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The Commonweal.

Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York, NY : Commonweal Foundation, 1955.LOC classification:
  • PER .C65 1955 V.62
Contents:
No. 1
Nehru of India: " to understand his policy we must understand the man, the qualities of his mind and heart/Jerome D'Souza. -- pp. 7--10.
The void in communism/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 11--12.
"I've got a little list/John Cooley. -- pp. 13.
The stage: bus stop/Richard Hayer. -- pp. 14.
The screen: biography/Philip T. Hartung. -- 14.
Of note: can we defend ourselves?/ --- pp. 15--16.
"Cardinal Manning/Alban Baer, O.S.B. -- pp. 17--18.
Love and violence: a parable of our time/Frank Getlein. -- pp. 19.
From Marxism to free enterprise/Robert Ludlow. -- pp. 19.
A poetry of passionate debate/Nicholas Joost. -- pp. 20--21.
China Question/Harold C. Hinton. -- pp. 22--23.
Love and violence: a parable of our times/Frank Getlein. -- pp. 19.
No. 2
Problems of Christian culture: "we must make an effort to achieve an open Catholic culture which is able to meet secularist culture on a even footing"/Christopher Dawson. -- pp. 34--36.
No place for private schools?/William Grancer Ryan. -- pp. 38--46.
Who's a hypocrite?/ John Cogley. -- pp. 47.
The screen: Ciaou/Philip T. Hartung. --- pp. 48.
Of note:state censorship/ -- pp. 49--51.
The agonies and ambiguities of Spain's Civil War/William P. Clancy. -- pp. 53--54.
Lost generation/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 55--56.
Art in America/Wayne Andrews. --- pp. 57--[58].
Security question/Paul V. Farrell. -- pp. 59--61.
The Passion/Elizabeth Bartelme. -- pp. 62.
No. 3
Trade, aid and the farmer: "the postwar decade of reconstruction is over, and we are now called upon for a new type of world leadership"/Martin E. Schirber and Emerson Hynes. -- pp. 71--74.
The battle over "right-to-work"/John C. Cort. -- pp. 75--76.
The screen: boy meets Girl, 1955/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 77.
The stage: the dark i light enough/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 78.
All this and heaven too?/John Cogley. -- pp. 79.
Art and the boxoffice/Walter Kerr. -- pp. 80-82.
An attack on the new Orthodoxy of literature/John W. Simons. -- pp. 83-84.
No. 4
Crisis in the MRP:"the problems is how to keep the conservative mass under authentic Christian democratic leadership"/John C. Olin. -- pp. 95-98.
Demogogues in American politics/Reinhard H. Luthin. -- pp. 99-101.
Birth of a problem in race relations/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 102-103.
Education -- and all that/John Cogley. --- pp. 104.
The screen: flight down Labyrinthine ways/Philip Hartung. -- pp. 105.
The stage: three for tonight/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 105.
Communication: "the morality of nuclear war"/Charles Ketcham. -- pp. 106.
An appraisal of decade American writing/Henry Popkin. -- pp. 108-109.
No. 5
Moroccan diary: "for over two years now, the nationalist underground has fought a grim struggle with succeeding protectorate regimes"/JohnK. Cooley. -- pp. 119-122.
The future of distributism/James V. Schall. -- pp, 123-125.
Albert Einstein/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 125-126.
The screen: to the ladies/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 126.
The stage: Ibsen and chekhov/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 127.
The ladies in black/John Cogley. -- pp. 128.
Communications: nuclear war/E. Dorman O'Gowan. -- pp. 129-131.
The craft of the novel/Joseph M. Duffy/ -- pp. 132.
No. 6
Belief and the writer: "the success of a religious novel defends on a very delicate balance between the man who believes and the man who writes"/Martin Turnell. -- pp. 143-146.
The Italian novel today: "even after the wintry season of Italian fascism there are writers who work"/Luigi Rosadoni. -- pp. 147-149.
The stage: the merchant of Venice/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 149-150.
The screen: Roger/ Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 150.
McArthuism revisited/John Cogley. -- pp. 151.
The mysticism of Thomas Merton/Aelred Graham. -- pp. 155-159.
No. 7
The advance of automation:"automation opens up the possibility of a third revolution in technology -- and in society/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 175-178.
