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The Terror in Czechoslovakia
The SpectatorThe pathetic illusion that anyone who doubts or qialifies the absolute dominance and rectitude of Russian policy can now survive unmolested in the East European satellite...
NEWS OF THE WEEK
The Spectator/ T is not surprising that Dr. Malan should view British colonial policy with concern. His policy is to keep the . &lean native down ; British policy, to which both political...
Duty versus Politics in France
The SpectatorNobody need be surprised at the fact that France has been precipitated into a political crisis on the subject of electoral reform. This particular threat has been hanging over...
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Moroccan Manoeuvres • General Juin is clearly being forced against
The Spectatorhis will to 'quit Morocco, where his g.rptest interests lie. Duty first called him to Indo-China ; now the summons is to the defence of Europe. He may still hope not to have to...
Twofold Relations With Russia
The Spectator• Since the middle of December public exchanges between the Western Powers and the Soviet Government have been carried on at two levels. There is the comparatively high level of...
The Italian Visit
The SpectatorThere will be widespread regret in this country if, as the result of internal difficulties following the Parliamentary defeat on Wednesday night the visit of the Prime Minister...
Delhi and Karachi .
The SpectatorThe trade agreement betWeen India . and Pakistan is of the best omen both in itself and in the bearing it may be hoped it will have on the solution of other and even more...
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The Liberty of the Z Man
The SpectatorThe many weeks of delay which preceded the publication of the Government's defence proposals, including the recall of reservists for training, were said to have been devoted to...
A I WESTMINS TER
The SpectatorT HE Government continues to lose ground in the country. The latest Gallup poll attests the fact ; other evidence confirms it. In an immediate election the Conservatives would,...
Railways on the Slippery Slope
The SpectatorLast week's agreement on railway wages does not take on a more attractive aspect as its implications and consequences become plainer. The Railway Executive decided to give way....
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THAT ADMIRAL
The SpectatorF AR better an American Admiral than an Anglo-American dispute. That being accepted, the question of the Admiral —the Supreme Allied Commander Atlantic—can be dis- cussed with...
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My solicitude for unguided foreigners in London during the Festival
The Spectatorof Britain brings certain assurances. These welcome aliens will not, it seems, be completely unguided. Messrs. Collins will be publishing later this month for the Festival...
Mr. Glenvit Hall was returning good for evil when he
The Spectatorrescued the Prime Minister from hostile questions on Monday by giving notice that he would raise the question of the appointment of an Atlantic Admiral on the adjournment, a...
So the Oxford-Cambridge coach is licensed--for an experi- mental year
The Spectatorand a maximum of 50 days in that year. It will be a highly academic coach, for no one but members of the two universities may travel in it. These at least will be spared the...
To persons who, in reply to my objections to "
The Spectatortelecon " as, among other vices, a hybrid, quote a number of similar hybrids (like parasol) I would rejoin that that doesn't improve matters at all. However, one thing does, and...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorF ROM someone who enjoys unusual facilities for studying Eastern Germany I have learned a great deal that is extremely interesting about conditions there. He confirms the common...
The London School of Economics, like other human institu- tions,
The Spectatorgets blame for some offences it has not committed and credit for some virtues it does not•possess. In which category to place the legend that the Gold Coast leader, Kwam'...
Can the college system of Oxford and Cambridge be trans-
The Spectatorplanted and domesticated elsewhere? That has never, I think. been quite successfully achieved, for antiquity is an essential ingredient of it, even the newest foundations at the...
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Manchuria as Prize
The SpectatorBy MAX BELOFF T HE announcement from Moscow on February 10th that certain properties in Dairen (Dalny) and in Manchuria, as well as the buildings of the former military...
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The Language Export
The SpectatorBy EDWARD HODGKIN T HE inhabitants of this, island will probably not be surprised, though they ought to be pleased, to learn that English is well on the way to becoming a...
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Africa for Whom ?
The SpectatorBy SIR EVELYN WRENCH R. MALAN, the Prime Minister of the Union ,of South Africa, in his interview with the Burger in Cape Town last week, raised issues of the utmost importance...
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Steadfast Berlin
The SpectatorF ROM the moment when one first plans a trip to Berlin one is in a curiously strange world. The very rules for getting there are Gilbertian, except that it is the undercurrent,...
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Tribute to Blowers
The SpectatorBy R. H. GIBBON T HE organ-blower will soon be an extinct species, for the electric blower will have taken his place. He has failed of conspicuity, beaten hands-down by the...
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UNDERGRADUATE PAGE
The SpectatorThe Well-Rounded Man S student in an American university, or institution for higher learning, I have often pitied my benighted brethren in the British Isles. For there, we...
"Me ispectator," Olarch 1St, 1851
The SpectatorLORD JOHN RUSSELL has failed to work the political machine to good purpose, but he has shown that he can bring it to a dead stop: he has broken up his oft Cabinet, apparently...
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MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON S OME years ago I read a story by Sir John Squire dealing with the adventures of an unsuccessful poet employed in the obituary department of a newspaper....
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MUSIC
The SpectatorTHE performance of Bruckner's seventh symphony by the Philhar- monic Orchestra under Furtvvangler on February 22my gave the London public one of their rare opportunities to...
CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorBALLET Sleeping Beauty was danced by the first company with a fresh- ness one would hardly have believed possible so soon after the rigours of their strenuous tour ; and...
CINEMA
The Spectator"Faust and the.Devil." (Berkeley.) Ur to Tuesday afternoon of this week there was no doubt in my mind and, I hoped, no doubt in the minds of film-producers, that canned opera...
