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NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorN O more than the first official bulletin on what will surely be known as the Cunningham campaign in North Africa is available as these words are written. But that is enough to...
Vichy and Hitler
The SpectatorThe apparently well-founded report of the enforced retirement of General Weygand from his command in North Africa, follow- ing on the death in an aeroplane crash of General...
The Strikes in America
The SpectatorThe revision of the Neutrality Act has carried the United States a long step forward in giving reality to President Roosevelt's policy of all aid for Britain and the Powers...
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Religious Education in the Schools
The SpectatorThe House of Commons has not many opportunities of dis- cussing educational questions, and still fewer of considering religious education. The debate which was opened by Mr. R....
Mr. Amery and India
The SpectatorIndians who were hoping for an announcement regarding the release of political prisoners at Delhi on Tuesday are not likely to consider the Secretary of State's speech at...
Finland's Share in the War
The SpectatorIt appears that the apparently uncompromising Finnish reply to the American Note which described Finnish operations against Russia as " a direct threat to American security,"...
Shop Stewards versus Trade Unions In calling a half-hour's token
The Spectatorstrike at certain shipyards and engineering shops in Clydeside last Tuesday, the shop stewards took action which can only tend to undermine the authority of their own trade...
Married Women on Part-time
The SpectatorIn his speech at Middlesbrough last Sunday, appealing once again for more women to bridge the big gap in industry which must be filled, Mr. Bevin indicated new ways of...
The Real Middle East
The SpectatorThe statement made by Nuri Pasha, the Prime Minister of Iraq, to Mr. Arthur Merton, the Special Correspondent of the Daily Telegraph at Baghdad, and published in Tuesday's issue...
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JAPAN ON THE VERGE
The SpectatorA LL the indications suggest that war in the Pacific is con- siderably more likely than it was a week ago. There has been some tendency in this country to believe that Japan...
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No doubt Lord Vansittart's new pamphlet, Roots of the Trouble
The Spectator(Hutchinson, 3d.), will have a large sale, perhaps as large as its predecessor, Black Record. But I doubt whether it will be altogether effective. The average Englishman has no...
The University of Cambridge will make history on a minor
The Spectatorscale on Sunday, for on that day the University Sermon will be preached, for the first time for three centuries, by a Free Churchman. Not quite for the first time ever, for in...
* * * * A letter in Wednesday's Daily Telegraph
The Spectatoron the predicament of an officer who sent his four children to America soon after his return from Dunkirk, contains statements so incredible that I withhold comment till an...
Mr. Birrell (I quote from memory), in referring to someone
The Spectatorwho had quoted Thoughts in Prison, by the Rev. William Dodd, of Clare Hall, Cambridge, noted the omission of the information that the thinker in question was subsequently...
I have been sent a report of the second year's
The Spectatorwork of the Friends' Ambulance Unit, composed practically, if not entirely, of men who have been granted exemption from military service on conscientious grounds, and have been...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK I F it be accepted that the retirement
The Spectatorof Sir John Dill from military service on the day he reaches the age of 6o is for the benefit of the British Army, then the changes and promotions that follow consequentially no...
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The War Surveyed
The SpectatorEXPANDING VISTAS By STRATEGICUS I N one of my earliest articles on the war I pointed out the overwhelming difficulty of foreseeing the course it might take because of our...
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A MESSENGER FROM FRANCE
The SpectatorBy NEVILLE LITTON [The Hon. Neville Lytton, a brother of the present Earl of Lytton, was a member of Earl Haig's staff in the last War.] S INCE I have landed in England, I have...
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CANADA'S EFFORT
The SpectatorBy GRANT DEXTER Ottawa, October. T HE war-effort of Canada is now entering the, phase of full production and by the spring of 1942 about 5o per cent. of our national income...
PORNOGRAPHY AND PAPER
The SpectatorBy RONALD W. CLARK T HERE has been an immense and dangerous increase in the production and sale of pornographic literature in this country during the last two years. It has...
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THE COUNTY BADGE •
The SpectatorBy THE MASTER OF BALLIOL • T HE Headmaster of Bolton School, Mr. F. R. Poskitt, in his article in last week's Spectator, wrote that " in school hours the child as personality,...
