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Argentina's President
The SpectatorArgentina's presidential elections, held on Sunday, will have a decisive effect on the future of the South American continent and may have even more far-reaching consequences....
NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT HE Government's unprecedented decision to send a Cabinet delegation to India is first and foremost a demonstration to India itself, and not to India alone, that in spite of...
Changes in Egypt
The SpectatorFor better or worse—and it is a little of each—the negotiations over the revision of the Anglo-Egyptian Treaty of 1936 are to be carried on by new men on either side. Sir Ronald...
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The Belgian Elections
The SpectatorThe Social Christian, or Catholic, Party made large and surprising gains in the Belgian elections held last Sunday. They increased their representation in the Chamber from the...
Spies
The SpectatorThe suspicions and alarms created by the Canadian Government's revelation of the activities of foreign agents continue to grow and may have serious repercussions. Their most...
Combat on Coal
The SpectatorMr. Shinwell's fight for the Coal Nationalisation Bill goes on in Standing Committee. Fight is the word. The recent remark that the Minister of Fuel cannot refrain from behaving...
Hope for Exports
The SpectatorThe cheer which the Chancellor of the Exchequer received when he announced in the Commons the rise of exports in January to £57,000,000 must have caused certain misgivings in...
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GREAT BRITAIN AND THE WORLD
The SpectatorI T was full time for another debate on foreign affairs in the House of Commons, though the preoccupations of the Foreign Secretary and the Minister of State at the U.N.O....
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John Humphreys was one of the most effective propagandists of
The Spectatorhis day. He was advocate for a cause—proportional repre- sentation—which had other able supporters, some weighty and distinguished in public life, but essentially he was the...
The facts concerning King Zog's wardrobe—if they matter a stiver
The Spectatorto anyone—are being straightened out. The Times, it will be remembered, stated unequivocally one day last week that this former sovereign, who had just left England, had ordered...
No one can feel quite happy at the news that
The SpectatorSir Arthur Harris, " Bomber Harris," has left this country, apparently for ever, to settle in South Africa, without any public recognition of the immense work he organised so...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorT HE new batch of diplomatic appointments, added to others I announced in the past month, marks a pretty extensive series of changes. The chief feature of them is the toughness...
The Opposition was disappointed in a hopeful little manoeuvre on
The SpectatorWednesday night. Word had gone round that in spite of the important foreign affairs debate the Foreign Secretary was diverting himself at the ballet. The debate was to close at...
The question I raised last week about the position of
The Spectatorclergy and Free Church ministers under the new Insurance Bill has been answered in the House of Commons. Clergy and ministers, it seems, are not " under a contract of service,"...
The selection by the Secretary-General of the first members of
The Spectatorhis new staff is in a sense a test case. It must be said at once that Mr. Lie comes out of the test well. The choice of a Russian member is of particular importance, and in M....
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TORIES AND CONTROLS
The SpectatorBy HUGH MOLSON, M.P. I T is apparent from Mr. Eden's recent speech on the Goal Mines Bill that it is no part of the Conservative Party's policy to oppose nationalisation as...
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THE LANDLESS LABOURER
The SpectatorBy G. A. SQUIRES AM told that in Eire all farmer-landlords whose workers' houses I are tied to the farm and the job are legally bound to provide one acre of adequately fenced...
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SCIENCE AND SOCIETY
The SpectatorBy DR. DOUGLAS McKIE T HE citizen of our modern state, while looking to his government for the ordering and regulation of local and national affairs and international relations,...
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THE DOMESTIC PROBLEM
The SpectatorBy GWENDOLEN FREEMAN T HE Government this month has announced its intention to establish a " National Institute of Houseworkers " whose most important aim will be to raise the...
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EVE OF RELEASE
The SpectatorBy CAPTAIN, B.A.O.R. I AM drawing very close to the date of my release from the Army after six years' service, which has taken me to thirteen countries in M.E.F., C.M.F.,...
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MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON I WROTE last week about the mysticism of the Russians, attri- buting buting their ill-manners, not to any unkindness of heart, but to the moral arrogance...
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SLEEPING BEAUTY
The SpectatorHear the challenge ring From March to Spring - " You dare not wake my closely-guarded bride Who by my side Sleeps in her frosted veil, Whose cheek is pale And cold as this...
ART
The SpectatorPaintings by Eight British Artists. At the Lefivre Galleries.— Paintings by Jack B. Yeats. At Wildenstein's. THE exhibition at the Lefevre Galleries contains at least two...
THE CINEMA
The Spectator14 Love Eternal." At the Curzon.—" The Diary of a Chamber- maid." At the London Pavilion.—" Excerpts from French Fil l s." Shown by the Royal Photographic Society. ALMOST a...
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" BRITAIN'S GREATEST HOUR "
The SpectatorSts,—Other readers of Professor Rappard's article in your issue of February 8th must surely have felt, as I did, a tinge of shame in the pride evoked by the kind things he wrote...
MUSLIM LEAGUE AND INDIA
The SpectatorsiR,—It is understood that, barring a sudden change in plans, India will have a clear indication of the British Government's intentions with regard to the Indian constitutional...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The Spectator" OURSELVES AND RUSSIA " Sta,—Mr. Philips Price's article reads like a piece of blatant Soviet Communist propaganda. There is hardly a single statement which he makes that...
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COLONIAL POLICY IN MALAYA
The SpectatorSnt,—In less anxious times the disclosure by the Secretary of State for the Colonies in the House on February 54th that the Sultan of Kedah considered his signature to the new...
THE TYROL REVISITED
The SpectatorSrR,—Until recently in Italy, may I be allowed to point out a few facts relating to South Tyrol which seem to have been overlooked in Sir George Frankenstein's article? (a) The...
