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Week By Week
Page 4 from 26th July 1940THE WAR, PROFITS AND PROPERTY The Attack Is Unjustified And Harmful 1 WRITE these lines before the terms of the new Bud g et are known. No-one is......

Heirs To Clowns
Page 5 from 3rd March 1961By FREDA BRUCE LOCKHART T HE cinema's great clowns belonged to its earliest beginnings. Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Harry Landon, Harold Lloyd, and at......

News That Matters
Page 2 from 8th April 1938March 30—April AT HOME The Boat Race Oxford wen the boat race. Revenue Surplus The nation's accounts for the past financial year showed a......

In A Few Words
Page 4 from 2nd August 1940Belloc's Birthday n N Saturday last Mr. Hilaire Belloc had seen seventy years' service on the battlefield of life. If the metaphor seems......

General Wu Goes To Bed At Seven
Page 3 from 22nd December 1950THEATRE By W. J. IGOE LADY PRECIOUS STREAM (ARTS TirEsua) FRESH, so to speak, from Jimmy Russell's hostelry hovering corn- , fortably above......

Fungi In
Page 4 from 3rd August 1951the Cellar By W. J. IGOE INTIMATE RELATIONS (THE STRAND THEATRE) M. Jean Cocteau is the poet of the necrophilic ; only death or the decay that......

History
Page 6 from 19th July 1940These Statesmen's Problems Look Like Trivialities Now The Life and Letters of Sir Austen Chamber The Life and Letters of Sir Austen Chamber lain.......

Celebrating An Old Duffer
Page 11 from 9th May 2008Never So Good NATIONAL THEATRE, LONDON B ased on an imperfect knowled g e of political history, I g uess the most interestin g British Prime......

Book Reviews
Page 10 from 16th March 1935(Continued from page 5.) of a g rolip which used him to promote their 1) ,, n dark ends. But (eery utterance of the man was iL law Whiell the......

Fear Or Threat Mr. Mellish ?
Page 2 from 27th January 1950Stit,-Will you allow me a little space wherein to record my grave concern, shared I am sure by many others. at a statement made by Mr. Mellish,......