7 DECEMBER 1951

Page 1

DR. ADENAUER'S AIMS

The Spectator

W HILE the content of the talks Dr. Adenauer has been having in London With the Prime Minister and Mr. Eden naturally remains undisclosed something of their tenor may be...

The Disarmament Talks

The Spectator

If there is nothing very tangible to show from the meetings of the United Nations Assembly in the past week, the mere fact that the representatives of Britain, France, the...

Page 2

The European Army'Problem

The Spectator

M. Paul Reynaud, the French Conservative leader, has scored rather heavily, both at the Council of Europe and in a letter to The Times, in his references to Mr. Churchill's...

Royalties Galore

The Spectator

The amicable signature of a new oil agreement is a rare source of gratification these days, and the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, which owns fifty per cent. of the shares in the...

U.N.O. and German Unity

The Spectator

One more road which the Soviet delegation at the Assembly has blocked, this timeihrough the agency of M. Malik, is that lead- ing to the appointment of a United Nations...

Towards a Truce

The Spectator

A suggestion made by the Communist delegates at Panmunjom that truce supervision should be carried out by "representatives of nations neutral in the Koiean war" still awaits...

MeALyttelton in Malaya

The Spectator

It would be a mistake to make too much of Mr. Lyttelton's remark, on arrival in Malaya, that "the political situation would have to wait." It need not be supposed that he was...

Page 3

AT WESTMINSTER T HE brief session of Parliament now ending has

The Spectator

been too short even to be regarded as a curtain-raiser to the Parlia- mentary drama that is to come. No sooner has the new House of Commons settled down than it is breaking up....

The Dockers' Christmas Greeting

The Spectator

The Christmas season would hardly be complete without some threat from transport workers to spoil it. This year it is the growing delay to cargoes, including food cargoes,...

The Future of the City Churches

The Spectator

The Bill authorising the re-organisation of the City Churches corresponds closely with the exposition of its purpose by the Bishop of London before his Diocesan Council last...

Page 4

HOUSES OR POLITICS?

The Spectator

I T would be interesting to know how many of the multitude seeking a house to live in are enlightened and encouraged by the unending argument between political parties on the...

Page 5

Dame Elizabeth Cadbury was unquestionably one of the remarkable women

The Spectator

of the day. Obituary notices in the daily papers have dwelt on her vitality. That is just. It was one of the characteristics which was bound to strike even the most casual...

A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK T HIS year's opening Fabian lecture, delivered by

The Spectator

Mr. John Strachey, relieved, to his satisfaction or other- wise, from the responsibilities of office, contains some very sound observations on Russia in relation to world-peace....

Last week I raised the question where the 2,000 million

The Spectator

pennies (40 for every man, woman and child in the population) now in circulation go. A clerical correspondent replies feelingly that he knows—into church collection bags, but...

A year or two- ago, when Pakistan was rather urgently

The Spectator

seeking admission to the Imperial Cricket Conference, membership in which India automatically retained after the partition in 1947, it was explained by Sir Pelham Warner and...

It is not surprising that the ovangelists of Basic English

The Spectator

should have found the task of rendering Mr. Churchill's speeches into that medium too much for them. Since the Prime Minister's art consists of putting the indispensable word in...

With last week's issue the Guardian ended its long and

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notable career. I am sorry it is dead, but it might have expired more becomingly. There has been too much "of whom the world was not worthy" about recent leaders bearing on its...

DISARMAMENT_ TALKS TO BE HELD IN SECRET Sunday Times, December

The Spectator

2nd. NO SECRET TALKS ON DISARMAMENT Observer, December 2nd. Nice to know.

Page 6

How to Win the Jungle War

The Spectator

By F. SPENCER CHAPMAN* T is very easy, as a study of the recent dailies and weeklies will show, to criticise the direction of the campaign in • Malaya during the...

Page 7

Mr. Republican

The Spectator

By D. W. BROGAN A YEAR from now a new President will have been elected. He may, of course, be Mr. Truman, who is exempted from the new constitutional amendment barring a third...

Page 8

British Railways in 1951

The Spectator

By CANON ROGER LLOYD F 4 AGER and widespread speculations about the visible changes which nationalisation would bring to the railway scene have now died down, for during this...

Page 9

Demos on the Bench

The Spectator

By KENNETH OCHILTREE T HE warm sunshine of an unusually lovely September afternoon poured through the long windows, enhancing an after-lunch somnolence. The quiet voice of the...

Page 10

On Spending a Penny

The Spectator

By CLARE FRY T HE architectural papers have an excellent habit of making surveys of different kinds of buildings, particularly places of public resort, and showing by...

THE SPECTATOR

The Spectator

Subscription rates: 52 weeks, 35s.; 26 weeks, 17s. 6d. Send subscription instructions, accompanied by a remittance, to the Spectator, 99 Gower Street, London, W.C1. Postage on...