" NATIONALISED INDUSTRY "
The SpectatorSIR,—In his article on " Nationalised Industry," in your issue of February 8th, Geoffrey Cooper, M.P., says: " The Post Office leaves much to be desired in the standard of its...
SIR,—In your issue of February 8th, Mr. Geoffrey Cooper, M.P.,
The Spectatorstarts with the following statement: " Will public ownership succeed where private enterprise has failed in the coal, iron and steel, road and rail and air transport, gas and...
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PROSPECTS IN 'SPAIN "
The SpectatorSIR, —May I add a brief statement on the religious situation in Spain to the clear outline given by Don Salvador de Madariaga on Spanish affairs? General Franco recently, in an...
NATIONAL INSURANCE AND INJUSTICE
The SpectatorSra,—I have but recently found time to study the National Insurance Bill, and I am appalled at what I find in it. So far I have counted 51 out of the 79 clauses which...
SARAWAK'S HISTORY
The SpectatorSm,—May I, an old friend and admirer of Britain and the Empire, intrude a warning word in your pages upon the subject of Sarawak? For me and for many it is a test case. All...
RUSSIA AND THE LABOUR PARTY
The SpectatorSta,Until fairly recently, any mention of Russia at a Socialist gathering was greeted with a storm of cheers. To the conventional Labour mind, that other great nation, the...
MINISTERS' EMPLOYERS
The Spectatordo not know by what authority " Janus " asserts that " Congre- gational and Baptist ministers are the servants of their individual con- gregations," but I can assure him that he...
EMPLOYMENT AND DEMOBILISATION
The SpectatorSm,—In the course of a statement in the House of Commons on January 24th, Mr. Ness Edwards gave this assurance: " So far as my Right Hon. Friend the Minister of Labour is...
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In My Garden
The SpectatorThe popularity of that rather queer vegetable, the potato-onion, seems to be on the increase. Its virtues are preached, for example, in "Home and County," the wise little...
Jealous Roses
The SpectatorAmong light, some might say light-headed, articles in the same journal is a well-documented theory that roses and some other flowers are capable of jealousy! A yellow rose...
Winterers The general openness of the winter, which has saved
The Spectatorthe Continent from disaster, has been a godsend to the birds. The most vulnerable and sensitive perhaps are the smallest, the long-tailed tits, or bottle-tits, so called most...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorGREAT country houses which have proved too expensive for the successors of the so-called feudal lords are going begging in many parts. A new use has been found for one of them,...
PARCELS FROM AMERICA
The SpectatorSta,—A friend in California has sent me a clipping from the Los Angeles Times. It is a letter from Hampton-on-Thames referring to alleged thefts in the British Post O ffi ce of...
Flood - Victims Flood-waters on heavy lands in the Midlands have had
The Spectatorone effect which may lessen fertility for several years. In hollows where the water stood every single worm has been drowned ; and these " earth- eels," so greatly detested on...
ITS OR THEIRS ?
The SpectatorSIR,—On page 169 of your current issue you state that the term United Nations, representing a single organisation, is properly referred to in the singular and not in the plural....
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Home to India
The SpectatorHome to India. Santha Rama Rau. (Gollancz. 6s.) MISS SANTHA Rama Rau, daughter of a distinguished Indian official, was sent to school in England at the age of six, and returned...
BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorRobert Moffat's Last Journeys The Matabele Journals of Robert Moffat, 1829-1860. Volume Two. Edited by J. P. R. Wallis. (Chatto and Windus. 30s.) IN 1857 the directors of the...
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A Tale of a Fish
The SpectatorThe Swift Trout. By H. E. Towner Coston. (Collins. 8s. 6d.) THis is the re-issue (revised) of a book originally published, in 1938, as Speckled Nomads. I missed it then, but...
Soviet Economics
The SpectatorThe Development of the Soviet Economic System. By Alexander Baykov. (Cambridge University Press. 30s.) THE sheer mass of the literature on the SoViet economic system is perhaps...
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Brogan Meats
The SpectatorThe Democrat at the Supper Table. By Cohn Brogan. (Hollis and Carter. 8s. 6d.) The Democrat at the Supper Table. By Cohn Brogan. (Hollis and Carter. 8s. 6d.) " WHAT,"...
The Seventh Volume
The SpectatorFoothold in Europe. By Strategicus. (Faber and Faber. 10s. 6d.) THIS is the seventh volume of Strategicus's valuable review of the war, and another volume ought to complete his...
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Shorter Notices
The SpectatorTHE attractive Essex living of Thaxted fell to Conrad Noel in 191o. by favour of the quasi-Socialist Countess of Warwick, and as " the Red Vicar " of the headlines he held it...
What is Christian Witness ?
The SpectatorWail this translation of Kierkegaard's last work, Dr. Lowrie reaches —perhaps—the end of the labours he has expended in bringing to the attention of English and American readers...
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"THE SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 363 IA Book Token for one
The Spectatorguinea will be awarded to the sender of the first correct o h i r i on of this week's crossword to be opened after noon on Tuesday week, March 5th. Envelopes must be received...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 361
The Spectatorc . ..4 4 ■ 7 1 91IN 0 Q. I Pj‘2,P4 N T 0 AlEIR N 9ELN. 0 eiA!c1 1 e. E p41 0 m:E! :o!Liir4 - ri VS A E oPA 5 z 5. !Aq!E 2 ,4;+ E Iwo Err NC 2 i* . i4 42 lkPIE A R •...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT .% - U WI 0 WrrHour showing
The Spectatorany signs of weakness, markets are decidedly less buoyant than at the beginning of the year. Just what has caused the change it is hard to say, but probably the main factors are...