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D
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E
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F
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F - Fc
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F, A.
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F, Patrick
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F, Sister Jean Marie, O S
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F, Thomas
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F., A.
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F., C. F.
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F., Sister Mary Honora, O.S.
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FABRO, J. A.
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Faggen, Robert
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Faggioli, Massimo
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Fagin, Mary
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Fagin, N. Bryllion
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FAHEY, JOHN F.
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Fahey, Michael A.
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FAHEY, ROBERT J.
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FAHRIG, (BROTHER) DONALD
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FAHRIG, BROTHER DON
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Fairbanks, Henry G.
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Fallis, Jeff
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Fallon, Gabriel
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Fallows, Marjorie
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Falque, Ferdinand C.
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Families, Diatribe ll--The Negro's Friends--Peace and Prejudice--The Other News--Four Million
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Fandel, John
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Bid
(March 2012)
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Bid When into deathlessness I die out of the running, past pray, no need for livelihood, versimilitude, or reason why, past okay, selfhood; nude, stript to ashes to ashes dust...
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return / finale
(November 2010)
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return Each time it tried to get into the sea, The waves resisted entering and swept Tumbling the turtle back With weed in welter and wrack Holding it as in fee; And still it...
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Stumped
(November 2009)
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Poetry Stumped I called the tree Syn-symmetry as all who saw the tree did see down to its shade symmetrical even its shadow—before its fall, all this all. Lighty Lightning took its...
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Apostrophe
(May 2000)
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bly. It is an exquisite irony that some elite Catholic schools now play...
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A Question at Duskrise
(December 1997)
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John Fandel A Question at Duskrise Now the Flag on the flagpole next the water might just as well be a blister on the pole, a colored blister, a kind of barber pole in front of a clipjoint,...
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Poetry
(January 1994)
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19 John Fandel Sermon It did not speak to me. It spoke such hindsight views, My spirit put on shoes And hiked to Galilee. An exile from the pews, What would it thereby see? A man beside the...
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Poetry
(May 1990)
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John Fandel Someone Says So A rift becomes Grand Canyon, given time- Ten zillion years, give or take a day. Gulley to gulch takes less almost to rime. And so "the little rift within the lute"...
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Miss Dickinson, no Emily, still makes me nervous
(September 1987)
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Miss Dickinson, no Emily, still makes me nervous n those days, jacketed and tied, Let us remembering we stood in the Holy Presence of God, in those days when a part-time assistant adjunct...
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Verse
(May 1987)
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321 John Fandel Memorial Days I pass by three wars remembered in bronze, stone, trees, as I go where I go: gingerbread granite tiers Civil War infantries outdated bombs ago; a putteed...
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In the Orchard
(February 1987)
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AWAKENING THE SENSES IR TIE OHCHABD Charles W. Pratt The Tidal Press, $22, $15 paper, 62 pp. John Fondcl Each of the thirty-three poems in Charles Pratt's first collection has something...
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Verse
(December 1986)
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world it depicts: the silent, austere life of early twentieth- The problem lies not with filming dance, which Ballard and century cloistered Carmelite nuns. ...
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VERSE
(July 1978)
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CONSENT WITHOUT ADVICE PETER BLUM KOVLER Questions about the Senate confirmation process The Bert Lance case is now a good many weeks behind us. Nonetheless, it would be worthwile to examine...
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THE WEIGHT OF A FEW WORDS
(December 1977)
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keenly felt in the scene where Clara goes to see the store owner while he's still under the impression that she is a n unwed mother. She doesn't realize that this is the reason he is being...
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VERSE
(November 1977)
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the individual (in a Western Christian setting) is suggested here for each and every separate cultural group. Thus, a Christian missionary is to enter into the new culture, read, listen and...
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VERSE
(October 1977)
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on account of its ahistorical approach, the film has been shot almost entirely on sound-stage interiors. The pristine, specially constructed quality this gives to each set and the patent movie...