Page 11

"Ighe itopectator," Eletember 6th, 1851

The Spectator

SIR ROBERT PEEL announces that his entire stud is to be sold by auction, by Messrs. Tattersall and Son. In the advertise- ment announcing the sale, it is stated that Sir Robert...

UNDERGRADUATE PAGE

The Spectator

American Opinion By ANDREW HACKER (Queen's College, Oxford) A S an American at Oxford I am getting rather tired of being considered an expert. I feel that I know as much about...

Page 12

MARGINAL COMMENT

The Spectator

By HAROLD NICOISON I WAS lunching yesterday with a friend who had just obtained an appointment in Iraq. He told me that he was leaving England on Saturday and would be in...

Page 14

THEATRE

The Spectator

"Relative Values.' By NoSI Coward. (Savoy.) MR. COWARD'S new comedy was jubilantly greeted on its first per- formance, and what with royalty in the stalls, the author in the...

CONTEMPORARY ARTS

The Spectator

OPERA MELVILLE'S Billy Budd, of which psychological reflection is the greater part, and incident by far the smaller, seemed an improbable basis for a good opera. It has...

Page 16

CINEMA

The Spectator

"The House in the Square." (Odeon.)— - " Lightning Strikes Twice." (W,a2-ner.)-- ,4 Week End With Father." (Gaumont and Marble Arch Pavilion.) PERHAPS it is a mistake to hope to...

MR. TENNESSEE WILLIAMS has a nose for incompleteness. His pla)s

The Spectator

specialise in people sheltered and unfinished, maladroit in the presence of hard reality wing-beating idealists, like the mother in The Glass Menagerie, Blanche in A Streetcar...

Page 17

BALLET

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Uday Shankar and Amala with their Indian Ballet. (Princes Thearre). ON Tuesday night Uday Shankar and his company carried me a step further in my understanding of Indian...

Page 18

SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 92

The Spectator

Report by D. R. Peddy A prize of £5 was offered for an extract from a speech by a delegate to the annual conferm of a union representing one of the following : Recidivists,...

SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 95

The Spectator

Set by R. J. P. Hewison A prize of £5, which may be divided, is offered for a macaronic New Year carol in not more than 16 lines, including refrain. Entries must be addressed_...

Page 20

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

The Spectator

From the Dalcassian Legation A cu.—Our London Representative has drawn our attention to an article by Mr. Brian Inglis which appeared in the October 26th, 1951, issue of your...

The Clyde Steamers

The Spectator

Snt,—The article by Professor Brogan on the threatened stoppage of steamer sailings on the Clyde deals with a matter that requires wide publicity. Unfortunately Professor Brogan...

The Future of Cyprus

The Spectator

SIR, —Mr. Franklin has criticised the Government of Cyprus on two issues in particular, without attempting to explain the difficulties that confront it. He claims that "the...

Page 22

The East—West Problem

The Spectator

Sta, — Mr. Cadbury states that the Quaker delegation walked about Moscow and Kiev " unaccompanied " when they wished to do so. It goes without saying that he and his colleagues...

Apples for Market

The Spectator

am only too sensible of the truth of S. M.'s contention. The English apple (with which, when well grown, no other apple in the world can compare) has all too frequently been...

The. Press and Royalty

The Spectator

Sia,—I am glad that Janus has directed attention to the ridiculous lengths to which the publishing of photographs of the Royal Family is going. A short unit ,ago at the cinema I...

Life and Years

The Spectator

S1R,—Professor Tunbridge in his article, Lire--and Years, refers to some important aspects of the expected increase in what he terms the pension- able population. In this...

Page 24

Flood. Water and Land Use

The Spectator

We are indignant with the weather for the recent floods, but the fault, dear Brutus, lies not in the clouds but in ourselves. Floods are a symptom, not-of excess water, but of...

COUNTRY LIFE

The Spectator

I WATCHED a man ploughing very stiff and sodden land with a heavy tractor. A light Ferguson tractor would obviousry have been by far the better implement against packing, but...

Six—Janus asks if the Press chiefs ever heard why Aristides

The Spectator

was ostracised. This is loose thinking, as in the journals, including the Spectator, which habitually treat King Canute as a - vain fool, instead of one who gave his courtiers a...

“ Trash-Farming "

The Spectator

In the United States, where bitter experience of "mining" out fertility has 'taught a belated frisdom, it is in the best farming areas that our mould-board plough has become...

Shaw's Letters

The Spectator

SIR,—With the authority of the Public Trustee, and as the principal publishers of Bernard Shaw's works in Great Britain, we are contem- plating, some time during the next live...

Time-Spans

The Spectator

Str,—My grandfather was born in 1795, and died in 1868. I was born in 1862, and remember him quite well. A span of 156 years.

