The Commonweal.
The Commonweal.
- New York, NY Commonweal Foundation 1953
No. 1 Academic freedom: " it will endure only as long as those who profess to have a right to it stand ready to pay for it any price which may be exacted."/George N. Shuster. -- pp. 11-13. Foreign mission at home: "the deepest need of the Catholic foreign student is to acquire a mature, apostolic Christian personality/Lydwine Van Kiersbergen. -- pp. 14-17. Marshal Tito comes to call/MIchael P;. Fogarty. -- pp. 18-22. The screen: where she danced/Philip T. HArtung. -- pp. 24. A portrait of the artist as critic/Patrick F. Quinn. -- pp. 26-27. No. 2 Clericalism, anti-clericalism: as part its own battle-scarred vocabulary, the nineteenth century has left us "clerical" and "anti-clerical)/Frederick E. Flynn. -- pp. 43-47. Amending Taft-Hartley/John C. Cort. -- pp. 48-49. New forces and new faces/Richard C. Hottelet. -- pp. 49-51. The stage: Camino real/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 51-52. The screen: fugue played with guns/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 52-53. Communications: Sidney Hook/John E. Connor. -- pp. 54. The ultimate detachment of a free spirit/Richard Butler. -- pp. 55-57. Jewish American: commentary on the American scene/Seymour Krim. -- pp . 58-59. No. 3 Speaking of policies/John Cogley. -- pp. 66. An American in Asia: "every American in India who was made a genuine effort to know the Indian people as human beings has been richly rewarded/Chester Bowles. -- pp. 67-70. The political uses of peace/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 70-72. The stage: room service/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 72. The screen: what are the little films saying?/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 73. Communications: the Lattimore case/Thomas E. Kennelly. -- pp. 74-75. "Is there a religious noise?/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 75-77. Surface and substance in a major talent/Seymour krim. -- pp. 78. The coin of tribute: the realm of spirit and the realm of Ceasar/Pierre Conway. -- pp. 79. A key to Asia: five gentleman of Japan/William Pfaff. -- pp. 79-80. No. 4 The Mayor of Florence: the florentines have put a Christian in City Hall who, they say, is more communist than the communists/Vanna Philips. -- pp. 91-93. Catholicism in America: as citizens, Catholics do well to remember that "in politics as in science the church need no seek her own ends."/William P. Clancy. -- pp. 94-96. Have we really got it so good?/R. W. Faulhaber. -- pp. 97-99. The screen: design for chilled spine/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 99-100. The stage: angelic doctor/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 100. Communications: need for light/Robert McAfee Brown. -- pp. 100-102. Seeing the man beyond the legend/Neville Braybrooke. -- pp. 103. The humanistic vocation of literature/John W. Simons. -- pp. 106-107. No. 5 Democratizing/John Cogley. -- pp. 114. The finaly case: the Catholic and Jewish communities in France are divided over the fate of two war orphans/Robert Barrat. -- pp. 115-117. A Protestant looks at Catholics/Reinhold Niebuhr. -- pp. 117-120. A man from India/John C. Cort. -- pp. 120-121. The screen: a man must stand up/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp.121-122. The voice of Tito/Evelyn Waugh. -- pp. 122-125. The early phase of an American Writer/Wayne Andrews. -- pp. 125- The "little life" of everyman/Frank Getlein. -- pp. 126-127. Details and trends of history: the mind of the Middle Ages --A.D. 200-1500, an historical survey/Max Fischer. -- pp. 128. No. 6 My novels: "to write one book, just one, that would absolve me from writing any other one: I have never begun a novel without hoping"/Francois Mauriac. -- pp. 140-143. The magic of Mauriac: " to love for his heroes and heroines, is to fall victim to a kind of trick or mirage."