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NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT HE American Government's appeal for an immediate truce in Palestine deserves more support than it is likely to receive. Unfortunately, it is not possible to arrange for a...
Russia in Germany
The SpectatorThe arbitrary action of the Russian authorities in Berlin in imposing drastic restrictions, in flagrant violation of the Potsdam Agreement, on Allied and German traffic into and...
Decision for Italians
The SpectatorLong before the Italian elections came to be regarded as a phase in a struggle between East and West it was clear that they would decide not only the composition of the next...
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The Uncontrollable Atom
The SpectatorFrom the day in June, 1946, when Mr. Gromyko told the United Nations Atomic Commission that its decisions must be subject to the agreement of the. Security Council, and...
Hope from France
The SpectatorSo many unsuccessful attempts have been made to push French prices down from above that the news of one or two of them falling of their own accord seems a little too good to be...
Pause After Havana
The SpectatorIt is likely that at least a year will pass before the charter of an International Trade Organisation of the United Nations, agreed by the representatives of 53 countries at...
The Press and Monopoly
The SpectatorA United Nations Conference on freedom of information can easily be little better than a farce under the conditions existing in Europe. Certainly the speeches of Mr. Hector...
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AT WESTMINSTER
The SpectatorTUST before Easter circumstances moved me to give thought j to the difficult question of style in Parliamentary speaking. The circumstances in themselves were entirely pleasant,...
The Civil Service and Communism
The SpectatorThere is little to quarrel with in the considered statement on Communists in the Civil Service made by the Prime Minister in the House of Commons before Parliament adjourned for...
A Fixed Easter ?
The SpectatorIn stating the Government's attitude in regard to a fixed Easter (discussed in an article in The Spectator last week) in the course of the adjournment debate in the House of...
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POWER BEHIND U.N.O.
The SpectatorO N both sides of the Atlantic the familiar controversy between Russia and most of the other members of the United Nations is in progress. At Lake Success the British and...
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I am not a music-hall addict. It must be ten
The Spectatoryears since I last visited one of these nobly-named institutions, as Mr. Chesterton called them. That, no doubt, is why I failed to appreciate the much- advertised Miss Martha...
The number of persons in the world who apparently attach
The Spectatorno importance to their own name is incredible. Again and again I get letters quite tolerably written—and in any case the context usually clarifies what is obscure—culminating in...
Re-reading Greville during Easter—like Boswell, he fits every mood. and
The Spectatorevery season—I came on the record of an odd conversa- tion between Louis XVIII and the Duke of Wellington. Louis, the Duke told Greville, had an astonishing and accurate...
The fact that an experiment is laudable does not necessarily
The Spectatormean that it succeeds. It will be a thousand pities if the gallant endeavour of EDAC (Education for Action and Leisure) to provide good music " at cost price " fails to achieve...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorA PPROVAL of the steps the Government is taking regarding Communists in the Civil Service is sufficiently widespread to make any elaborate defence unnecessary. If anyone doubts...
Considering how I could most becomingly comment on last week's
The Spectatorrecord Boat-race—having myself certain affiliations with the victors— I find the problem satisfactorily solved by an Oxford colleague, who tells me (and vouches for the fact)...
During Easter I was sent to buy a cauliflower (or
The Spectatorpossibly broccoli). For what was described as a medium-sized specimen I was asked more than one and a half times the value of a week's meat ration. The relationship, translated...
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THE ISSUES AT BOGOTA
The SpectatorBy GEORGE BRINSMEAD p AN-AMERICA is now in conference at Bogota. The discussions will provide a severe test for Mr. Marshall and his colleagues. The future role of Latin...
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HIMSELF THE GREEK
The SpectatorBy C. M. WOODHOUSE Both their Greeks were terrible; Barba Niko's English was fluent by comparison. Or rather his American was fluent ; for he was one of the Brooklidhes, one of...
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PRAGUE AND FRANKFORT
The SpectatorBy W. H. EDWARDS I N recent weeks German democrats have been subjected to two heavy shocks. Modern medical therapy has discarded the nineteenth-century conception that every...
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KREMLIN POLICY
The SpectatorBy G. B. THOMAS T HERE is nothing new or surprising about the hostility of the Kremlin to the conception of Western Union. It is not the product of post-war complications ; nor...
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PROJECTION OF DECADENCE
The SpectatorBy T. C. SKEFFINGTON-LODGE, M.P. A RE we decadent ? Joad has written a book to prove that we are. I am prepared to admit that he establishes his case. That, however, is not...
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MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON H ISTORY, we are assured, never • repeats herself : but she does furnish us with certain analogies and from these, if we are careful, we can derive...
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CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorTHE THEATRE c. Dark Eyes." By Elena Miranova and Eu g enie Leol a tovich. (Strand.) IN the days before honest citizens began to lie awake at night wondering what goes on behind...
THE CINEMA
The Spectator" Escape." (Marble Arch Pavilion and Gaumont.) "Snowbound." (Odeon, Marble Arch.) — " Spring in Park Lane." (Empire.) MR. JOHN GALSWORTHY'S Escape has once again been filmed,...
" The Happiest Days of Your Life." By John Di g hton.
The Spectator(Apollo.) QurrE why, in these post-war days, St. Swithin's School for Girls should find itself billeted on Hilary Hall School for Boys is never Made plausible, but the art of...
