23 MARCH 1951

Page 1

NEWS OF THE WEEK T HE Conservative Party can hardly derive

The Spectator

unlimited satisfaction from Mr. Robert Boothby's gift for candour. His speech at Banstead last week, in • which he proclaimed in relation to the Labour Pday in Parliament that "...

The 38th Parallel Again When the United Nations forces last

The Spectator

advanced northward -across the 38th parallel, in October, 1950. they were out to stabilise conditions in the whole of Korea and to establish a unified democratic government, in...

Eisenhower's Adjutants

The Spectator

The import of the Atlantic Treaty Organisation appointments announced by General Eisenhower on Wednesday -is not to be grasped without careful study. It may be noted, to begin...

Page 2

Schuman Plan By Inches

The Spectator

' If the treaty initialled in Paris by representatives of France, • Germany, Italy, Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg is finally signed by their Governments, and if after that it...

Strengthening Strasbourg

The Spectator

Mr. Morrison would appear to have made a successful debut at his first international conference. To restrain the enthusiasms of politicians in this and other countries who want...

A Proposition for the Unions In the prevailing atmosphere of

The Spectator

party political nonsense, the speech which Mr. David Eccles, M.P., made last Saturday on relations between the Conservatives and the trade unions came as a welcome breath of...

Page 3

Festive Finance

The Spectator

When Mr. Herbert Morrison announced on March 6th that, on the best figures he could then obtain, the expenditure on the Festival Gardens in Battersea Park would amount to some...

One-type Education

The Spectator

One of the least happy aspects of the educational situation in this country is the petty jealousy of the old-established grammar schools exhibited by bodies with a Labour...

AT WESTMINSTER

The Spectator

T HROUGH all the " loud contention " of these last days. through the bickerings and the buffetings, the cheers and the jeers, the echoes have been insistently heard of two...

Page 4

STORM OVER PERSIA -

The Spectator

T HE decision of the Persian Parliament to nationalise the oil industry has been greeted in this country with as much astonishment as alarm. Yet it would have been much more...

Page 5

Thanks to the working of those mysterious digits that com-

The Spectator

prise the Golden Number, Easter falls this year almost, if not quite, as early as it is possible for it to fall—for extensive as its vagaries are, they are not completely...

I have more than once expressed my envy of those

The Spectator

enterprising persons who collect impassive degrees as easily as picking primroses. A case heard at Manchester Assizes on Monday throws gratifying light on the process. It was an...

This is a tolerant country, but I confess to some

The Spectator

astonishment at its acquiescence in the present food fiasco. It is not merely that Mr. Webb's persistence in haggling with the Argentine— right enough, no doubt, up to a...

It was natural that the ceremony of the transfer of

The Spectator

Mr. Bernard Shaw's cottage at Ayot St. Lawrence to the National Trust last Saturday should attract a considerable crowd ; for though many had to walk in weather that can best be...

A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK N 0 one could charge Mr. Churchill with

The Spectator

a deficiency of audacity, and there was a certain entertainment in those passages of his broadcast last Saturday in which he deplored with the utmost gravity the party...

Page 6

The Third Day

The Spectator

11) N% ARREN POSTBRIDGE 0 F all the miracles recorded in the Gospels, the supreme miracle, the resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth on the third day after his crucifixion, is the...

Page 7

Wolf

The Spectator

By A. C JENKINS C ROSS-LEGGED we squatted op the deeply piled birch- brushwood that formed the floor of the guottar of striped blanket-cloth. The air seemed to drape us about...

Page 8

Prospecting

The Spectator

By CLELAND SCOTT F OR the man who can bear. his own company for long periods, prospecting for minerals is fun, especially in Africa. You are unlikely to make a fortune, but you...

Page 9

Audubon in Britain

The Spectator

By Prof. C. M. YONGE, F.R.S. 0 NE hundred years have elapsed since the death of John James Audubon. This centenary will not pass unnoticed in the United States, where Audubon's...

Page 10

The Underworld of Sport

The Spectator

By R. G. G. PRICE j UNIOR games in a private school have the duration of hell without the literary flavour. Obe cannot console oneself by saying to one's fellow-sufferers, "...

