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Geneva The best of the news about lndo-China this week
The Spectatoris that in Geneva the Communists have agreed to discuss a cease-fire in advance of a political settlement. In Hanoi, on the other hand, the situation (discussed in the following...
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During his recent visit to Ankara, President Tito proposed 4
The Spectatorthat the treaty of friendship and co-operation, signed at Ankara in February, 1953, between Greece, Turkey and Yugo- slavia, should be turned into a military alliance. There is...
Locking the Stable Door
The SpectatorGerman rearmament has been classed with teetotalism and pacifism by the national executive of the Labour Party. S° Bevanites and others opposed to the party line on this great...
Sir Hubert Houldsworth did his best to put a good
The Spectatorface on it, but there was no disguising the fact that the National Coal Board's report for 1953 was disappointing, to say the least. Fro" duction dropped, for the first time...
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Th e Achievement of Billy Graham The Archbishop of Canterbury gave
The Spectatorhis blessing to 120,000 people gathered at Wembley Stadium last Saturday. He, with the Moderator of the Free Church Council, the Lord Mayor of London and other eminent people...
Mr. Stravinsky Waits Without
The SpectatorThe foreigner who comes to labour in our midst must not forget his labour permit—not even if he is one of the world's greatest composers come to be honoured by the Royal...
AT WESTMINSTER
The SpectatorHO'S up ? " It is the most flattering question that can be asked at Westminster. Towards the end of the debate on members' pay on Monday the magnet of a name on the ticker began...
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SAVING THE ALLIANCE
The Spectatorargument that foreigners should keep out of American politics and leave Americans to sort out their own mistakes ? In every crisis of their foreign policy in the past thirteen...
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Out - Postmaster-Generalled In January the Post Office installed in a remote
The Spectatorroom in my house (which is a long way from any other house) an extension to the telephone. When people rang me up, this instrument remained silent. The Post Office returned,...
, A yellow finger-board stuck in the hedge said "To
The Spectatorthe "emonstration ' ; I turned off the road and parked the car in the farmyard. I had known this farm since boyhood. In three Years Mr. A, its present owner, has transformed its...
Three Monosyllables Missing
The Spectator'Peterborough,' commenting in the Daily Telegraph on Lord Beaverbrook's 75th birthday, quoted from his newly published book, Don't Trust to Luck, three rules which Lord B...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorI L AST Sunday a great many people in Rome became suddenly and inexplicably convinced that the world was going to end at midnight on Monday; the Vatican had to issue a statement...
For What It Is Worth
The SpectatorCaptain Martingale, my intensely unreliable racing corres- pondent, advises me in his usual ambiguous jargon that Valerullah may be there or thereabouts on Wednesday.
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Psychiatry and Spiritual
The SpectatorIn the first part of this article, published in last week's Spectator, a parallel was drawn between the effects of some of the present-day forms of physical treatment of mental...
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A New Hope for Nairobi
The SpectatorBy JANE MEIKLEJOHN THE . police operation 'Anvil,' carried out against the Mau Mau in Nairobi during the week-end of April 25th, was not merely the latest in a series of...
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The Italian Left
The SpectatorBy JENNY NICHOLSON Ro HRISTIAN DEMOCRAT statisticians claim that l l i l They think that at the next election—which may happen anY time after May next year and in any case not...
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Indefinite Article
The SpectatorbY SIR CARLETON ALLEN, Q.C. T 0 most mortals words are given, as the cynic has said, in order to conceal their thoughts. To legislators they , are given for a nobler...
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MUSIC
The SpectatorThe Snow Maiden. (Sadler's Wells.) RimsKY - KoRSAKov'S Snow Maiden has been restored to the Sadler's Wells repertory with an excellent cast. Elsie Morison avoids as far as...
THEATRE
The Spectatorbelieve in Lopalchin's peasant origin. There is better work in the small parts: Robert Eddison's wonderfully gormless Epikhodov, Pauline Jameson's Varya, Chekhov's manag- ing...
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CINEMA
The Spectator,1 V14EN we go to see a glamorous star we expect nowadays to find her where we left her, playing more or less exactly the same role in more or less exactly the same picture and...
