June 1933
In This Issue
Explore the June 1933 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
England Under Queen Anne: Ramillies and the Union With Scotland
Bohemia
Looking Forward
The Atlantic Bookshelf: Conclusion
A wrap up of book reviews from Edward Weeks
Water Sports at Summer Camps
Dramatic High-Lights at Private Schools
The Contributors' Column
The Crime Against Youth
Vienna and I
How the Jew Did It: The Mystery of His Survival
A Mother's Creed: Dangerous Questions and Difficult Answers
When We Were Very Young: Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas. Ii
White Justice
College and the Poor Boy
ON the revival of letters, learning became the universal favorite, and with reason; because there was not enough of it existing to manage the affairs of a nation to the best advantage, nor to advance its individuals to the happiness of which they were susceptible. . . , All of the efforts of the society therefore were directed to the increase of learning. . . . These circumstances have long since produced an overcharge in the class of competitors for learned occupations and great distress among the supernumerary candidates; and the more, as their habits of life have disqualified them for reëntering the laborious class. The evil cannot be suddenly, nor perhaps ever, entirely cured. &emdash; THOMAS JEFFERSON, 1803
Couplets for the Thirtieth Year
Shakespeare and Mine Host of the Mermaid
Land Ho!
Frieda
'She's Had the Doctor!'
The Slave Complex: A Timely Word to Employers
A Squire's Complaint
Daddy Isaac's Prayer
President Lowell and His Influence
Rain, Steam, and Speed
A Plea for Mystery Relief
The Seven Points of Departure
Another Story Mammy Told Me
The Atlantic Bookshelf: A Guide to Good Books
The House of Exile











