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Mr. Acheson
The SpectatorDo Senators McCarthy, Hickenlooper and Wherry, who are now leading an almost incredible attack on the reputation of the United States Secretary of State; Mr. Dean Acheson,...
Unrest in Italy
The SpectatorLand reform is a subject which has agitated Italy fairly con- tinuously since the days of the Gracchi, and it is perhaps a little unreasonable to expect Signor de Gasperi to...
NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT HE eagerly-awaited White Paper on the Seretse dispute contains . virtually nothing new at all. As a contribution to discussion it is of negligible importance compared with the...
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The Answer to Violence
The SpectatorThere can be no real ground for challenging the Government's decision, announced by the Lord Chancellor, not to reintroduce corporal punishment after having abolished it in...
Food Is What You Eat
The SpectatorThe election of a new Parliament and a change of heads at the Ministry of Food provide a suitable occasion for enquiring exactly what this Ministry is supposed to be doing....
Malaise in Malaya
The SpectatorIt has been apparent for some time past that the situation in Malaya, so far from being (as seemed a year ago to be the case) precariously stabilised, is deteriorating. A Gurkha...
European Payments
The SpectatorIt is commdn sense to assume that, satisfactory progress having been made in the recovery of European production and the immediate integration of the separate national economies...
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A Symbol of Gratitude
The SpectatorNo single word can be needed to commend the National Thanks- giving Fund inaugurated by the Lord Mayor's broadcast on Tuesday evening. The object makes its own irresistible...
AT WESTMINSTER
The SpectatorW ITH the estimates of the three services under discussion in the Commons and the debate on flogging in the Lords, Parliament this week left behind the tension of the first ten...
The G.P.'s Future
The SpectatorOur contemporary, The Lancet, publishes this week a report of very considerable interest of an enquiry conducted by a young Australian doctor, Dr. J. S. Collings, at present a...
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A RETURN TO ARMS
The SpectatorT HERE has been no marked public reaction to the debates on defence which have occupied the House of Commons last week and this. No good reason for this appearance of...
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Mr. Aneurin Bevan seems to have endeavoured to talk sense
The Spectatorto the Press about the Press last Tuesday, but at points the effort broke down. What, for example, is the point of asking, why should the public not know where the editor of a...
The retirement of Sir Alexander Cadogan from the post of
The SpectatorBritish member of the United Nations Security Council brings to an end a distinguished diplomatic career and a most notable record of public service. Quiet, firm, invariably...
There is an element of comedy in the application of
The SpectatorCol, Morris, the recently elected Labour M.P. for Sheffield Neepsend, for the Chiltern Hundreds, in order to provide a safe seat for the unseated Sir Frank Soskice. Questioned...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorT HE exact date when the statue of Lord Oxford and Asquith will be placed in the Members' Lobby of the new House of Commons has not been fixed, but to know that it will at any...
* * * *
The SpectatorDoes cup-tie fervour produce a form of hysteria - ? The question is worth considering seriously. Observe what took place in Liver- pool, last Sunday. Tickets were being issued...
Nothing could be more galling for the British motorist than
The Spectatorto be told he can hope for no relaxation of the harsh restrictions imposed on him in the matter of petrol, while in every other European country petrol is completely unrationed,...
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Operation in a Gale
The SpectatorBy ROBERT WAITHMAN Washington T HE kind of admiration that is normally felt for a ship's doctor who performs a delicate operation while the ship is rolling and pitching its way...
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The Faithful Servant
The SpectatorBy LAURENCE HOUSMAN (In her private sitting-room at Balmoral Castle (April, 1883) the Queen is going through her daily correspondence ; and, on this occasion, her favourite and...
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Christopher Fry
The SpectatorBy STEPHEN SPENDER D URING the past twenty years we have seen a surprising revival of English gifts in arts which had seemed dead since Elizabethan times.• The most astonishing...
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Reaching the Public
The SpectatorBy Dr. CHARLES HILL, M.P. Q U1TE early in the General Election campaign I formed the impression—and almost every canvasser made the point —that a high proportion of voters had...
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proposition to put to the clerk, find yourself behind a
The Spectatortraveller with the most complicated needs. But this is nothing to the agonies of getting attention at an American air terminal. For the clerks .are always on the phone making...
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I have just returned from a motoring trip to Switzerland,
The Spectatorunder- taken with a view to ascertaining at first hand how prices and general conditions on the Continent are shaping for the 1950 season. It appears that the British tourist is...
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T WO Sundays ago, in another place, I wrote a review
The Spectatorof Denton Welch's posthumous and memorable book A Voice through a Cloud. I mentioned, almost incidentally, his invectives against the administration of our public hospitals and...
* * * *
The SpectatorOn the one hand, it is obvious that any person who is sufficiently ill or injured to be taken to hospital must be in an abnormal state of mind. He is bound to become excessively...
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CINEMA
The Spectator46 The Beautiful Blonde from Bashful Bend." (Odeon, Marble Arch.)--" South of St. Louis." (Warner.) WESTERNS, those simple unfrustrated sagas of manly men and womanly women,...
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accompanying the voice or in the ritornelli, preludes and postludes.
