Dear Editor

DEAR EDITOR ARMOUR I am by nature peaceful, but Richard Armour has gone too far too often. He has occasioned the following: THE MOUNT IDA BLUES I ivandered far the other day, To Attic shores I...

...It is also a grand place for hiking, mountain-climbing, riding and fishing...
...As Dr...
...for the Governor of Georgia, influenced by the President's determined stand and by political reasons relating to Presidential candidates, finally issued a pardon to the missionaries upon their withdrawal of their suit...
...In short, a thoroughly civilized presentation...
...On page 776, Warren states: "Early in January [1833] a Washington correspondent of a New York paper predicted a settlement of the Cherokee Case, writing: 'The President has said, since the Proclamation was promulgated [Jackson's celebrated proclamation, December 10, 1832, answering South Carolina's Nullification Ordinance of November 24, 1832], that he would carry any decision the Supreme Court should make in the imprisonment of the missionaries into effect...
...I feel, as he does, that the Parks (and the National Nature Monuments) are places of wonderful beauty and inspiration, and I have made a point of taking my wife and four children to many of them...
...U. 5. History (rev...
...Oh, poet, hear...
...Harrisburg, Pa...
...In India, it appears, every light must be a votive-light to Nehru, or it is extinguished...
...Boston Harold Huneker INDIA In his very instructive October 21 article, "Bombay Test," Daniel Bell mentions A. D. Gorwala, one of India's leading independent commentators...
...Of course, the Grand Canyon is incomparable...
...Biyce and Yellowstone, except for the latter's splendid canyon, I consider sort of freak parks, but they are fascinating as such...
...and the charge so frequently made in modern histories and legal articles that Jackson actually defied the Court's decree is clearly untrue...
...It is a matter of extreme doubt, however, whether Jackson ever uttered these words...
...The amazing rock formations in Bryce have their own type of beauty, and many people become quite ecstatic over thorn...
...Is it correct to say that "for an inordinately long time modern historiography has neglected to establish the reality of Turkism" and that "this is the first and only definitive history of Turkism" ? It seems to me that Halman might have mentioned Sir Olaf Caroe's masterly Soviet Empire—The Turks of Central Asia and Stalinism (Macmillan, 1953), which retraces the history of the Turks of Asia and draws extensively on Turkish sources...
...Zion is one of the smaller areas...
...Madison, Wis...
...Bohn does not mention two of the most glorious National Parks...
...He is well known to Turki refugees from the Soviet Union...
...New York City Paul "Wohl CHANGING BRITAIN How gratifying it was to read T. R. Fyvel's series on "Changing Britain" (October 28, November 4-11-25) ! Here is the serious type of reporting of foreign affairs I had hoped would become more general in The New Leader after your readership survey showed how many of us want our politics seasoned with economics, sociology, culture and science...
...Sir Olaf, who is the head of the British Institute of Turki Studies, is generally considered an expert In the field of the Pan-Turki movement...
...A year ago, the columns of the Times of India, published in Bombay and New Delhi, were closed to him because he was moderately but firmly critical of Nehru and Krishna Menon...
...but since Zion is only half i mile wide, you can become more intimate, as it were, with its beauty...
...Miniver epoch—a portrait which adjusts our mental image of the country to present-day reality...
...Camarillo, Calif...
...Cleveland Mrs...
...The second is Zion National Park in southern Utah...
...In the past, the Turki movement was studied mainly by British and German scholars and subsidized by London and Berlin as a possible leverage against the Russian Empire...
...they all chimed in, "No soldier, king or farmer Could e'er commit poetic sin Like fertile Richard Armour...
...Fyvel succeeded in giving rounded portrait of how the British scene has changed since the Mrs...
...He has occasioned the following: THE MOUNT IDA BLUES I ivandered far the other day, To Attic shores I knew not...
...I'd like to see a similar one on "Changing America...
...New York City Corliss Lamont TURKISM I have read with interest Talat S. Halman's review (NL, November 11) of Turkism and the Soviets, by Colonel Charles Warren Hostler...
...I hope we shall see more of Mr...
...and thus the crisis in the history of the Court was averted...
...sought why ladies like them would Have cause to wail their bruises...
...The first is Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming, which has the most dramatic mountain scenery I have ever seen in America...
...And recent dispatch tucked away in the New York Times reports that Frank Moraes, editor of the Times of India, has been sacked because of his editorial independence— i.e., because he criticized Nehru and Krishna Menon...
...I understand that this fascinating problem not only appeals to the few disinterested friends of the Turki people among us, but is now also being studied in this country as possible avenue toward breaking up the Soviet Union into national states...
...Bohn makes clear, it is a shame that Congress allocates such small sums to the Park Service...
...Why stand you weeping, Muses nine, Why tears in such profusion...
...every newspaper must be his today, or it gets no newsprint...
...For America's system of National Parks, unique in the world today, offers a continuing and magnificent opportunity to our people for recreation and the appreciation of nature...
...He certainly did not, in fact, refuse to aid in enforcing the Court's decision...
...No earthly sorrows make us brood, But theme and rhyme and meter: To crimes 'gainst these do we allude, And cry tears by the liter...
...Carl A. Auerbach...
...Twas at Mount Idrfs base I stood, And these mere all the Muses...
...His undogmatic and friendly style was also a pleasure, in contract to some of your more hard-bitten polemicists...
...Edward Munce PRESIDENT JACKSON I should like to make the following comment on George La van's November II letter concerning my article, "Little Rock and the Law" (NL, September 30), My reference to President Jackson, which Lavan thinks is erroneous, was based on Charles Warren's account of the Cherokee Cases in Vol...
...1 of The Supreme Court in...
...for the time never arrived when the exercise of executive power to enforce the law was called for...
...The Georgians have been restive under the Proclamation, and there is much to induce a belief that they will in some way avoid a direct collision with the General Government.' This prophecy was soon fulfilled...
...John Sloss Many thanks for the Fyvel series on England...
...Halman hints at these tendencies, but it is frequently helpful to state the political implications of a problem clearly...
...George Niederauer NATIONAL PARKS I was very much interested in William E. Bohn's excellent series on the National Parks (NL, July 22, 29, August 12, 19, 26, September 2, 9...
...ed., 1947), pages 729-779...
...And found nine damsels in dismay, Lamenting o'er their blue lot...
...On page 759, "Warren says: "'Well, John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it,* was the President's commentary on the decision, according to the recollection of a Massachusetts Congressman...
...Has Bacchus, late with food and ivine, Caused all this sad confusion...
...Fyvel (and more like him) in the future...
...Of the canyon parks, it is, I think, the most remarkable...

Vol. 40 • December 1957 • No. 48


 
Developed by
Kanda Sofware
  Kanda Software, Inc.