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MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON I N the hall of the Café Royal the other day I met one of the younger and more gifted of our Labour politicians. He had come in from Regent Street and I was...
I do not regret, either, the passing of the social
The Spectatorhabits which existed before 1914. I remember in the last war helping Monsieur Paul Cainbon into his brougham. He wore a grey top-hat, a grey frock-coat and yellow leather...
Thinking these not unpleasant thoughts I crept, with head lowered
The Spectatoragainst wind and rain, along the north side of Trafalgar Square The water poured in cascades from the roof of St. Martin's, and I splashed into puddles at the cross-streets....
Talleyrand, as we know, remarked that only those who lived
The Spectatorbefore the Revolution had any conception of how pleasant life could be. I have never experienced the slightest desire to live in. the eighteenth century. The formality of their...
Will such young men really be satisfied to become clerks
The Spectatorin offices at Wolverhampton, or will they readily support the politician who preaches a new world of organised equality against the politician who preaches opportunity for those...
We assume today that the levelling process will continue with
The Spectatorincreased momentum throughout the war, and that in the end we shall emerge as an almost classless State, resigned to a continuance of coupons and controls. I do not myself see...
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In the Garden The flower-gardener—if he may be recognised—must be
The Spectatorutterly ruthless at this season with his Michaelmas daisies, even with the new and popular dwarfs. It is probably best to dig up and replant only one rooted stem. Reward comes...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorCats' Brains An authority on British place-names is a little perplexed by the intrusion, in several widely separated parts of the country, of the odd phrase, " cats' brains."...
In a Nutshell
The SpectatorWhat is a patriotic citizen to do when the birds come close to the house and demand largess? Feeding animals, whether dogs, cats or birds, is a difficult business in war-time....
More Green Thumbs An ancillary scheme for increasing gardeners and
The Spectatorthrough them the production of garden produce, has been successfully launched, and merits both publicity and support. A group officially named " The Women's Farm and Garden...
THE CINEMA
The Spectator" The Common Touch " and " The Feminine Touch." At the Empire.—" Hatter's Castle." At the Plaza. IT is a somewhat ironic but a solemn fact that the film has always been close...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The Spectator" NEEDS " OR " WORK " ? srR,—" Janus has commented on the surprise with which one finds, in Article 12 of the Soviet Constitution, the phrase, " In the U.S.S.R. the principle...
SIR,—Having spent a good deal of time in analysing the
The Spectatorreal in- contistencies of the Soviet regime, I am glad to explain the apparent contradiction discovered by " Janus." The principle " from each according to his abilities, to...
A BRITISH BOY siR,—It is now thirteen years since the
The Spectatorscheme for sending British boys to spend a year in American schools was inaugurated by the English-speaking Union. It has always been the aim of the British and American...
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GERMANS AND AUSTRIA SIR,—In your last week's issue, " Janus
The Spectator" complains that the Sunday Times is not kind enough to some Germans aria Austrians who, in the guise of refugees from Nazi oppression; openly conduct Pan- German propaganda in...
THE LOST PEACE
The SpectatorSIR,—It seems singularly futile just now to contradict historical in- accuracies; but I am moved to protest against a phrase on page 469 of The Spectator, to the effect that the...
GREEK FOR GIRLS SIR, —Miss Archibald in a recent article urged
The Spectatorthat Greek should have an assured place in the school curriculum, and showed how this could be achieved without ousting another subject, namely, by teaching Greek as the second...
DR. BENES AT ABERDEEN SIR,—I have a great admiration and
The Spectatorrespect for The Spectator, and was much surprised to find a startling inaccuracy in your "News of the Week " of November 14th. You say that Dr. Benes outlined his peace plan for...
RECRUITMENT OF WOMEN
The SpectatorSIR,—May I be permitted to express my appreciation of the wise and imaginative approach to the problem of " The Unrecruited Women " as presented in the leading article in last...
FACTS AS FOUNDATIONS
The SpectatorSIR,—If you will permit me anther word, I would tike to re-emphasise that I have never questioned the necessity of basing planning, or any other action, on facts. My difference...
