29 JULY 1949

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Striking by Turns

The Spectator

Almost the only concession which the workers seem inclined to make to the feelings of the Labour Government which they elected is to stagger their strikes. Not until the...

ARMS AND THE PACT

The Spectator

p RESIDENT TRUMAN is just as convinced as General dc Gaulle that the Atlantic Pact and the arming of Europe are mutually dependent. The language of his message to Congress which...

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Criminal Records

The Spectator

One of the few relevant facts which it is impossible to discover from the figures given in the Home Office's annual Criminal Statistics for England and Wales is whether or not...

Asking for More

The Spectator

News from the Paris headquarters of the 0.E.E.0 always begins as a more or less authentic "leak." The fact that, at the time of writing, Mr. Paul Hoffman, in Washington, has not...

The Steel Rush

The Spectator

The Lords having refused to withdraw their remaining 32 amend- ments to the Steel Bill, they are deemed by the Government to have rejected it, and the Government itself now...

Next Time ?

The Spectator

The most depressing aspect of the whole depressing affair is that if a similar strike were to break out tomorrow—and on present form nothing is more likely—there is no guarantee...

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AT WESTMINSTER

The Spectator

N . debate in this Parliament has had so much of the true Test Match atmosphere as the stage of the Steel Bill which was reached on Monday in the Commons. That issue could not...

Education 1948

The Spectator

Since 1948 will take its place in the history of education as the first full year in which the school-leaving age was raised to 15, it was desirable that the Ministry of...

Hopes on the Land

The Spectator

The Minister of Agriculture's admission—discovery would perhaps be a better word—that there is a crisis in the "plans and hopes" of his Department has not aroused much interest...

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RIGHT ROAD?

The Spectator

L., AST week-end's speeches by Mr. Churchill and Mr. Attlee, both on the Conservative Party's statement of policy, The Right Road for Britain, have been called, with an...

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Somewhere in the Paris office of the New York Herald-Tribune

The Spectator

there sits a sub-editor whose curious and unenviable task it is to write headlines for the cricket ncws from London. The London office does its best to ensure that he is seized...

Readers who recall the comments made—mildly by Strix, More thunderously

The Spectator

by Janus—on a rather scabrous American war-book called The Naked and the Dead may be interested to know how it has been selling. The publishers say that, although they have re-...

After lunch the other day somebody asked somebody else: "What

The Spectator

are the nicest, the most beautiful, the most inspiring words you have ever heard spoken ? " Various people recalled remarks which had given them extreme pleasure when they were...

Considering the size of the taxes we pay and the

The Spectator

regularity with which (on the whole) we pay them, the manner in which the Com- missioners of Inland Revenue acknowledge their receipt always strikes me as singularly ungracious....

A SPECTATOR 'S NOTEBOOK

The Spectator

I FEAR that I made a deplorable impression on the Russian Ambassador, with whom I fell into conversation the other night. Having in the past derived much pleasure and interest...

After receiving plans (in quadruplicate) of the edifice and a

The Spectator

great deal of superfluous correspondence having been exchanged, the local Planning Authority has granted my application for permission to erect a summer-house in my garden on...

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ITALY'S OLD TROUBLE

The Spectator

By lsillstETTA S. JUCKER Rome I N one of the last of his brilliant articles in &faille, Georges Bernanos observed that the forces which govern the world today have annexed...

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THE ROLE OF FORMOSA By PETER FLEMING

The Spectator

S PECULATIONS about the future trend of events in China generally include some reference to Taiwan, as Formosa is called out there. In the twilight of the Kuomintang's fortunes...

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MARXISM AND SCIENCE

The Spectator

By E. M. FRIEDWALD T HE sweeping implication contained in - this title at once calls for qualification. For not all scientists are Marxists— not even the majority of them. But...

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NEW YEAR IN MEXICO

The Spectator

By FREYA STARK O NE of the pleasantest places to come upon when travelling is the small provincial capital of an agricultural district, well-to-do and not important in the...

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"Mir Elirrtator" July 28, 1849 Loan ASHLEY brought under the

The Spectator

notice of the House of Common , ti state of a portion of the juvenile population of the Metropolis. A short time ago, he said, he was anxious to perceive with his own eyes what...

MY NAME IS OZYMANDIAS

The Spectator

By D. W. BROGAN I N 1910, so the story runs, Theodore Roosevelt visited Berlin and gave an audience to the Kaiser. William II asked his visitor why it was that so many American...