/Donat O'Donnell. -- pp. 144-150. The stage: Bleak house/Philip T. Hartung. --- pp. 151-153. The "innocence" of an art which endures/George Miles. -- pp. 154. Campus communism: heresy, yes--conspiracy, no/John Cogley. -- pp. 155-156. No. 7 People and food: "no political leader, however powerful, no economist, whoever learned, has the slightest right to interfere with the birth of children"/Colin Clark. -- pp. 171-173. A Jew looks at Catholics: comments made in in the hope that American Catholics will see themselves as a friendly outsider sees them/Will Herberg. -- pp. 174-177. The artless art of Italiam films/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 177-179. The stage: modest proposals/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 179-180. The screen: old hickory smoked/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 180-181. Tawney as Christian socialist/Geoffrey Ashe. -- pp. 182-183. One woman: Mary Magdalene/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 184-185. The long struggle: go tell it on the mountain/T.E. Cassidy. -- pp. 186. No. 8 Arab refugees: hundreds of thousands of Palestinian Arabs in camps throughout the Middle East still dream returning home/Jules Kagian. -- pp. 195-196. "They servant, our Queen/Donald Attwater. -- pp. 197-198. An uncertain courtship/John C. Cort. -- pp. 199-200. The stage: can-can/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 200. The Screen: strong men-weak minds/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 201. Communications: liturgical art/Clarence E. Giese. -- pp. 201-202 Morals Makyth movies/Gerald Vann. -- pp. 203-204. The ordered insight which is earned/R.J. Schoeck. -- pp. 205. A flight from man -- and God/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 206-207. The Revelation of man to man/Emeric A. Lawrence. -- pp. 207-208. No. 9 Strangers to their own: no happy ending is in sight for three thousand American-German children of Negro blood/Manfred George. -- pp. 219-221. Catholics and American democracy/John Cogley. -- pp. 221-24. The wages of virtue/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 225-226. The stage: the New York City opera/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 226-227. The screen: where angels fear/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 227-228. Communications: "clericalism, anti-clericalism/Francis B. Donnelly. -- pp. 228-229. Jung and the Christians/Karl Stern. -- pp. 229-231. The reconciliation of art and intelligence: feeling and from: a theory of art development from philosophy in a new key/Robert Fitzgerald. -- pp. 231-232. One who believed in man: father Tommpkins of Nova Scotia/Leo R. Ward. -- pp. 232-233. No. 10 Contemplatives in India: Benedictine Monks are modifying the Christian monastic tradition to fit the mood and culture of the orient/Roland Hill. -- pp. 243-246. Catholics and American democracy/John Cogley. -- pp. 245-248. The screen: a buss for bess/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 249. Communications: "a Jew looks at Catholics"/Francis E. McMahon. -- pp. 250. A center for social action: Ciudad Trajillo, Dominican Republic/J.H. Steele, S.F.M. -- pp. 250-251. The real world of science fiction/Seymour Krim. -- pp. 252-254. Ordeal: Calvary in China/James O'Gara. -- pp. 256. A Modern Monarch: King George V: his life and reign, 1865-1936/M.A. Fitzsimons. -- pp. 257-258. The poor man: the hour of St. Francis of Assisi/Claire Huchet Bishop. -- pp. 258-259 No. 11 The Catholic reactionary: an enthusiastic distributor of blinkers, muzzles, handcuffs, gags and earmuffs, he finds in the church not fulfillment, but armor/Eric Von Kuehnelt-Leddihn.-- pp. 267-270. Crown, color and witchdoctors/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 271-273. The stage: me and Juliet/Richard Hayes. pp. 273. The screen: the fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 273-274. Communication: "a Protestant looks at Catholics"/J.M. Malloch. -- pp. 274-275. Humanist on the stump/Philip J. Scharper. -- pp. 276-278. To recover a concept and a tradition/Frederick D. Wilhelmsen. -- pp. 278-279. Life of the spirit: Christ the ideal of the priest/Alban Baer. -- pp. 282-283. No. 12 Britain and the far east: an analysis of British opinion in an area where Anglo-American relations are most strained/Harold C. Hinton. -- pp. 291-293. Catholic separatism/John J. Kane. -- pp. 293-276. The stage: poets in the theater/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 297-298. The screen: movies' answer to movies/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 298. Communications: "the finaly case/Robert Sterling. -- pp. 299-300. Two kinds of war/Willim Pfaff. -- pp.300-302. The building of a bridge: section 1: a yearbook of contemporary thought in anthropology, Biblical study, psychology, philosophy, theology, biology/John W. Simons. -- pp. 304-307. No. 13 Fear and freedom: "we are never free from the danger of reducing unity in university to uniformity"/Jerome G. Kerwin. -- pp. 