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Debacle in China
The SpectatorEvents in China seldom move as rapidly as the headlines suggest that they may, but it does seem that a decisive phase is being reached in the increasingly one-sided civil war....
NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorA S Sunday's municipal elections in the Western sectors of Berlin draw nearer, uproar grows in the Soviet sector with all the care- fully graduated spontaneity of a Nazi putsch....
Bernadotte Abandoned
The SpectatorOnly once during the past six months have British and American policies on Palestine drawn close enough to be almost identical ; this was when, immediately after the publication...
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European Plans
The SpectatorAfter a bout of rumours and denials, it is now claimed that the differences of view which are holding up the completion of the four-year plans of the Marshall aid countries are...
Eire's Achievement
The SpectatorThe attitude of this country and the Dominions towards an tire which, by repealing the External Relations Act, is in process of cutting the last thin thread which binds her to...
Government Publicity
The SpectatorThe Central Office of Information is the ghost of the Ministry of Information sitting disowned upon the grave thereof. It has some of the staff, some of the functions, and some...
Coal and Politics
The SpectatorAs the General Election draws nearer the chances of treating coal production as a question of et‘onotnic organisation grow smaller. Coal, like steel, is being transferred from...
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AT WESTMINSTER
The SpectatorT HE fog which has paralysed the life of Britain during the week has swirled around the towers and penetrated the endless corridors of Westminster. Perhaps it has had its effect...
Wise Marriage
The SpectatorFaced with the task of deciding "on what lines marriage guidance as a form of social service can be most advantageously developed in England and Wales if assisted by Exchequer...
Universities and Finance •
The SpectatorThe annual report of the University Grants Committee, which was published on Tuesday, deals naturally with much the same problems as were discussed by the chairman of the...
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THE FUTURE OF CONSCRIPTION
The SpectatorT HAT the new National Service Bill would be given its second reading last night by an overwhelming majority was a fore- gone conclusion. It was searchingly criticised—or rather...
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"With the monstrous weapons man already has, humanity is in
The Spectatordanger of being trapped in this world by its moral adolescents. Our knowledge of science has clearly outstripped our capacity to control it. We have too many men of science ;...
A SPECTATOR 'S NOTEBOOK N article of great historical importance
The Spectatorappears in the current' issue of the Cambridge lournal. The writer, Mr. R. Bassett, of the London School of Economics, sets himself to shatter, and does most effectively...
It is not surprising that the question what effect the
The SpectatorTribunal and what lies behind it is likely to have on Labour's electoral pros- pects is being much discussed. It can clearly not be answered till the findings of the Tribunal...
The case of R. E. L. v. E. L. (names
The Spectatorwere rightly withheld in this case), decided by Mr. Justice Pearce in the High Court on Tues- day, combines with the recent action of Baxter v. Baxter to make some...
Sir John Boyd Orr is a man of wisdom and
The Spectatorexperience, but he seems to have lapsed strangely from his normal objectivity in some public references he made this week to Russia. "Let us try a new approach," he suggested,...
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THE HABITS OF FOGS
The SpectatorBy E. GOLD, F.R.S.* g GREAT mist and a darkness fell upon them so that they could not see," wrote John Bunyan, and the boy said, "Are we not yet at the end of this doleful...
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THE STATE PUBLICAN
The SpectatorBy EDWARD HODGKIN T HE Government's proposal to let the State run the public houses in the new towns has put the cat among the pigeons—the pigeons, reading from left to right,...
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THE FRENCH COAL STRIKE
The SpectatorBy D. R. GILLIE O N November 27th the C.G.T. miners' strike committee called off the strike which had been in progress for 57 days. The strike committee claimed to be sounding...
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TWILIGHT OF REALPOLITIK
The SpectatorBy W. H. EDWARDS VV HILE the economic experts in Western Europe and the United States are congratulating themselves—sometimes perhaps a little unduly—about the "miracle" worked...
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TRUMAN'S CHINESE PUZZLE
The SpectatorBy EDWARD MONTGOMERY O NCE upon a time, in those far-off days when Russians, Americans and British were all fighting Hitler together and Russians and Westerners were being ever...
