16 NOVEMBER 1945, page 4

Now A Word On The B.b.c. In Another Light. The

services it renders to the public deserve recognition. Not long _ago one of its dietetic authorities denounced with proper severity the tendency to use liquid paraffin, which is......

Lord Baldwin, Many People Will Be Glad To Hear, Is

beginning to pick up some of his old interests after a prolonged hibernation, cover- ing practically the whole of the war, in Worcestershire. His vow "not to speak to the man at......

In The Lecture He Gave At Oxford A Few Days

ago on "Some Political Consequences of the Atom Bomb" Professor E. L. Woodward opened up fields of thought into which I would gladly pursue him if space were available. As it is......

The United Nations Conference On Education In London Is Very

largely the outcome of the diligence and conviction of Mr. R. A. Butler during the years when he was Minister of Education. To the Conference countries like France and the......

Members Of Parliament Always Like To Get In A Hit

at the Press or the B.B.C. when they can, but I cannot think the charge of the premature announcement of Brigadier Mallaby's death has much substance. The news was cabled home......

A Spectator 's Notebook

I DOUBT whether the last word has been said about the seat of the United Nations Organisation. It is true that the Executive Com- mittee of the Preparatory Committee of the......

Quot Homines . . . .

"Clement Attlet's speech to the Congress of the United States will rank among the great pronouncements of our time."—The Daily Herald. "A nice little speech by a nice little......

The Bomb And The Charter Vor The Last Week Mr.

Truman and Mr. Attlee have been I discussing a problem which, in the opinion of many, may decide whether mankind is to survive or perish. Even the most sympathetic observer must......