June 1943
In This Issue
Explore the June 1943 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
Cow Pasture Golf
Hats Are Fun
Our Allies
Golden Mean
Laughter on the Air
How to Be a Radio Announcer
The Peripatetic Reviewer
Capricornia
The World of Yesterday
The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom
Tucker's People
First Harvest
Years of Blindness
Men From Nowhere
The Enigma of Admiral Darlan
Free Men of America
Experiment Perilous
Last Man Off Wake Island
Double, Double: Toil and Trouble
The Dead Look On
Indigo: A Novel of India
SYNOPSIS: A novel of life in an Indian garrison town, Amritpore, this story centers in the household of Madame de St, Remy, a French widow who owns and operates an indigo factory. She despises the English colony, particularly eccentric old Mrs. Lyttleton, who has befriended Madame’s dark-haired son, young Jacques de St. Remy. Jacques has an intimate of his own age, Hardyal, a sensitive young Hindu. To break up these friendships, his mother sends Jacques off to school in the Indian uplands. There he chums up with a schoolmate,
Latin America
The Atlantic Report on the World Today: Washington
Quotes
European Front
The Hornet Stings Japan
The Hoover Frame of Mind
Western Star
The Unimagined America
Ave Atque Vale: A. W
Suspicions Old and New
» Our Anglo-American relations are now, as Walter Lippmann says, so deeply engaged that “they cannot be severed.” But they must be clarified.
Old England My Eye! A Middle Westerner's View
The Great Deception
Bring Back the Liberal Arts
The Liberal Arts have necessarily been minimized in our military training. How shall we bring them back when the war is over?
Art and Mrs. Willoughby
Fly-Fisherman in Wartime
The Pacific War
How Peaceful Are the Irish?
The Cruise of the "Fidget"
Working Around the Clock