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DUSTMEN'S DAY

The Spectator

By KENNETH HOPKINS T the far side of the cricket field, and a little apart from the main colliery, stood a long row of buildings. These were much older than the colliery proper,...

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MARGINAL COMMENT

The Spectator

By liAR01.13 N1COLSON R. JOHN BETJEMAN, being representative of the alert generation which rendered Oxford vivid between the wars, has taught us that good taste is the most...

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ART

The Spectator

THE annual exhibition of Artists of Fame and of Promise which remains open at the Leicester Galleries until August zoth is an inexacting collection well suited to a hot summer's...

CONTEMPORARY ARTS

The Spectator

THE CINEMA Rope of Sand." (Plaza.)—" Family Honeymoon." (Odeon, Marble Arch.) — " Knock on Any Door." (New Gallery and Tivoli.)—" Conspirator." (Empire.) Rope of Sand, directed...

MUSIC

The Spectator

THERE has been great outcry since the war both for and against the State subsidising of music and ballet, and some very eminent authorities have adopted an unaccustomedly severe...

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No Rhetoric

The Spectator

Mr. John Pudney's script (very well handled by Mr. W. P. Rilla) did somehow communicate its author's intention—to convey a feeling of return to a place once visited in war-time....

Moral" Dr. Posin retained breath enough to point his own

The Spectator

moral, which he did firmly: (a) The effects of an atom bomb on a human being arc frightful; (b) There is no defence against it ; (c) The only protection is "a system of world...

A CHINESE PAINTING

The Spectator

(Late Sung) Clarity ! This bird, this branch of pine, A gull-wing cloud above the cataract : The sure, calm balance of its space and line ; The colour come exact. The heart...

Antics and Atoms

The Spectator

The indubitable oddity of the. week was reserved for television. Dr. Daniel Q. Posin, of U.S.A., gave a talk on the working of the atomic bomb. Seeing that, by way of...

Cockaignually The fifty-fifth season of Promenade Concerts opened on Saturday,

The Spectator

with Cockaigne and all that. The tumultuous applause that shivered the air is our annual disproof that the English are reserved at their meeting with old friends.

RADIO

The Spectator

IN my last notes I recorded a certain disappointment in a documen- tary feature about Holland, Men Against the Sea ; and on its heels came another documentary, Journey to Malta,...

Romance versus Realism Of Success Story, which last week enthroned

The Spectator

Miss Gentude Lawrence, I suppose it is fair to say that the title was a warning to expect romance rather than realism. The theatrical excerpts, undoubtedly, will have had great...

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THE DOCTORS' REAL WORK

The Spectator

SIR,—In this age of science and materialism it is indeed pitiful that the citizens of our country should be so misguided and misinformed on a subject of vital importance to...

THE REAL DOCKER SIR,—Having read carefully Mr. MeUish's article, The

The Spectator

Real Docker, I formed the impression that the writer was relating facts confined to the London dock worker, with whom he is so intimate ; surely he should have said so, as this...

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

The Spectator

UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER • Sia,—A curious amount of ignorance seems still to prevail as to the origin of the doctrine of "unconditional surrender," if one is to judge from the...

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ENOSIS

The Spectator

Sra,—I did not seek to defend, only to explain, "Enosis." Its use as the name of a political movement for the unification of Cyprus and Greece has no doubt puzzled many who...

SPECTATOR

The Spectator

SUBSCRIPTION RATES Ordinary edition to any address in the World. 52 week. Li 10s. Od. 26 weeks 15s. (Id. Air Mail to any Country in Europe. 52 weeks £2 7s. 64. 26 weeks LI 3s....

AN AMERICAN RETURNS

The Spectator

SIR, —I am an American returning to England after eleven years. I go back to pay my respects and to reaffirm my ancient allegiance. I shall first go into Westminster Abbey, the...

COPING WITH COMMUNISTS

The Spectator

Sia,—Recent correspondents have advocated, if only by implication, the banning of the Communist Party in this country. However tempting this move may seem, it could scarcely be...

RELIGION IN EAST EUROPE SIR,—May I respectfully suggest that, whatever

The Spectator

our political approach may be, we should be wise to try to understand the real situation in Eastern Europe today? To say, as does the author of your leader Cross or Sickle: " In...