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READING IN DOMUS ANGELORUM
(August 1976)
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Reading in Domus Ungelorum JOHN FANDEL It had been so long since I had given a reading, I wondered, when the invitation came, if I still could, feeling, as I hadn't for nearly as long, I'd like...
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VERSE
(June 1976)
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JOHN FANDEL SEA-GLASS: TWO VIEWS 1 In the green tons of silence sound as a drum, A stained glass window of a Sea-Dome shattered, The stillness so intense. These pieces, from That soft explosion,...
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VERSE
(February 1976)
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JOHN FANDEL SCALING If, instead of trying this poem, I were climbing the Matterhorn- boots, parka, pack, ropes, clamps... what it takes to take a peak! I'll stay home (to scale that rime), bora...
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VERSE:
(July 1975)
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JOHN FANDEL THE LOWLY EMERGENCY It is only in the lonely emergencies of life that our creed is tested: then routine maxims fail, and we fall back on our gods. William James Of the books I have...
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VERSE
(January 1975)
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JOHN FANDEL CONSEQUENCE I How we live long with pain, in limb or mind, With grief, with fears, all their close next of kin, Should make us Saints. But for the grace of God There go I without a...
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BOOKS:
(September 1974)
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wrestling matches with Jacob's angel, integrity that none of us can find in erous and hard-working . . . I ask You full of blessing and wounding. Each in solitary confinement....
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VERSE:
(April 1974)
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made, barely-made, unseen, unseeable But Duchamp is not a prophet or theo- life of art finally subverts the institution and unspeakable objects. Not the Mona logian with a...
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E. E. CUMMNGS
(December 1973)
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E. E. CUMMINGS JOHN FANDEL hee hee cunnings' fonetty kinglish If the poetry of E.E. Cummings could be like Caesar's Gaul divided into three parts, to write about it would be easy. But his...
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VERSE
(September 1973)
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only what the subjects as photographic images say. The formality of the pose, the frontality of presentation, the direct look into the camera, the fact that the figures tend to fill the space,...
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BOOKS
(October 1972)
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mother is divorced and remarried, living with Alex's brother Howard at a Michigan lakeshore resort. Curly dies, but not before Alex serves time in what we continue to call reform schools,...
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Verse
(February 1972)
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lies the conviction that itself, the Christian body, is the cor~tinued manifestation in history of the Lord whose office, meaning and nature are disclosed in the development of the life and...
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VERSE
(December 1971)
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nationalization of Kennecott's and Anaconda's huge holdings. No political (or other) element has questioned the soundness of the---in effect---confiscatory nature of the take-over. (The Council...
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VERSE
(September 1971)
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JOHN FANDEL
IlWiTATWN
I just stopped by to tell you
the lily on the seaward moor has opened.
I was out to watch dawn '
wash in on the breakers,
and walking back, I saw—
something a...
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VERSE:
(March 1971)
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POEM JOHN FANDEL I dream a poem fluent as the dawn flows still as water after torrential falls streams to calms between froth and sea, a madrigal all melody shall be in rippled sun when purling...
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VERSE
(February 1971)
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JOHN FANDEL BLACK SQUIRREL Out for a walk, after the heavy rain had kept me indoors half the livelong day, I saw part of the rainsoaked dogwood stir as if it might leaf in my sunstarved...
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VERSE:
(November 1970)
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LETTER JOHN FANDEL Nothing's the same. The houses left are Funeral Parlors, primped and prinked beyond habitation; corpses, rouged, in crinkled satin lie in parlors where we played blindman's...
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VERSE
(July 1970)
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367 NORMA FARBER STITCH f j¥ TIME Let, in this rending end of August, the little tailor cicada but oil his shrill machine, but thread his metalline needle, let him this once stitch so I wear...
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VERSE
(March 1970)
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THE STARS AND STRIPES FOREVER Flags on campus EDWARD R. CAIN Late one freezing night last December, a student at SUNY, Brockport, N. Y., came out of the local tavern to discover that his car...