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I N"".se - OM-mettc' ww,TZAC-raksm.welmlimicomwrgez=trictutrz macs YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT. WHY NOT A SUBSCRIPTION
The SpectatorTO "THE SPECTATOR"? LV71.P.MPORIFPARIIMORIMPPARMITIORMRHINVOILINIRWRMICIROUX 52 weeks. 26 weeks. Subscription rates for Gt. Britain and Over s. d. s. d. seas by ordinary...
BOS WELL REVEALED
The SpectatorBy S. C. ROBERTS (Master of Pembroke College, Cambridge) N exhibition recently held at the Grolier Club, New York, is a reminder that few authors have been so gradually, yet so...
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MARGINAL COMMENT
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON O N December 3rd, 1874, Mr. Winston Churchill received his first mention in The Times newspaper : he was four days old. It is curious to reflect that a...
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CONTEMPORARY ARTS
The SpectatorTHE THEATRE "The Cherry Orchard." By Anton Chelchov. (New.) ONE of the points that emerges, as we watch the uprooting of the Ranevsky family, is how comparatively shallow...
THE CINEMA
The Spectator"Call Northside 777." (Odeon, Marble Arch.) " Red River." (Plaza.)—" Here Come the Huggetts." (Dominion and New Victoria.)—" Scott of the Antarctic." (Odeon, December 30th.) IN...
The Return of the Prodigal. By St. John Hankin. (Globe.)
The SpectatorA VERY clever production by Mr. Peter Glenville, staged sumptuously but not without whimsicality by Mr. Cecil Beaton, does much for a revival which in less practised hands might...
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A Cat Story
The SpectatorA lady again and again found the clay bars of her gas stove broken ofl for no apparent reason ; but one day she saw her cat, which of course loved to sit in front of the fire...
Forgotten Words It was a theory of Mr. Pearsall Smith,
The Spectatorthat great and lively authority on words, that our literary language is, or should be, constantly refreshed by absorption of rural speech. Racy rural words are very numerous. A...
MUSIC WE have had two English rarities this last week—Vaughan
The SpectatorWilliams's Riders to the Sea, in a concert performance at the Central Hall, on November 26th, and Hoist's Choral Symphony, at the Albert Hall, on the 27th. These works are...
Rural Psychology In the latest humble little typewritten bulletin of
The Spectatorthe excellent County Garden Produce Central Committee (fathered by the Ministry) appears a sort of potted account of the work of Mr. Rollo Myer as a country parson. It is all...
In the Garden We have, of course, compared especially with
The Spectatorthe Americans, a very narrow taste in vegetables ; ,and even if delectable rarities are seen in a shop no one will buy them. And we narrow the use of severaL One of these is the...
IT is almost traditional now-abouts for writers -on natural history
The Spectatorand diarists to refer to the catkins of the hazel nut, which indeed are wont to anticipate the spring by a wide interval. But there are a number of other bushes and trees which...
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Sm,—That reorganisation of the curriculum, whicii the new system of
The Spectatorexternal examinations demands, will be onerous, and will call for hard thinking and skilful planning The imposition of a minimum age before which no candidate will be allowed to...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR STATE versus SCHOOL Sus, — The Headmaster of
The SpectatorTonbridge has indicated the acute difficulties that will arise in the schools unless the Minister of Education modifies his decision that no candidate will be allowed to take...
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THE CHOICE IN CHINA
The SpectatorSra,—If my letter deserved Colin McDonald's imputation of intolerance, I am sorry for it. I was not trying to uphold "Communist claims to perfection," but simply to question the...
THE FUTURE OF ERITREA
The SpectatorSta,—The plans agreed upon by Britain and U.S.A. for the future of Eritrea cannot but cause consternation to anyone who knows that country. The scheme looks as if it had...
SIR,—With regard to my letter on the subject of, State
The Spectatorversus School, I regret that some inaccuracy crept into my quotation of the figures issued by the Northern Universities Joint Board. Quoting from memory, I stated that 46 per...
Snz,—May I give details of one type of so-called "highly
The Spectatorspecialised" sixth-form work ? I am in charge of boys reading history for the Higher Certificate Examination. In addition to history they take another main subject, usually...