ART
The SpectatorSEVERAL Italian sculptors have achieved reputations since the war which have made them potent forces beyond their own fron- tiers. Post-war Italian painting is less well known...
SCOTCH SCHOOLMASTERS '
The SpectatorOn presenting petitions praying that the House would not sanction the severance of publics schools from the Church of Scotland, the Duke of Buccleuch called attention to the...
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Letters to the Editor
The SpectatorEND OF SEGREGATION SIR, -- Mr. Brogan's article The End of Segre- gation ' must interest many who like myself knew the Deep South before the First World War, when the colour...
CROFTING CONDITIONS
The SpectatorSIR.-- Many in the crofting counties and country districts of Scotland must have been cheered by Sir Compton Mackenzie's ' Side- light ' in the Spectator of May 14th. Principal...
Sus.--Strix does less than justice to an organi- sation that
The Spectatorhas helped many undeveloped countries in general, and disabled veterans in particular, by the technical advice of its medical consultants in the field of rehabilita- tion. The...
A REAL TRUMPET
The SpectatorSIR,--Rather behind-hand in my thorough reading of your - columns I came across a passage today in the issue of April 30th for which I have waited all my life to see in print....
and there are no penalties attached to offenders.
The SpectatorOnce more the time-lag, that terrible spectre in humanitarian reforms, is painfully in evidence, and, with this mutilation of the provisions against oil pollution, we are faced...
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Thermopylx 1941
The SpectatorBelong to us. He was brave the Australian Farmer, who fell there in nineteen forty-one With an oath that lashed the rock. Every pass Has to be defended once, and Leonidas
This volume on my lap endues With shiny covers crimes
The Spectatorand clues, Glossing murders. Pages bend. A chapter straggles, followed by The hypnotised and prancing eye To the revealing end.
Comrade Worm
The SpectatorIndubitably this maggot's a fly fellow; Only a narrow cousin to the worm Who knows nothing of a phoenix birth, Does not spread fancy wings and go Or multiply his kind upon our...
The patient seldom sees his fever-thart (A thoughtful doctor hides
The Spectatorthe thing away), But guesses much from what he knows in part. Knowledge of madness suffers a delay: When the mind rots, no introspective art Gives it a check upon its own decay.
A day's march at the equinox might not suffice to
The Spectatorclose our long circuit by dark, this still brick angled coil of the inmost core of the many-membered body's mortared frame, harbour for swallows, and a city's guard. We at the...
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Country Life
The SpectatorMYXOMATOSIS is again reported a little farther north than it once was, but so far it has not made a rapid advance as it may do in hotter weather. The rabbit population in my...
A reader who is troubled by weeds in his lawn
The Spectatorasks me what he can do about it. Weeds can be dug out at any season and there is no other satisfactory way for things such as dandelion, but providing the soil is not sour — and...
Sparrows Hatched
The SpectatorTwo friends wrote to give me information regarding the iticubation period of hedge sparrows which is normally twelve to thirteen days, but may extend a day or two above this. By...
Cable Talk
The SpectatorThe Cable and Wireless EFM service provides for the transmission of certain set phrases, e.g. I am fit and well," "I have been commissioned," "Twins born," etc., by code numbers...
Co-operation
The SpectatorAn amusing Story of the making of a robin's nest comes from Archdeacon G. H. Marten of the Homes of St. Barnabas, Lingfield, Surrey, who writes: "About ten days ago my very...
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 224 Set by A. M. O. S.
The SpectatorThe poems of Burns have recently been 'translated' into English for the benefit of the benighted Sassenach. Competitors are asked to comment on this event in a poem of three...
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Compton Mackenzie
The SpectatorW HEN in 1863 the news of the intended cession to Greece of the Ionian Islands was received in Corfu a deputation of citizens proceeded to the house of the Lord High...
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PROSPECT OF SCOTLAND
The SpectatorIn the pages which follow, the Scottish scene is surveyed. The main object has been to bring all the salient features into focus in such a way as to present the reader not with...
