Page 1
British Colonial Policy •
The Spectator"The maximum of self-government within the Empire at the earliest practicable time "—that, said Colonel Oliver Stanley, and not "independence," as urged in America under a...
NEWS OF THE WEEK pn 145 T is much to be
The Spectatordesired that the Foreign Secretary should from I time to time give an exposition of British foreign policy in the country as well as in the House of Commons, and Mr. Eden's...
Debates o Civil Air Policy 7 Lucid statements expoun ng
The Spectatornmenes plan for civil aviation were made by Viscount Swinton in the Houge of Lords last week and by Sir Stafford Cripps in the Commons on Tuesday. On the whole the debate in...
Page 2
Less Meat from America
The SpectatorThe Prime Minister did well to put the plain facts about the food situation in this country before the House of Commons on Wednesday. It has been suggested in certain quarters...
New Grammar School Recruits
The SpectatorOne of the immediate effects of the coming into force of the Education Act, on April 1st, is that from then on all children deemed capable of profiting from secondary education...
The Gough Case
The SpectatorIn the trial of Reginald Gough, found guilty of manslaughter, and his wife Esther sentenced to prison for neglect, much more was at stake than the condemnation of a singularly...
Plans for Some Houses
The SpectatorThere is nothing in the White Paper on housing issued by the Government this week to allay public anxiety. The estimate of immediate post-war needs will be thought by many to be...
Page 3
THE ELECTION AND AFTER
The SpectatorO NE sentence in the Prime Minister's recent speech to the Conservative Conference deserves quotation for a particular reason. " At the head of our mainmast," said Mr....
Page 4
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The Spectatorability in 1919, and he has acquired wide and varied experience since then. General Smuts, it will be recalled, was the originator of the mandate principle, though the mandate...
Page 5
THE FINAL BATTLE
The SpectatorBy STRATEGICUS HE opening shots of the decisive phase of the battle in the west may well be heard before this article is read. No one can have failed to recognise that the...
Page 6
THE YALTA COMPROMISE
The SpectatorBy DR. GILBERT MURRAY, O.M. I T was often said at Geneva that, to have a fair chance of success, the League ought at least to start in a peaceful world. The old League did not...
Page 7
" THE VICIOUS SPIRAL"
The SpectatorBy PROFESSOR A. C. PIGOU The enquiry, which covered a wide field of industry, showed a general overall increase of money earnings per head of 82 per cent. as against October,...
Page 8
CHINA AND DEMOCRACY
The SpectatorBy E. M. GULL One of the chief differences is to be found in the combination of popular representation with a distinction between political and governmental power—ehing...
Page 9
WHAT THE SOLDIER THINKS"
The SpectatorIn November, 1944, " The Spectator" published an article from a Captain in the British Liberation Army on the atti- tude of the average soldier—officer or other ranks—on the...
A RITUAL MURDER TRIAL
The SpectatorBy A SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT The story of the case, as reported at length in the Press of the colony, is briefly this. A native potentate, the Odikro (or sub-thief) of Apedwa, was...
Page 10
MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON W ALKING last week in the streets of my constituency,—wearing upon my face that fixed but ambient smile with which one seeks to mitigate by general benignity...
Page 11
GRAMOPHONE RECORDS
The SpectatorTHE - most important of the month's recordings is that of Schubert's early C major Symphony No. 6 played by the London Philharmonic Orchestra under Sir Thomas Beecham (H.M.V. DB...
"The Fighting Lady." At the Odeon.
The SpectatorTHE CINEMA IN his recent book, Presenting Scotland, Norman Wilson briefly examines on behalf of his native land a question which is of present concern to many nations. The...
• IT WILL BE SO
The SpectatorOne day, when guns have ceased to roar And once again the world is clean, The memory of these tortured years Will seem as distant as a dream; And listening to old soldiers'...
A LOVE SONG
The SpectatorMY darling, be brave, Come, live with me: I am the white cherry bough That sways over thee. I am the shining green star, In the East I abide: I am the cold billow washing...
THE THEATRE
The SpectatorTins play will appeal to the same audience that enjoys Esther McCracken's suburban comedies. It is human, all-too-human, unsophisticated and not too silly. Also it is topical,...
Page 12
VOTERS' IDEAS
The SpectatorSnt,—May I try to answer the query with which Mrs. Bentwich con- cluded her article on "Voters' ideas" in your issue of March znd? She had expressed the view that the majority...