Battle for the future/Robert Barrat.-- pp. 178-180.
Guaranteeing the worker's pay/John C.Cort. -- pp.180-181.
Behind the many faces/John Cogley. -- pp. 182.
The stage: the red and the black/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 183.
The screen: mad dogs and Englishmen/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 183-184.
Communications: the worker-priests/Claire Huchet Bishop. -- pp. 184-185.
A new look at the pursuit of truth/Erwin W. Geissman. -- pp. 187-188.
No. 8
Vocation of the poet:"he anguished over how he was to adapt himself to God"./Wallace Fowlie. -- pp. 199-201.
The universal artist: he was like a volcano of creativity, belching forth masterpieces"/J.P. Manship. -- pp. 201-203.
The intolerance of genius:"he was determined in spite of ourselves, to drag us away from doubt and dilettantism"/Martin Turnell. -- pp. 204-207.
The screen: September and May/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 207-208.
Communications:"McCarthysim revisited"/Gordon Graham. -- pp. 208
The undebated issues/John Cogley. -- pp. 209.
Assult on UNESCO/Paul Jacobs. -- pp. 210-211
Continuity in Russian thought/Michael Harrington.-- pp. 212.
No. 9
Is starvation inevitable?: "two thirds of the people of the world live in areas where malnourishment is normal and starvation by no means unknown"/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 223-226.
The Sunday Papa missed mass/Rose Griego. -- pp. 226-227.
The stage: cat on a hot tin roof/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 230-231.
The screen: flower in the crannied wall/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 231-232.
Two images of one man/John Cogley. -- pp. 233.
The presupposition of democracy/Will Herberg. -- pp. 234-236.
No. 10
Tito's turn to the East: the belgrade visit of the Soviet emissaries only dramatizes a reversal long in the making/Cunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 247-251.
Cops, robbers, and citizens/Victor C. Ferkiss. -- pp. 251-253.
The silver and the gold/John Cogley. -- pp. 254.
The stage: a modest proposal/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 255.
The screen: high wide and somewhat handsome/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 256
Communication: "belief and the writer'/Cornelia Jessey. -- 257.
The novels of Elizabeth Taylor/Richard Austen. -- pp. 258-259.
The enduring fecundity of Christian wisdom/Joseph W. Ewans. -- pp. 260.
The free and enslaved/William Dunlea. -- pp. 261.
The Magic of Dylan Thomas/Chadler Brossard. -- pp. 262-263
No. 11
The children of poverty: "they live in a world where slowly and evitably escape becomes the motivation of life/Eileen Fantino. -- pp. 271-274.
Unrest behind the curtain/Norbert Muhlen. -- pp. 274-276.
The view from a train/Thomas P. Health, O.P. -- pp. 276.
If you were they/John Cogley. -- pp. 277.
The stage: our American cousin/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 278.
The screen: "ten cents a dance"/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 278-279.
Communications: "Italian movie code/William H, Mooring. -- pp.279-280.
The bravery and insight of Georges Bernanos/George N. Shuster. -- pp. 282.
A voice of America/Seymour Krim. -- pp. 283-284.
No. 12
The conservative vision: 'an exploration of the vision may go far toward suggesting a cure for the crisis of the west/Frederick D. Wilhelmsen. -- pp. 295-299.
Challenge to conservatives: "if the movement is to succeed, it must assume a shape that will greatly bewilder its present sponsors"/Geoffrey Ashe. -- pp. 299-302.
The dice are slightly loaded/John C. Cort. -- pp. 302-303.
See their faces/John Cogley. -- pp. 304.
The screen: it ain't measles/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 305.
Communications: "the challenge of abundance/John O'Grady. -- pp. 305-306.
An examination of the world of letters/Vivian Mercier. -- pp. 307-308.
No. 13
Asi looks at the bomb: "there is a strong and vocal opposition among non-communist Asians to the possible use of nuclear weapons"/Shao Shuan Leng. -- pp. 319-321.
The Russian writer today/Erik Von Kuehnel-Leddihn. -- pp. 322-325.
All the sad young men/John Cogley. -- pp. 326.
Labor's lost opportunities/ Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 327-328.
The stage: the musical temper/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 329-330.
The screen: venetian glass; Egyptian tomb/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 330.
