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Thanks for the Bonfire ?
The SpectatorThe British electorate had better decide, with great deliberation, what its attitude should be to the various relaxations of controls and rationing which are taking place, and...
THE AKABA ARGUMENT
The SpectatorI T was never expected that there would be many obstacles in the way of an armistice between Lebanon and Israel, since the fighting between them had never been urged with much...
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Consolidation in Berlin
The Spectator" We have been colossally patient in this matter," said Major- General Bourne, referring to the question of the Berlin currency. He was not over-stating the case. Indeed, our...
A Victory for Apartheid South Africa is, of course, a
The SpectatorDominion, and its own internal politics are its own affair, but public opinion in this country neither will nor should be content to be completely silent on the attitude of...
Confirming the Pact
The SpectatorAll the discussion on the terms of the Atlantic Pact, published last Friday, has done nothing to suggest that they need to be amended,in any particular. Firmly confined within a...
No Meat, No Money and No Manners
The SpectatorIt would require a deeply jaundiced imagination to envisage a meat situation worse than the present one. It is not merely that the British ration at rod. a week, including ad....
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Target for Communists
The SpectatorThat the Commissioner of Police should have had to request, and the Home Secretary to concede, a reimposition of the Order pro- hibiting all political processions in London is...
The Film Quota
The SpectatorThe President of the Board of Trade has been obliged to cut the quota of British films which exhibitors are obliged to show, for the excellent reason that, at its present level...
AT WESTMINSTER
The SpectatorP RIVATE Members' Fridays have provided a welcome break in the flow of Government business ; but there have been moments when the Government must have regretted their...
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COLD WAR ISSUES
The SpectatorW ITH the Atlantic Pact, designed primarily for the defence of Western Europe (both for its own sake and as an outlying bastion of the United States) on the point of signature,...
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It is something to learn that the verdict given in
The Spectatorfavour of Sebel Products, Limited, against the Commissioners of Customs and Excise is being officially considered, for on the face of it a more indefensible attitude has rarely...
Here is another which, I admit, comes near baffling me:
The SpectatorSUGAR PROBE BLAMES GOVERNMENT FOR BAD HOUSING. jANUS,
Freedom shrieked when Kosciusko fell, but I doubt whether it
The Spectatorwill so much as squeak over the exclusion from the United States of one distinguished British scientist and three other persons less dis- tinguished who wanted to attend a...
A SPECTATOR 'S NOTEBOOK
The Spectator0 NE of the most cheering features of the House of Commons this week has been the return of the Foreign Secretary . to form. On the occasion of each of the last two or three of...
The distinguished Oxford men who write to The Times in
The Spectatordefence of a famous Oxford view raise a subsidiary question which must be decided before the main issue is raised. There can be no adequate re-planning, they write, " so long as...
"Trin. Coll., Cam.," otherwise anonymous, sends me a cutting drawing
The Spectatorattention not merely to the extraordinary fecundity of that royal and religious foundation in Fellows of the Royal Society, but to the hereditary element in the achievement. One...
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NO MONEY ABOUT ?
The SpectatorBy HONOR CROOME I S there really less money in the average man's purse, or can the conviction that there is be explained away ? Studying the Economic Survey for 5949, the...
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INDIA INDEPENDENT
The SpectatorBy SIR JOHN THORNE ISITING India again this year—New Delhi and the smith, with glimpses of Hyderabad , and Bombay—I have found a welcome as warm as ever. Looking back on my...
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CONSERVATIVE DILEMMA
The SpectatorBy T. E. UTLEY HE recent correspondence in The Times on future Conserva- tive policy, to which many eminent members of the party have contributed, has resembled nothing so much...
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MR. TRUMAN'S TROUBLES
The SpectatorBy EDWARD MONTGOMERY New York, March 18th T HE United States is rapidly returning to political normal. The President and the Congress are at loggerheads ; the economic...
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Colonial Prospect
The SpectatorWEALTH OF HONDURAS STEPHEN L. CAIGER j UST before the war the Spanish-American Republic of Guate- mala issued a five-centavo postage-stamp map of Central America showing...
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"I DREAMT THAT I DWELT.. /2 •
The SpectatorBy OSBERT LANCASTER 0 F all the achievements of the late Serge Diaghileff none was more remarkable or widespread in its effects than his reintroduction of the painter to the...
SPECTATOR
The SpectatorSUBSCRIPTION RATES Ordinary edition to any address in the World. 52 weeks LI 10s. Od. 26 weeks 15s. Od. Air Mail to any Country m Europe. 52 weeks £2 7s. 6d. 26 weeks LI 3s....
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Undergraduate Page
The SpectatorSANATORIUM STUDENTS By DEREK LINDSAY (Corpus Christi College, Oxford) I N all there were seven of us—six men and one woman. Of the six men four had spent periods of between...
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MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON I WAS pleased to read in the Spectator last week Mr. R. H. Cecil's measured summary of the report on The Criminal Law and Sexual Offenders. This report...
