The Commonweal
Material type:
- PER .C65 1958 V.68
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PERIODICAL | Saint Andrew's Theological Seminary Mosher Library | PER .C65 1958 V.68 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan | 17127 |
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PER .C65 1955 V.62 The Commonweal. | PER .C65 1955-1956 V.63 The Commonweal. | PER .C65 1956 V.64 The Commonweal | PER .C65 1958 V.68 The Commonweal | PER .C66 1990 Concilium : the international journal of theology. | PER .C66 1991 Concilium the International journal of theology | PER .C66 1992 Concilium : the international journal of theology. |
No. 1
The Kennan-Acheson debate: in his now famous B.B.C. lectures Gerge F. Kennan struck a spark that set off major debates on foreign policy in most of the Western capitals/Kenneth W. Thompson. -- pp. 6-9.
The whole truth/John Cogley. -- pp. 10.
Cozzens dispossessed/James Finn. -- pp. 11-13.
Labor's glass house: the A.F.L.C.I.O. response to attempts to form an organizers' union added injury to insult/John C. Cort. -- pp. 14-16.
The stage: the shock of recognition/Richard Hayes.-- pp. 16-18.
The screen: everyman in his humor/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 18.
Revealing account of Joyce's early year/David H. Greene. -- pp. 19-20.
No. 2
The lay professor: if a college is in one a community of scholars, then a Catholic college is two communities, one lay, the other religious, which are separate but not equal/Oscar W. Perlmutter. -- pp. 31-34.
The Bishop and the butcher/John Cogley. -- pp. 35.
The death of Rouault: once rejected, his work is today very much a part of Ctholic art/Frank and Dorothy Getlein. -- pp. 36-37.
Chardin and human knowledge: his life testifies to the sanctifying mission of Christian intelligence and of Christian activity/Justus George Lawler. -- pp. 40-48.
The screen; bigger than life and twice as natural/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 49-50. The reality of the Catholic press/Robert D. Cross. -- pp. 51-53. No. 3
Invisible salesman: is subliminal advertising a sinister new force in the art of mass communication, or is it just another crackpot idea, doomed to inevitable failure?/Jack Patterson. -- pp. 71-73.
Those other Americans/John Cogley. -- pp. 74.
Tito's great failure: in Yugoslavia, university students are once again battling the government/Matthew M. Mestrovic. -- pp. 75-77.
The stage: the province and the poetry/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 77-78.
The screen: the face of war/ -- pp. 79.
Communications: "the G.O.P. in the Midwest"/Geralf L. Nolan. -- pp. 79-80.
American Catholic Theologians/Justus George Lawler. -- pp. 80-81.
Literature and criticism: two approaches/William Esty. -- pp. 84-85.
No. 4
Spanish Catholics: right, left, and center: after a decade and one-half of equilibrium Spanish politics are again in ferment/George Dennis. -- pp. 95-98.
Father Ford/John Cogley. -- pp. 99.
The consumer as guinea pig/James Rorty. -- 100-102.
Christian word and work: a consideration of an urgently needed book on the role of Catholicism in the modern world/E. Harold Smith. -- pp. 102-104.
The stage: thieves carnival/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 105.
The screen: down to the sea/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 105-106.
Simple and moving story clearly and directly told/William James Smith. -- pp. 108-109.
The two myths: the French nation: from Napoleon to Petain/Thomas Molnar. -- pp. 109-110.
No. 5
The intellectual and the American dream: "objectively speaking Babbitt may not do anything real, but sociologically he is in the mainstream of reality"/Edward L. Rousseau. -- pp. 119-122.
Canada surprises itself/Harry Lorin Binsse. -- pp. 122-124.
The other two-thirds: more than half the children in the world have never drunk milk or seen medicine/Neil P. Hurley. -- pp. 125-126.
Liturgy and language/John Cogley. -- pp. 127.
Communications: "was fascism an episode"/Walter O'Hagan. -- pp. 129.
No. 6
The Catholic as censor: the censorship struggle in the United States has done nothing to close the tragic gap between religion and secular culture/William Clancy. -- pp.142-144.