Communication: " the Church in Argentina"/Martin Turnell. -- pp. 331-332.
The mystery of the ordinary/Wallace Fowlie. -- pp. 333-334.
No. 14
The UN-ten years later: the questions that confronted us then are basically still the same/Robert E. Lucey. -- pp. 343-346.
Soviet man today/Erik Von Kuehnelt-Leddihn. -- pp. 347-349.
No, no, a thousand times no/John Cogley. -- pp. 350.
Colonialism, Belgian style/ William Pfaff. -- pp. 351-353.
The screen: just for the fun of it/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 354.
Communications: "the children of poverty"/Bernard G. Murchland, C.S.C. -- pp. 354-355.
Humanity and ideology in the novel/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 356-357.
Prophets of victorian science/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 357-358.
No. 15
Messianism and the jew: the search for deliverance, whether in time or in eternity, lies at the heart of the Jewish experience/Arthur A. Cohen. -- pp. 367-369.
Sex in Italian films/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 370-371.
The screen: scalpel-and-soap opera/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 371-372.
Of note: Catholics and the common good/ --- . pp. 372-374.
Communications: Christian culture/John J. Mulloy. -- pp. 374-375.
The novels of Raymond Radiguet/Martin Turnell. -- pp. 377-379.
The quality of an original and penetrating mind/D. Bernard Theall. -- pp. 380-381.
The mystery of human personality/J.N. Moody. -- pp. 381-382.
Suspect diplomat/Sally Y. Orr. -- pp. 383-384
No. 16
The silent revolution: "a major revolution involving the socail order is advancing rapidly in Latin America, carrying everything before it"/Francois Houtart. -- pp. 391-394.
To own or not to own/John C.Cort. -- pp. 394-395.
Bitter harvest in Algeria/Robert Barrat. -- pp. 396-398.
The stage: the drama as disgust/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 398-399.
The screen: three shrikes and you're out/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 399-400.
Communication: "belief and the writers"/ James J. Greene. -- pp. 400-401.
"Is starvation inevitable/Frank Ferrarl. -- pp. 401- 402.
Of note: war on starvation/ --- pp. 402.
The poet revealed to his friends/Ned O'Gorman. -- pp. 403-404.
The comic and the sad/Jame Greene. -- pp. 404.
A genius in foreign lands/Henry Popkins. -- pp. 405-406.
The man who found a world/John Cournos. -- pp. 406-407.
No. 17
The pattern of colonialism: "the congo runs with the noiseless efficiency of a Lincoln, and the driver's seat is in brussels"/William Pfaff. -- pp. 415-418.
New man and the people/Alastrair Guinan. -- 418-420.
The stage: a school for Shakespeare/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 421.
The screen: Lilacs on a palm tree/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 421-422.
Communications: "the conservative visions"/ Raymond Decker. -- pp. 422-423.
Communism in the thirties/James O'Gara. -- pp. 424-427.
A guidebook to modern literature/Joseph M. Duffy, Jr. -- pp. 427-428.
No. 18
The relevance of Kierkegaard: "the Danish Socrates is now propounding his questions and presenting his insights to men everywhere/James Collins. -- pp. 439-442.
Person's future/Francis E. McMahon. -- pp. 443-444.
The screen: Solomon, Solomon/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 445-447.
Communications: non-conformity and democracy/William H. Wells. -- pp. 447-448.
Art and modern criticism/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 449-450.
The spiritual resources of democracy/Will Herberg. -- pp. 451.
Faith and human society/Thomas P. Coffey. -- pp. 452.
Exploring the divine comedy/Serge Hughes. -- pp. 452-453.
No. 19.
The religious issue in God: "Portugal has presented Christianity as a de-nationalizing instrument in the hands of a foreign government"/S.H. Anthony. -- pp. 463-464.
Experiment in housing/William M. Dwyer. -- pp. 465-466.
Progress of a revolution/William Pfaff. -- pp. 466-468.
The stage: Morning at seven/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 469.
Communications: "the rights of non-conformity"/Eugene F. Schade. -- pp. 469.
The tragedies of Garcia Lorca/Anthony Aratari. -- pp. 472-475.
The mellowing of Mr. Waugh's art/R.T. Horcher. -- pp. 476.
On the Shoulders of Giants/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 477-478.
One, Holy, and Catholic/Helen Iswolsky. -- pp. 478-479.