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THE GATE
The SpectatorIs the moon in the pond As real as the moon in the sky ? Is the gleam on the gate beyond As real as Or the hush As the owl'i cry ? H. H. BASHFORD.
A Partridge Farm Some years ago a partridge farm was
The Spectatorbrought into being—by the LC.I.—to increase the stock of this most interesting bird. Quite apart from its prime object, which presumably was to increase the use of cartridges by...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorWHEN I said something to an old type of agricultural worker about the beauty of the weather, his response was : " We shall want our greatcoats in June." However, after this...
Hawks and Game On the general subject of hawks and
The Spectatorgame some peculiarly interesting evidence has been supplied by one of the small but by no means extinct bands of hawkers. One expert was called in to defend our airmen. Birds...
MUSIC
The SpectatorSINCE 1893, when Verdi's Falstaff appeared, the fat knight has had -a good musical sun. Elgar started in 1913 with his symphonic study, and then came Hoist with his folk-song...
THE
The SpectatorSPECTATOR SUBSCRIPTION RATES :- 52 weeks. d. 26 weeks. f s. d. Great Britain and Overseas by ordinary mail 1 10 0 15 0 Air Mail to Members of the Forces in any part...
In the Garden
The SpectatorA country gardener said to me the other day: " So long as you've plenty of carrots and onions you can always make a stew." It would be wrong, of course, to belittle green...
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Sit,—There is one aspect of the present position which seems
The Spectatorto have been overlooked, and which to the outside layman appears fundamental. It is urged against the B.M.A. that the present scheme differs little " in principle " from that...
THE L.C.C. AND PUBLIC SCHOOLS
The SpectatorSuz,—Many parents and other members of the public will share Janus's disappointment that the L.C.C. has seen fit to reject 270 of the boarding places in independent schools...
A NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE
The SpectatorSIR, —In the excitement of witnessing the battle between the Minister, of Health on one side and the doctors and dentists on the other, the public, for whom the Health Act was...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorTHE INFORMATION FAMINE SIR, —Janus quotes approvingly some of the points made in a long letter censuring the British Press and radio by Mr. Walter H. Cummins, an Australian...
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" THIRD FORCE IN CHINA "
The SpectatorSIR,—I do not wish to prolong this discussion with my friend, Mr. Tony Gibson, unless it may serve to clear all our minds on the complicated situation in China. Neither of us is...
"YOUR MOST SWEET VOICES "
The SpectatorSIR,—I read with great interest and admiration my old friend Mr. Harold Nicolson's brilliant description in your issue of March 19th of his sufferings as a Parliamentary...
" DUBLIN AND PLENTY "
The SpectatorSIR, —As a constant reader and admirer of your paper, I am both amused and annoyed at the articles which have appeared in it from time to time on the subject of Ireland. This...
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J. L. GARVIN
The SpectatorSun,—Mr. Wilson Harris, in his review of my sister's book (3. L. Garvin: A Memoir), in your issue of March 5th, published a number of state- ments concerning my father which are...
NEWS EMBARGOES
The SpectatorSiat,-*-The Public Relations Officer of the B.M.A. scarcely displays in argument that urbanity and good-humour one would expect from " an old Manchester Guardian hand." I sought...
" SHOULD FARMERS COMBINE ? "
The SpectatorSut,—Having been very intimately connected with the agricultural co- operative movement from soon after the end of the first world war up to the present time, I was very pleased...
" BUILDING SECURITY "
The SpectatorSix,—Your leading article in The Spectator of March 19th presents an admirable analysis of the existing threat to peace and freedom. But what remedies does it propose ? You...
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Problem for the Democrat
The SpectatorThe Free Society. By John Middleton Murry. (Dakers. 12s. 6d.) THIS book is a portent. Its author, once a well-known pacifist, now revives the old discredited slogan of the "...
BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorTraditions of Civility NOBODY who knows anything about Sir Ernest Barker can think of him as living in retirement. The habits of a lifetime and a strong and urgent sense of...
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The Cultivation of Joy
The SpectatorTHESE are two books that it is impossible to review in the orthodox manner. They are collections made deliberately to illustrate a faith. It is that faith which is the important...
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Victorian Art Critics
The SpectatorA Century of British Painters. By Samuel and Richard Redgrave. (Phaidon Press. 10s. 6d.) Tuns book is a classic, and there is every reason why it should be, since it is highly...
Unmemorable Epigrams
The SpectatorTHE late Professor Hudson opens his book by quoting an epigram on epigrams: " The epigram is a witty kind of writing—though not all who write it are witty." And, he adds, not...
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Fiction
The SpectatorIT is so difficult nowadays for a novel not to deal in some form or other with the sickness of our time (the lack of a satisfactory integrating symbol, myth or faith) that one...
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SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 469 iedu I IR SOLUTION ON
The SpectatorAPRIL 16th The winner of Crossword No. 469 is: THE HON. MRS. HormE, Chelsea House, Beaconsfield.
"THE SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 471
The Spectator[A Bask Token . for one guinea will be awarded to the sender of the first correct solution cif this week's crossword to be opened after noon on Tuesday week April 13th....
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT By CUSTOS IT says a good deal
The Spectatorfor the toughness of investment morale in these uncertain times that with a Crippsian Budget looming ominously near industrial share prices are as steady as a rock. So far from...