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DELAYED OFFENSIVES
The SpectatorHE various reputed dates for the opening of Hitler's spring offensive having been successively and uneventfully passed, the e of the war still leaves feelings of expectancy...
ermany's Western -e ront
The SpectatorIn the discussions regarding the prospects of opening a western rat against Germany it has too seldom been stressed that such ront already exists and that it engages large...
The War-Planning Problem
The SpectatorThere has been severe criticism, and there is going to be more, about the organisation for planning and directing the war, and it is all to the good that the Government should...
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The Release of Civil Defence Workers
The SpectatorIt is now nearly a year since heavy enemy air-attacks on this country were frequent, and for some time the large army of whole- time civil defence workers has been...
Japan Under Bombardment
The SpectatorOn the day after the Germans had been surprised by the daring daylight raid of our four-engined Lancaster bombers on Augsburg the Japanese received an unexpected blow dealt at...
Rebuilding Britain
The SpectatorThe Ministry of Works and Buildings, like the Board of Educat is one of those departments where continuity of policy is m important, and where, it follows, one Minister should,...
The I.L.O. and the Peace
The SpectatorWhatever may happen to other organisations that have grown up side by side with the League of Nations, the International Labour Office, which has survived with reputation...
The Rationing of Fuel
The SpectatorThe Government's plan for reducing the consumption of dom coal, based on a report by Sir William Beveridge, and outlined Mr. Dalton in the House of Commons on Tuesday, has...
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LAVAL AND
The SpectatorDE GAULLE HE manoeuvres by which M. Pierre Laval has been re- established at Vichy are tortuous and sordid, but nothing is by wasting vituperation over them. The successive...
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A SPECTATOR 'S NOTEBOOK T HE official entry of our future
The SpectatorQueen into public life has been announced with just the right amount of discreet publicity. The royal children spent their early years at a salutary distance from the Throne,...
* * * *
The SpectatorMy reference last week to monoglot Welshmen has brou some very interesting letters, which I wish I had space to rep One of them emphasises the real hardship imposed on such m...
Every rule, or almost every, has an exception. Here is
The Spectatoran e of each. First, I can in no circumstances whatever make this CO the vehicle, of any charitable appeal. Secondly, the Trade missioner for Malta, 39, St. James's Street,...
Most worthy to be linked here with the first subject
The Spectatorof the Crown is another of the King's subjects, two years older than the King's daughter, Nora Caveney, the first member of the A.T.S. to be killed in action. The story, as told...
The chairman of an eminent firm of publishers was eloquen
The Spectatorthe annual meeting of his company last week on the need for paper for books to maintain the country's morale. I observe since then one of the firms the company controls has been...
An apostle of S.P.C.E. in Los Angeles draws attention to
The Spectatora good work lately done in that connexion by President Roos Mr. James L. Landis, Dean of Harvard Law School and Di of Civil Defence, gave a few simple directions lately on the...
The mention, in a New York message this week; of
The Spectatorthe arrest of two members of the crews of Swiss merchant-vessels on charges of espionage may have caused some minor surprise to persons who specialise in geography, a life on...
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PRELUDE TO ADVENTURE
The SpectatorBy STRATEGICUS HERE is undeniably a spirit of optimism in the air. If we attempt to identify its cause we find that it cannot be traced single event, but that it has developed...
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AIR-POWER SPRINGBOARDS
The SpectatorBy J. M. SPA1GHT W E have been passing through a depressing phase of the war in the last four months, culminating in the sinking of the ' Cornwall ' and Dorsetshire,' and...
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MADAGASCAR'S DANGER
The SpectatorBy J. T. HARDYMAN HE capitulation of Petain and the return of Laval to power have revived fears of the surrender not only of the French fleet but French overseas possessions to...
MARTYRED GREECE
The SpectatorBy AN ANGLO-GREEK G REECE has now been occupied by the enemy for a year. During that year her people have suffered more than any other in Europe, except perhaps the Poles. It...
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THE GUNNER-GIRLS
The SpectatorBy MAJOR D. REES WILLIAMS 0 NE by one the strongholds of male isolation have been We rather thought in the Gunners that our bastions wo the last to fall, but we were mistaken,...