No. 20
Plight of the intellectual: " intellectuals have been dismissed by society at the very times when they thought their services most needed" /Thomas Molnar. -- pp. 487-489.
Dominican theologians of Islam/James Kritzeck. --- pp. 490-492.
Partners--nut what kind?/Charles Henry Lee. -- pp. 492-493.
Indian at a summer school/John C. Cort. -- pp. 494-495.
The screen: drapes of wrath/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 495-496.
Of note: family allowances/--- pp.496-497.
Communications: "the rights of non-conformity"J. W. Gaffney, S.J. -- pp. 497-499.
The spirituality of Baron von Hugel/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 499-500.
Tale of India/William Dunlea. -- pp. 500-501.
No. 21
Politics in a new world:"we live in an age of flux, and gur assertion of values must begin with this fact"/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 511-513.
The enemy is within/William Pfaff. -- pp. 514-516.
The stage: the American stratford/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 516-518.
Communications: "belief and the writer"/Michael Novak, C.S.C. -- pp. 518-519.
Of Notes: revising the Un charter/ --- pp. 519-520.
The return to liturgy/H.A. Reinhold. -- pp. 521-523.
Stories from the spirit of this age/Henry Popkin. -- pp. 523-524.
Art as a mode of salvation/Wallance Fowlie. -- pp. 524-525.
No. 22
Steps toward coexistence: " if the cold peace is to endure the west must undertake a fundamental revision of its positions/R.W. Faulhaber. -- pp. 535-538.
Psychoanalysis and the Christian/Karl Stern. -- pp. 539-541.
The screen: "most friendship is feigning"/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 541-542.
Communications: "the relevance of Kierkegaard"/ Robert J. Kreyche. -- pp. 542.
Of Note: restoring community/ -- pp. 544-545.
A note on the prevalence of anthologies/Joseph M. Duffy, Jr. -- pp. 546.
No. 23
The great American debate: " it has opened up a discussion of political fundamentals more far-reaching than anything we have known since the civil war./Will Herberg. -- pp. 559-562.
On the holy mountain/John Alden Williams. -- pp. 563-565.
The screen: what is this thing called love?/ Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 565-566.
Communications: "the rights of non-conformity"/ Michael Harrington. -- pp. 66-567.
The crucifix after Cellini/Isobel Enlish. -- pp. 570-572
A visit to the Eisenhower brother/Frank Getlein. -- pp. 572-573.
No. 24
The essence of Thomas Mann: "his whole vision is of the majestic darkness of a mind estranged from truth by a long genealogy of error"/Anna Hellersberg-Wendriner. -- pp. 583-586.
Hope behind the curtain/Gunnar D. Kumlien.-- pp. 586-588.
The screen: what are heroes, prophets, men?/ Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 588-589.
Communications: " the rights of non-conformity"/Robert Ilson. -- pp. 589-590.
Of note: " i confess"/ -- pp. 592.
The things that pass/John P. Sick. -- pp. 593-595.
The sicilian world of Giovanni Verga/James Greene. -- pp. 595-596.
American Catholicism/J.N. Moody -- pp. 596-597.
No. 25
Catholic education -- for what?: " the problem is one determining how deep are the spiritual roots of Catholic education"/William A. Osborne. -- pp. 607-610.
Liturgy and the layman/John C. Cort. -- pp. 611-612.
The stage: cocteau/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 613.
The screen: what, no hemingway!/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 613-614.
Communications: hell's canyon/G.T.Garrett. -- pp. 615.
The poetry of Wallance Stevens/Marius Bewley. -- pp. 617-622.
The preoccupations of a Christian philosopher/Frederick D. Wilhelmsen. -- pp. 623-627.
problems: Catholic approaches to modern dilemmas and eternal truths/Frank Griffin. -- pp. 627-629.
No. 26
Man's anguish and his hope: "only now are we experience what it is to stand defenseless before an evil will of iron"/Jan Cep. -- pp. 639-641.
Church and State in Guatemala/Daniel James. -- pp. 642-644.
Labor union pluralism/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 645-646.
The screen: mead in your eye/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 647.
Writing in the welfare State/Herbert Howarth. -- pp. 648-650.
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PERIODICAL Saint Andrew's Theological Seminary Mosher Library PER .C65 1955 V.62 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan 17124

