The Commonweal
The Commonweal
- New York, N.Y. The Commonweal Foundation 1956
No. 1 The alienated professor: "only the naive are shocked by the transformation of the American University into an academic circus/Frederick D. Wilhelmsen. -- pp. 9-12. Signs and symbols/Lyman Bryson. -- pp. 14-16. Search for meaning/Russell Barta. -- pp. 17-20. The stage: a Southern fiction/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 22-24. The screen: "true life is only love./Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 24-27. A scientist's esthetic rage for order/John P. Sisk. -- pp. 27-29. No. 2 Tito's triumph: "Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union share once again a common ideological platform"/Josef Korbel. -- pp.43-45. Water, power, and politics/Lawrence T. King .-- pp. 45-48. The screen: malice in wonderland/ Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 49. Communications: "freud, Catholic s and culture". /Richard C. Crowley. -- pp. 49-50. The "poor Sod " as hero/Sam Hynes. -- pp. 51-53. A Cunning and curious dramatization/John W. Simons. pp. 54-56. No. 3 The secularization of culture; "post Christian thought conceives the world devoid of animations or divinity, an object reducible to the processes of abstract science/Thomas F. O'dea. -- pp. 67-69. Crisis in Algeria/Robert Barrat. -- pp. 70-71. Crime and criticism/John P. Sisk. -- pp. 72-74. The screen: opus, opera/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 74-75 The stage: the expense of spirit/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 75-76 A perceptive report on varied cultures/Gerald Weales. -- pp. 77. Destiny of the new China/Harold C. Hinton. -- pp. 78-79. A man's mission and temptation/William Pfaff. -- pp. 80-81. No. 4 The missionary today: "a missionary must come, not as the representative of a foreign power, but as a simple minister of the gospel/Bede Griffiths. -- pp. 90-92. World behind bars/Eileen Fantino. -- pp. 93-94. The stage: the beautiful, Galatea/Richard Hayes.-- pp. 95-96. The screen: royalty is as royalty does/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 96-97. Communications: "fraud, Catholics, and culture"/John K. Daly. -- pp. 97. Of notes: Soviet visitors to Britain/ -- pp. 97-98 The wisdom of children/Ernestine Evans. -- pp. 98-99. No. 5 Myths about desegregation: " in news analyses of recent events in the south, a fair of familiar stereotypes has emerged/Mabel M. Smythe. -- pp. 115-116. Christians under Ehru/Anthony J. Parel. -- pp. 117-119. Defeat at the box office/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 120-121. The screen: peck under a Bushel/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 121-122. Of note: Catholics and the Ilo/ -- pp. 122-123. Communications: capital punishment/William J. Pease. -- pp. 123-124. Prophet with honor/Philip Scharper. -- pp. 125-126. Of deliverance gained through active despair/Thomas F. Curley. -- pp. 126. Behavior of communism/James Rorty. --pp. 127-128. Pattern of life: democracy and dictatorship/M.A. Fitzsimons. -- pp. 128-129. No. 6 Christianity and ideologies: "ideology has taken the place of theology as the creator or social ideals and the guide of public opinion"/Christopher Dawson. -- pp. 139-143. The anomaly of Andre Gide/Martin Turnel. -- pp. 143-146. The war novel/William J. Smith. -- pp. 146-149. The stage: dissent/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 149-150. The screen: poor butterfly/Phiulip T. Hartung. -- pp. 150-151. Communications: " the tranquil surface"/Leonard F.X. Mayhew. -- pp. 151. Power in the third age of the middle earth/Anthony Bailey. -- pp. 154. The good life: all manner of men/James Greene. -- pp. 155-156. No. 7 The role of woman: "the problem is not so much that modern woman is looking for a career: it is that she id looking for a different career"/John L. Thomas. -- pp. 171-174. Crisis inside communism/Paul Jacobs. -- pp. 174-176. Power and plenty/Clyde t. Ellis. -- pp. 177-178. The screen: one third of a nation/ Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 179. Of notes: task of the Catholic College/ --- pp. 180-181. Communications: "the missionary today"/Edward J. Tully, Jr. -- pp. 181. The citizen as Patriot and traitor: the loyal and the disloyal/Michael Harrington. -- pp. [183]. Origins of England's civil war/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 184. No. 8 The power of the senate: by its nature the senate is not