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PAPER-RATIONING
The SpectatorSul,—The Daily Express has been making a big thing of Lord Beaverbrook's appeal to save every possible scrap of paper. When in London last August I was surprised to see frequent...
Sta,—Your correspondent, Mr. Woodhouse Smith, has voiced an opinion which
The SpectatorI have long held in saying that children should begin Greek first . and go on to learn Latin at a later stage. I think there is no question but that Greek is the easier language...
MILK FOR CHILDREN
The SpectatorSIR,—In regard to the letter from St. Louis on " Milk for Children " in last week's Spectator, I cannot say definitely whether every ship that has been loaded from Canada or the...
THE ARK ROYAL'S ' CATS
The SpectatorSus,—Few more touching episodes connected with the Navy have been recorded than the following. When the ' Ark Royal ' was tor- pedoed, and her doom certain, the crew was saved....
A LETTER BY MR. PICK
The SpectatorStn,—The manner in which a letter to The Spectator sent by a dynamic person like the late Frank Pick may inspire useful action, is proved by the following facts: In your issue...
LIFE ON THE LAND
The SpectatorSln,—The news that agricultural labourers are to have £3 in cash weekly draws attention to a skilled occupation open to all who desire to spend their lives happily in their...
KEEPING TOMATOES
The SpectatorSin,—A few months ago the writer of your " Country Life " notes gave two suggestions for keeping tomatoes fresh, one being from a doctor-gardener who advocated packing the...
" MISS MACAULAY'S BOOKS
The SpectatorStrt,—It may not be much consolation to Miss Rose Macaulay, but we should like to assure her that there is no difficulty about replacing her Baedekers. We have ample stocks, and...
HELPING CHINA
The SpectatorSill,—The Spectator has always been friendly to China. Is not this the time to urge that the Allied Powers should try io give her some measure of war equipment, however small?...
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BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorThe Political Milton Milton in the Puritan Revolution. By Don M. Wolfe. (Nelson. 25s.) Tins is a timely book, well worth wading through, since so much that agitated Milton's...
Lessons for the Future PROFESSOR BROGAN'S sub-title is " Some
The SpectatorReflections on Foreign Affairs," and by way of a motto he quotes the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary's definition of innocence, beginning with " free- dom from sin " and...
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Mr. Dobb's Facts : Mr. Cole's Fancies
The SpectatorSoviet Economy and the War. By Maurice Dobb. (Routledge. 3s.) MR COLE approaches his problem as one who is " not a Com- munist, but a West European liberal (with a small '1')...
Vive La France !
The SpectatorWrites stir la France. By Louis Levy. (Edition Pingouin. 6d.) WHEN war broke out Rene Balbaud was bathing at Dieppe. His wife was in a nursing home overlooking the harbour...
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Fiction
The SpectatorOpen the Door. By Osbert Sitwell. (Macmillan. 7s. 6d.) The Time of the Singing. By David Scott Daniell. (Cape. 8s. 6d.) SHORT story writers are, we have been told, the...
Self-Portrait
The SpectatorA Lady's Child. By Enid Starkie. (Faber and Faber. Iss.) MISS STARKIE'S autobiography deserves praise for its powerful reconstruction of period, and its moving evocation of...
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Shorter Notices
The SpectatorWhen We Build Again. A Bournville Village Trust Research Pub- lication. (Allen and Unwin. 8s. 6d.) WHAT a tantalising book! The result of three years' research into Birmingham...
THIS charmingly printed little book was first published in 1895
The Spectatorwith an introduction by George Saintsbury, which is reproduced here. Saintsbury particularly commended its non-fortuitous con- junction of old and new. " I cannot imagine," he...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS NOTWITHSTANDING 100 per cent. E.P.T. and the war-time changes which have played havoc with the normal business and profit- earning capacity of so many companies the...
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" THE SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. 141
The SpectatorACROSS r. Least confused in a tree (9). 5. Foreign office grog for discus- sion (5). • 8. Hertfordshire saint (5). 9. This seems to be at the other extreme from an even keel...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 139 The winner of Crossword No.
The Spectator69, Ormonde Drive, Glasgow, S. 139 is Mr. David W. Blair, 4.