No. 1

Nehru of India: " to understand his policy we must understand the man, the qualities of his mind and heart/Jerome D'Souza. -- pp. 7--10.

The void in communism/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 11--12.

"I've got a little list/John Cooley. -- pp. 13.

The stage: bus stop/Richard Hayer. -- pp. 14.

The screen: biography/Philip T. Hartung. -- 14.

Of note: can we defend ourselves?/ --- pp. 15--16.

"Cardinal Manning/Alban Baer, O.S.B. -- pp. 17--18.

Love and violence: a parable of our time/Frank Getlein. -- pp. 19.

From Marxism to free enterprise/Robert Ludlow. -- pp. 19.

A poetry of passionate debate/Nicholas Joost. -- pp. 20--21.

China Question/Harold C. Hinton. -- pp. 22--23.

Love and violence: a parable of our times/Frank Getlein. -- pp. 19.

No. 2

Problems of Christian culture: "we must make an effort to achieve an open Catholic culture which is able to meet secularist culture on a even footing"/Christopher Dawson. -- pp. 34--36.

No place for private schools?/William Grancer Ryan. -- pp. 38--46.

Who's a hypocrite?/ John Cogley. -- pp. 47.

The screen: Ciaou/Philip T. Hartung. --- pp. 48.

Of note:state censorship/ -- pp. 49--51.

The agonies and ambiguities of Spain's Civil War/William P. Clancy. -- pp. 53--54.

Lost generation/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 55--56.

Art in America/Wayne Andrews. --- pp. 57--[58].

Security question/Paul V. Farrell. -- pp. 59--61.

The Passion/Elizabeth Bartelme. -- pp. 62.

No. 3

Trade, aid and the farmer: "the postwar decade of reconstruction is over, and we are now called upon for a new type of world leadership"/Martin E. Schirber and Emerson Hynes. -- pp. 71--74.

The battle over "right-to-work"/John C. Cort. -- pp. 75--76.

The screen: boy meets Girl, 1955/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 77.

The stage: the dark i light enough/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 78.

All this and heaven too?/John Cogley. -- pp. 79.

Art and the boxoffice/Walter Kerr. -- pp. 80-82.

An attack on the new Orthodoxy of literature/John W. Simons. -- pp. 83-84.

No. 4

Crisis in the MRP:"the problems is how to keep the conservative mass under authentic Christian democratic leadership"/John C. Olin. -- pp. 95-98.

Demogogues in American politics/Reinhard H. Luthin. -- pp. 99-101.

Birth of a problem in race relations/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 102-103.

Education -- and all that/John Cogley. --- pp. 104.

The screen: flight down Labyrinthine ways/Philip Hartung. -- pp. 105.

The stage: three for tonight/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 105.

Communication: "the morality of nuclear war"/Charles Ketcham. -- pp. 106.

An appraisal of decade American writing/Henry Popkin. -- pp. 108-109.

No. 5

Moroccan diary: "for over two years now, the nationalist underground has fought a grim struggle with succeeding protectorate regimes"/JohnK. Cooley. -- pp. 119-122.

The future of distributism/James V. Schall. -- pp, 123-125.

Albert Einstein/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 125-126.

The screen: to the ladies/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 126.

The stage: Ibsen and chekhov/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 127.

The ladies in black/John Cogley. -- pp. 128.

Communications: nuclear war/E. Dorman O'Gowan. -- pp. 129-131.

The craft of the novel/Joseph M. Duffy/ -- pp. 132.

No. 6

Belief and the writer: "the success of a religious novel defends on a very delicate balance between the man who believes and the man who writes"/Martin Turnell. -- pp. 143-146.

The Italian novel today: "even after the wintry season of Italian fascism there are writers who work"/Luigi Rosadoni. -- pp. 147-149.

The stage: the merchant of Venice/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 149-150.

The screen: Roger/ Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 150.

McArthuism revisited/John Cogley. -- pp. 151.

The mysticism of Thomas Merton/Aelred Graham. -- pp. 155-159.

No. 7

The advance of automation:"automation opens up the possibility of a third revolution in technology -- and in society/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 175-178.

Battle for the future/Robert Barrat.-- pp. 178-180.

Guaranteeing the worker's pay/John C.Cort. -- pp.180-181.

Behind the many faces/John Cogley. -- pp. 182.