properly constituted frame a national program"/William V. Shannon. -- pp. 195-198. Falling idols/John Caxton. -- pp. 198-200. Progress report/John C. Cort. -- pp. 201-202. The stage: nothing/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 203. The screen: a little learning is/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 204. Of notes: married deacons/. -- pp. 205-206. A joyous , unorthodox search for freedom/Jack Patterson. -- pp. 207. Analyses of the party system: modern political parties/Victor C. Ferkiss. -- pp. 209-210. Other aspects of Lincoln/John Cournos. -- pp. 210-211. No. 9 Franco and Peron: why has Franco managed to survive all storms, whereas the argentine dictator now languishes embittered exile?/Franics E. McMahon. -- pp. 219-222. The expose magazine/John P. Sisk. -- pp. 223-225. The stage: down in the valley/ Richard Hayes. -- pp. 226. The screen: save me the Waltz/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 226-227. Communications: "Alger HIss at princeton/ --- pp, 227-228. Dreiser and his critics/Seymour Krim. -- pp. 229-231. The Eisenhower Crusade and the American way/M.A. Fitzsimons. -- pp. 231-232. No. 10 Pattern for progress: "are the fanatical racists to be allowed to paralyze any discussion which they do not dominate/John La Farce. -- pp. [243]-246. Death of a myth/J.L. Benvenisti. -- pp. 246-249. Fugitives from the Soviet/William J. Donovan. -- pp. 249-250. The screen: daring young man/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 251-252. Communications: children in East Harlem/ Eileen Fantino. -- pp. 252. OF note: modern religious art/ -- pp. 253-254. The dramatic clash of great French Churchmen/Martin Turnell. -- pp. 255-256. No. 11 Realism in foreign policy: " have the realists not fallen over backwards in their efforts not to look like woodrow Wilson"/MIchael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 267-269. The decline of radicalism/John Stanley. -- pp. 269-271. Family farm/Edward W. O'Rourke. -- pp. 272-273. The screen: Looking, looking everywhere/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 274-275. Communications: "crime and criticism/Nathan A. Cervo. -- pp. 275. Nathanael West's holy fool/Arthur Cohen. -- pp. 276-278. Extnded comment on French intellectuals/Frank Getlein. -- pp. 279-280. Lucid account of Soviet conditions: Moscow was my Parish/Helene Iswolsky. -- pp. 281-283. No. 12 The future of education: "educational emphasis has been shifting from the individual and his exceptional qualities to the average man and his social uses"/Thomas Molnar. -- pp. 291-293. Puerto Ricans in New York/Ivan Illich. -- pp. 294-297. Land reform in Maremma/George Lorimer. -- pp. 297-299. The stage: notes and comments/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 299. The screen: life is real, life is earnest/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 300. Communications: "Alger Hiss at Princeton/Alexander B. Carver, Jr. -- pp. 301. The severe and light-hearted world of Saroyan/Tjhomas F. Curley. -- pp. 302. Apartheid in South Africa/Ned O'Gorman. -- pp. 303. No. 13 Moscow and Peking: "even granting ma fundamental community of interest serious differences of policy can still exist/Harold C. Hinton. -- pp. 315-319. Stresses and strains/John C. Cort. -- pp. 319-320. Religion and higher education/Robert M. Hutchins. -- pp. 321-323. The screen: adamant ahab/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 324. Politics of mediocrity/Victor C. Ferkiss. -- pp. 325-326. The New Testament and the Dead Sea Scrolls/Joseph S. Firmyer. -- pp. 327-328. No. 14 HOw neutral is Nehru?: "his neutrality is at at once a solution to the communist program of expansion and an expression of Asia's new creative urge"/Anthony J. Parel. -- pp. 339-342. Stoicism in the South/Walker Percy. -- pp. 342-344. Teaching the teachers/Donald McDonald. -- pp. 345-347. The screen: no sad songs for me/Philip T. Hartung. -- 348. OF note: literature and censorship/ -- pp. 349-351. E.M. Forster's homage to another time/William Dunlea. -- pp. 352. No. 15 New communist line: "this time, the American communists say, we are not what we have always been in the past, this time we are really independent"/Michael Harrington . -- pp. 363-365. The riddle of Sean O'Casey/Vivian Mercier. -- pp. 366-368. John Wesley's Legacy/John M. Todd. -- pp. 369-370. The screen: bad boy/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 371. Communications: "the role of woman/Norman Krause Herzfeld. -- pp. 372-374. Contemporary criticism in the Georgian Manner/Frederick D. Wilhelmsen. -- pp. 375-376. No. 16 Challenge in the UN: "we cannot win the battle of competitive coexistence unless we are more consistently on the side of principle/John Logue. -- pp. 387-390. The impotence of hatred/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 390-392. Meeting of minds/James Collins. -- pp. 393.395. The stage: fun and games/ Richard Hayes. -- pp. 396. The screen: a stately pleasure-dome/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 396-397. Learned, crotchety account of English poetry/Gerald Weales. -- pp. 399. Germany's post-war development/Victor C. Ferkiss. -- pp. 400. No. 17 Choosing the candidates: "conventions have been most useful democratic agencies for the peaceful transmission of power/Joseph F. Menez. -- pp. 411-413. Shaping the Christian message/Gerard S. Sloyan. -- pp. 413-417. The world of Ibsen/Stephen Whicher. -- pp. 417-419. The screen: Mr. Roberts rides again/Philip T. Hartung. --pp. 419-420. Communication: "the supreme court"/J.M. O'Neill. -- pp. 420. Franco, peron and the church/Erik Von Kuehnelt-Leddihn. -- pp. 420-*421. Beleagured reputation of a great iconoclast/R.T. Horchler. -- pp. 422. Mannners, values, and literature/Thomas F. Curley. -- pp. 423-424. No. 18 Realities of religion: " as soon as we of God's presence within the human spirit, we are brought face to face with the timeless realities of religion"/Alfred Graham. -- pp. 435-438. Right-to -work laws/John C.Cort. -- pp. 438-440. The screen: pilgrims' progress/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 441. Communications: "Puerto Ricans in New York"/Edward J. Dunne, C.SS.R. -- pp. 442. Of note: Ignatius and the new age/ -- pp. 442-444. The Ishmael complex/Patrick F. Quinn. -- pp. 444-448. Pathetic grandeur of a belfast spinster/William Clancy. -- pp. 448. No. 19 The South's economy: "it must be borne in mind that the South's relatives gain has halted: her future is in serious doubt/R.W. Faulhaber. -- pp. 459-461. Person's successors/Jaime Potenze. -- pp. 462 -463. Apostle to China/Lancelot C. Sheppard. -- pp. 464-466. The screen: the malady Lingers on/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 466-467. Communications: wages and price/Martin E. Schirber, O.S.B.-- pp. 467-468. The life of Thomas Cranmer/Theodore Maynard. -- pp. 468. Of note: religion, state and society/ --- pp. 469-471. The Oceanic sense of James Joyce/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 471-472. No. 20 A republican's view: "it remains for the party now and in the future years to espouse the eisenhower doctrine'/Jacob K. Javits. -- pp. 483-486. A democrat's view: " the democratic party, as the liberal party, looks to the office of the President as the great hope for progressive legislation"/Paul H. Dougals and Howard Shuman. -- pp. 486-489. Mirror of politics/William V. Shannon. -- pp. 489-491. The screen: twelve O'clock is still high/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 492. Of note: the language of devotion/ -- pp. 493-494. Familiar Catholic stories, too seldom told/John F. Sullivan. -- pp. 495-496. No. 21 Impressions of America: "de tocqueville forecast a century ago that America would lead the way to a classes society, many Americans think this prophecy is already fulfilled/Michael P, Fogarty. -- pp. 507-509. Priest of the slums/ -- pp. 510-512. Israel today: modern Sparta/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 512-513. The screen: pale horse, bright rider/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 514. The stage: waiting for hickey/Richard Hayes.-- pp. 515-516 Little nobleman, great Saint, continued paradox/Philip Scharper. -- pp. 518. Precarious balance of opposed demands/James Greene. -- pp. 520. No. 22 Christianity and civilization:'to speak of Christian civilization is not to speak of a myth, neither the nostalgic myth of a new middle ages, nor the dream of a kingdom of God on earth"/Jean Danielou. -- pp. 531-533. The American worker/Edward A. Marciniak. -- pp. 533-537. Elections in Japan/Murray Polner. -- pp. 537-539. The screen: one man in his time/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 539-540. The stage: passion and society/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 540-542. Communications: "wages and prices"/R.A. McGowan. -- pp. 542. Frank, Lucid appraisal of