July 1941
In This Issue
Explore the July 1941 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
The Jewish Problem in America
Original 1941 editor's note: In this and successive issues, the Atlantic will open its columns to the discussion of a problem which is of the utmost gravity. We have asked Mr. Nock to begin the enquiry, and we shall invite expressions of opinion from Jew and Gentile alike, in the hope that a free and forthright debate will reduce the pressure, now dangerously high, and leave us with a healthier understanding of the human elements involved. —The Editor
American Business and Hitler
Zeno Began This
My Mother and the President
To Madonna in Quaker
Conversation
Reveille in Washington: 1860-1865
World or Nothing
To Sea Lions!
Windwagon Smith
'Whodunit'
A College in Secession
Daylight in Tubes
Sir Richard Burton's Wife
Onions
Poems From London
A New Hope for the Deaf
Our Alternatives
Clambake
Ships--and More Ships
The Neutral Ground
United We Stand
Against This Torrent
John Kendrick Bangs
Honorable Enemy
The Best Poems of 1940
The Crowthers of Bankdam
London Front
Man Stands Alone
The Contributors' Column