Page 11

UNDERGRADUATE PAGE

The Spectator

Escape to Patriotism By JOHN FRIPP (Merton College, Oxford) W HILE Mr. Strachey turns jingo, and the world thaws into war, and the Sunday threepennies foretell the land- bound...

"MIR Spectator," /Raub 22nb. 1851

The Spectator

A PROJECT to establish at Chelsea a Metropolitan Hospital for Children was promoted by a meeting in the Hanover Square Rooms on Monday. Lord Ashley, who presided, while...

Page 12

MARGINAL COMMENT

The Spectator

By HAROLD NICOLSON I HAVE often endeavoured, in using the space accorded to me by this hospitable newspaper, to communicate to others the comfort and the relaxation that I...

Page 13

CINEMA

The Spectator

Lost Youth." (Continentals)—"" Tea for Two." (Warner.) WHEN first produced in Italy Lost Youth created an uproar and was banned by the censor, who subsequently relented on...

CONTEMPORARY ARTS

The Spectator

THEATRE " Electra" and "The Wedding." (The Old Vic.) IN their volatile new offering the Old Vic company prove, to our delight, that both they and Tchehov. are still capable of...

Page 14

A Nocturne The new March moon has brought a change

The Spectator

to the hours after dark. I was out prowling round before dinner, with the corgi snuffling his way along like a miniature doodle-bomb, exploding at every rabbit-hole. Light had...

Signs of Hope

The Spectator

That was a memorable walk, for the return of the rooks was not the only sign of spring that came my way. Further gales and floods had filled the Weald with open lakes where...

COUNTRY LIFE

The Spectator

I WAs wrong, or at least premature, about the absence of rooks from the nests in the copse at Hushheath Manor, that shapely, small Eliza- bethan housc with an Italian garden on...

In the Garden I am anxiously watching the graftings on

The Spectator

the old winter pear, for the heavy weather has washed away most of the clay with which they wets affianced to the old wood. No sign of life yet. When Thomas Cromwell, in the...

MUSIC ONLY five years lie between SchOnberg's tone-poem Pelleas and

The Spectator

Melisande, composed in 1902-3, and Hoist's chamber opera Savitri of 1908, two works which have been heard in London this last week. Schonberg's op. 5 is a monstruAr informe,...

The Spectator

Page 15

SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. 55

The Spectator

Report by Richard Usborne Tornkins, the hunter, a fairly veracious man, said, " I once shot a lion with a bandaged paw in the African jungle." A prize of £5 was offered for...

SPECTATOR COMPETITION No. s8

The Spectator

Set by R. Kennard-Davis A prize of £5, which may be divided. Is offered for a conver- sation (in not more than 250 words) on their respective masters between Sam Weller and...

Page 16

Malays and Malayans

The Spectator

SIR.—In your note on Malaya in the Spectator of February 2nd refer- ence is made to the economic rivalry between " the Chinese and the Malayans." "Malayans" is a term generally...

A Commonwealth of Churches

The Spectator

Sia,—Mr. Caraway asks for "an organisation consisting of Individual members of the various Churches whichyould have a similar relationship to the World Council of Churches as...

Section 47

The Spectator

SIR,—I must thank your correspondent for correcting me on matters of fact, but I must join issue with him on the question of principle. I cannot believe a country that has...

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Homes for Farm-workers SIR, —Mr. Sykes, in

The Spectator

his very interesting article in the Spectator of March 9th. does not mention one of the facts which is bound to have a far- . eaching effect on the future of farming, viz., the...

Religion and Politics

The Spectator

SIR,—When commen1ipj on Dr. Barnes and the Vicar of Crockham Hill, Janus falls into the l?l"too common error of imagining that spiritual matters must be kept in a watertight...

Unwillingly to School

The Spectator

SIR.—WC were most shocked when we read the article of Miss Virginia Graham in your paper the other day. She spoke of her childhood days and how she and the children of today...

Page 18

Mr. Bevin's Record

The Spectator

SIR.—In the leading article in last week's Spectator it is stated that Mr. Kevin occupied the Foreign Office longer than any predecessor since Sir Edward Grey. Did not Mr. Eden...

