THE Commonweal A Weekly Review of Public Affairs, Literature, and the Arts THIRTY-SECOND YEAR OF PUBLICATION week by week VICTIMS OF COMMUNISM I N ALL of the speculation about the new...
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The Power of the Senate "BY ITS NATURE THE SENATE IS NOT PROPERLY CONSTITUTED TO FRAME A NATIONAL PROGRAM" WILLIAM V. SHANNON I N THE ten years since the war, the United States Senate as an...
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FRENCH COMMUNISM Falling Idols JOHN CAXTON PIERRE HERVE, long a leading French Communist, published a book during the month before the momentous Twentieth Congress of the Communist Party...
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SOCIAL ENCYCLICALS Progress Report JOHN C. CORT IN 1891 it was considered revolutionary for the head of the Catholic Church, which, at least in Europe, was generally supposed to be an ally...
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THE STAGE NOTHING THEY COME before us, Mr. Samuel Beckett's tatterdemalion wayfarers, caked with the dust of nothingness: sour and smelly, down at the heel though not at the mouth; abused by...
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THE SCREEN A LITTLE LEARNING IS ALFRED HITCHCOCK, overimpressed in his recent films like ' The Trouble with Harry" and and "To Catch a Thief" with comedy, scenery and a large screen, returns in...
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OF NOTE MARRIED DEACONS WRITING in the Month (114 Mount Street, W.1, London), Roland Hill discusses the possibility of a revival of the practice of ordaining married men as deacons....
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BOOKS A Joyous, Unorthodox Search for Freedom THE ROAD. By Harry Martinson. Translated by M. A. Michael. Reynal and Co. $3.50. By JACK PATTERSON IT IS likely that few readers in this country...
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