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The Growth of Light Industry By CHARLES OAKLEY S LOGANS have
The Spectatorbeen freely bandied about in Scotland these last twenty-five years but, . so far as people knowledgeable on economic questions are concerned, there has been perhaps only one of...
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Coal, Steel and Engineering
The SpectatorS COTLAND'S motiern manufacturing industry was founded upon coal and is still largely dependent on coal. From the early nineteenth century . until 1913 expansion was continuous,...
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Banking and Insurance
The SpectatorBy F. S. TAYLOR T HE Scots are alleged to possess a gift for financial management and although today the scope of their operations is dwarfed by the • mammoth institutions whose...
Power from the Glens
The SpectatorBy A CORRESPONDENT T HANKS largely to the passionate insistence of the then Secretary of State for Scotland, Mr. Tbm Johnston, the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board was set...
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The Highland Half
The SpectatorIt is an old story, but, as many of our visitors do not appear to have heard it, it may be worth telling again. By an accident of geology the Middle Ages persisted in the High-...
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Agriculture and Forestry
The SpectatorBy ROBERT URQUHART I T is possibly true to say that Scotland's two great sister industries of agriculture and forestry are living a more harmonious family life than they did,...
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ashore. We want to see them back 0 sea In
The Spectatorgood, modernly equipped vessels. Young people must again be encouraged to, enter the industry. Thus shall Scotland again provide in fullest measure the peacetime harvest of the...
Clearing the Slums
The SpectatorBy MORRIS LINDEN A T the end of the last war Scotland was faced with an enormous re-housing problem. In a pre-war survey, the Scottish figure for overcrowding was given as 22.6...
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The Case for Home Rule
The SpectatorBy DEWAR GIBB Behind such a movement there are two main forces, the sentimental and the practical. Let the En g lish reader ima g ine a movement to unite En g land and the...
The Case Against
The SpectatorBy ALASTAIR HETHERINGTON T HE case against Scottish home rule is, in short, thl l other things are more urgent. A Scottish Parliament , pleasant as it would be, is not the...
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Educational Highway
The SpectatorBy DR. DOUGLAS M. McINTOSH The pattern of Scottish education, designed by John Knox in the sixteenth century, was largely devised for the benefit of the able child. Most of the...
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Enticing the Tourist
The SpectatorBy WILFRED TAYLOR A BOUT a year ago, while lolling in an armchair as 0 a guest in a private railway coach on a track inspect journey between Edinburgh and Berwick, I sugges te l...
Scottish Universities
The SpectatorBy SIRHECTOR HETHERINGTON T HE four Scottish universities have come through . the same post-war experience as their southern sisters— emergency, improvisation and gradual...
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Ashley Courtenay tours Scotland
The SpectatorT HE ink will barely be dry on this page before I set off on my annual visit of Scottish Hotels. Clearly I cannot have any 'cut and dried' programme for, besides hotels on my...
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Scottish Theatre
The SpectatorBy MORAY McLAREN 5 a tolerable run, on the grounds that he preferred varied and 41 1 ,.teresting work in his own country, such a state of affairs means at Scotland continues to...
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14 PECTATRIX
The SpectatorLooking at Arithmetic hY PAMELA HANSFORD JOHNSON HE trouble with a great deal of the teaching of arithmetic to young children is that clever people do it: people who are very...
Helping Readers Overseas
The SpectatorSeveral overseas readers have written to the Spectator to ask if books, which they had difficulty in obtaining, could be sent to them. The Spectator will gladly arrange for...
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UNDERGRADUATE .
The SpectatorBy DE SMO ND GRA YES (Christ Church, Oxford) E VENSONG was over. At the door, the Rector stc shaking hands with the people as they left. "Good-night! "he said to me. "I'm coming...
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Party and Church
The SpectatorBy REX WARNER ILONE is too distinguished a writer to be treated with anything but respect; and so, before complaining of a kind of vagueness and imprecision which seem to mark...
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IF The Annotator. By Alan Keen and Roger Lubbock. (Putnam,
The Spectator215.)„„ f, THERE are some books, lying on the borderland between scholars% n. and entertainment, which expert and layman alike can enjoy wit,,, 11 10 Li sort of vicarious...
