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⢠NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT HOSE in India and this country who expected much from Lord Wavell's visit to London have not been disappointed. The broadcasts of the Viceroy and the Prime Minister on...
Trieste and Tripolitania
The SpectatorThe Council of Foreign Ministers has achieved its first big success in its consideration of a peace treaty with Italy. In principle it has solved the problem of Trieste and...
Displaced Germans
The SpectatorThe existence of nine million German refugees, displaced from their homes in Poland, Czechoslovakia and Eastern Germany, is the nemesis of Nazism. The forcible uprooting of...
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Church Finances
The SpectatorThe final report of the Financial Commission appointed by the Church Assembly is an odd mixture of lengthy pleading for obvious and overdue reorganisation of central Church...
Atomic Power in Industry
The SpectatorIf Professor Oliphant, who was a member of the technical com- mittee of scientists responsible for the development of the atomic bomb, is right, no security against its misuse...
Mr. Churchill and General Franco
The SpectatorThe publication of the letters exchanged between General Franco and Mr. Churchill in 5944 completely disposes of the discreditable suggestion that Mr. Churchill had been unduly...
Britain, America and Oil
The SpectatorThe Anglo-American agreement about oil which was made a year ago has been followed by the Anglo-American oil conference which opened in London last Tuesday. The former agreement...
Political Parties in Germany
The SpectatorThe decision announced by Field-Marshal Montgomery to allow the reappearance of political parties in Germany in order " to foster the growth of a democratic spirit in Germany,...
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THE SECOND BATTLE OF BRITAIN I T was with mixed feelings
The Spectatorthat Londoners watched the impressive R.A.F. display which celebrated the anniversary of the greatest day in the Battle of Britain. It was the turning-point in the war against...
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Another irritating . sign today is the slowness with which the
The Spectatormilitary authorities are clearing up barbed wire and opening up coast paths closed for defence purposes. A year before the war I mentioned in' this column a rather ominous "...
. In the General Election of 19oo the newly-formed Labour
The Spectatorgroup returned only two candidatesâone of them was Keir Hardie. Today the T.U.C. must look at the Labour Cabinet and at Labour repre- sentation in the Commons with something...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorT HE sessions of the T.U.C. this year have been of great interest not merely in themselves but also for the relation between the trade unions and a Labour Administration holding...
Meanwhile, if we cannot use prisoners of war to clear
The Spectatorup the mess, it might be better to employ our own troops -rather than keep them idle or push them to and - fro on make-believe jobs. Everyone knows instances of this sham work...
After the defeat of Napoleon, Talleyrand's skill as well as
The Spectatorthe logic of the situation gave France an important' place in the final determination of the map of Europe. In 1919, although the Germans were not invited to a place at the...
Mr. Bevin's post is the most difficult of the departmental
The Spectatoroffices, not excluding that of the Minister of Labour. Among his other pre- occupations the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs is now en- gagedâwithout the direct help of...
Would it be possible for one of- the picture newspapers
The Spectatorto send a photographer round half-a-dozen of these popular places in the early spring of next . year when this summer's litter will have .dis- integrated? Photographs could be...
I have been this summer to one of the "
The Spectatorbeauty spots " of the West of England. Early in July the place was free of litter: Two months later, although the car and charabanc traffic is as yet on a small scale, I found...
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SELLING BRITAIN ABROAD
The SpectatorBy PHILIP CARR "THE best English propagandist in France is a Frenchman," said Jean Giraudoux to me at the beginning of the war, when he was in charge of the French Information...
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JAPANESE PATRIOTISM
The SpectatorBy THE RIGHT REV. S. HEASLETT ⢠1 HE Japanese use two words about the whole range of their I National Polity and their mental attitude to it. They are muruiâunique and...
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A PATIENT'S THOUGHTS
The SpectatorBy ROBERT R. HYDE VER the past period of half a century I have had opportunities of visiting hospitals and other healing institutions in various parts of the world, and for...
COOKERY IN ENGLAND
The SpectatorBy JOHN FULLER TT was my lot before the war to cook in hotels. Since the war I I have cooked in the Services, and that means to have cooked with British colleagues. At first...
