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NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorHE question of the status of Formosa has been eagerly seized on by all those in this country who are tempera- mentally or doctrinally opposed to the idea of accepting American...
Back to the Stirrup-Pump
The SpectatorIt was a pity that the atomic bomb should have dominated tho debate on civil defence in the House of Commons on Monday. If war should break out the chances are that it would be...
r 9 y Suis The return of King Leopold to his capital
The Spectatorhas filled half of his ibjects with enthusiasm and the other half with gloom and irrita- on. The terms of his return are uncertain ; so far nothing has been tid to show whether...
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Let Them Eat Cake
The SpectatorIn a month's time the extraction rate of flour for the national loaf will be reduced to 80 per cent. This means that bread will be whiter, keep better, cut better, and be...
More and More Electricity
The SpectatorOne of the more curious beliefs held by Lenin was that industrial and social problems of the most intractable kind could be rapidly solved by the use of electricity. There was...
Labour on the Wrong Leg
The SpectatorThe best excuse that can be made for the resolutions for the Forty-ninth Annual Conference of the Labour Party, published this week, is that they were drawn up before the attack...
Technicians for the Forces
The SpectatorOn the eve of the defence debate in the Commons some light was shed on the position regarding technicians in the Forces. The light, it is true, was not very strong, and the...
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ntiques for Export
The SpectatorThe fine-art trade—the great auctioneers and the dealers in tiq ties and works of art—awaits with some interest the results of Stafford Cripps's recent promise to review the...
AT WESTMINSTER
The SpectatorT HE adjournment prompts some thoughts on Ministers' fortunes during the session. Only one Cabinet Minister's reputation stands higher now than it did at the beginning of the...
If Ever I Grow to be Old "
The SpectatorTo become a literary legend it is not essential to be old, but ere is no denying that age helps. Mr. Shaw, who on Wednesday lebrated his ninety-fourth birthday, and Mr. Belloc,...
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WAR CABINET ?
The SpectatorS INCE the day when the North Korean forces crossed the 38th parallel a whole range of authorities have asserted, in tones varying from confidence, through hope, to panic. that...
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A lot of the resolutions are pure verbiage, a few
The Spectatorare sensible and constructive. But the general effect is of a large number of small- minded people with little grasp of realities, scant sense of responsi- bility,...
he fiscal arrangements in France sound more humane than ours.
The SpectatorFrench artist was recently assessed for tax purposes on an income last year of 600,000 frs., or about £600. His own impression s that he had, in fact, earned rather more than...
Owls seem to infest these notes. A reader has sent
The Spectatorme a picture of two of these birds which forms part of a full-page advertisement inserted by the North Thames Gas Board in the programme at the London Hippodrome. The caption...
I really don't know when I have read a more
The Spectatordepressing docu- t than the Resolutions for the 49th Annual Conference of the boar Party. I find it impossible to believe that the majority of British Socialists are as pompous,...
" The vast importation of tortoises finds the public, generally,
The Spectatoruninformed as to how they should be treated." This pleasing and dignified sentence, which I quote from the Oban Times, was followed by the statement that guidance in the matter...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorHE dispatch of British troops to Korea has been an obvious possibility for the last four weeks. A very easy and a very economical way of averting or anyhow delaying the decision...
peaking last week-end about the need for extra expenditure on
The Spectatorence, Mr. Strachey said : " It is perfectly possible that the burden uld be spread justly among all classes, and that the well-to-do their full proportion and share."...
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America and Mr. Truman By RICHARD LEE STROUT
The SpectatorWashington I MAGINE if you can a continental nation of 150,000,000 people ranging from Atlantic to Pacific and from Lakes to torpid Gulf of Mexico quietly composing itself in...
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ar in Korea
The Spectatory PETER FLEMING N a special communiqué issued from Tokyo on July 20th, the substance of which was reproduced in his report to the Security Council last Tuesday, General...
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Memories of Mackenzie King
The SpectatorBy SIR EVELYN WRENCH M Y first meeting with Mr. Mackenzie King remains a vivid memory. I was staying with Lord Grey at Ottawa, in 1906, and he introduced me to Mr. King, not...
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1 y a is,000 Ans y WILSON HARRIS Les Eyzies,
The SpectatorDordogne. O R perhaps 20,000. Or perhaps 25,000. The artists of that day did not date their pictures and the archaeologists of this day have not much better means for hitting...
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A Haven in Crete
The SpectatorBy BERNARD FERGUSSON T HERE is no lovelier island than Crete. From the snowy tops of Mount Ida through the vineyards to the mouths of the turbulent rivers that topple into the...