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SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. SS Set by Richard Usborne TomAins, the
The Spectatorhunter, a fairly veracious man, said, " I once sh, --a lion with a bandaged paw in the African jungle." Explain how happened, in his own words, but not more than 250 of then:....
SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 52
The SpectatorReport by Thea Holme A prize of £5 was offered for the views of one of the following on present-day domestic problems: Lady Bracknell, Lady Teazle, Lady Catherine de Bourgh,...
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A Commonwealth of Churches
The SpectatorSIR.-1 have read Viscount Cecil's article three times, but I still cannot discover what he wants the Churches to do, and I would be grateful if he would be more explicit. He...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The SpectatorFinal Examination SIR.—Ccrtain observations suggest themselves from reading Mr. Bell's article. His analysis of the troubles arising from the grammar-school entrance...
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Not Ministers
The SpectatorSIR,—By one of those aberrations which almost pass human understand- ins I appear, in reviewing Mr. H. G. Nicholas's book on the General Election of 1945, to have referred to...
The Oxford Union
The Spectatoram writing a history of the Oxford Union Society, and would be most grateful if any of .your readers who have documentary or personal information relating to this subject would...
SIR.—Lord Cecil, in his plea for Christian co-operation, writes, "The
The Spectatoronly test of a belief in Christianity put to the Ethiopian eunuch was whether he accepted the divinity of Christ." That test is never men-' tioned in the passage referred to...
The Record of Dr. Clementis SIR —May I be allowed to
The Spectatordeal with Mr. K. N. Ruppert's observations on the above subject ? I.' Mr. Ruppert is, of course, right. There were no Czech troops in Cheshire in 1941, and the events described...
National Service and the Farms
The SpectatorSta.—Farmers have been well supplied with ammunition for their traditional grumble recently. The loudest complaint to have arisen in recent weeks is the wail which went up when...
Parliamentary Customs
The SpectatorSIR—Members of the House of Commons have recently canvassed the time-honoured custom of wearing headgear when raising points of order duripg a division. There is, however, a...
Blankets for Berlin
The SpectatorSIR—Under the slogan "Every Child its own Bed" a recent campaign in West Berlin produced three hundred beds and mattresses for the children, of families subsisting on public...
o f Mathematics ot Road Safety SIR.—It has been said that
The Spectatorstatistics can be made to prove anything, but I would suggest, with all respect, that many of Mr. D.-A. Wilson's figures prove nothing . For example, statistics are said to...
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Various Wires
The SpectatorHaving been down the hill to see the extent of the floods in the hop- gardens in the valley, I was relieved to find that the little tributary of the Medway (spelled Theis, but...
Pottage on this issue : Inland and Overseas lid. ;
The SpectatorCanada - (Canadian Magazine Post) Id.
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorFIRST heard the blackbird in full song this season on February 18th, during a stormy Sunday evening. Every year I decide that this is the must superb and serene music in...
3n the Garden
The SpectatorIt is an intermission in the concord of wire that has allowed a huge Puck rabbit to break through the netting sunk below the fences. He ruas discovered ambling up and down...
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BOOKS AND WRITERS
The SpectatorA VIER one of their quarrels, when they were at Spezia and D. H. Lawrence had rushed away into a little boat to get away from her, Frieda shouted after him: " Well, if you can't...
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The West and Communism
The SpectatorPolicy for the West. By Barbara Ward. (Penguin Books. HI. 611.) IF anyone is feeling a little bewildered about the state of the world —and there are plenty of us—he could...
Reviews of the Week
The SpectatorThe Smith of Smiths Sydney Smith: A biography and a selection. By Gerald Bullett. (Michael Joseph. I 5, SYDNEY Shunt has long given me such pleasure that I picked up this book...
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Rome and her Empire
The SpectatorRoman Politics no-vso B.C. By H. H. Scullard. (Oxford Univer- sity Press. 3 03.) Die late period of the Roman Republic has been neglected by English historians. Professor...
East of Aldgate ia st London. By Robert Sinclair. (Hale. m s s.)
The Spectator°mar SINCLAIR has written a fascinating study of Est London in is book in the County Series. It is an area not easy to define. he story of London's growth east of Aldgate leads...
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Limelights on the Poliee The British Police. By J. M.
The SpectatorHart. (Allen and Unwin. 1 25. 6d.) THESE twp books differ strikingly. Mrs. Hart's is not merely written from ten years' administrative experience at the Home Office ; it is also...
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Hermann Goering
The SpectatorGoering. By Willi Frischauer. (Odhams. 12s. 6d.) THIS biography of Goering is not very much more than cheap journalese, a stringing together of what Frau Emmy and other eminent...
Short Stories
The SpectatorTHE English short story has been suffering badly from self- consciousness. With few exceptions its writers have been more concerned to achieve literature and to eschew vulgarity...
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THE " SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. 616
The Spectator;..4 Book Token for one guinea will be awardecl.to the sender of the first correct tution of this week's crossword to be opened after noon on Tuesday week, March 13th. Envelopes...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 614
The Spectator0 M g MEIMMOMM A 0 =To ari l welso a Imo on anommunR JUBM mmon p n iii mg ©g LA n R m O UrIMMIMMIM MAIM SOLUTION ON MARCH 16 The winner of Crossword No. 614 is Miss C....
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS WITH the Budget only five weeks off markets ire still putting up a remarkably good per- formance. Now that steel vesting is over some of the steam has gone out of...