I shall, I think, be doing a service to some
readers of column, perhaps to many, by calling their attention to a lit book just published—The Undivided Mind, by E. B. Cas headmaster of Leighton Park (Allen and Unwin, 25. 6d. is. 6d.)—which links, more convincingly and more sugg Lively than anything I have read for a long time, the spin with the practical, particularly the spiritual with the see and faces courageously, and again convincingly, the ete problem of divided allegiances and rival loyalties. It fo the annual Swarthmore Lecture, delivered last month to Society of Friends, but while addressed particularly to body (with which its author is associated by conviction, heredity) its appeal is in no way limited thereby. Its hun' pages have that in them which may shape both thought action in many readers.