Abstract
THE last annual report of the British Council, which covered the year ending March 31, 1944 (see Nature, 155, 58; 1945), well indicated the importance of the work of the Council, not only in the war effort but also for the establishment of cultural relations in times of peace. The Council's work in making British contributions to science better known abroad and promoting contacts between British men of science and those of other countries, particularly since the establishment of its Science Department four years ago, has become so important that the tenth anniversary of the inauguration of the British Council in July 1935 should not be passed unmarked by scientific workers.
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