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PARIS FACES THE WINTER
The SpectatorBy AMABEL WILLIAMS-ELLIS "B READ isn't rationed in England? " " You give no coupons in a restaurant? " " Grown-up people get milkâeven in the cities? " " And is it true your...
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Such criticism as can be made of our own policy
The Spectatorrelates not to the action which had inevitably to be taken at the time of the December disturbances, but to our failure to realise beforehand that these disturbances were bound...
It is fortunate that Archbishop Damaskinos should be in London
The Spectatorat this moment, and should be able by his impressive personality, his calm and powerful moderation, to convince those British and foreign statesmen with whom he comes into...
No man could fail to be impressed by this gentle
The Spectatorand imposing personage. Five times has the Archbishop been called upon, either by his Church or by public opinion, to bring to the solution of internecine disputes the authority...
MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD. NICOLSON T HE terrible events which took place in Athens last December created such perplexity in this country that it is still difficult for us to form an objective...
It was the historian Herodian who, seyenteen hundred years ago,
The Spectatorbewailed " that ancient malady of the Greeks which causes them ever to be at strife with one another, by which process Hellas was weakened and became the sport of Macedon and...
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THE THEATRE
The Spectator" The Old Man of the Mountains." At the Mercury. " The Thunderbolt." At the Arts.â" Exiles." At the Torch. " Big Boy." At the Saville. MR. MARTIN BROWNE and the Pilgrim...
THE CINEMA
The Spectator"Marie-Louise." At the Academy.â" Captain Eddie." At the Odeon.â" Duffy's Tavern." At the Carlton.â" Life on the Western Marshes " and " Chants Populaires." From the...
I THOUGHT I HEARD A BIRD
The SpectatorI thought I heard a birdâ Lying in my room in the heart of the city . . â And then I sensed Pressing upon me in that denser air The light of all past worlds gone down in...
THE Ministry of Supply have granted additional paper for periodicals
The Spectatorto be sent overseas. This will enable copies of The Spectator to be forwarded to friends of our readers, both civilians and those in the Forces, in any part of the world, except...
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PEACE THROUGH' FEAR OR . . . ?
The SpectatorSIR, âWhen I had read Canon Roger Lloyd's article "Peace through Fear or ...?" I remembered what Jowett said to Margot Tennant (Asquith) in her girlhood: " My child, you must...
THE M IN PMH
The SpectatorSiR,âYour article " Rational Farming " states: " Labour is only another aspect of the same problem." Though born in London, I have spent, for over 5o years, all available...
THE LIBERAL PARTY
The SpectatorSIR, âThere is I have thought for some time no striking difference between Tory Reformers and Liberals in Home Policy. The question to my mind is who should join who (or...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorINTERNATIONAL TRADE Snt,âIn your editorial " . The Washington Talks " of September 14th, I find the following statementâ" It (the Ottawa Plan) has produced an expansion in...
RATIONAL FARMING
The SpectatorSIR,âIf Mr. Heckstall-Smith feels he can produce oats to compete in price and quality with Norfolk and Aberdeen, or potatoes with the Carse of Gowrie and Cumberland, or sheep...
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BIRD BEHAVIOUR " Sm,âMr. A. F. C. Hillstead replied (in
The Spectatoryour issue of September 7) to my review of his book The Blackbird. It is clear that while he and I may share each other's respect, we do not share the same views on the nature...
Ste,âMr. Bohn in his reply (September 15th) to my letter
The Spectatorof the 7th inst. fails to distinguish between a retailer of essential food commodities and a sale of property b3t, auction. The shopkeeper is compelled to sell any goods, not...
SIR,âThe letter headed " Starving Germany " in your issue
The Spectatorof Septem- ber 14 contains the statemeni: " It is not in accordance with the tradi- tions of this country to let childrenâeven the children of ex-enemies- starve." I would...
A CONSUMERS' LEAGUE SIR, âDo we not need a Consumers' League?
The SpectatorThere are so many things, not merely commodities of all kinds, but public and other services, trans- port, broadcasting, &c., in which the suppliers, employers and employees,...