Publisher and Reviewer

The Spectator

SI R,—Io her review of The Cardinal, Miss Marghanita Laski remark , that she is aocustomed"to "devour a book in a few hours." In case a more protracted effort was made with...

Overseas Students SIR.-1 was most interested in Harold Nicolson's •Marginal

The Spectator

Comment in your issue of February 9th, and his description of the good work being done by London House and the Victory Club in providing places where students of various...

Although Not If

The Spectator

SIR,—Is it pedantic to protest at th , growing habit of writing "if " for " although " ? It is discouraging to see it appearing in your columns. "The hotels," I read, "if...

Ellen Terry

The Spectator

SIR.-1 was present at what I have always understood to be the last appearance of Ellen Terry and Henry Irving together. This was at the New Theatre, Oxford, in 1902. She was...

Page 19

BOOKS AND WRITERS

The Spectator

T WO massive volumes contain the Diary* which Dostoievsky contributed, first weekly and later monthly, to the review, The Citizen, between 1873 and 1881. The Diary is not con-...

Page 20

Reviews of the Week

The Spectator

The Task of the Red Cross Warrior Without Weapons. By Marcel Junod. (Cape. z2s. 6d.) NOBODY nowadays shares Mussolini's belief that war is to men what childbirth is to women ;...

A Voice of the Past

The Spectator

Memories and Portraits. By Ivan Bunin. Translated by Vera Traill and Robin Chancellor. (Lehmann. 1 as. 6d.) IVAN BUNIN, at eighty,.looks back on a past in which he has played...

Page 22

Footnotes to Yeats

The Spectator

The Lonely Tower. By T. R. Henn. (Methuen. 2 is.) As Yeats's poetry can be understood completely—if at all—only with some knowledge of his life and times, the topical and...

Six Rogues and Charles II Restoration Rogues. By Maurice Petherick.

The Spectator

(Hollis and Carter. 30.) THE reason why the public is offered this expensive and fully illus- trated study of six rogues who flourished in the reign of King Charles II is that...

Page 24

Response to Architecture

The Spectator

Smooth and Rough. By Adrian Stokes. Illustrated. (Faber. ► cs.) ONE of the pleasures of reading Mr. Stokes's writings on art has always been in the discovery of a poet's...

Confucius Re-interpreted

The Spectator

Confucius: The Man and the Myth. By H. G. Creel. (Routledge and Kegan Paul. ass.) PROFESSOR CREEL aims to pierce the mist of later tradition with which the conventional view of...

Page 26

Fiction

The Spectator

The Case of Comrade Tulaycv. By Victor Serge. Translated from Peterson. (Heinemann. los. 6d.) A Season in England. By P. H. Newby. (Cape. los. 6d.) Hoxisr faith, I think, and...

Italy and Ireland

The Spectator

Ireland and Italy in the Middle Ages. By Vincenzo Berardis. (Clonmore and Reynolds, Dublin. i is.) THIS IS an interesting study by the late Italian Envoy Extraordinary and...

Page 28

FINANCE AND INVESTMENT

The Spectator

By CUSTOS The Fall in Gilt-Edged In the Consol market the Northern Rhodesia loan flop has touched off a precariously-balanced situation and induced a stream of small sales...

TO ENSURE REGULAR RECEIPT OF

The Spectator

THE SPECTATOR readers are urged to place a firm ordet with their news- agent or to take out a subscription. Newsagenn cannot afford to take the risk of carrying stock, as...

Page 30

THE "SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. 619

The Spectator

[it Book Token for one guinea wilt be awarded to the sender of the first correct solution of this week's crossword to be opened after noon on Tuesday week. April 3rd. ACROSS...

SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 617

The Spectator

illnillEIVICIVIERM5 1- ©e riani Mien T. , EOM Sarin M ri m anne e°R9 "°n° mEin° OMEOPICIAMITICICIEI T1 PI Agi MillIMIE3111LAMUM elnarip p F. , 0111517:1 011I! dItIFIr im p...