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Sabotage ?
The SpectatorAccusations of sabotage should be very circumspectly considered before they are bandied about in the Press—or anywhere else for that matter. But the Admiralty has now gone back...
The Big Lie
The SpectatorNo student either of psychology or of sociology can fail to be interested in Senator McCarthy, upon whose ambitious attempts to pollute decisively the atmosphere—seldom very...
THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE
The Spectatorp RESIDENT TRUMAN'S message to Congress shows that he, at any rate, has realised the simple truth that an emergency requires emergency measures to deal with it. In many ways the...
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The Coal Danger
The SpectatorThe fuel crisis of 1947 was preceded by several months of dangerously low coal stocks during which experts and other authori- ties issued frequent warnings of trouble...
Monarch of Arabia
The SpectatorThe capture of Riad fifty (Moslem) years ago, which Ibn Saud and his subjects have been celebrating this week, was an act of inspired buccaneering. By it Ibn Saud seized the...
Groundnut Revision
The SpectatorSo the groundnut scheme is to go on—but not as the groundnut scheme. Mr. Maurice Webb on Tuesday was anxious to make clear that so far he was giving only " my own very general...
Broken Paper Promises
The Spectator- The Newsprint Supply Company, Limited, which on Monday issued a statement setting out the miserable story of newsprint supplies in the past six months, is no doubt capable of...
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Schools and Teachers
The SpectatorIf the general level of education in this country was lower the task of the educationist would be easier ; if there was more agree- ment as to what was wrong, there could be...
AT WESTMINSTER
The SpectatorT HE recess is only a few days off and the House approaches it in circumstances that confound all anticipations. When the session began and it seemed possible that the influenza...
The Road Slaughter
The SpectatorLord Lucas, the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Transport, told the House of Lords on Tuesday that the Govern- ment hoped shortly to be able " to introduce...
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THE COST OF KOREA
The SpectatorT HERE has never been any real doubt as to what was the most important and most heartening result of the Communist attack on South Korea. It was the immediate crystallisation of...
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* * * * Every now and then the hack
The Spectatorwhose business it is to comment upon the way of the world is bowled a googly, a ball that breaks both ways, cannot be left alone, and is exceedingly difficult to play. Into this...
* * * * Walking down the Charing Cross Road
The Spectatorlate the other night, we overtook a Sikh with a blonde on his arm. They were talking about the Faroe Islands. " That," I said to my friend, " is the sort of thing that makes...
The other day The Times published a Fourth Leader (it
The Spectatorwas bout something to do with ramblers and hikers) in which the titer quoted from " the White Paper recently produced by the oyal Commission on Leisure." The quotation—taken,...
When, several years ago, I chose the pseudonym of Strix
The Spectator(mean- ing, as you all know, a screech-owl) in which to cloak the identity of Janus's stand-in, I did not foresee that my private life would one day be dislocated by a real,...
North Korea is—among a good many others things—one of he
The Spectatorhomes of Felix tigris mongolica, commonly known as the Iberian tiger (the Russians call it tigre Ussuriski, after the Ussuri iver). It is easily the biggest of the tigers, and...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorT HE Daily Express started the week by announcing, under a headline, " The Press is in Danger," that the Government's policy over newsprint will--if there is a further cut in...
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War in Korea
The SpectatorBy PETER FLEMING N ORTH KOREAN forces have forced the Kum River line by direct assault. Very few of the tanks used in this operation appear to have got across, but the American...
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The Second German Aftermath
The SpectatorBy ELIZABETH WISKEMANN A FTER the First World War the German reaction against it, and against the German regime which had waged it, was violent, but it was also violently...
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Unique Hibernia
The SpectatorT T school—in England, this was—the debating society used occasionally to discuss whether Ireland ought not to be towed out into the Atlantic, and sunk. The motion, which would...
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If Music Be . . .
The SpectatorBy Professor D. W. BROGAN T HE President of the Board of Trade is up to the minute as usual. He has refused to put another nickel in the Odeon, thus showing familiarity with...
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Bluebirds
The SpectatorBy VIRGINIA GRAHAM I T must not surprise the inhabitants of the British Isles too much if, during the month of July, they meet a flushed Girl Guide with a dedicated look in her...