RELATIONS WITH SPAIN
The SpectatorLETTERS TO THE EDITOR Sia,—Mr. Loveday has always taken the rosiest view of Falangist Spain. Neither Franco's declaration that he hoped Germany would win the war nor the...
A GERMAN SCHEMER
The SpectatorStn,—As one who has close business and personal ties with the Argentine, I read with the greatest interest Mr. Brandt's article in your issue of March 9th on "A German Schemer."...
Page 13
THE SAN FRANCISCO CONFERENCE
The SpectatorSlit,—May I point out in reply to Dr. David Thomson that it is only on matters of procedure that the agreement of at least two of the smaller numbers of the Council of the World...
THE PROBLEM OF LAY J.P.s Sm,—Let us have stipendiaries or
The Spectatorlet us have lay benches, but not I combination of both, reducing the lay justice, as at Quarter SessionS, to mere surplusage. Attend to the theorists, and which of our...
COALOWNERS AND COAL PLAN Stn,—In The Spectator of March 16th,
The Spectatorunder " Coalowners and Coal Plan," your correspondent Mr. Cecil F. Pike writes: "Under any cir- cumstandes the 'Foot Plan' would be infinitely better than the miners'...
COST OF LIVING Sut,—I notice in your issue of last
The Spectatorweek Flying Officer Krammer calls in question my statement that, as far as can be seen, the Cost of Living Index figure will be lower in the years after this war than it was in...
MR. HUDSON'S ECONOMICS
The Spectatoras reported, the Minister of Agriculture stated in Manchester on the 6th instant that dear food need not be a menace to our citizens with prudent legislation, he is only...
Page 14
A NOTE ON DR. GAR VIE
The SpectatorSta,—I was most disappointed to find no reference in The Spectator to the death of Dr. A. E. Garvie, one of the greatest Christian leaders of our time. A man of encyclopaedic...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorLAST week, as once before this year, I saw a rainbow of a most tm- orthodox pattern. As some of us looked towards the sun (not away from it) A rainbow quite perfect in prismatic...
FRATERNISATION
The SpectatorSta,—A very large number of people in this country would like some intelligible explanation of the strict no-fraternisation order issued to soldiers in occupied Germany. It...
WELLINGTON AND NAPOLEON
The SpectatorSIR,-Mr. Arnold Brittatn, in his letter purporting to correct Mr. Harold Nicolson, suggests that the only " contact " between the Duke of Wellington and Napoleon was at...
Page 16
BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorThe New China China Looks Forward. By Sun Fo. (Allen and Unwm. 12s. 6d.) The Making of Modern China. By Owen and Eleanor Lattimore. (Allen and Unwin. 8s. 6d.) I See a New...
The Future of Western Civilisation
The SpectatorThe Condition of Man. By Lewis Mumford. (Seeker and Vi , arburg. 25s.) Tins impressive volume is the third of a series which Mr. Mumford opened in 1934 with his Technics and...
Page 18
Sea-Power Today
The SpectatorSea-Power in the Machine Age. By Bernard Brodie. (Princeton University Press, $3.75 and Oxford University Press. 25s.) MR. BRODIE has firmly established himself among the...
Page 20
Fiction
The SpectatorRoad to Calvary. By Alexei Tolstoy. Translated by Edith Bone. (Hutchinson. 12s. 6d.) " On the Side of the Angels. By Betty Miller. (Robert Hale. 8s. 6d.) This Is the House. By...
Cardus on Composers
The SpectatorTen Composers. By Nevile Cardus. (Cape, 8s. W.) IN his love of both cricket and music, Mr. Nevile Cardus seemed in Manchester in the period between the two wars as a man born...
Page 21
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 313 SOLUTION ON APRIL 6th
The SpectatorThe winner of Crossword No. 313 is DR. J. F. S. Ross, 3, Conyers Avenue, Birkdale, Southport.
ACROSS
The Spectator.. May be worn or drunk, at the same time. (8.) 5. Most of a sad situation is that the cigar's come back. (6.) 9. An optimistic bird; perhaps it never heard of crackers. (8.)...
Page 22
Shorter Notices
The SpectatorBritish Soldiers. By Major S. H. F. Johnston. (Collins. 4s. 6d.) THIS little book is an admirable addition to the 'series of Britain in Pictures. It confines itself, except for...
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS AurHoucti it has been a foregone conclusion that Austplia would seize the first opportunity to deal with its 5 per cent, loans in London, the plan now announced for...
The second volume of this work by two eminent Roman
The SpectatorCatholic scholars has the qualities of the first volume, which was reviewed at length in The Spectator, with the difference that, having left behind the New Testament, the...