315-317. Setback for the Christian democrats/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 318-320. Before you walk, you crawl/John C. Cort. -- pp. 320-322. The screen: "this scepter'd isle"/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 322-323. Of Note: totalitarianism/ -- pp. 323-324. Their profession was war/Nobert Muhlen. -- pp. 324-325. A Victorian proto-martyr of the arts/Marshall McLuhan. -- pp. 326-327. No. 14 Being an Irish writer: booby traps lie in wait for every writers, but they have a special lure for the provincial/Sean O'Faolain. -- pp. 339-341. Clergy and laity/Joseph M. Duffy, Jr. -- pp. 341-345. Marx, morals, and the vacuum/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 345-347. The screen: what no toast?/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 348. Of note: end of segregation/ -- pp. 348-350. The lectern and the judgements seat/Frank Getlein. -- pp. 350. Two histories: Christianity in European history/Philip Burnham. -- pp. 351-353. No. 15 Revolt of the children: they were born into a world where life itself has been devalued/Manya Harari. -- pp. 363-365. The woman who was rich/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 366-367. The Hearn's strike/John C. Cort. -- pp. 367-369. The screen: and made of green cheese/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 369. Communications: "clericalism, anti-clericalism/Frederick E. Flynn. -- pp. 370. "Catholicism in American/Laurence Michel. -- pp. 370-371. The cosmic struggle: for the sake of heaven/Will Herberg. -- pp. 372. No. 16 Spain today: "while one may not have liberties in Spain, one may take them with a certain assurance of success"/Robert H. Boyle. -- pp. 387-389. Catholics and politics: as voters, Catholics and non-Catholics alike tend to take on the political coloration of their economic class/Daniel F. Cleary. -- pp. 390-392. Trouble comes to memphis/William H. Slavick. -- pp. 392-394. The stage: Martha Graham's theater/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 394-395. The screen: in the cool, cool, cool of the movie/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 395-396. Communications: "Catholic separatism"\Hugh Dickinson. -- pp. 396-397. An analysis of the American political temper: the genius of American politics/John W. Lukacs. -- pp. 397-398. No. 17 Love among the ruins: a romance of the near future with decorations by various eminent hands including the authors's/Evelyn Waugh. -- pp.410-422. The stage: a backward glance/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 423. The screen: hitch your wagon/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 423-424. The squander of innocence/Doris Grumbach. -- pp. 425. Sharp dissension: Soviet imperialism: its origin and tactics/John A. Lukacs. -- pp. 426. No. 18 Rights of the guilty: "in coping with the communist threat, we have perhaps endangered our safety more than a spy could ever go"/Michael Harrington. -- pp.435-437. Catholics and education/Joseph E. Cunneen. --pp. 437-441. The screen: "square cut or pear shape"/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 442-444. Barracdes in the background/Hans Sahl. -- pp. 445-446. The giant of the Irish revival: three great Irishmen, shaw, yeats, Joyce/Walter Kerr. -- pp. 446-447. No. 19 Two poverties: " in a orwell began where Bloy had left off and left off where Bloy had begun/Neville Braybrooke. -- pp. 459-461. Catholics and education/Joseph E. Cunneen. -- pp. 461-464. The Rosenberg case/Robert Barrat. -- pp. 464-466. The screen: suds in your eye/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 466-467. Alger Hiss and the Earl Jowitt/James N. Vaugh. -- pp. 467-479. A Catholic evaluation of psychoanalysis/William C. Bier. -- pp. 470-471. No. 20 The Catholic assimilationist: "he believes implicitly in the Goddness of all winds, waves and currents"/Erik Von Kuehnelt-LEddihn. -- pp. 483-486. Unity in the making/JOhn C. Cort. -- pp. 486-488. The screen:gentlemen-rankers on a spree/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 488-489. Communications:"the church today"/Victor C. Ferkiss. -- pp. 489-490. Anglicans and reunion/John M. Todd. -- pp. 490-491. A prelate who stood at the center of his times/George N. Shuster. -- pp. 492-493. New philosophy: good and evil/Pierre Conway. -- pp. 494-495. Apostle: Saint Paul/H.A. Reihold. -- pp. 496. No. 21 Visit to Padre Pio: because the humanity of the capuchin mystics is so evident his