26 MARCH 1932, page 16

Mr. Epstein And The Man In-thestreet . .

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] - * SIR,--Your Half-Century Reader may have assured himself as to his views on Epstein, but has he not something to learn about controversy ?......

The Freedom Of The Press [to The Editor Of The

SPECTATOR.] agree with Mr. Tomlinson that the dangers of the modern Press are many. The trouble is that the modern Press is not free. It is in the firm grip of a number of......

Escape And Prayer - * [to The Editor Of The

SPECTATOR.] SIR, —Mr. F. G. Keen overlooks two important points when he replies to the simile of the wireless : 1, You must switch on if you expect a message ; not all do so. 2,......

Points From Letters Noise . In Hospitals.

I beg to endorse all your recent correspondent wrote on this topic. The nurses ought to wear silent . shoes or those, with rubber heels at least, and .the cleaners ought-not to......

In Life Was The Longing For That Immortality Which Comes

from the recognition by a later generation that one of the forerunners has served it well." In his lecture on "Le Sort de l'Esprit" at La Nouvelle Ecole de la Paix on February......

Tim Rey. J. T. Bramston.

I have -been entrusted -with the task of writing a memoir of the late Rev. J. T. Bramston, House-Master at Winchester College from 1869 to 1908. Will any of your readers who may......