Japanese writers today/Donald Keene. -- pp. 144-147.
The indestructible hero/William James Smith. -- pp . 147-149.
More on prato/John Cogley. -- pp. 150.
Letters on "the lay professor"/Edward P.J. Corbett. -- pp. 134-136.
Robert Graves: Cranky, malicious and entertaining/Anthony Bailey. -- pp. 157-158.
Cardinal Wolsey/ Elizabeth Bartelme. -- pp. 158-160.
No. 7
The Middle East: prospects and perils: it is the Arab-Israel quarrel which is most likely to lead to a great conflagration/Norman Thomas. -- pp. 175-178.
The Price of power/Gunnar F. Kumlien. -- pp. 178-179.
The Catholic worker/John Cogley. -- pp. 180.
Decline of the Western: we have traveled a long way from "the Virginian", the best western of them all/Walker Percy. -- pp. 181-183.
The screen: yes, my darling daughter/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 183-184.
Of note: ethics and foreign policy/ -- pp. 185-186.
Revealing biography of newsman's spirit/Philip Deasy. -- pp. 187-188.
No. 8
American civilization: it it characteristic of Americans to consider the phenomena of thier way of life as inalterable data of the human condition/Tjomas Molnar. -- pp. 198-200.
View with alarm/ James B. Kelly. -- pp. 200-202.
The Church in Latin America/Joseph B. Gremillion. -- pp. 202-205.
The stage: the limits of lyricism/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 205-206.
The screen: what makes Rita run/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 206-207
Travel books for children/Claire Huchet Bishop. -- pp. 208.
No. 9
Thirty years of Salaza: the theoretical basis of Portugal's present regime lies in Salazar's belief that " the people has less need of being sovereign than of being governed"/Francis E. McMahon. -- pp. 223-226.
Put out no flags/John Cogley. -- pp. 226.
Catholics and the dialogue/James O'Gara. -- pp. 227-229.
God and Caesar in Italy/Gunnar D. Kumlien. -- pp. 229-231.
The screen: rabbling in babel/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp.231-232.
The stage: an infernal harmony/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 232-233.
More letter on "The lay professor"/William Bates. -- pp. 233-234.
An autonomous individual with a cultural conscience/Max Cosman. -- pp. 236-237.
No. 10
Morality and nuclear war: such is human folly that a war begun in restraint is likely to end in uncontrolled and therefore immoral violence/L.L. McReavy. -- pp. 246-249.
Television in Britain/ J.L. Benvenisti. -- pp. 249-251.
Railroads in crisis/Lawrence T. King. -- pp. 253-255.
The screen: what did you have in mind?/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 255-256.
Communication: "Spanish Catholics"/Basil Carmody. -- pp. 256-257.
Random pieces from an eminent career/Richard L. Schoenwald. -- pp. 259-260.
No. 11
Catholicism and the East: if the church is to enter into the cultural inheritance of the East, she must enter into the heart of its religious tradition/Bede Griffiths. -- pp. 271-274.
Split among Christian democrats/Michael P. Fogarty. -- pp. 274--276.
Passing of the stereotype/Robert J. Landry. -- pp. 276-278.
What image of the church/John Cogley. -- pp. 279.
The screen: Beamish boy/ Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 280.
The stage: Maecenas/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 280-281.
Communications: The Middle East/Theodore N. Lewis. -- pp. 281.
Two views of a strong personality/Elizabeth Bartelme. -- pp. 283-284.
No. 12
Breaking the stalemate: "the NATO allies must at least think out and place before the bar at public opinion an alternative policy for Middle Europe"/Henry S. Reuss. -- pp. 295-298.
Trouble in California/Ted Le Berthon. -- pp. 299-301.
The Lost leaders/John Cogley. -- pp. 302.
The Stage: the road to the Isles/Richard Hayes. -- pp. 303-304.
The screen:Wholesome and otherwise/Philip T. Hartung. -- pp. 304-305.
Communication: "Protestant-Catholic Jew"/Will Herberg. -- pp. 305.
Proust's invisible vocations/Martin Turnell. -- pp. 306-307.
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