The World of Katherine Mansfield
The SpectatorKatherine Mansfield. By Antony Alpers. (Jonathan Cape. 21s.) I , IT is with some misgiving that we read a biography by a wr ite r . who claims that he felt a special mission to...
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The Naval War
The SpectatorWar at Sea, Vol. I. By Captain S. W. Roskill, R.N. (H.M.S.O. 42s,) op % E . experiences of the last war," writes Captain Roskill in his 4. 1 41 , 11 8 pages, "appear to...
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Danger! Men at Work
The SpectatorThe Scottish Economy, By Members of the Staff of Glasgow Wive sity. Edited by A. Caimcross. (C.U.P. 30s.) THIS is essentially a superior statistical handbook. Not manY its...
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Young Man at Sea
The SpectatorThe Adventures of John Wetherell. Edited by C. S. Forester. (Michael Joseph. 18s.) LOOKING back from the disappointments of middle-age on the adventures of his youth, John...
Eastern Windows
The SpectatorBurma under the Japanese. By Thakin Nu. (Macmillan. 12s. 6d.) THESE two books will appeal to very different groups of readers. The narrative of Thakin Nu, the present Prime...
Golf in the Library
The SpectatorHow to Play Your Best Golf All the Time. By Tommy Armour' (Hodder and Stoughton. 12s. 6d.) This is Golf. By Louis T. Stanley. (W. H. Allen. 16s.) To judge from the publishers'...
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Thunder on the Left
The SpectatorThe Vengeance of the Gods. By Rex Warner. Illustrated by Susan Einzig. (MacGibbon and Kee. 12s. 6d.) To the 'experienced reader, especially perhaps to one who has n° Greek,...
New Novels
The Spectator13howanf Junction. By John Masters. (Michael Joseph. 12s. 6d.) Bhowani Junction is so ambitious a novel that I doubt if anyone but a practising novelist will realise how big a...
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OTHER RECENT BOOKS
The SpectatorThomas 'Voting, Natural Philosopher, 1773- 1829: A Biography. By the late Alexander Wood, completed by Frank Oldham. (C.U.P. 30s.) THE late Dr. Wood of Emmanuel College,...
THIS book easily fulfils what it sets about to do,
The Spectatorand more, for in dealing with the various aspects of French life and literature in the seventeenth century it probes into the historical roots of French society in a way which...
- mans. 21s.) MRS. G. M. TREVELYAN'S Two Stories -- which
The Spectatorare really fragments from her life—all both concerned with children. As narratives they are contrasted: the first all sunn,Y domestic intimacy, the second booming Witll the...
THERE is a tendency to rem,ember Cardinal Gasquet only as
The Spectatorthe complement to Coulton, and this book's merit is to recall that Gas- quet's life was important in many different ways. From his letters and diaries, and from his unfinished...
Britain, an Official Handbook. Prepared by the Central Office of
The SpectatorInformation. (H. M.S.O. 10s.) Tms book within its own field rivals and in part replaces Whitaker as, a source of sternly factual information. It is the fifth edition of a book...
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By CUSTOS THE set-back on the Stock Exchange proves at
The Spectatorlast that a bull market, however strong, is vulnerable to bad political news. The gilt- edged market was chiefly affected and the unduly steep fall in the undated stocks...
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy NICHOLAS DAVENPORT THE great industrial problem of "manage- ment and men," which has never yet been solved in a satisfactorily democratic way, crops up again with the new...
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SPECTATOR CROSSWORD No. 784
The SpectatorTwo prizes are awarded each week - a copy of the De Luxe edition of Chambers's Twentieth Cen- tury Dictionary and a book token for one guinea. These will be awarded to the...
Solution to Crossword No. 782
The SpectatorMEMO 'a MOO OMMOMM 12000 13I2113 OMM MOM OMB III MIAMR10 1 130111P1 EI 1019MODUO MOMOOMMBOODM OM OD 20 r 1 11 1 9 171 FEI C E n MUMMIES:JO MUM° M101 - 111EVOQMO mmnomm g OMM 0...