The stage: the red and the black/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 183.

The screen: mad dogs and Englishmen/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 183-184.

Communications: the worker-priests/Claire Huchet Bishop. -- pp. 184-185.

A new look at the pursuit of truth/Erwin W. Geissman. -- pp. 187-188.

No. 8

Vocation of the poet:"he anguished over how he was to adapt himself to God"./Wallace Fowlie. -- pp. 199-201.

The universal artist: he was like a volcano of creativity, belching forth masterpieces"/J.P. Manship. -- pp. 201-203.

The intolerance of genius:"he was determined in spite of ourselves, to drag us away from doubt and dilettantism"/Martin Turnell. -- pp. 204-207.

The screen: September and May/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 207-208.

Communications:"McCarthysim revisited"/Gordon Graham. -- pp. 208

The undebated issues/John Cogley. -- pp. 209.

Assult on UNESCO/Paul Jacobs. -- pp. 210-211

Continuity in Russian thought/Michael Harrington.-- pp. 212.

No. 9

Is starvation inevitable?: "two thirds of the people of the world live in areas where malnourishment is normal and starvation by no means unknown"/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 223-226.

The Sunday Papa missed mass/Rose Griego. -- pp. 226-227.

The stage: cat on a hot tin roof/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 230-231.

The screen: flower in the crannied wall/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 231-232.

Two images of one man/John Cogley. -- pp. 233.

The presupposition of democracy/Will Herberg. -- pp. 234-236.

No. 10

Tito's turn to the East: the belgrade visit of the Soviet emissaries only dramatizes a reversal long in the making/Cunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 247-251.

Cops, robbers, and citizens/Victor C. Ferkiss. -- pp. 251-253.

The silver and the gold/John Cogley. -- pp. 254.

The stage: a modest proposal/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 255.

The screen: high wide and somewhat handsome/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 256

Communication: "belief and the writer'/Cornelia Jessey. -- 257.

The novels of Elizabeth Taylor/Richard Austen. -- pp. 258-259.

The enduring fecundity of Christian wisdom/Joseph W. Ewans. -- pp. 260.

The free and enslaved/William Dunlea. -- pp. 261.

The Magic of Dylan Thomas/Chadler Brossard. -- pp. 262-263

No. 11

The children of poverty: "they live in a world where slowly and evitably escape becomes the motivation of life/Eileen Fantino. -- pp. 271-274.

Unrest behind the curtain/Norbert Muhlen. -- pp. 274-276.

The view from a train/Thomas P. Health, O.P. -- pp. 276.

If you were they/John Cogley. -- pp. 277.

The stage: our American cousin/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 278.

The screen: "ten cents a dance"/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 278-279.

Communications: "Italian movie code/William H, Mooring. -- pp.279-280.

The bravery and insight of Georges Bernanos/George N. Shuster. -- pp. 282.

A voice of America/Seymour Krim. -- pp. 283-284.

No. 12

The conservative vision: 'an exploration of the vision may go far toward suggesting a cure for the crisis of the west/Frederick D. Wilhelmsen. -- pp. 295-299.

Challenge to conservatives: "if the movement is to succeed, it must assume a shape that will greatly bewilder its present sponsors"/Geoffrey Ashe. -- pp. 299-302.

The dice are slightly loaded/John C. Cort. -- pp. 302-303.

See their faces/John Cogley. -- pp. 304.

The screen: it ain't measles/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 305.

Communications: "the challenge of abundance/John O'Grady. -- pp. 305-306.

An examination of the world of letters/Vivian Mercier. -- pp. 307-308.

No. 13

Asi looks at the bomb: "there is a strong and vocal opposition among non-communist Asians to the possible use of nuclear weapons"/Shao Shuan Leng. -- pp. 319-321.

The Russian writer today/Erik Von Kuehnel-Leddihn. -- pp. 322-325.

All the sad young men/John Cogley. -- pp. 326.

Labor's lost opportunities/ Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 327-328.

The stage: the musical temper/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 329-330.

The screen: venetian glass; Egyptian tomb/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 330.

Communication: " the Church in Argentina"/Martin Turnell. -- pp. 331-332.

The mystery of the ordinary/Wallace Fowlie. -- pp. 333-334.