I have planted not far short of a hundred trees

The Spectator

in my 'garden and its surround, so that I did not relish having to fell one of the biggest and finest. This was a balsam poplar, the nearest to the house of a line of them...

The Soil is the Secret

The Spectator

But this is by no - means the whole of the story. Soil conditions range from the extremes of good and evil. If the latter, soil is like dust or cement ; if the former, like a...

Page 26

CHILDREN'S BOOKS

The Spectator

Miss Farjeon Looks Back to 1851 WEU, my dears! summer is over, with all the delights and excite- ments of the Great Exhibitifln, and I hope you were lucky enough to be taken...

Page 28

History, Fantasy and Verse

The Spectator

As usual there is much ephemeral shoddy stuff among the Christmas books for children ; but some sparks shine in the ashes, books that lift the imagination and charm with their...

Page 29

The Young Idea

The Spectator

8s. 6d.) Castaway Camp. By M. E. Atkinson. (Bodley Head. 95. 6d.) ANY parent with a sense of social responsibilty must be seriously perturbed at this year's crop of adventure...

Page 30

Books With Pictures

The Spectator

Famous Paintings: An Introduction to Art for Young People. By Alice Elizabeth Chase. With a Foreword by Sir Gerald Kelly, P. R. A. (Macdoinald. r 8s.) The Story of the...

Minority Writes

The Spectator

WE the too minor poets, we (And let's be facetious, call it wee) Are humble enough, God knows, God knows. Perhaps we ought to have written prose, Not written at all, not tried...

Page 32

BOOKS OF THE WEEK

The Spectator

Happy-Go-Wilkie SINCE, some 25 years ago and on both sides of the Atlantic, an urge to " re-valuate " a Victorian man or woman of letters took possession of contemporary...

Page 34

Transatlantic Humour

The Spectator

The New Yorker Twenty-Fifth Anniversary Album, (Ilamish Fiamilton. 305.) THE difference between English and American humour is not really so remarkable as the difference between...

American in the Near East

The Spectator

The Phoenix in the .Desert. By Dunstan Thompson. (John Lehmann. 2 Is.) THE writer of a - travel-book describes either the countries visited or himself. If he is accomplished...

Page 36

For the, Uninitiated

The Spectator

The Apple and the Spectroscope. By T. R. Henn. (Methuen. 25. 6d) • AT most Universities the doctrine is given lip-service that the scientist needs humanising, and the humanist...

Page 38

An Artist in Society

The Spectator

The Second Burst. -By Sir Alfred Munnings. (Museum Press. ass.) WrrH characteristic verve and disarming candour Sir Alfred Mun- nings continues the reminiscences of his first...

The Whiteness of the Whale

The Spectator

WHEN Moby Dick began to be widely read, in the nineteen-twenties, some ten years after its rediscovery, the verdict of the American journalist who called the world's attention...

Page 40

Unrepentant Petainist

The Spectator

Petain : Patriot or Traitor ? By Sisley Huddleston. (Dakers. us.) Mn. HUDDLESTON lived in unoccupied France or in Monaco through- put the four years of the Vichy Governments,...

Lone-Matiners

The Spectator

THIS is a rare cdmbinalialBlvd1idf6rfhary adventure and most skilful telling. The sttaiMefltNtis of a man and wife, living contentedly until the outbreak of war, and with...

Page 42

Fiction

The Spectator

Lion in the Cellar. By Pamela Branch. (Robert Hale. 9s. 6d.) IN the traditionally told novel we are carried along a road past scenes and objects laid out in chronological...

Page 44

Shorter Notices

The Spectator

One Man in His Time. By Bruce Belfrage. (Hodder and Stoughton. 12s. 6d.) One Man in His Time. By Bruce Belfrage. (Hodder and Stoughton. 12s. 6d.) MR. BRUCE BELFRAGE has played...

"The Times" House of Commons, 1951. (Times Office. los. 6d.)

The Spectator

THE new issue of this valuable guide to the House follows the same lines as its pre- decessors; there is indeed no very obvious way to improve on them. There are the usual short...

Page 45

THE " SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. 655

The Spectator

1.4 Book Token for one guinea will be awarded to the sender of the first correct solution opened after noon on Tuesday week, December 15th, addressed Crossword, 99 Gower Street,...

SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 653

The Spectator

II It al 0 Ill U OINIMMICCICEI glriffrnryn ans.nurnna tencran Et4COGratIM El in KA TS ro. ifirnmimnrForimin EA VA ler 0 C3 151 ril a t4 wrr5rmirmin LU i2 0 r1 IMMant;...

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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT

The Spectator

By CUSTOS As I suspected, markets are not finding it easy to hold up in face of continuing uncer- tainties. Gilt-edged prices, from which in present conditions other markets...