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TO ENSURE REGULAR RECEIPT OF
The SpectatorTHE SPECTATOR readers are urged to place a firm order with their newsagent or to take out a subscription. Newsagents cannot afford to take the risk of carrying stock, as unsold...
DERGRADUATE PAGE
The Spectatorhange of Status J. H. MORRIS (Christ Church, Oxford) UST a year ago, when I was working as a journalist in the Cairo office of a news agency, I announced that I was going to...
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MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON A FRIEND of mine has lent me an unusual book. It is the correspondence between Paul Claudel and Andre Gide, published by Gallimard, and edited with strength...
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BALLET The New York City Ballet." (Covent Garden.) SINCE my
The Spectatorlast review the New York City Ballet has staged several more ballets new to London, the majority of which have been created by M. George Balanchine. The programme on Monday,...
CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorTHEATRE ister Roberts." By Thomas Heggen and Joshua Logan. (Coliseum.) far as I was concerned—and I realise how unkind such a gement must sound—the authors of this play lost...
CINEMA he Wooden .Horse." (Rialto.)—"" Panic in the Streets." (Odeon.)—"
The SpectatorSylvia and the Ghost." (Academy.) 'ERYBODY knows by now how three British officers escaped from l ag Luft III through a tunnel they had dug, through the course four tired...
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GRAMOPHONE NOTES
The SpectatorORCHESTRAL.—Columbia issues two of the great classical con- certos. Szigeti plays Beethoven's violin concerto, with the Symphony Orchestra of New York under Bruno Walter, and...
Road Victims
The SpectatorThe total of birds and other animals killed on the roads is considers at this season. The road-sense differs much in different species. Blackb in the experience of some...
In the Garden
The SpectatorI must confess that the range of colour in both pentstemons a petunias is new to me ; and a nurseryman mentioned that it was new him in respect of the newer French-bred...
Posta g e es this issue: Inland & Overseas lid.; Canada (Canadian
The SpectatorMa g azine Post) Id.
Alluring Mouths •
The SpectatorIt has often been noticed and said that the interior of a young cuckoo mouth is of a brilliant orange tint ; and this is held to be one of t reasons why birds cannot refrain...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorA FARMER has said that no farmer was ever ruined by laid crops. arg that these were usually heavy crops, which paid for the extra ex of harvesting. It is a brave statement, and...
"Tbe 6prctator," 3utp 27th, 1850 By noon on Friday a
The Spectatorlarge number of Jews had assembled at the House of Commons to witness . the demand by Mr. Rothschild to be sworn in as the elected representative in Parliament of the citizens...
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SPECTATOR COMPETITION No.
The SpectatorReport by Daniel Farson A prize of £5 was offered for a letter applying for admission to college at Oxford or Cambridge from one of the following, stating hr they now feel the...
The Old Poet
The SpectatorONCE, lightfoot, with what ardent vow He visited the sacred hill Summer by copious summer ! Now The days close in, but still His windows, ere the light grow dim, Open on...
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 30
The SpectatorSet by N. K. Boot" The eightieth birthday of Mr. Hilaire Belloc which falls this week, seems to be a good opportunity for considering what happened in the passing years to the...
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View of South Africa
The SpectatorSIR,—Your correspondent, Mr. Rymer, seems to have missed the point both of Mr. Ray's article on South Africa and also the statement by Dr. Schweitzer, which he quotes. Nobody...
SIR,—I am sorry to learn from Mr. Kirkbride's letter in
The Spectatoryour issue of July 21st that he did not enjoy hisjOurney in the restaurant , car. The "tavern" restaurant car in Which he travelled is one of eight which were Introduced as an...
The Examination Age-Limit
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. Jacks' letter seems to me to beg all the important questions. (a) What has age to do with mental age? Why not choose weight or height as a criterion? (b) The...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorThe Arab Refugees SIR,—At a press conference last week Mr. Moshe Sharett, Israel's Foreign Minister, declared that Israel was not prepared to take any further steps to open...
Meals on Trains
The SpectatorSIR,—Mak I be allowed to support G. Kirkbride's well-founded com- plaint about the new melancholy, depressing English railway dining- cars. Formerly one could mitigate the...
Private Patients in Hospitals
The SpectatorSIR,—Your correspondent, E. F. Davidson, does well to call attention to the injustice meted out by the National Health Service to private patients. I cannot see why a private...
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Prison for Sex Offences SIR,—Mr. Hewitt and others have in
The Spectatorthese columns denounced the laws by which " biological aberrationals" are tried in our courts and sent to prison. May we ask what these critics would like to substitute for...