No. 14

The UN-ten years later: the questions that confronted us then are basically still the same/Robert E. Lucey. -- pp. 343-346.

Soviet man today/Erik Von Kuehnelt-Leddihn. -- pp. 347-349.

No, no, a thousand times no/John Cogley. -- pp. 350.

Colonialism, Belgian style/ William Pfaff. -- pp. 351-353.

The screen: just for the fun of it/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 354.

Communications: "the children of poverty"/Bernard G. Murchland, C.S.C. -- pp. 354-355.

Humanity and ideology in the novel/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 356-357.

Prophets of victorian science/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 357-358.

No. 15

Messianism and the jew: the search for deliverance, whether in time or in eternity, lies at the heart of the Jewish experience/Arthur A. Cohen. -- pp. 367-369.

Sex in Italian films/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 370-371.

The screen: scalpel-and-soap opera/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 371-372.

Of note: Catholics and the common good/ --- . pp. 372-374.

Communications: Christian culture/John J. Mulloy. -- pp. 374-375.

The novels of Raymond Radiguet/Martin Turnell. -- pp. 377-379.

The quality of an original and penetrating mind/D. Bernard Theall. -- pp. 380-381.

The mystery of human personality/J.N. Moody. -- pp. 381-382.

Suspect diplomat/Sally Y. Orr. -- pp. 383-384

No. 16

The silent revolution: "a major revolution involving the socail order is advancing rapidly in Latin America, carrying everything before it"/Francois Houtart. -- pp. 391-394.

To own or not to own/John C.Cort. -- pp. 394-395.

Bitter harvest in Algeria/Robert Barrat. -- pp. 396-398.

The stage: the drama as disgust/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 398-399.

The screen: three shrikes and you're out/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 399-400.

Communication: "belief and the writers"/ James J. Greene. -- pp. 400-401.

"Is starvation inevitable/Frank Ferrarl. -- pp. 401- 402.

Of note: war on starvation/ --- pp. 402.

The poet revealed to his friends/Ned O'Gorman. -- pp. 403-404.

The comic and the sad/Jame Greene. -- pp. 404.

A genius in foreign lands/Henry Popkins. -- pp. 405-406.

The man who found a world/John Cournos. -- pp. 406-407.

No. 17

The pattern of colonialism: "the congo runs with the noiseless efficiency of a Lincoln, and the driver's seat is in brussels"/William Pfaff. -- pp. 415-418.

New man and the people/Alastrair Guinan. -- 418-420.

The stage: a school for Shakespeare/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 421.

The screen: Lilacs on a palm tree/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 421-422.

Communications: "the conservative visions"/ Raymond Decker. -- pp. 422-423.

Communism in the thirties/James O'Gara. -- pp. 424-427.

A guidebook to modern literature/Joseph M. Duffy, Jr. -- pp. 427-428.

No. 18

The relevance of Kierkegaard: "the Danish Socrates is now propounding his questions and presenting his insights to men everywhere/James Collins. -- pp. 439-442.

Person's future/Francis E. McMahon. -- pp. 443-444.

The screen: Solomon, Solomon/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 445-447.

Communications: non-conformity and democracy/William H. Wells. -- pp. 447-448.

Art and modern criticism/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 449-450.

The spiritual resources of democracy/Will Herberg. -- pp. 451.

Faith and human society/Thomas P. Coffey. -- pp. 452.

Exploring the divine comedy/Serge Hughes. -- pp. 452-453.

No. 19.

The religious issue in God: "Portugal has presented Christianity as a de-nationalizing instrument in the hands of a foreign government"/S.H. Anthony. -- pp. 463-464.

Experiment in housing/William M. Dwyer. -- pp. 465-466.

Progress of a revolution/William Pfaff. -- pp. 466-468.

The stage: Morning at seven/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 469.

Communications: "the rights of non-conformity"/Eugene F. Schade. -- pp. 469.

The tragedies of Garcia Lorca/Anthony Aratari. -- pp. 472-475.

The mellowing of Mr. Waugh's art/R.T. Horcher. -- pp. 476.

On the Shoulders of Giants/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 477-478.

One, Holy, and Catholic/Helen Iswolsky. -- pp. 478-479.

No. 20

Plight of the intellectual: " intellectuals have been dismissed by society at the very times when they thought their services most needed" /Thomas Molnar. -- pp. 487-489.