sanctity is all the more impressive./Sean O'Faolain. -- pp. 507-509. Catholic and science/Julian Pleasants. -- pp.509-514. The commonweal and McCarthyism/Philip Burnham. -- pp. 515-520. The screen: no moaning at no bars/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 520. The recollections of a Bloomsbury critic/Marshall McLuhan. -- pp. 521. No. 23 The age of advertising: the ads are form of magic which have come to dominate a new civilization/Marshall McLuhan. -- pp. 555-557. Catholics and social reform/Edward A. Marciniak. -- pp. 557-560. The screen: riding, riding/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 561. Communications: 'the Reosenberg case"/Claire Huchet Bishop. -- pp. 561-562. Of note: authority/ -- pp. 563-564. The private necessity/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 564-566. No. 24 After the brave new world: now naive optimism has yielded to nervous fears and dawnism has turned into twilightism/John J. Wright. -- pp. 579-582. Can a psychologist be religious?/Victor White. -- pp.583-584. Big bill rides again/John C. Cort. pp. 584-586. The screen: a star is born/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 586-587. Communications:"McCarthyism"/John J. Hebal. -- pp. 587. Two Protestant approaches to social problems/John F. Crown. -- pp. 589-590. No. 25 IS there a Christian learning: " a catholic scholar is more than, and other than, a Catholic who is a scholar; his learning has some kind of plus value/Leo R. Ward. -- pp. 605-607. American houses in Europe/Erik Von Kuehnelt-Leddihn. -- pp. 607-609. The screen: this happy breed/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 610. Communication: "Catholic and science/Roy J. Deferrari. -- pp.610-612. Of note: contemporary spirituality/ -- pp. 613. Indictment: the making of a Moron/Geoffrey Ashe. -- pp. 614-616. No. 26 Silence on the left: the new deal marked the decline of American radicalism as revolutionaries turned reformers/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 627-630. Catholic radicalism/Ed Willock. -- pp. 630-633. The stage: Anna Russell's little show/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 634. The meeting of theology and history/Erwin W. Geissman. -- pp. 635-636.
PER .C65 / 1953 V.58
No. 1 Academic freedom: " it will endure only as long as those who profess to have a right to it stand ready to pay for it any price which may be exacted."/George N. Shuster. -- pp. 11-13. Foreign mission at home: "the deepest need of the Catholic foreign student is to acquire a mature, apostolic Christian personality/Lydwine Van Kiersbergen. -- pp. 14-17. Marshal Tito comes to call/MIchael P;. Fogarty. -- pp. 18-22. The screen: where she danced/Philip T. HArtung. -- pp. 24. A portrait of the artist as critic/Patrick F. Quinn. -- pp. 26-27. No. 2 Clericalism, anti-clericalism: as part its own battle-scarred vocabulary, the nineteenth century has left us "clerical" and "anti-clerical)/Frederick E. Flynn. -- pp. 43-47. Amending Taft-Hartley/John C. Cort. -- pp. 48-49. New forces and new faces/Richard C. Hottelet. -- pp. 49-51. The stage: Camino real/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 51-52. The screen: fugue played with guns/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 52-53. Communications: Sidney Hook/John E. Connor. -- pp. 54. The ultimate detachment of a free spirit/Richard Butler. -- pp. 55-57. Jewish American: commentary on the American scene/Seymour Krim. -- pp . 58-59. No. 3 Speaking of policies/John Cogley. -- pp. 66. An American in Asia: "every American in India who was made a genuine effort to know the Indian people as human beings has been richly rewarded/Chester Bowles. -- pp. 67-70. The political uses of peace/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 70-72. The stage: room service/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 72. The screen: what are the little films saying?/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 73. Communications: the Lattimore case/Thomas E. Kennelly. -- pp. 74-75. "Is there a religious noise?/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 75-77. Surface and substance in a major talent/Seymour krim. -- pp. 78. The coin of tribute: the realm of spirit and the realm of Ceasar/Pierre Conway. -- pp. 79. A key to Asia: five gentleman of Japan/William Pfaff. -- pp. 79-80. No. 4 The Mayor of Florence: the florentines have put a Christian in City Hall who, they say, is more communist than the communists/Vanna Philips. -- pp. 91-93. Catholicism in America: as citizens, Catholics do well to remember that "in politics as in science the church need no seek her own ends."