MIDDLE EAST: Concert in Cairo
To Cairo last week for a conference on Pan-Arab problems came Premier Riad Solh of Lebanon. For the first time, he and his party represented an independent nation. The crisis over France's League of Nations mandate (TIME, Nov. 29) was settled. Syria and Lebanon had won their point: "all powers and capacities hitherto exercised by the French" had passed to their native governments.
France still had a legal claim; juridically, the mandate still existed. But this was a tenuous handhold on an area which has traditionally been the scene of Anglo-French imperial rivalry. Commented London's Times with surprising frankness: the settlement...
Email, Password or Region is incorrect
A required form parameter was missing.
The System is currently down. Please try again in a few minutes.
Email Address is invalid
Password is blank
Most Popular »
- Your Turn, Canada: A Second-By-Second Look at Jeremy Lin Lighting Up Toronto
- Linsanity Heads East, Linfects China and Taiwan
- Love Ever After: A Valentine’s Day Special
- Can Jeremy Lin End The MSG/Time Warner Cable War?
- After Whitney Houston, Musicians Say: I'm Afraid
- What's in Your Lipstick? FDA Finds Lead in 400 Shades
- Rick Santorum Wants to Fight 'The Dangers Of Contraception'
- Top 10 Famous Love Letters
- Move Over, Pajama Jeans: Dress-Pant Sweatpants Have Arrived
- Music: White Lies and The White Stripes
- Harvard's Hoops Star Is Asian. Why's That a Problem?
- With Syria's Rebels: A Visit to a Bombmaker's Factory
- Beirut: Where Valentine's Day Belongs to Another Kind of Saint
- Study: Lead Poisoning Could Lurk in Spices
- Europe's Deep Freeze: Why Climate Change Is Not (Entirely) to Blame
- Children of the New India: How Economic Reforms Impacted Upon the Young
- Friends With Benefits
- Iowa Welcomes Back China's Next President
- The Brain: The Mystery of Consciousness
- What Happens When We Die?