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THE CINEMA
The Spectator` 4 The Accused." (Plaza.)—" Easter Parade." (Empire.)—"Aux Yeux du Souvenir." (Studio One.) Timl is , on the whole, kind to film stars. Although it robs them of the sparkle and...
CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorTHE THEATRE "Adventure Story." By Terence Rattigan. (St. James's.) IF Mr. Terence Rattigan needs a test of the innate vitality of his Adventure Story he must surely have found...
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SETTING OUT
The SpectatorLoth to leave, yet eager to look For what, beyond my travel, I shall at last unravel, I close all knowledge with the book, Lock the small, familiar room, And walk toward my...
MUSIC
The SpectatorI THINK that most honest people will admit that they found Wozzeck in concert form almost unbearable, because practically unintelligible. Following the text and stage directions...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorSOVIET RESHUFFLE SIR,—I hope your contributor,' Mr. Richard Chancellor, will forgive me, but after reading his article Soviet Reshuffle in the Spectator of March 11th, I am...
WORK AND PROMOTION IN THE R.A.F.
The SpectatorSIR,—The man-power shortages of the Royal Air Force have caused a considerable amount of comment during recent weeks, and as one released from that Service some eight months...
SIR,—H. G. Monro-Davies' letter in the Spectator of March 18th
The Spectatordoes not take into consideration the fact that most children are in hospital for a serious illness. If they were not seriously ill they would be treated at home by their own...
Sta,—Any parent who is so unhappy as to have to
The Spectatorleave a child in hospital can only hope that whilst its bodily ills are being tended its mind will not suffer irreparable damage. When I collected my three- year-old daughter...
VISITS TO CHILDREN IN HOSPITAL
The SpectatorSIR, —Your correspondent's letter raises a very acute problem. Parents would no doubt be willing to waive their rights if they were certain that this was for the good of the...
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CARRIAGE AND MISCARRIAGE
The SpectatorSta,—Dr. Allen is wrong. Mr. Pickwick was not unwise in taking the first cab on the rank for, according to The Hackney Coach Directory by James Quaife, Surveyor to the Board of...
RAILWAY TRAVEL
The SpectatorSnt,—When writing to you the letter which you were good enough to publish in the Spectator of March 11th, I also addressed another letter to British Railways, sending it this...
SLR,—I shall be grateful for the courtesy of your columns
The Spectatorto reply to the letter from Miss Mowat, which was published in the Spectator of March 11th, making the allegation that letters addressed to British Railways receive no...
WEATHER PROPHECIES
The SpectatorSm,—Sir William Beach Thomas alludes in his column to some weather prophecies, so perhaps the following may be of interest to your readers. A peasant living iu the province of...
ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION
The SpectatorSIR,—Our Peers have recently been discussing in the House of Lords the legal implications of this revolting practice which, established between the two great wars in pagan...
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ST. CLEMENT DANES
The SpectatorSIR,—Janus remarks that the Secretary of State for Air, being a Methodist, would have no place ip - St. Clement Danes (if it became the official church of the Royal Air Force)...
THE PENALTY OF THRIFT Sni,—May I cite my case (only
The Spectatortoo typical) to Sir Stafford Cripps as he broods over his new Budget ? Though my husband and I started our married life penniless we determined not only to pay our way but to...
PROSTITUTION AND THE LAW
The SpectatorSnt,—It seems somew,hat surprising that in R. H. Cecil's article on sexual crimes no mention was made of prostitution, a branch of, the law very badly in need of reform. Every...
THE GOVERNMENT OF LONDON
The SpectatorSut,—The following figures illustrate " the encouraging tendency for local politics to follow their own rhythm," to which Mr. Hodgkin referred in his article. There have been 69...
OFFICIAL MISTAKES
The SpectatorSIR,—The second paragraph of A Spectator's Notebook this -week con- tains the diverting implication that costly mistakes never occur in private businesses. Does Janus really...
WHAT WALES WANTS
The SpectatorSnt—Professor Gruffydd's not unsympathetic reference in the Spectator of March 11th to the Conservative Policy for Wales includes an all too common fallacy. He refers to the...
A YOUNG CRIMINAL
The SpectatorSIR,—Some weeks ago a friend of mine came to the help of a young man whose discharge book showed that he had been out of the Army only three months. There was nothing about this...
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CHARLES THE MARTYR
The SpectatorSta,—Your reviewer Canon Charles Smyth, writing of the book Saints and Their Emblems in English Churches, deprecates the omission from a list of saints of the name of Charles I....
Early Birds
The SpectatorNor are the first immigrants, such as chiff-chaffs and wheatear, early. What is remarkable is the number of blackcaps seen in the south-west. There is, I suppose, no doubt that...
POLITICAL TERMINOLOGY
The SpectatorSIR,—The Sowerby by-election figures show a percentage of the total votes cast of 53 for the successful candidate, compared with 47 for the other. In 1945 the percentages were...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorTHE arrival of spring—dated last Monday—means probably more to the cottage gardener than even to the poets. He is a diarist who does not put pen to paper. The phenomena of...