Dominican theologians of Islam/James Kritzeck. --- pp. 490-492.

Partners--nut what kind?/Charles Henry Lee. -- pp. 492-493.

Indian at a summer school/John C. Cort. -- pp. 494-495.

The screen: drapes of wrath/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 495-496.

Of note: family allowances/--- pp.496-497.

Communications: "the rights of non-conformity"J. W. Gaffney, S.J. -- pp. 497-499.

The spirituality of Baron von Hugel/Anne Fremantle. -- pp. 499-500.

Tale of India/William Dunlea. -- pp. 500-501.

No. 21

Politics in a new world:"we live in an age of flux, and gur assertion of values must begin with this fact"/Michael Harrington. -- pp. 511-513.

The enemy is within/William Pfaff. -- pp. 514-516.

The stage: the American stratford/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 516-518.

Communications: "belief and the writer"/Michael Novak, C.S.C. -- pp. 518-519.

Of Notes: revising the Un charter/ --- pp. 519-520.

The return to liturgy/H.A. Reinhold. -- pp. 521-523.

Stories from the spirit of this age/Henry Popkin. -- pp. 523-524.

Art as a mode of salvation/Wallance Fowlie. -- pp. 524-525.

No. 22

Steps toward coexistence: " if the cold peace is to endure the west must undertake a fundamental revision of its positions/R.W. Faulhaber. -- pp. 535-538.

Psychoanalysis and the Christian/Karl Stern. -- pp. 539-541.

The screen: "most friendship is feigning"/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 541-542.

Communications: "the relevance of Kierkegaard"/ Robert J. Kreyche. -- pp. 542.

Of Note: restoring community/ -- pp. 544-545.

A note on the prevalence of anthologies/Joseph M. Duffy, Jr. -- pp. 546.

No. 23

The great American debate: " it has opened up a discussion of political fundamentals more far-reaching than anything we have known since the civil war./Will Herberg. -- pp. 559-562.

On the holy mountain/John Alden Williams. -- pp. 563-565.

The screen: what is this thing called love?/ Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 565-566.

Communications: "the rights of non-conformity"/ Michael Harrington. -- pp. 66-567.

The crucifix after Cellini/Isobel Enlish. -- pp. 570-572

A visit to the Eisenhower brother/Frank Getlein. -- pp. 572-573.

No. 24

The essence of Thomas Mann: "his whole vision is of the majestic darkness of a mind estranged from truth by a long genealogy of error"/Anna Hellersberg-Wendriner. -- pp. 583-586.

Hope behind the curtain/Gunnar D. Kumlien.-- pp. 586-588.

The screen: what are heroes, prophets, men?/ Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 588-589.

Communications: " the rights of non-conformity"/Robert Ilson. -- pp. 589-590.

Of note: " i confess"/ -- pp. 592.

The things that pass/John P. Sick. -- pp. 593-595.

The sicilian world of Giovanni Verga/James Greene. -- pp. 595-596.

American Catholicism/J.N. Moody -- pp. 596-597.

No. 25

Catholic education -- for what?: " the problem is one determining how deep are the spiritual roots of Catholic education"/William A. Osborne. -- pp. 607-610.

Liturgy and the layman/John C. Cort. -- pp. 611-612.

The stage: cocteau/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 613.

The screen: what, no hemingway!/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 613-614.

Communications: hell's canyon/G.T.Garrett. -- pp. 615.

The poetry of Wallance Stevens/Marius Bewley. -- pp. 617-622.

The preoccupations of a Christian philosopher/Frederick D. Wilhelmsen. -- pp. 623-627.

problems: Catholic approaches to modern dilemmas and eternal truths/Frank Griffin. -- pp. 627-629.

No. 26

Man's anguish and his hope: "only now are we experience what it is to stand defenseless before an evil will of iron"/Jan Cep. -- pp. 639-641.

Church and State in Guatemala/Daniel James. -- pp. 642-644.

Labor union pluralism/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 645-646.

The screen: mead in your eye/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 647.

Writing in the welfare State/Herbert Howarth. -- pp. 648-650.

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Saint Andrew's Theological Seminary is an ecumenical center of theological education, training, and formation serving the Episcopal Church in the Philippines (ECP), the Iglesia Filipina Independiente (IFI), and beyond.