controversial F.D.R./Michael Harrington. -- pp. 544. History in the service of popular art/Dexter Allen. -- pp. 545-547. No. 23 The power of the President: "American politics has come to be not a debate over issues but a search for an all-knowing, all-loving, all-powerful leader/Victor C. Ferkiss. -- pp. 555-558. Rumors of war/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 558-560. The screen: brash boy braves bus/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 561-562. OF note: the natural law/ -- pp. 562-563. Golden Horizon/Joseph M. Duffy, Jr. -- pp. 564-566. A poetic and wise book/John P. Sisk. -- pp. 567. No. 24 Letter to France: " I too have made Christ a prisoner of a certain limited way of thinking and feeling/Francois Mauriac. -- pp. 579-580. Long road to Baghdad/William Pfaff. --pp. 581-584. The screen: long war/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp.587-588. Of Note: Catholics and community/ -- pp. 588-589. Art imitating life in California politics/John F. Sullivan. -- pp. 591-592. No. 25 Challenge to America: "if we cannot or will not solve the problem of race relations, our future is in serious jeopardy/L.J. Wowey. -- pp. 603-606. The burden of Algeria/Robert Barrat. -- pp.606-608. Last fortress of the celt/David H. Greene. -- pp. 609-610. The screen: seasoned with gallic/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 611. Communications: elections in Japan/Edmund S. Wehrle. -- pp. 611-612. Spirit of a decade/Thomas F. Curley. -- pp. 613-614. On Mary McCarthy's advance to farther frontiers/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 615-616. Of Abraham, Sarah and Isaac/Henry Popkin. -- pp. 616-617. No. 26 Neutralism in Asia: "the tide of neutralism runs very deep and embraces important segments of all classes of Asian society"/Harold C. Hinton. -- pp. 627-630. A continuing debate/Funnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 630-632. Labor makes a choice/John C. Cort. -- pp. 632-633. The screen: bad seeds makes bitter fruit/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 633-634. The stage: the making of Americans/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 634-635. A Jesuit poet in Elizabethan England/D.H. Moseley. -- pp. 635-637.
PER .C65 / 1956 V.64
No. 1 The alienated professor: "only the naive are shocked by the transformation of the American University into an academic circus/Frederick D. Wilhelmsen. -- pp. 9-12. Signs and symbols/Lyman Bryson. -- pp. 14-16. Search for meaning/Russell Barta. -- pp. 17-20. The stage: a Southern fiction/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 22-24. The screen: "true life is only love./Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 24-27. A scientist's esthetic rage for order/John P. Sisk. -- pp. 27-29. No. 2 Tito's triumph: "Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union share once again a common ideological platform"/Josef Korbel. -- pp.43-45. Water, power, and politics/Lawrence T. King .-- pp. 45-48. The screen: malice in wonderland/ Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 49. Communications: "freud, Catholic s and culture". /Richard C. Crowley. -- pp. 49-50. The "poor Sod " as hero/Sam Hynes. -- pp. 51-53. A Cunning and curious dramatization/John W. Simons. pp. 54-56. No. 3 The secularization of culture; "post Christian thought conceives the world devoid of animations or divinity, an object reducible to the processes of abstract science/Thomas F. O'dea. -- pp. 67-69. Crisis in Algeria/Robert Barrat. -- pp. 70-71. Crime and criticism/John P. Sisk. -- pp. 72-74. The screen: opus, opera/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 74-75 The stage: the expense of spirit/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 75-76 A perceptive report on varied cultures/Gerald Weales. -- pp. 77. Destiny of the new China/Harold C. Hinton. -- pp. 78-79. A man's mission and temptation/William Pfaff. -- pp. 80-81. No. 4 The missionary today: "a missionary must come, not as the representative of a foreign power, but as a simple minister of the gospel/Bede Griffiths. -- pp. 90-92. World behind bars/Eileen Fantino. -- pp. 93-94. The stage: the beautiful, Galatea/Richard Hayes.