which forbids a player to...
Double -Leap Year ?
The SpectatorSm,—It was unexpected to find in the notice of the "Nation's Health" competition that the Spectator is favouring a change in the calendar, as the articles are to be received by...
Mussorgsky
The Spectatorsill,—In the course of his notes on Boris Godunov, your music critic says, "Of course we must all admit to the fact that Mussorgsky was a hopeless drunkard." This looks like a...
Vacation Work
The SpectatorSER,—I should like to comment on Dr. Wolfenden's article Vacation Work in connection with its significance in the educational systems of the U.S. and Canada. The studies of a...
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The Lost Dog
The SpectatorLong before the dog reached me I could see he was lost. He was a young dog, half a collie, half something else, and he stood little higher than a good-sized fox. I was reminded...
COUNTRY LIFE -
The SpectatorFOR some time now I have been in the habit of pausing when a scene has pleased me and examining the points that make it seem pleasant, and I have discovered that often my...
Raspberry Canes
The SpectatorRaspberries that fruit early should be shortened now, while late- fruiting and new canes should be cut back to six inches. A top dressing of compost or manure will benefit soft...
Lambs and Winter
The SpectatorAs we went along the road, the wind, rising to almost a gale, was threshing the poplars, and 1 was glad when we were past them, for the poplar-tree is not to be trusted,...
The Roadman
The Spectator"My old dad was roadman with the County Council all his life. If we wanted him we always knew where he was, between the quarry and the crossing. My mother would send me along...
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The Dividing Ocean
The SpectatorTHE description of the impact of the old world on the visitor from the new is one of the classic themes of American literature. So is the description of the European milieu,...
In next week's " Spectator" Sir Gerald Kelly, P.R.A., reviews
The Spectatora new Pbaidon edition of " Renoir " ; Margbanita Laski "The Brontë Story" by Margaret Lane; and the Bishop of Soutbwell "According to the Scriptures "by Dr. C. H. Dodd.
BOOKS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorLucrezia Borgia The Marriage at Ferrara. By Simon Harcourt-Smith. (John Murray. 21s.) BYRON, wandering by chalice into the Ambrosian Library at Milan, found his attention...
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The Conqueror of Tibet
The SpectatorFrancis Younghusband ; Explorer and Mystic. By George Seaver. (John Murray. 25s.) Francis Younghusband ; Explorer and Mystic. By George Seaver. (John Murray. 25s.) THE figure...
Voudoun in Haiti
The SpectatorDivine Horsemen: The Living Gods of Haiti. By Maya Deren. (Thames and Hudson. 25s.) THERE is perhaps something slightly misleading in the title of this most interesting book;...
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The Man Between
The SpectatorNewman's Way. By Sean 0 'Faolain. (Longmans. 25s.) "WHOEVER comes off safely in a quarrel, the man between never does." Mr. O'Faolain quotes the Gaelic proverb incidentally, but...
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A Radical Traveller
The SpectatorThis selection from the writings of 'R. B. Cunninghame Graham, published to mark the centenary of his birth in 1852, contains fourteen of his stories and sketches, fifteen...
The Cozens
The SpectatorAlexander and John Robert Cozens. By A. P. Opp& (Black. 30s.) THE history of English water-colour painting is still so largely frag- mentary that a detailed study of two of its...
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Fiction
The SpectatorNight is Darkest. By Georges Bernanos. Translated from the French by W. J. Strachan. (Bodley Head. 10s. 6d.) Troy Chimneys. By Margaret Kennedy. (Macmillan. I Is. 6d.) Desiree....
Mr. Sansom's Pleasures
The SpectatorPleasures Strange and Simple. By William Sansom. (Hogarth Press. 12s. 6d.) UNLIKE many creative writers who turn occasionally to journalism, Mr. Sansom has never assumed a...
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Clothes. By James Laver. (Burke. 21s.) THREE elements, Mr. Laver
The Spectatorcontends, determine the psychology of fashion. Snob- bery and sex are the most important. Clothes are designed to denote status. In the case of men they now express respecta-...
Shorter Notices
The SpectatorPeacocks and Primroses. A Survey of Disraeli's Novels. By Muriel Masefield. (Bles. 21s.) . HAPPILY entitled, scrupulously compiled, this intelligent and pious tribute to Lord...
Gordon Bottomley : Poems and Plays. With an introduction by
The SpectatorClaude Colleer Abbott. (Bodley Head. 30s.) GORDON Borroauxv has never been the poet of the many; - his plays are too short to make commercial production easy, and his...
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Solution to Crossword No. 716
The Spectatorn Al a_a a CI LI 0 K 11130331111131111211 e El IB El 13 El aly 141111411111 annenineen 3 K Dean e_e ill e sling Nil.I EMU( C1 a MO' M EI 13 13_,M_ ha 11 14 MAWR - Winn...
THE "SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 718
The SpectatorIA Book Token for one guinea will be awarded to the sender of the first correct solution opened after noon on Tuesday week, March 3rd, addressed Crossword. 99 Gower Street,...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT By CUSTOS Avail a surprisingly good innings
The Spectatorthe market in industrials and gold shares began to show signs of fatigue in mid-week. This was due partly to the slowing down of tax collections revealed in the weekly revenue...