| BY WAY OF CRITICISM NOW THAT the press has featured a particularly startling Nazi decree,  there will doubtless be some general awakening of interest in a situation which has been acute for... | 
    
    
      | August 2, 1935 The Commonweal 335 Week by Week  ONGRESS worried along through a maze  of committee activities while powerful administration efforts to curb revolt were greatly in... | 
    
    
      | August 2,  1935 The Commonweal 337 THE  HORNS OF  DILEMMA By   PAUL   SEVERANCE EVERYBODY in Tennessee is talking about the Valley. Three to one, sixteen to one—such are the... | 
    
    
      | WHEN  THE  PIE WAS OPENED By  THEODORE   MAYNARD FOR SOME time in England there has been what might be described as a slump in poetry. Not that poetry has had for a long while any very great... | 
    
    
      | The Inevitable     -\1 The hands have learned a cunning of their own; The feet have found a path that takes them far; The eyes have followed, seeing all alone A boyish vision of some guiding... | 
    
    
      | 342 The Commonweal August 2,  1935 ETERNAL   REVOLUTION By CHARLES WILLIS THOMPSON 44"1"F ANY   gentleman   in  this   car,"   cried I    Artemus Ward, "has a crisis concealed -^-   on his... | 
    
    
      | 344 The Commonweal August 2,  1935 even urvey The Church.—Sixteen boxing bouts between members of the New York Catholic Boys' Clubs and the Chicago Catholic Youths' Organization were... | 
    
    
      | August 2,  1935 The Commonweal 347 The Play and Screen By  GRENVILLE  VERNON The Summer Theatres THERE is both a pathos and a hope in the multiplication of the summer theatres. Twenty years... | 
    
    
      | 34« The Commonweal August 2,  1935 Communications A LITERARY  CENTER Whittier, Calif. TO the Editor: A few weeks ago The Commonweal called the attention of its readers to two new Catholic... | 
    
    
      | Books A Valuable First Novel Out of the Whirlwind, by William Thomas Walsh. New York: Robert H. McBride and Company.    $2.50. IN THIS novel of American life Mr. Walsh has made fine use of the... |