6 FEBRUARY 1942, page 4

" It Only Remained For Him To Suffer In Silence,

and to bear with fortitude, but without reply, the popular clamour against him for not having provided the very safeguards which he himself had clearly foreseen to be necessary......

A Spectator's Notebook

F OR an imaginative man Mr. Churchill shows himself surpris- ingly unimaginative in the periodical reshufllings of his administration. New men are rarely brought in—despite the......

A Week Or Two Ago A Puhlic Man Whose Words

on any subject carry more weight than most public men's said to me, " If I had my way I would abolish the India Office altogether." I was the more interested, therefore, to see......

Sir Stafford, By The Way, Has Just Put On Paper

some important observations about Russia. He was one of the originators, and, I believe, the chief financial supporter, of the Labour weekly, The Tribune, which publishes this......

On The Detailed Merits Of The Controversy Mr. Stanley Unwin

is carrying on in the columns of The Times with Trinity College, Dublin, I have no desire to pronounce. But on the fundamental fact on which the argument hinges there is room......

S.p.c.e. Corner I Am Asked To Affix The Official Damn

of the Society to the use of "-like " as a conjunction (" like many bad writers use it "). Most certainly. Double dams hereby affixed. " WHO WOULD You Puv In, by Lord Winster "......

Diplomacy And Economics

0 reform in our constitutional practice is more urgently necessary than the restoration of the Foreign Secretary the position in relation to Parliament, the country and binet......