Page 1
NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT HERE is little genuine encouragement to be derived from the initial agreement on matters of secondary importance reached by the Foreign Ministers at their meeting in Paris on...
Palestine Outrages
The SpectatorNew and alarming outrages committed by Jewish bands in Palestine follow hard on the announcement that President Truman is sending a Cabinet committee to London to confer with...
General de Gaulle Again
The SpectatorGeneral de Gaulle favours a new type of ivory tower, among whose fittings is included a powerful loud-speaker. His tour of the Normandy beaches, two years after his own arrival...
Page 2
Peace in Azerbaijan
The SpectatorIt is to be hoped that the settlement between the Persian Govern- ment and Azerbaijan is as satisfactory as the first reports suggest. That the general outlook in Persia has...
The Food Production Crisis
The SpectatorThere is not much satisfaction to be got out of the debate on food- production in the House of Commons on Tuesday. Mr. R. S. Hudson was justified up to a point in accusing his...
U.N.O. and Franco
The SpectatorThe declaration of British policy on Spain at the Security Council's meeting on Monday will no doubt provoke fierce criticism from those sections of public opinion, more vocal...
Men at Work
The SpectatorThe excellent statistics of employment and unemployment published each month by the Ministry of Labour have mostly good news to tell. The numbers employed in industry continue...
Page 3
ATOMIC FACTS
The SpectatorT HERE was just room for one more great speech on the horrible possibilities of the atomic bomb and the magnificent prospect of the peaceful use of atomic energy. At the first...
Page 4
The election of the Master of Clare as Vice-Chancellor of
The SpectatorCam- bridge for a second year follows as a matter of ordinary routine, but it has the advantage, among others, of giving further oppor- tunities for the after-lunch oratory of...
" The Communist Party will wage a determined struggle to
The Spectatorbring about the reversal of the Government's present foreign policy ' before it is too late '." So The Daily Worker. It has been too late too long. Even before Bournemouth the...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorA N article by Mr. Christopher Hollis, M.P., in the current issue of the New English Review .on personalities in the present Parliament, contains one interesting and unexpected...
The Labour Party in Parliament is suffering from a convulsion.
The SpectatorThe Party meeting on Wednesday was the scene of shots that may echo round the world. It is over the Map Room in the Commons Library that the controversy rages. In the last...
There is a lot to be said for regional publications.
The SpectatorI mean, not daily or weekly papers devoted to current news, but magazines dealing with local folklore, local history, local arts and the like ; Sussex, I fancy, has for some...
Listening to Mr. John Strachey's broadcast on the food situation
The Spectatoron Sunday night I caught at one point a singularly familiar echo. I think it was in regard to the despatch of food to starving Europe that Mr. Strachey observed that he was "...
Page 5
THE PARTITION OF GERMANY
The SpectatorBy M. J. BONN W HATEVER the outcome of the Paris Conference is, it cannot restore the economic unity of Germany. The Potsdam Con- ference has destroyed it beyond diplomatic...
Page 7
" EQUALITY " EDUCATION
The SpectatorBy GUY BOAS T HE problem of secondary education becomes ever more be- wildering as the views of those who pronounce upon it become more contradictory, impracticable and...
Page 8
THE LIVESTOCK CRISIS
The SpectatorBy FRANK SYKES T HE news that the domestic egg-producer's ration is to be cut has been greeted as a major calamity in many households. On the farm the position is hardly less...
Page 9
A POETS' PAINTER
The SpectatorBy ERIC GEORGE O N the 22nd of June one hundred years ago this country was shocked to learn of the suicide of Benjamin Robert Haydon. He was then sixty ; and for over thirty...
" THE SPECTATOR " FOR BIRTHDAYS
The SpectatorWhy not take out a subscription to THE SPECTATOR as Birthday gift for a relative or friend? Subscription 3os. per annum, or 15s. for six months. Special rate to Members of...
Page 10
MARGINAL COMMENT .
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON O PENING an illustrated paper this morning, I came across a page of photographs which aroused within me feelings of rage and sorrow. It depicted a sheet of...
Page 11
MUSIC
The SpectatorLa Boheme and The New Monte Carlo Ballet. At the Cambridge.— The School for Fathers. At Sadler's Wells. IT was with some misgiving that I went to the opening night of the new...
THE THEATRE
The SpectatorGrand National Night. By Dorothy and Campbell Christie. At the Apollo.—Love Goes to Press. By Martha Gellhorn and Virginia Cowles. At the Embassy. You feel that the authors of...
THE CINEMA
The SpectatorBeware of Pity. At the Leicester Square. THIS is a distinguished film, a rare event these days, and although it lacks that intensity of style and purpose which alone can make...
Page 12
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorTHE master in these country matters, for whom I play locum year by year, wrote a few weeks ago about the effect of latter-day agricultural conditions upon the hird-life of...
In My Garden I have never known so spectacular an
The Spectatorearly summer in the garden. The frequent rains have brought the lawns to perfection, following an experimental treatment with basic slag instead of the more usual lawn- sand...
URANIA AND URANIUM
The Spectator" The electrifying announcement that Uranium, used in making atomic bombs, can be `de-natured,' so that it becomes in effect non- explosive, has ranked with many as second only...