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UNDERGRADUATE PAGE
The SpectatorOxford Portrait RN D. J. MAY (Lincoln College, Oxford) 66 LFRED paints a gloomy picture of conditions in England before his accession," said the lecturer. " Still," she...
TO ENSURE REGULAR RECEIPT OF
The SpectatorTHE SPECTATOR readers are urged to place a firm order with their newsagent or to take out a subscription. Newsagents cannot afford to take the risk of carrying stock, as unsold...
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MARGINAL COMMENT By HAROLD NICOLSON T HE Library Association have issued
The Spectatora pamphlet in cele- bration of the centenary of the first Public Libraries Act, which received the Royal Assent on August 14th, 1850. It is a neat little booklet, enriched with...
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MUSIC
The SpectatorTHE Promenade Concerts start at the Albert Hall on July 22nd, and run for eight weeks until September 16th. The orchestras concerned are the London Symphony, the London...
CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorCINEMA " The Furies." (Plaza.)---cc A Ticket to Tomahawk." (Rialto.) THERE is; no doubt, some significance in twentieth-century America's preoccupation with all the trimmings...
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Hidden Coveys Those friends and denizens of the harvest fields,
The Spectatorthe partridges, are also early. I saw coveys strong on the wing in June ; but not even game. keepers can prophesy with any confidence whether it will be a good or indifferent...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorWE shall see—perhaps are now seeing—harvest , scenes in July. On early lands — for the soileas surely as the latitude affects the date—a good deal of grain is already ripe, and...
A Floriferous Season
The SpectatorSeasons have their distinctions. This summer, as it seems to me, is remarkable for the size of its flowers. The harebells, those bluebells of Scotland, now blooming on Southern...
ART
The SpectatorCONSTANT PERMEKE, now in his middle sixties, is the best-known figure in modern Belgian painting after Baron James Ensor and, perhaps, Paul Delvaux. But Ensor had...
In the Garden When I saw that the Royal Horticultural
The SpectatorSociety were holding a joint show of lilies and roses, a host of quotations floated up into memory. It would, I should say, be little trouble to collect a great many score of...
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A SHIPWRECKED BODY Who buried you ? A stranger who
The Spectatorfound here My shipwrecked body, and he shed a tear For himself too, remembering that he
ERASIPPUS The tomb of Erasippus is not stones Nor his
The Spectatorgrave dust, but all this ocean-swell: He perished with his ship, and where his bones AMANUENSIS.
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 27
The SpectatorReport by Peter King When Hamlet was performed in its natural setting at Elsinore, an insensitive spectator Was annoyed by the noise of swallows and steamships. A prize was...
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 29
The SpectatorSet by R. Kennard Davis A prize of £5, which may be divided, is offered for an essay, in not more than 250 words, on The Fascination of Man-watching, by a Bird. Entries must...
"Tbe ippettator," juip 20th, 1850
The SpectatorTun long deliberations as to the building to be erected for the Exhibition of 1851 have been terminated by a decision in favour of Mr. Paxton's design and estimate. Mr. Paxton...
From the Creek
The SpectatorETEOCLES I am Eteocles who left the plough For profit by the sea. Vain hope! A gale Shipwrecked and drowned me. I can tell you how The wind that winnows sounds upon the sail....
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SIR,—I am glad that the headmaster of St. Olave's has
The Spectatorcalled in question the comments made by the headmasters of Harrow and Mill Hill on this subject, and Janus's endorsement of them. It has become popular to criticise the...
Ambivalence
The SpectatorSin,—In his review of Mr. Greig's book on Thackeray Dr. Garrod sniffs professorially at the words' ambivalent and ambivalence: observing that the reader " will not be helped by...
View of South Africa
The SpectatorSIR,—As a supporter of General Smuts's United Party, which, as its name suggests, aims at the unity of South Africans whether once Boer or Briton, may I express regret at the...
TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorLETTERS Spectators in Court expected that Dr. R. D. Reid would draw somebody when he declared that the public galleries at the criminal courts are " attended for pornographic...
Examination- Age-Limits
The SpectatorSIR, —May I say how cordially I agree with Mr. Carrington in his criticism of the recent remarks of the headmasters of Harrow and Mill )11ill? And may I add that no boy or girl,...