Butterfly Migrants
The SpectatorWe are all familiar with ringing birds with the object of tracing their migrations. The practice has now been extended to butterflies and moths. Many hundreds were marked last...
A NEW DOMINION ?
The SpectatorSIR,—Referring to the article on the Dominion of "Zambezia " (which I am glad to see graced with a question-mark), may one hope that in discussions of this project, which is...
CHILDREN'S BOOKS
The SpectatorSim,—Your correspondent, H. T. Ives (in the Spectator of March 11th), errs in attributing " those delightful Brownies " to Kenyon Cox. It was Palmer Cox who chose them for his...
Old Limes
The SpectatorIt was feared some years ago that the arrival of the elm disease would wipe out a very large number of our best trees ; but the plague was stayed, or stayed itself, as often...
In the Garden
The SpectatorMost small gardeners, I think, being one of them, are not particular enough about the varieties of their annuals. We sow a coreopsis or an agrostemma or, say, dimorphotheca...
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SPRING BOOK SUPPLEMENT
The SpectatorAlbert the Good The Prince Consort. By Roger Fulford. Ms.) " To me," wrote Sir Theodore Martin in the dedicatory epistle to Queen Victoria which prefaced the first of his five...
The Emergence of Israel
The SpectatorTrial and Error. By Chaim Weizmann. (Hamish Hamilton. 21s.) This is a book of absorbing interest—to the general reader as the life-story of a very remarkable man ; to the...
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Study of Mrs. Woolf
The SpectatorVliginia Woolf. By Bernard Blackstone. (Hogarth Press. 12s. 6d.) This book is all that one should require of critical writing. hill learned, sympathetic and lucid ; it is both...
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Poets on the Frontier.
The Spectator(The Creative Experiment. By C. M. Bowra. (Macmillan. 16s.) , .THE Warden of Wadham has already assessed The Heritage of Symbolism. In The Creative Experiment he brings together...
•
The SpectatorThe' German Potnt of Vie* Studies in German History. By G. P. Gooch. (Lobs-Mans. 21s.) IN this new volume of German studies Dr. Gooch has collected a number of his old esays,...
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Byron's Last Flash Poem... (Keats)
The SpectatorDion Juan. By Lord Byron. With an Introduction by Peter Quennell (John Lehmann. 10s. tid.) DON JUAN, in his several incarnations, is always a contemporary. Some of his modes...
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Cornwall Outwards
The SpectatorCornish Years. By Anne Treneer. (Cape. 12s. 6d.) Coium11.1. is still fairly remote. The period before the Great War it growing remote. Miss"Treneer has a world to write about...
A Maker of Modern France
The SpectatorFrance Pagan ? The Mission of Abbe Godin. By Maisie Ward. (Sheed and Ward. 10s. 6d.) ONE day it may well seem obvious to every French historian of our own times that the real...
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Music and Malice
The SpectatorlIvItialcal Chairs. By Cecil Gray. (Home and Van Thal. 16s.) SURELY the autobiography of anyone who regards himself as a 1 ypical Scot and something approaching a reincarnation...
The Road to Munich
The SpectatorDocuments on British Foreign Policy. Edited by E. L. Woodward and Bohan Butler. Third Series, Vol. I. 1938. (Stationery Office. 21s.) THIS first volume of a third series covers...
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Battle with Zulus
The SpectatorIT is not surprising that the Battle of Isandhlwana was in danger of being forgotten. It was fought more than seventy years ago (on January 22nd, 1879) ; the name is as hard to...
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Scholarship Unbends
The SpectatorHERE is a volume which has been long awaited by everyone with an interest either in Greek and Latin studies, or in history, or in things which continue ancient tradition within...
The Paintings of Alfred Wallis
The SpectatorAlfred Wallis, Primitive. By Sven Berlin. (Nicholson and Watson. 21s.) THE first time I saw any of Alfred Wallis's work was at the home of some St. Ives artists whose small boy...
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Shorter' Notice
The SpectatorThe Silent Company. By Remy. (Arthur Barker. 15s.) " REmv " was the nom de guerre of Gilbert Renault, a young Frenchman who, after. escaping to. England in the tragic summer of...
Fiction
The Spectator;THERE is a growing disposition to maintain that critical standards tie merely personal preference writ large. In a sense every work - Of art creates its own standards, by which...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS PERHAPS the most significant and certainly the most interesting development in- the stock markets this week was the emergence, tentative but unmistakable, of...
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1 4 ; 11 1
The Spectator■ I .:, ,4 - > 1 1/8 1%9 2' I 2/ ACROSS 1. The occupant seems to lack original grasp. (10.) 6. This fly might make a trumpeter. (4.) 9. It demonstrates objects out of all...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 520 SOLUTION ON APRIL 8th.
The SpectatorThe winner of Crossword No. 520 is Miss E. C. ALLMOND, 1 Road, London, S.E.9. Dobell