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"But, No! " says Sir Robert Greig, " you are
The Spectatortaking the romantic point of view. Titles do a great amount of harm. They perpetuate class differences, and they expose us to contempt and ridicule abroad." I do not believe...
MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorN ICOLSON By HAROLD ()last week's Spectator Sir Robert Greig contributed a letter in which he advocated the abolition of all titles. He contended titles of nobility and...
e origins of the word " snob " are obscure.
The SpectatorThe O.E.D. sug- that it was first used as a slang name for cobblers, and that ter it was employed by the undergraduates of Cambridge to ate that class of their fellow citizens...
r ace saw, in a graveyard at Erfurt, a tomb-stone to
The Spectatorthe memory Frau Witwe Lokomotivefiihrer Binder." This title struck me time as over-precise, but is it so far removed from the tal, and American, habit of conferring functional,...
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COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorBIRDS have their ups and downs, and since we generally rejo the ups, it may be pleasing to believe that hawfinches are gr commoner. They have been numerous, for example, in H...
Eggs of Moorhen New sources of food are desirable in
The Spectatorwar-time, and among that may be recomm • inded, even by the greatest lover of birds, the eggs of moorhen. These birds are now excessively nume and with their increase (as...
In the Garden How many gardeners are faced with the
The Spectatordifficulty of 13 mowing in war-time? The lawn is not only a luxury. The grass is an invaluable food for both poultry and pigs. Sonic . recommend the drying of it in greenhouses....
Food Source A small country boy, aged about four years,
The Spectatorwas seen dig with a very large fork in a cottage garden, and to a passer-by engaged him in conversation explained that he was making The too-wise elder informed him that bees...
THE THEATRE
The Spectator" Full Swing." At the Palace Theatre. THE cascades of glowing colours, the nodding plumes mocking Nature's hues, the sequins glittering like the eyes of rococo birds— all these...
l'HE CINEMA
The Spectator4. How Green Was My valley." At the Marble Arch Pavilion and New Gallery. NOWADAYS it is the fashion for films to cast a long glance back to the dreams and disappointments of...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorTHE INDIAN VILLAGER six, —We have seen the rejection of the ambitious plan which Sir Stafford capps strove to bring into being with so much misplaced ability. Its failure must...
KITTY O'SHEA
The SpectatorE,—Having lived in Ireland the greater part of my life, much of what • Harold Nicolson says in his " Marginal Comment " in the issue of The Spec razor of March 27th last seems...
WELSH AND ENGLISH
The SpectatorSIR,—In your issue of April 17th, " Janus " wants to know how many monoglot Welshmen there are in Wales. According to the last census, they numbered 77,932, out of a total...
SIR,—I can testify to the readiness of many soldiers and
The Spectatorairmen, not to mention W.A.A.F.s, to attend and take part in discussions of an intelligent kind. I was asked by Mobile Entertainments Sussex Areas to organise a local Brains...
Sit—Mr. W. A. Hirst's letter in The Spectator of April
The Spectatorloth is timely. The one thing which the people of India dread is to be put into the hands of their fellow countrymen ; for of course the talking mob of• half- educated Indians...
ENTERTAINING THE FORCES
The SpectatorSlit,—It was with feelings of no little annoyance and disgust that I read the letter of " Another Private Soldier " in your issue of April 17th. I am afraid the letter is not a...
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WASTE OR WARTS ?
The SpectatorSIR,—In your issue of April 17th, page 384, your compositor makes say " . . the figure of Franklin Roosevelt= waste and all '—stan out . .." I wrote " warts and all" but perhaps...
GEORGE MOORE'S SI YLE
The SpectatorStn,—Mr. Harold Nicolson's story of George Moore has moved me see how far George Moore avoided " that " and " which" in his o writings. In less than five minutes I found this...
OVERCOATS AND RAILWAYS
The SpectatorSta,—Is not the teply to Mr. Harold Nicolson's question the threefold one of (1) Draughts, (2) Rheumatism, and (3) Courtesy? Those who travel often on British passenger trains...