Am—Neither Mr. J. M. Sinclair nor myself can know the
The Spectatorproportion of spectators who attend Assize Courts for pornographic or educative reasons. I am unrepentant in that I am convinced that the former out- number the latter. If,...
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Newsprint Shortage
The SpectatorSiR,—It would be a pity if Janus's strictures on the contents of some daily papers should in any way condone the Government's cut in news. print. For in the first place any...
SIR.—Dr. Garrod says that the reader who does not know
The Spectatorwhat ambi- valence is will not be helped by Webster. He will if he consults the edition dated 1934. Can it be that Dr. Garrod uses an earlier
THE SPECTATOR
The SpectatorSUBSCRIPTION RATES e / • South class mail • South Africa-2nd class mail • India and Pakistan ... • Hon g kon g ... I I ORDINARY EDITION by post to any part of the World...
The Impact of Korea
The SpectatorSIR,—" Cantabrian " writes that M. Vishinsky " is said " to have cautioned against the invasion of South Korea. "Is said " by whom? Iron and other curtains apart, how can we...
Meals on Trains
The SpectatorSta,—Among the diminishing number of simple pleasures I count, or counted, leaving my book in a stuffy third-class carriage and moving ta the dining-car where, although this...
Private Patients
The SpectatorSIR,— Attention has been called at the meeting of the B.M.A. to the penalising of private patienti by making them pay for their medicines. This is stupid as well as obviously...
Realities in Burma
The SpectatorSIR. —It was kind of you to publish the comments of " Onlooker" on my letter of June 6th. I am sorry that my letter failed to convey its simple theme to the correspondent: this...
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BOOKS AND WRITERS
The SpectatorS AINTSBURY left directions in his will that there should be no biography of him, and that his letters should not be pub- lished. About his letters I think he judged wisely. I...
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Reviews of the Week
The SpectatorMr. Churchill's Panorama Ma. CHURCHILL, pursuing, and anything but faint, in this his third volume carries his war-history from January to December, 1941. It was a dramatic...
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Two Poets
The SpectatorThe Swarming of the Bees. By John Heath-Stubbs. (Eyre and Spottiswoode. 7s. 6d.) MR. RONALD DUNCAN appears from this volume of his poetry—as distinct from his poetic drama—to...
Anglo-Japanese
The SpectatorBroken Thread. An autobiography. By Maj.-Gen. F. S. G. Piggott, C.B., D.S.O. (Gale and Polden. 2 Is.) Kakemono. A sketchbook of post-war Japan. By Honor Trac y . (Methuen. 12s....
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Ballet : Doubtful Judgements
The SpectatorModern English Ballet. By Fernau Hall. (Melrose. 203.) PART of the value of Mr. Fernau Hall's book lies in its insistence upon the fact that the art of the dance travels...
Christian Socialist
The SpectatorFrederick Denison Maurice. By H. G. Wood. (Cambridge Univesity Frefs. ios. 6d.) DR. WOOD was surely wise to devote his Dale Lectures to the teaching of Frederick Denison...
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Bees in the Bonnet
The SpectatorSomewhere South of Suez. By Douglas Reed. (Cape. 12S. 6d.) HITLER did not die in the bunker, says Mr. Reed ; he was spirited away by his Soviet confederates. His Soviet...
Fiction
The SpectatorThe Flowering Cross is about love and tenderness, and tit difficulty of deciding:not only between appearance and reality, bu between different levels of reality. It considers...
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THE " SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD I No. 591 I A Book
The SpectatorToken for one guinea will be awarded to the sender of the first correct s, ;anon to be opened after noon on Tuesday week, August 1st.] II • • • • • MINIM E•••111•••1111• • • •...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 589
The SpectatorEIRP36111m MAT , IC AIL 111 11111E113110 OBE R IA I-- Ill In n El MI In EIGIREICI IS II ' N 0 N , 1 CI pi n EICIPIEIM a 121 filnlirillrlial MI N A T 12 Piti 0 ERA m Ari114143 1...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS Ir says a good deal for the toughness of investment morale and for the trim condition of\ markets that prices are standing up well to the onslaught of the political...
SHORTER NOTICE
The SpectatorTHIS is the second monograph on Bewick to appear within two years ; and Mr. Reynolds's appreciation is no obvious improvement on Mr. Rayner's King Penguin of 1947. It includes,...