-- pp. 95-96. The screen: royalty is as royalty does/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 96-97. Communications: "fraud, Catholics, and culture"/John K. Daly. -- pp. 97. Of notes: Soviet visitors to Britain/ -- pp. 97-98 The wisdom of children/Ernestine Evans. -- pp. 98-99. No. 5 Myths about desegregation: " in news analyses of recent events in the south, a fair of familiar stereotypes has emerged/Mabel M. Smythe. -- pp. 115-116. Christians under Ehru/Anthony J. Parel. -- pp. 117-119. Defeat at the box office/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 120-121. The screen: peck under a Bushel/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 121-122. Of note: Catholics and the Ilo/ -- pp. 122-123. Communications: capital punishment/William J. Pease. -- pp. 123-124. Prophet with honor/Philip Scharper. -- pp. 125-126. Of deliverance gained through active despair/Thomas F. Curley. -- pp. 126. Behavior of communism/James Rorty. --pp. 127-128. Pattern of life: democracy and dictatorship/M.A. Fitzsimons. -- pp. 128-129. No. 6 Christianity and ideologies: "ideology has taken the place of theology as the creator or social ideals and the guide of public opinion"/Christopher Dawson. -- pp. 139-143. The anomaly of Andre Gide/Martin Turnel. -- pp. 143-146. The war novel/William J. Smith. -- pp. 146-149. The stage: dissent/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 149-150. The screen: poor butterfly/Phiulip T. Hartung. -- pp. 150-151. Communications: " the tranquil surface"/Leonard F.X. Mayhew. -- pp. 151. Power in the third age of the middle earth/Anthony Bailey. -- pp. 154. The good life: all manner of men/James Greene. -- pp. 155-156. No. 7 The role of woman: "the problem is not so much that modern woman is looking for a career: it is that she id looking for a different career"/John L. Thomas. -- pp. 171-174. Crisis inside communism/Paul Jacobs. -- pp. 174-176. Power and plenty/Clyde t. Ellis. -- pp. 177-178. The screen: one third of a nation/ Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 179. Of notes: task of the Catholic College/ --- pp. 180-181. Communications: "the missionary today"/Edward J. Tully, Jr. -- pp. 181. The citizen as Patriot and traitor: the loyal and the disloyal/Michael Harrington. -- pp. [183]. Origins of England's civil war/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 184. No. 8 The power of the senate: by its nature the senate is not properly constituted frame a national program"/William V. Shannon. -- pp. 195-198. Falling idols/John Caxton. -- pp. 198-200. Progress report/John C. Cort. -- pp. 201-202. The stage: nothing/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 203. The screen: a little learning is/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 204. Of notes: married deacons/. -- pp. 205-206. A joyous , unorthodox search for freedom/Jack Patterson. -- pp. 207. Analyses of the party system: modern political parties/Victor C. Ferkiss. -- pp. 209-210. Other aspects of Lincoln/John Cournos. -- pp. 210-211. No. 9 Franco and Peron: why has Franco managed to survive all storms, whereas the argentine dictator now languishes embittered exile?/Franics E. McMahon. -- pp. 219-222. The expose magazine/John P. Sisk. -- pp. 223-225. The stage: down in the valley/ Richard Hayes. -- pp. 226. The screen: save me the Waltz/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 226-227. Communications: "Alger HIss at princeton/ --- pp, 227-228. Dreiser and his critics/Seymour Krim. -- pp. 229-231. The Eisenhower Crusade and the American way/M.A. Fitzsimons. -- pp. 231-232. No. 10 Pattern for progress: "are the fanatical racists to be allowed to paralyze any discussion which they do not dominate/John La Farce. -- pp. [243]-246. Death of a myth/J.L. Benvenisti. -- pp. 246-249. Fugitives from the Soviet/William J. Donovan. -- pp. 249-250. The screen: daring young man/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 251-252. Communications: children in East Harlem/ Eileen Fantino. -- pp. 252. OF note: modern religious art/ -- pp. 253-254. The dramatic clash of great French Churchmen/Martin Turnell. -- pp. 255-256. No. 11 Realism in foreign policy: " have the realists not fallen over backwards in their efforts not to look like woodrow Wilson"/MIchael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 267-269. The decline of radicalism/John Stanley. -- pp. 269-271. Family farm/Edward W. O'Rourke. -- pp. 272-273. The screen: Looking, looking everywhere/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 274-275. Communications: "crime and criticism/Nathan A. Cervo. -- pp. 275. Nathanael West's holy fool/Arthur Cohen. -- pp. 276-278. Extnded comment on French