/William P. Clancy. -- pp. 94-96. Have we really got it so good?/R. W. Faulhaber. -- pp. 97-99. The screen: design for chilled spine/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 99-100. The stage: angelic doctor/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 100. Communications: need for light/Robert McAfee Brown. -- pp. 100-102. Seeing the man beyond the legend/Neville Braybrooke. -- pp. 103. The humanistic vocation of literature/John W. Simons. -- pp. 106-107. No. 5 Democratizing/John Cogley. -- pp. 114. The finaly case: the Catholic and Jewish communities in France are divided over the fate of two war orphans/Robert Barrat. -- pp. 115-117. A Protestant looks at Catholics/Reinhold Niebuhr. -- pp. 117-120. A man from India/John C. Cort. -- pp. 120-121. The screen: a man must stand up/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp.121-122. The voice of Tito/Evelyn Waugh. -- pp. 122-125. The early phase of an American Writer/Wayne Andrews. -- pp. 125- The "little life" of everyman/Frank Getlein. -- pp. 126-127. Details and trends of history: the mind of the Middle Ages --A.D. 200-1500, an historical survey/Max Fischer. -- pp. 128. No. 6 My novels: "to write one book, just one, that would absolve me from writing any other one: I have never begun a novel without hoping"/Francois Mauriac. -- pp. 140-143. The magic of Mauriac: " to love for his heroes and heroines, is to fall victim to a kind of trick or mirage."/Donat O'Donnell. -- pp. 144-150. The stage: Bleak house/Philip T. Hartung. --- pp. 151-153. The "innocence" of an art which endures/George Miles. -- pp. 154. Campus communism: heresy, yes--conspiracy, no/John Cogley. -- pp. 155-156. No. 7 People and food: "no political leader, however powerful, no economist, whoever learned, has the slightest right to interfere with the birth of children"/Colin Clark. -- pp. 171-173. A Jew looks at Catholics: comments made in in the hope that American Catholics will see themselves as a friendly outsider sees them/Will Herberg. -- pp. 174-177. The artless art of Italiam films/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 177-179. The stage: modest proposals/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 179-180. The screen: old hickory smoked/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 180-181. Tawney as Christian socialist/Geoffrey Ashe. -- pp. 182-183. One woman: Mary Magdalene/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 184-185. The long struggle: go tell it on the mountain/T.E. Cassidy. -- pp. 186. No. 8 Arab refugees: hundreds of thousands of Palestinian Arabs in camps throughout the Middle East still dream returning home/Jules Kagian. -- pp. 195-196. "They servant, our Queen/Donald Attwater. -- pp. 197-198. An uncertain courtship/John C. Cort. -- pp. 199-200. The stage: can-can/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 200. The Screen: strong men-weak minds/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 201. Communications: liturgical art/Clarence E. Giese. -- pp. 201-202 Morals Makyth movies/Gerald Vann. -- pp. 203-204. The ordered insight which is earned/R.J. Schoeck. -- pp. 205. A flight from man -- and God/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 206-207. The Revelation of man to man/Emeric A. Lawrence. -- pp. 207-208. No. 9 Strangers to their own: no happy ending is in sight for three thousand American-German children of Negro blood/Manfred George. -- pp. 219-221. Catholics and American democracy/John Cogley. -- pp. 221-24. The wages of virtue/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 225-226. The stage: the New York City opera/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 226-227. The screen: where angels fear/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 227-228. Communications: "clericalism, anti-clericalism/Francis B. Donnelly. -- pp. 228-229. Jung and the Christians/Karl Stern. -- pp. 229-231. The reconciliation of art and intelligence: feeling and from: a theory of art development from philosophy in a new key/Robert Fitzgerald. -- pp. 231-232. One who believed in man: father Tommpkins of Nova Scotia/Leo R. Ward. -- pp. 232-233. No. 10 Contemplatives in India: Benedictine Monks are modifying the Christian monastic tradition to fit the mood and culture of the