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AMERICANS - AND RUSSIA Sra,—May I express the hope that no
The Spectatorone will have been misled, by the prominence which you gave to it in your issue of Noirember 19th, into supposing that The New "New Deal" represents the - facts, or can even be...
PATTERDALE HALL
The SpectatorStit,—I am writing in the hope that the most fruitful use for a house and grounds in the heart of the English Lake District may occur to one or more of your readers and that...
THE INVINCIBLE DOWSER
The SpectatorSm,—Regarding the remarks in Country Life in The Spectator of November 26th, I gather from a practical dowser with a unique record for the successful location of underground...
THE ARAB REFUGEES
The SpectatorSIR,—The plight of the Arab refugees in the Middle East, now more than half a million, is well known to your readers. The Acting Mediator recently pointed out the danger, with...
RICHARD JEFFERIES
The SpectatorSm.,—It seems hardly necessary - to say that I had no intention of affront- ing Mr. Elwin personally, either in the title or in the substance of my review. Nor did I suggest...
SCAPEGOATS?
The SpectatorSta,—We may not yet comment on the conduct of certain people involved in the Inquiry at Church House, because it is still sub *dice; but the conduct of the British public in the...
CHRISTMAS POSTING:
The SpectatorTo meet the wishes of the Postmaster-General during the Christmas rush, alterations In subscribers' addresses must reach THE SPECTATOR, 99 Gowisr Street, London, W.C.1, by the...
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BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorThe Beastly British THE form of nausea which overcomes Mr. Wilson when he writes about the British is easier to understand than to diagnose. Perhaps it is some social or...
The Importance of Fiction
The SpectatorThe Great Tradition. By F. R. Leavis. (Chatto and Windus. 12s. 6d.) - HOWEVER much one may differ from Dr Leavis—and why should anybody want a book with which he wholly agrees...
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Prussia Triumphant
The SpectatorB:smarck and the Creation of the Second Reich. By F. Darnistaedter. (Methuen. 21s.) FOR close on ten years out of the forty-eight of this century we have been at war with...
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Real Miners
The SpectatorMen in the Pits. By F. Zweig. (Gollancz. 7s. 6d.) FROM time to time in the past few years there have been attacks on British miners for not working hard enough. There have also...
British East Africa
The SpectatorBRITISH EAST AFRICA is about eight times as big as Great Britain, or roughly the size of Western Europe. Its total population, of the order of 13,000,000 includes some 200,000...
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Haydon's " Sublimity "
The SpectatorThe Life and Death of Benjamin Robert Haydon, 1786-1846. By Eric George. (Oxford University Press. 215.) THE present revival of interest in English Romantic painting is an...
Ciano in 'English .
The SpectatorCiano's Diplomatic Papers. Edited by Malcolm Muggeridge ; translated THIS is the translation of the Mondadori publication entitled L'Europa verso la Catastrofe to which a...
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Fiction
The SpectatorThe Bachelor of Arts. By R. K. Narayan. (Eyre and Spottiswoode. 8s. 6d.) Miss TOWNSEND WARNER has been criticised and is likely to be criticised again for the fact that in her...
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"THE SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 506
The Spectator[A Book Token for one guinea will be awarded to the sender of the first correct solution of this week's crossword to be opened after noon on Tuesday week, December 14th....
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 504 arefflEfillilE5111301111 - 11111e . E110113111 I Dap() wIni
The SpectatorEl El tn s . s CI 6 El El s T TIR11(6. E A E RIA101- E L S L fl: jl! 5 ii d io i B 0 12111711110121 SAN 12141a 1 101 v.E s -1- !AliLl I G It H N lY;IVSIS LI 0 A...
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Shorter Notices
The SpectatorThe Artamonov Business. By Maxim Gorki. Translated by Alec Brown. (Hamish Hamilton. 6s.) THIS new translation (one of the excellent Novel Library series) of Gorki's best-known...
[In the issue of The Spectator dated November 26th, Mr.
The SpectatorP. D. F. Tennent's lbsen's Dramatic Technique, published by Messrs. Bowes and Bowes, was wrongly stated to have been published by the Cambridge University Press.]
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS IT is a significant commentary on the current positon in the stock markets,. that while prices are conspicuously firm a considerable number of brokers are complaining...