Bird Shyness The most obvious change in the habits of
The Spectatorthe birds is their larger group gatherings and troopings, especially the blue-tits and all the hedgerow families. These gay little creatures followed in their myriads the early...
The Tidy Countryside With this auxiliary labour of ex-enemy workers,
The Spectatorplus that of the men returned from the Services, the farmers have had the spring-clean of their lives. I have never seen the countryside so carefully trimmed and set. The...
ART
The SpectatorContemporary Italian Painting. At the Redfern.—American Painting. At the Tate. THE provinces may well envy the fortunate Londoner his unrationed opportunities nowadays to...
Page 13
Snt,—May I hope that you will find room for the
The Spectatorfollowing comments on the letter from Sir Edward Spears in The Spectator of June 14th? Whether there was on the Arab side a bona fide belief that the McMahon undertaking...
Stn,—General E. L. Spears misunderstood my interpretation of the phrase
The Spectator" Portions of Syria lying to the west of the districts of Damascus, Horns, Hama and Aleppo." He repeats what George Antonius has stated in 1938 (The Arab Awakening, p. 178) that...
BURMA TODAY
The SpectatorSIR,—Please permit me to reply briefly to Mr. Arthur Manton, the author of an article Fascism in Burma which has appeared in your periodical recently. I am sure Mr. Manton has...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorDILEMMA IN PALESTINE Sm,—In discussions of the Palestine situation, a basic fact which is some- times forgotten but which is of great importance to the Arab world is that Great...
Page 14
THE FRUITS OF NEUTRALITY Sta,—In his Marginal Comment in your
The Spectatorissue of May 31st, Mr. Nicolson has been impressed by the new beautiful Swedish liner, the ' Saga,' by the Heidsieck Monopole, 5934, and by the feeling that " something in this...
WHITHER NOSTALGIA
The SpectatorSia,—May I lodge a protest against the increasing misuse by modern writers of the word " nostalgia"? Used in its proper sense it means a yearning for home, but nowadays it...
PRESERVING GOOD FILMS Sut,—I should like to support your correspondent
The Spectatoron the subject of the proposed destruction of the French film, Le Jour se Leve. There are two points connected with this outrage, about which some of your readers can perhaps...
THE MALAYAN MUDDLE SIR,—In his article on Malaya Captain Gammans
The Spectatorconfirms that the situation in that country need not have arisen but for a first-class piece of bungling " and that the issues which the new Union policy were designed to meet...
THE PLIGHT OF THE POLES Sta,—The decision to bring upwards
The Spectatorof too,000 Polish veterans from Italy to England for demobilisation and " absorption " into civilian life may relieve a difficult international situation ; but it raises other...
RACING AND RATIONS SIR,—The reduction in the ration of feeding-stuffs
The Spectatorfor pigs, poultii and . milking cows raises the question whether the allotment of oats for race- horses ought not to be reduced in . Optober. If racing is to be - limited...
Page 16
BOOKS OF THE DAY
The Spectator. East and West The Far East Must Be Understood. By H. Van Straelen, S.V.D. (Luzac and Co. 10s. 6d.) A STRIKING passage in this book, quoted from Christopher Dawson, attributes...
The Case of France
The SpectatorFrance Between the Republics. By Dorothy M. Pickles. (Contact Publications. 10s. net.) ONE of the great difficulties of the present moment is the ignorance, the muddle and the...
Page 18
Lively Letters
The SpectatorBernard Shaw : W. B. Yeats : Letters to Florence Farr. Edited by Clifford Bax. (Home and Van Thal. 7s. 6d.) IN July, 1912, the actress Florence Farr, who had played Rebecca in...
Our Recent Writers
The SpectatorEnglish History and Ideas in the Twentieth Century. By H. V. Routh. (Methuen. Ils. 6d.) To attempt to approach the subject of literature—and especially contemporary...
Page 20
The Art of Printing
The SpectatorAs a means of livelihood the occupation of typographer came into being after the 1914-1918 war ; now there must be hundreds work- ing at it. Printing became conscious of the...
Fiction
The SpectatorLand. By Liam O'Flaherty. (Gollancz. 9s.) IT is a long time since Liam O'Flaherty last published a novel. Famine, a great book which appeared before the war, has been...
How to Speak in Public
The SpectatorPublic Speaking. By Richard Acland. (Gollancz. 5s.) NOBODY can be good at public speaking unless he enjoys it. The pity is that so many people enjoy it who are no good at it,...
Page 21
[A Book Token for one guinea will be awarded to
The Spectatorthe sender of the first correct solution of this week's crossword to be opened after noon on Tuesday week, poly 2nd. Envelopes must be received not later than first post that...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 378
The SpectatorXEEP E ' PP t 11 A G A S A T R C A 1.1 I A R M A,L AD E A B .1) t. '1- 8! I D • E T H E T E2 - iE B.-. N T T A U R A S • E ASE R A IS E P LEME SOLUTION ON JULY 5th The...
Page 22
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The Spectator,By CUSTOS SOONER or later Mr. Dalton will discover that it is bad policy to beat the big drum all the time. In recent weeks he has given us several examples of his...