THE BLIND GIRL
The SpectatorSIR, âI had hoped that some poet would write a worthy appreciation of Judyth Monnickendam's arresting poem " The Blind Girl" in your issue of August zoth. As one who enjoys...
STARVING GERMANY Snt,âMr. Harold Nicolson's article is a most moving
The Spectatorappeal, tempting one to send the required post-card to the distinguished body of men and women sponsoring the " Save Europe Now " appeal. May I try to show another side of this...
THE HOUSE PRICE RACKET Sm,âHouse-owners are not necessarily rapacious profiteers.
The SpectatorI happen to own a house on the borders of Middlesex and Hertfordshire. It has been used by the Army for most of the war period, and is now occupied by four families. I am unable...
R.A.F. TRAINING
The SpectatorSta,âHaving read your correspondence upon this subject, may I add a few suggestions based upon by personal experience. Unless a trade of "Education Instructor," carrying...
THE ATTRIBUTES OF SCIENTISTS
The SpectatorSnt,âMr. Barr asks for an explanation of some words used by myself in a review of fiction in your columns, " . . the very attributes of scientists, which make for the common...
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Italian Problems
The SpectatorMR. MACARTNEY'S book on this crucial and topical subject had unfortunately to be written before the liberation of Northern Italy, the more vigorous and serious part of the...
BOOKS 014 THE DAY
The SpectatorKipling Rudyard Kipling. A New Appreciation. By Hilton Brown. With a Foreword by Frank Swinnerton. (Hamish Hamilton. 10s. 6d.) IT is a singular fact that Kipling has fared...
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Man and Woman
The SpectatorA Psychologist Looks at Sex. By H. L. Philp, Ph.D. (Hutchinson. 8s. 6d.) A Psychologist Looks at Sex. By H. L. Philp, Ph.D. (Hutchinson. 8s. 6d.) " SEX " is a word nowadays...
Rebuilding Devastated Russia
The SpectatorA PUZZLING thing about Soviet reports on the areas of Russia liberated from the enemy is the reiterated accusation that the Germans destroyed factories, power-plants, public...
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A New Writer
The SpectatorBy Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept. By Elizabeth Smart. (Editions Poetry London. Nicholson and Watson. 6s.) IT would perhaps be easy to criticise this bookâand it...
Fiction
The SpectatorTHIS week's fiction all comes from America. Robert Ardrey, who made a name for himself with a single play, Thunder Rock, has now produced a first novel, World's Beginning. It is...
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THE SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. 341 to - Beak Token for
The Spectatorone guinea will be awarded to the tender of the first correct solution of this week's crossword to be opened after noon on Tuesday week, October 2nd. Envelopes should be...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 339
The SpectatorSOLUTION ON OCTOBER 5th The Winner of Crossword No. 339 is CAPT. C. B. CAMPBELL, M.C., 28, Victoria Avenue, Harrogate.
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COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorTo see good food destroyed on a large scale gives a very melancholy feeling, especially at a period when food is not plentiful. The farmer loses his money and has wasted his...
A Playful Crime
The SpectatorWalking last week in the beautifully treed garden of a country house, I came upon two trees that were apparently in the sere and yellow leaf. Every leaf on a vigorous young...
Parasols and Morel
The SpectatorAre we gradually becoming a little more catholic in our taste for that delectable and most wholesome form of food which has the pleasant names of mushroom and toadstool, and the...
In My Garden The harvest festival approaches, and the village
The Spectatorin general sends fruit and vegetables first to decorate the Church, and then to supply the cottage hospital. One of my contributions will be a pumpkin of Falstaffian...
Shorter Notices
The SpectatorTrollope, A Commentary. By Michael Sadleir. (Constable. 10s.) IT is fortunate that Mr. Michael Sadleir has been able to persuade Messrs. Constable, over whose activities he...
Unsweetened Heather
The SpectatorEvery day I have walked about a heather-covered common, and, so far as I can remember, have never yet seen a hive bee enjoying the crop. Yet the species of heather is the ling,...
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COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorSIR ISAAC' PITMAN AND SONS, LTD. AN ENCOURAGING YEAR THE forty-ninth annual general meeting of Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons, Limited, was held in London on September 14th. Mr. I....