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COUNTRY LIFE

The Spectator

As this year's harvest opened so prosperously we heard with sadness of the death of Sir Rowland Biffen, the greatest perhaps of all benefactors to English corn. His creation of...

POUGHER OF LEICESTER

The Spectator

Sui,—Wirden has already supplied the details for which Mr. Mallalieu asks. A. D. Pougher died in 1926, and there is an account of his career in the 1927 edition (Part I, pp....

Mendel 's Followers

The Spectator

Awhile ago, by an arrangement between the universities, it was agreed that Oxford should concentrate on the economic side, and Cambridge on the scientific ; and the division of...

In the Garden Onc of the present activities in my

The Spectator

garden is the rooting up of alstrurneria. This lily is a favourite of mine, but in its more common form (the newer colours arc much less rampant) it spreads outrageously, like...

RIFLES AT BISLEY

The Spectator

Sta,—David James's article, Ashburton Day, in the Spectator of July 1,5th, was ,welcome. Considering the popularity of rifle-shooting—which is much more widespread than the...

Melanistic _Theories.

The Spectator

On the subject of melanism and black rabbits, letters from Ireland assure me that it is a general belief that black rabbits, with white marks on the cheek, arc the product of a...

THE BATTLE OF SYDNEY STREET SIR, —Referring to your note in

The Spectator

the Spectator of July 15th on the "Battle of Sydney Street," at which I was present, I can say that there was a universal belief that there were three men at the outset,...

Honey Colour

The Spectator

Last week some 20 lb. of run honey was taken from a hive in my garden. It is excellent honey but dark almost to the point of blackness in the jar. A good deal of this year's...

HEADMASTERS

The Spectator

SIR,—" Ex-assistant Master's" proposal of a five-year tenure for head- masters fills me with horror. In my experience it takes at least a year, some- times two, for a new...

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BOOKS OF THE DAY

The Spectator

Two Shakespeares Shakespeare. By Ivor Brown. (Collins. 12s. 6d.) SHAKESPEARE'S devotees, Mr. Brown tells us, "have naturally seen their paragon as they want him ; that is, in...

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Autobiography of a Trappist OWEN MERTON, the father of the

The Spectator

author of this unusual auto- biography, was a distinguished water-colour painter, a New Zealander by birth, who died in London in 193t at the age of forty-three ; Sir Michael...

The Unfinished Campaign

The Spectator

The Peaceful Revolution. Speeches by Herbert Morrison. (Allen and Unwin. 7s. 6d.) MOST collected speeches, particularly those of Cabinet Ministers, deserve their place in the...

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West Indian Hero

The Spectator

Black Liberator : The Life of Toussaint Louverture. By Stephen Alexis. Translated by William Stirling. (Benn. 18s.) Toussatsrr LOUVERTURE rose to supremacy at the end of the...

1798 in Retrospect

The Spectator

HISTORIANS, even more than the general reader, have cause to be grateful to Mr. McHugh and the publishers for producing this book. No comprehensive, or even objective, work has...

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The Rise of the Canteen

The Spectator

IT is difficult to realise that there are people living today who escaped by only a few years the fate of those poor wretches who as "parish apprentices" were dragged off at the...

Americans in Russia

The Spectator

A Russian Journal. By John Steinbeck and Robert Capa. (Heinemann. 21s.) IN these days, when the Russian obsession for secrecy has reached such a pitch that Pravda itself is on...

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Fifty Years of Cinema

The Spectator

BORN a mere half-century ago, the art of the film was bound from the beginning by existing conventions of mass-cntertainment- novelettish conventions, stage conventions, the...

Fiction

The Spectator

The River Line. By Charles Mor g an. (Macmillan. 8s. 6d.) EVERY fiction writer who is not merely paying out a rope of narra- tive faces the necessity of choosing and shaping a...

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SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 538 SOLUTION ON AUGUST 12 The

The Spectator

winner of Crossword No. 538 is Mits. L. M. LEGG, 19 Allan Way, Acton, London, W.3.

"THE SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 540

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IA Book Token for one guinea will be awarded to the sender of she first correct Solution of this week's crossword to be opened after noon on Tuesday week, August 9th. Envelopes...

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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT

The Spectator

By CUSTOS WHETHER or not the Government is tackling—or planning to tackle— the dollar problem on the right lines, markets are steadily proceeding with their task of making the...