The Road Slaughter
The SpectatorSta,—There is one remedy which has not been tried. Let the law provide for the automatic suspension for long or short periods of driving licences on conviction for offences...
Expulsion from Israel
The SpectatorSIR.--I was interested in the attempt by Dr. Yapou, the Press Attaché of the Israel Legation, to refute your remarks on the position of Arabs in Israel. I should like to point...
Poundbury
The SpectatorSIR,—In H. J. Massingham's review of Dorset by Eric Benfield appear the words: " Poundbury is Danish, not pre-Roman." Might I call your contributor's attention to the report of...
Ambivalence
The SpectatorSIR.—Mr. Rossiter certainly " sees pedantry where none is meant." I wasn't being pedantic about " ambivalent." Pedantry requires more learning than I have. I thought it odd to...
Father Douglass
The SpectatorSta.—The Oxford Mission to Calcutta has decided that the most fitting memorial to the late Father Douglass will be a hostel at Behala for boys employed in Calcutta, which thus...
Harvest Fields
The SpectatorSIR.—There have been two literary references in the Spectator recently to harvest fields, one querying the appropriateness of Tennyson's epithet " happy," the other quoting a ."...
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BOOKS AND WRITERS
The SpectatorGREAT dramatist, Ibsen, the liberating and tutelary genius A of what the text-books call modern European drama, and yet how hard it is to warm to him! What exactly is it that...
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The Return of Dr. Gogarty
The SpectatorRolling Down the Lea. By Oliver St. John Gogarty. (Constable. t SS.) IT was, of course, the Liffey that was lolling down the lea, though since the poet Spenser said so the...
Reviews of the Week
The SpectatorEscape Story I Walked Alone. By The Earl of Cardigan. (Routledge l find Kegan Paul. i as. 6d.) A " VINTAGE " escape story, this—one which, besides offering all the usual...
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A Soldier's Business
The SpectatorHappy Odyssey. By Lt.-Gen. Sir Adrian Carton de Wiart, V.C. (Cape. i 2s. 6d.) AT the turn of the century General Carton de Wiart, then a Belgian citizen decamped from Balliol,...
The Human Situation
The SpectatorMorals Since 19oo. By Gerald Heard. (Dakers. 12s. 6d.) THIS is a book whose title admirably indicates its contents. If con- tains a description of British moral practice, of the...
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Rural Ways and Rural Days
The SpectatorThe Curious Traveller. By H. J. Massingham. (Collins. 12s. 6d.) THE need for a reverent approach to nature has long been the burden of Mr. Massingham's song ; for his rounded...
Seventeen Cathedrals
The SpectatorEnglish Cathedrals. Photographs and introduction by Martin Midi- mann, with descriptive text by Peter Meyer and foreword by Geoffrey Grigson. (Thames and Hudson. 305.) ENGLISH...
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The French Invade Ireland
The SpectatorAn Invasion that Failed. By Commander E. H. Stuart Jones, R.N. (Basil Blackwell. 2 is.) " Tun occupation of Ireland might lead to the end of the war. Investigations are to be...
Fiction
The SpectatorA Broken Engagement. By Betty Askwith. (Gollancz. 8s. 6d.) The Desert in the Bed. By Royston Morley. (Methuen. 9s. 6c1.) Such Darling Dodos. By Angus Wilson. (Secker and....
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SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 590
The Spectator1 3" i 2 o . e S c 1p A.I'F ! 0 :E R T 7 E ' a Baca NuA Eit- , g. _.e.A.'ssg WC £ 12 p E o , 4:1_ ,V VE N N yM $3 L iik. ,, ,. mill N 10i R 5 E 'A 12 A N . E.. I D Ar4 41 N.■...
THE "SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. 592
The Spectator[A Book Token for one guinea will be awarded in the sender of the first correct solution to he opened after noon on Tuesaav week. August 8th.] ill•il•1111111•11•1111 1111 • • •...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS To the superficial onlooker the Stock Exchange now presents an odd spectacle. -While prices of existing securities drift downward there is still a keen demand for new...
SHORTER NOTICE
The SpectatorNOT for nothing is Mr. Green the assistant librarian at Merton College, Oxford, where the ancient classics are chained to prevent their disappearing, and a ghost traditionally...
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CIRCULATION MANAGER OF THE SPECTATOR Mr. A. E. Harrison, who
The Spectatorhas been Circulation Manager of the Spectator since 1936, will retire at the end of July at.his own request. He will not sever his connection with the Spectator, but will. con-...