orient/Roland Hill. -- pp. 243-246. Catholics and American democracy/John Cogley. -- pp. 245-248. The screen: a buss for bess/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 249. Communications: "a Jew looks at Catholics"/Francis E. McMahon. -- pp. 250. A center for social action: Ciudad Trajillo, Dominican Republic/J.H. Steele, S.F.M. -- pp. 250-251. The real world of science fiction/Seymour Krim. -- pp. 252-254. Ordeal: Calvary in China/James O'Gara. -- pp. 256. A Modern Monarch: King George V: his life and reign, 1865-1936/M.A. Fitzsimons. -- pp. 257-258. The poor man: the hour of St. Francis of Assisi/Claire Huchet Bishop. -- pp. 258-259 No. 11 The Catholic reactionary: an enthusiastic distributor of blinkers, muzzles, handcuffs, gags and earmuffs, he finds in the church not fulfillment, but armor/Eric Von Kuehnelt-Leddihn.-- pp. 267-270. Crown, color and witchdoctors/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 271-273. The stage: me and Juliet/Richard Hayes. pp. 273. The screen: the fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 273-274. Communication: "a Protestant looks at Catholics"/J.M. Malloch. -- pp. 274-275. Humanist on the stump/Philip J. Scharper. -- pp. 276-278. To recover a concept and a tradition/Frederick D. Wilhelmsen. -- pp. 278-279. Life of the spirit: Christ the ideal of the priest/Alban Baer. -- pp. 282-283. No. 12 Britain and the far east: an analysis of British opinion in an area where Anglo-American relations are most strained/Harold C. Hinton. -- pp. 291-293. Catholic separatism/John J. Kane. -- pp. 293-276. The stage: poets in the theater/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 297-298. The screen: movies' answer to movies/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 298. Communications: "the finaly case/Robert Sterling. -- pp. 299-300. Two kinds of war/Willim Pfaff. -- pp.300-302. The building of a bridge: section 1: a yearbook of contemporary thought in anthropology, Biblical study, psychology, philosophy, theology, biology/John W. Simons. -- pp. 304-307. No. 13 Fear and freedom: "we are never free from the danger of reducing unity in university to uniformity"/Jerome G. Kerwin. -- pp. 315-317. Setback for the Christian democrats/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 318-320. Before you walk, you crawl/John C. Cort. -- pp. 320-322. The screen: "this scepter'd isle"/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 322-323. Of Note: totalitarianism/ -- pp. 323-324. Their profession was war/Nobert Muhlen. -- pp. 324-325. A Victorian proto-martyr of the arts/Marshall McLuhan. -- pp. 326-327. No. 14 Being an Irish writer: booby traps lie in wait for every writers, but they have a special lure for the provincial/Sean O'Faolain. -- pp. 339-341. Clergy and laity/Joseph M. Duffy, Jr. -- pp. 341-345. Marx, morals, and the vacuum/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 345-347. The screen: what no toast?/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 348. Of note: end of segregation/ -- pp. 348-350. The lectern and the judgements seat/Frank Getlein. -- pp. 350. Two histories: Christianity in European history/Philip Burnham. -- pp. 351-353. No. 15 Revolt of the children: they were born into a world where life itself has been devalued/Manya Harari. -- pp. 363-365. The woman who was rich/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 366-367. The Hearn's strike/John C. Cort. -- pp. 367-369. The screen: and made of green cheese/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 369. Communications: "clericalism, anti-clericalism/Frederick E. Flynn. -- pp. 370. "Catholicism in American/Laurence Michel. -- pp. 370-371. The cosmic struggle: for the sake of heaven/Will Herberg. -- pp. 372. No. 16 Spain today: "while one may not have liberties in Spain, one may take them with a certain assurance of success"/Robert H. Boyle. -- pp. 387-389. Catholics and politics: as voters, Catholics and non-Catholics alike tend to take on the political coloration of their economic class/Daniel F. Cleary. -- pp. 390-392. Trouble comes to memphis/William H. Slavick. -- pp. 392-394. The stage: Martha Graham's theater/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 394-395. The screen: in the cool, cool, cool of the movie/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 395-396. Communications: "Catholic separatism"\Hugh Dickinson. -- pp. 396-397. An analysis of the American political temper: the genius of American