The SpectatorTo know such a work as Die Winterreise means to know it, in every sense, by heart. Herr Hotter's dependence cn his copy was therefore disquieting, and was, in fact, matched by a...
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DO PILOTS TALK T.I.P
The SpectatorThose swooping palms, those turning wrists, more eloquent than words when flying men foregather . . . do they refer to TI ? Rarely, if you put it like that. But when you...
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Report by C. E. Vulliamy
The SpectatorI set this competition with a few misgivings, fearing that a Rhadamanthine decision would not be a very congenial exercise. But the task of reading the entries, though...
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CD CD JOHN STEWART COLLIS *The.Triumph of the Tree
The Spectator12s. 6d, M. M. MAHOOD *Poetry and Humanism 16s. ISOBEL RYAN *Black Man's Country Published POPSKI'S PRIVATE ARMY 'A work of outstanding literary merit.' Observer. 'A...
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The SpectatorPLAYS LAURENCE HOUSMAN The Family Honour Frontispiece. 8s. 6d. PETER USTINOV Plays about People To be published in May. 9s. 6d. Recent novels *There's no Home by ALEXANDER...
editor, Philip Graves. Illustrated. 12s. 6d.
The SpectatorEMILY HAHN: England to Me 'With uninhibited good humour Miss Hahn reports on British morals, British manners, and a certain very British Major.' New York Times. The Evening...
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But, despite these defects, here is a lively, intelligent and
The Spectatormost attractive version of the story of France, full of scholarly learning and penetration, and spiced with wit and the telling phrase. Some of M. Maurois's judgements are...
M. Maurois's method is to tell his story in some
The Spectatorsixty short consecutive chapters, each of which is a kind of essay on a minor theme, interspersed with occasional sweeping general surveys of broad development. It is an...
brilliantly supplies."—New Statesman. 12s. 6d. net.
The SpectatorFICTION THE EDGE OF DOOM By LEO BRAD Y Winner of the Annual Golden Book Award of the Catholic Writers' Guild. • " An impressive outing to the Graham Greene country."—Evening...
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THE HOLIDAY LIBRARY
The SpectatorRecent additions : NOW EAST, NOW WEST, by Susan Ertz ; CHEERFUL WEATHER FOR THE WEDDING, by Julia Strachey. 6s. each
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The SpectatorTHE CHOKECHERRY TREE The latest novel from an author whose work is said to be on a level with the early novels of Sinclair Lewis and Sherwood Anderson. lOs 6d net INTRODUCTION...
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My Time, My Life George Camden A remarkable first novel
The Spectatorof love, toil, and terror in London's East End during the blitz-terse, swift, and utterly convincing. 8s. 6d. net First 6 vols. obtainable at all bookshops The New 1949-50...
17full-page plates. 2nd impression. 9s. 6d. net WINDOWS UN THE
The SpectatorWORLD SERIES Print v■hirli these titles base been selected are !nisei hooks uith a difference. 'limy are indispensable companions no journeys abroad, and make ideal rending for...
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The SpectatorITALIAN PAGEANT DEREK PATMORE The Italian cities of Tuscany and Umbria have a charm and beauty to which the author has done full justice. A book of personal impressions of...
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The Life of Benvenuto Cellini written by Himself (Phaidon Press.
The Spectator10s. 6d.). Though written between 1558 and 1562, this auto- biography—the only autobiography of a Renaissance artist—was not published until 1728 and was first translated into...
I cannot conclude without a reminder that Mr. Desmond MacCarthy's
The SpectatorPortraits has been re-issued by MacGibbon and Kee at 10s. 6d. This is a book of good reading for anyone at all interested in literature—and literature for Mr. MacCarthy means J....
Formal Spring : French Renaissance Poems. With Translations by R.
The SpectatorN. Currey. (Oxford University Press. ios. 6d.) THE chief distinction of this bilingual volume lies not only in the excellence of Mr. Currey's translation but in its lack of...
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War in Three Dimensions. By Air Vice-Marshal E. J. Kingston-
The SpectatorMcCloughry. (Cape. los. 6d.)
own hints show that artifice and elaboration are his if
The Spectatorhe wants them. But he knows too that, in a book of this kind, it is direct simplicity and natural progress that count most. Where he could shape a tale or conversation he...
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The Spectatorgroup of Educational Institutions known RS THE SEELY OAK COLLEGES. Its aim is, to give men and women from manycountries and with a great variety of out look, an Y OUNG Lady...
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The Spectatorat Cardiff,' Duties include preparation and editing of announcements, accurate timing of pro- grammes and taking charge of speaker s and artists at the microphone . Eseentiai...
EMOVALS by highly • Sates Method of visual re-education sight-traintn_g
The Spectatorcan obtain particulars 10. the BATES PBACTITIONERS ASSOCIATION, Harcourt, House. 19a. Cavendish Square, W.1. FOR D SALE, a small quantity Readers 1 4 Diest. Complete years,...
I/00Ks. Catalogue No. 552 containing I t , 13110 books for sale
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The SpectatorW.1. provides training for High Grade Secretarial Posts and has few vacancies left for 1950/1. S PAIN AND PORTUGAL. - Sommer Courses in Santander (August) and Coimbra...