intellectuals/Frank Getlein. -- pp. 279-280. Lucid account of Soviet conditions: Moscow was my Parish/Helene Iswolsky. -- pp. 281-283. No. 12 The future of education: "educational emphasis has been shifting from the individual and his exceptional qualities to the average man and his social uses"/Thomas Molnar. -- pp. 291-293. Puerto Ricans in New York/Ivan Illich. -- pp. 294-297. Land reform in Maremma/George Lorimer. -- pp. 297-299. The stage: notes and comments/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 299. The screen: life is real, life is earnest/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 300. Communications: "Alger Hiss at Princeton/Alexander B. Carver, Jr. -- pp. 301. The severe and light-hearted world of Saroyan/Tjhomas F. Curley. -- pp. 302. Apartheid in South Africa/Ned O'Gorman. -- pp. 303. No. 13 Moscow and Peking: "even granting ma fundamental community of interest serious differences of policy can still exist/Harold C. Hinton. -- pp. 315-319. Stresses and strains/John C. Cort. -- pp. 319-320. Religion and higher education/Robert M. Hutchins. -- pp. 321-323. The screen: adamant ahab/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 324. Politics of mediocrity/Victor C. Ferkiss. -- pp. 325-326. The New Testament and the Dead Sea Scrolls/Joseph S. Firmyer. -- pp. 327-328. No. 14 HOw neutral is Nehru?: "his neutrality is at at once a solution to the communist program of expansion and an expression of Asia's new creative urge"/Anthony J. Parel. -- pp. 339-342. Stoicism in the South/Walker Percy. -- pp. 342-344. Teaching the teachers/Donald McDonald. -- pp. 345-347. The screen: no sad songs for me/Philip T. Hartung. -- 348. OF note: literature and censorship/ -- pp. 349-351. E.M. Forster's homage to another time/William Dunlea. -- pp. 352. No. 15 New communist line: "this time, the American communists say, we are not what we have always been in the past, this time we are really independent"/Michael Harrington . -- pp. 363-365. The riddle of Sean O'Casey/Vivian Mercier. -- pp. 366-368. John Wesley's Legacy/John M. Todd. -- pp. 369-370. The screen: bad boy/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 371. Communications: "the role of woman/Norman Krause Herzfeld. -- pp. 372-374. Contemporary criticism in the Georgian Manner/Frederick D. Wilhelmsen. -- pp. 375-376. No. 16 Challenge in the UN: "we cannot win the battle of competitive coexistence unless we are more consistently on the side of principle/John Logue. -- pp. 387-390. The impotence of hatred/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 390-392. Meeting of minds/James Collins. -- pp. 393.395. The stage: fun and games/ Richard Hayes. -- pp. 396. The screen: a stately pleasure-dome/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 396-397. Learned, crotchety account of English poetry/Gerald Weales. -- pp. 399. Germany's post-war development/Victor C. Ferkiss. -- pp. 400. No. 17 Choosing the candidates: "conventions have been most useful democratic agencies for the peaceful transmission of power/Joseph F. Menez. -- pp. 411-413. Shaping the Christian message/Gerard S. Sloyan. -- pp. 413-417. The world of Ibsen/Stephen Whicher. -- pp. 417-419. The screen: Mr. Roberts rides again/Philip T. Hartung. --pp. 419-420. Communication: "the supreme court"/J.M. O'Neill. -- pp. 420. Franco, peron and the church/Erik Von Kuehnelt-Leddihn. -- pp. 420-*421. Beleagured reputation of a great iconoclast/R.T. Horchler. -- pp. 422. Mannners, values, and literature/Thomas F. Curley. -- pp. 423-424. No. 18 Realities of religion: " as soon as we of God's presence within the human spirit, we are brought face to face with the timeless realities of religion"/Alfred Graham. -- pp. 435-438. Right-to -work laws/John C.Cort. -- pp. 438-440. The screen: pilgrims' progress/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 441. Communications: "Puerto Ricans in New York"/Edward J. Dunne, C.SS.R. -- pp. 442. Of note: Ignatius and the new age/ -- pp. 442-444. The Ishmael complex/Patrick F. Quinn. -- pp. 444-448. Pathetic grandeur of a belfast spinster/William Clancy. -- pp. 448. No. 19 The South's economy: "it must be borne in mind that the South's relatives gain has halted: her future is in serious doubt/R.W. Faulhaber. -- pp. 459-461. Person's successors/Jaime Potenze. -- pp. 462 -463. Apostle to China/Lancelot C. Sheppard. -- pp. 464-466. The screen: the malady Lingers on/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 466-467. Communications: wages and price/Martin E. Schirber, O.S.B.