politics/John W. Lukacs. -- pp. 397-398. No. 17 Love among the ruins: a romance of the near future with decorations by various eminent hands including the authors's/Evelyn Waugh. -- pp.410-422. The stage: a backward glance/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 423. The screen: hitch your wagon/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 423-424. The squander of innocence/Doris Grumbach. -- pp. 425. Sharp dissension: Soviet imperialism: its origin and tactics/John A. Lukacs. -- pp. 426. No. 18 Rights of the guilty: "in coping with the communist threat, we have perhaps endangered our safety more than a spy could ever go"/Michael Harrington. -- pp.435-437. Catholics and education/Joseph E. Cunneen. --pp. 437-441. The screen: "square cut or pear shape"/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 442-444. Barracdes in the background/Hans Sahl. -- pp. 445-446. The giant of the Irish revival: three great Irishmen, shaw, yeats, Joyce/Walter Kerr. -- pp. 446-447. No. 19 Two poverties: " in a orwell began where Bloy had left off and left off where Bloy had begun/Neville Braybrooke. -- pp. 459-461. Catholics and education/Joseph E. Cunneen. -- pp. 461-464. The Rosenberg case/Robert Barrat. -- pp. 464-466. The screen: suds in your eye/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 466-467. Alger Hiss and the Earl Jowitt/James N. Vaugh. -- pp. 467-479. A Catholic evaluation of psychoanalysis/William C. Bier. -- pp. 470-471. No. 20 The Catholic assimilationist: "he believes implicitly in the Goddness of all winds, waves and currents"/Erik Von Kuehnelt-LEddihn. -- pp. 483-486. Unity in the making/JOhn C. Cort. -- pp. 486-488. The screen:gentlemen-rankers on a spree/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 488-489. Communications:"the church today"/Victor C. Ferkiss. -- pp. 489-490. Anglicans and reunion/John M. Todd. -- pp. 490-491. A prelate who stood at the center of his times/George N. Shuster. -- pp. 492-493. New philosophy: good and evil/Pierre Conway. -- pp. 494-495. Apostle: Saint Paul/H.A. Reihold. -- pp. 496. No. 21 Visit to Padre Pio: because the humanity of the capuchin mystics is so evident his sanctity is all the more impressive./Sean O'Faolain. -- pp. 507-509. Catholic and science/Julian Pleasants. -- pp.509-514. The commonweal and McCarthyism/Philip Burnham. -- pp. 515-520. The screen: no moaning at no bars/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 520. The recollections of a Bloomsbury critic/Marshall McLuhan. -- pp. 521. No. 23 The age of advertising: the ads are form of magic which have come to dominate a new civilization/Marshall McLuhan. -- pp. 555-557. Catholics and social reform/Edward A. Marciniak. -- pp. 557-560. The screen: riding, riding/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 561. Communications: 'the Reosenberg case"/Claire Huchet Bishop. -- pp. 561-562. Of note: authority/ -- pp. 563-564. The private necessity/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 564-566. No. 24 After the brave new world: now naive optimism has yielded to nervous fears and dawnism has turned into twilightism/John J. Wright. -- pp. 579-582. Can a psychologist be religious?/Victor White. -- pp.583-584. Big bill rides again/John C. Cort. pp. 584-586. The screen: a star is born/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 586-587. Communications:"McCarthyism"/John J. Hebal. -- pp. 587. Two Protestant approaches to social problems/John F. Crown. -- pp. 589-590. No. 25 IS there a Christian learning: " a catholic scholar is more than, and other than, a Catholic who is a scholar; his learning has some kind of plus value/Leo R. Ward. -- pp. 605-607. American houses in Europe/Erik Von Kuehnelt-Leddihn. -- pp. 607-609. The screen: this happy breed/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 610. Communication: "Catholic and science/Roy J. Deferrari. -- pp.610-612. Of note: contemporary spirituality/ -- pp. 613. Indictment: the making of a Moron/Geoffrey Ashe. -- pp. 614-616. No. 26 Silence on the left: the new deal marked the decline of American radicalism as revolutionaries turned reformers/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 627-630. Catholic radicalism/Ed Willock. -- pp. 630-633. The stage: Anna Russell's little show/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 634. The meeting of theology and history/Erwin W. Geissman. -- pp. 635-636.
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