SNOBBERY AND TITLES
The SpectatorSiat,—I am wholly in favour of Sir Robert Greig's plea for the aboliti of titles. But there are two points in his letter which I think call comment. The first is that he does...
A WAR OF FAITHS
The SpectatorSIR, —" Gunner, R A." writes: " Our present struggle is not—as Lord Vansittart would have it—one of peoples, nor, as Mr. Gollancz, of classes: it is a war of faiths." I must...
THE ARCHBISHOP'S NOVEL
The SpectatorSIR,—The title of the retiring Primate's novel, to which " Janus" alluded, is The Young Clanroy (not Glenroy): A RoMance of the '45 by the Rev. Cosmo Gordon Lang, late Fellow...
THE MACHINERY OF GOVERNMENT
The SpectatorSIR,-" Jana " puts his finger on one of the weakest Waces in the machinery of government when he points out the influence of the head of the Civil Service on nominations for...
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A Post-War Prime Minister
The SpectatorLord Liverpool and Liberal Toryism, 1820-7. By W. R. Brock. (Cambridge University Press: 8s. 6d.) ROBERT BANKS JENKINSON, second Earl of Liverpool, has been under- rated by...
Ireland Without Tears
The SpectatorNever No More. By Maura Laverty. (Longmans. cos. 6d.) Miss MAURA LAVERTY is a new writer, and her first book—memories of childhood in a village on the plain of Kildare—should...
BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorMore About Russia Tbe Kremlin and the People. By Walter Duranty. (Hamilton. 5s.) Ain. WALTER DuRANry has rendered a great service to all the English-speaking world by staying...
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Nutrition and the Housewife
The SpectatorFood for the Future. By Josephine Terry. (Duckworth. as.) International Comparisons of Food Costs. By Robert Morse Woodbury. (P. S. King and Sons. 4s.) IN one way, at any rate,...
An American on Italy
The SpectatorSpurs on the Boot. By Thomas B. Morgan. (Harrap. 9s.) MR. THOMAS B. MORGAN, of the United Press news agency, gas privileged spectator of Italian affairs from the end of the fi...
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Murder and Misadventure
The SpectatorClub. 8s. 6d.) Tragedy at Law is the best detective story that has appeared for some time, and at the end of the year will undoubtedly stand as one of the class leaders in the...
Shorter Notices THESE villagers lived a long time ago, before
The Spectatoreven Chaucer arrn to portray one or two of them ; but Mr. Homans, an Amen sociologist, has managed to bring together a great deal about th affairs and abilities. Under the...
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SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 161
The SpectatorV AiR i d je!Vi I ;14 T 4 11111r?. f rs! *IP IS !fili! z i is' S .. ... La 1.1 I I I Al. !.'.. . R! - r!, !ptiaINIT I - 1” ye./ ono ivE ill . 1 _ _ /1 'UN!' !aim; AR ;...
. , THE SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 163 IA Book Token for one
The Spectatorguinea will be awarded to the sender of the first correct saloon of this week's crossword to be opened after noon on Tuesday week. Emelopes ,houll be received not later than...
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The Sporting Queensberrys. By the tenth Marquess of Queens- berry.
The Spectator'Hutchinson. 158.) As a book this story of the. Queensberry family from old Q. to the present Marquess, or, alternately, from the pug. Broughton to the National Sporting Club,...
The Wonderful Dog and other Tales. By Michael Zoshchenko. (Methuen.
The Spectator78. 6d.) THESE contemporary short stories have been very fluently translated by one Elisaveta Fen, who also contributes an introduction slightly counter-revolutionary in tone....
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS AFTER a brief attempt to shake off their lethargy, markets h relapsed into inactivity. If it is true this*. Budget uncertainties ha been removed without any unduly...
The Red Duster at War. By Warren Armstrong. (Gollancz. tos
The Spectator" MECHANICS? Benches? Farms? Factories? Dammit, sir! If Bri had no merchant seamen there would be NO agriculture labourers—no benches—no farms—no factories—no progre NOTHING! "...