-- pp. 467-468. The life of Thomas Cranmer/Theodore Maynard. -- pp. 468. Of note: religion, state and society/ --- pp. 469-471. The Oceanic sense of James Joyce/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 471-472. No. 20 A republican's view: "it remains for the party now and in the future years to espouse the eisenhower doctrine'/Jacob K. Javits. -- pp. 483-486. A democrat's view: " the democratic party, as the liberal party, looks to the office of the President as the great hope for progressive legislation"/Paul H. Dougals and Howard Shuman. -- pp. 486-489. Mirror of politics/William V. Shannon. -- pp. 489-491. The screen: twelve O'clock is still high/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 492. Of note: the language of devotion/ -- pp. 493-494. Familiar Catholic stories, too seldom told/John F. Sullivan. -- pp. 495-496. No. 21 Impressions of America: "de tocqueville forecast a century ago that America would lead the way to a classes society, many Americans think this prophecy is already fulfilled/Michael P, Fogarty. -- pp. 507-509. Priest of the slums/ -- pp. 510-512. Israel today: modern Sparta/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 512-513. The screen: pale horse, bright rider/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 514. The stage: waiting for hickey/Richard Hayes.-- pp. 515-516 Little nobleman, great Saint, continued paradox/Philip Scharper. -- pp. 518. Precarious balance of opposed demands/James Greene. -- pp. 520. No. 22 Christianity and civilization:'to speak of Christian civilization is not to speak of a myth, neither the nostalgic myth of a new middle ages, nor the dream of a kingdom of God on earth"/Jean Danielou. -- pp. 531-533. The American worker/Edward A. Marciniak. -- pp. 533-537. Elections in Japan/Murray Polner. -- pp. 537-539. The screen: one man in his time/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 539-540. The stage: passion and society/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 540-542. Communications: "wages and prices"/R.A. McGowan. -- pp. 542. Frank, Lucid appraisal of controversial F.D.R./Michael Harrington. -- pp. 544. History in the service of popular art/Dexter Allen. -- pp. 545-547. No. 23 The power of the President: "American politics has come to be not a debate over issues but a search for an all-knowing, all-loving, all-powerful leader/Victor C. Ferkiss. -- pp. 555-558. Rumors of war/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 558-560. The screen: brash boy braves bus/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 561-562. OF note: the natural law/ -- pp. 562-563. Golden Horizon/Joseph M. Duffy, Jr. -- pp. 564-566. A poetic and wise book/John P. Sisk. -- pp. 567. No. 24 Letter to France: " I too have made Christ a prisoner of a certain limited way of thinking and feeling/Francois Mauriac. -- pp. 579-580. Long road to Baghdad/William Pfaff. --pp. 581-584. The screen: long war/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp.587-588. Of Note: Catholics and community/ -- pp. 588-589. Art imitating life in California politics/John F. Sullivan. -- pp. 591-592. No. 25 Challenge to America: "if we cannot or will not solve the problem of race relations, our future is in serious jeopardy/L.J. Wowey. -- pp. 603-606. The burden of Algeria/Robert Barrat. -- pp.606-608. Last fortress of the celt/David H. Greene. -- pp. 609-610. The screen: seasoned with gallic/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 611. Communications: elections in Japan/Edmund S. Wehrle. -- pp. 611-612. Spirit of a decade/Thomas F. Curley. -- pp. 613-614. On Mary McCarthy's advance to farther frontiers/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 615-616. Of Abraham, Sarah and Isaac/Henry Popkin. -- pp. 616-617. No. 26 Neutralism in Asia: "the tide of neutralism runs very deep and embraces important segments of all classes of Asian society"/Harold C. Hinton. -- pp. 627-630. A continuing debate/Funnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 630-632. Labor makes a choice/John C. Cort. -- pp. 632-633. The screen: bad seeds makes bitter fruit/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 633-634. The stage: the making of Americans/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 634-635. A Jesuit poet in Elizabethan England/D.H. Moseley. -- pp. 635-637.
PER .C65 / 1956 V.64