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Verse
(August 1969)
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perate attempt of the papacy to survive as a political and territorial power. Though the situation has greatly changed in the interval between Plus IX and Paul VI the political and ideological...
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Verse
(February 1969)
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redefining obscenity and the pornographic in terms of that which makes life inhumane, then one begins to worry. I have come to doubt that opinion which insists that pornographic material does not...
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Verse
(December 1968)
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as the principal leader of the left wing of Accion Popular. Several months ago he was officially named as the Accion Popular nominee for President. However, it was an open secret that Belaunde...
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Verse
(October 1968)
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his people outside were not afraid. As the weeks went by, the slight, dark man who sat quietly by his attorney, began to affect everyone in it. When he took the stand in his own defense, he...
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VERSE
(September 1968)
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JOHN FANDEL TEAR GAS (8/29/68) Brouhaha, folderol, flapdoodle, All the gas of the whole kit and caboodle Makes no tears. The real McCoy For that. Then the forced tears employ The expense of...
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VERSE:
(March 1968)
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JOHN FANDEL STATES Soul wept, down upon Waters by Babylon, Its morning of loss; This would come to a cross, Being the only one God the chaste Father's Son. Such interest improved Soul's...
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VERSE:
(August 1967)
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have cause to distrust the other: Steiger fears for his job and the uppity...
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Verse
(May 1966)
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THE MORGAN GRINDER 0 0 _9 0 0 _9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 THE SCREEN Undaunted that their darling "Darling" lost out on Oscar night to a more popular American mediocrity, the British keep plugging away....
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VERSE: ONELINERS
(March 1965)
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the depths of his being. Yet faith today may be said to entail still another risk: the risk of exercising one's freedom to look at one's faith. For the Catholic trained only to see faith as a...
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Triptych: The Transmogrified
(December 1963)
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Triptych : The Transmogrified
JOHN FANDEL
I Polonius Redivivus
Let all your words be palatable; you will have to eat
them, eventually. Actions speak louder than words, and their slightest
whispers...
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Poets and Mystics
(December 1963)
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Speaking by Silences
Poets and Mystics
JOHN FANDEL
FROM THE same source of silence, through different modes of silence, poet and mystic represent Francis Thompson's adaptable paradox: "they speak by...
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Adonis in Purgatory: A Poem
(October 1961)
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read here in Moscow gives even a hint of support for such reports." S OVIET EFFORTS, or lack of them, notwithstanding, the Administration, with the approval of Congress, is determined to go...
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Minerva at Canossa: A Poem
(September 1961)
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MINERVA AT CANOSSA We praise him intelligent who speaks our silent prejudice. Imitation can not diminish greatness. He who knows himself shall not know insult. A friend is one we are always about...
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Apollo in Podunk: A Poem
(June 1961)
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APOLLO IN PODUNK We sometimes agree with ideas it would be redundant to deny. We frequently give time to those who merely take it. Many talk but do nothing; some are silent and act; a few...
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Resignation, Esq.: A Poem
(September 1960)
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countries, many Latins Rankly felt that the U.N. was undemocratic and that in several respects its functions were apt to be redundant and regressive. Americans, after all, could already boast a...
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Two Poems: "Pieta" and "The Bee"
(September 1959)
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While a Protestant would be justified in simply reading the works of the great classical expositors of Catholicism with considerable assurance that the contemporary Catholic would be one with...
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Legend: A Poem
(July 1958)
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travel by American tourists. The Russians in turn failed to persuade the Americans to minimize their travel restrictions or to agree on direct commercial air trat~c between the two countries....
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Husbandry: A Poem
(November 1957)
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Christianity as an alien power—an instrument of foreign domination—and identifies national loyalty with loyalty to the religious traditions of the nation. This is a paradoxical attitude in that it...
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The Watch: A Poem
(November 1957)
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would constitute capital formation of the most fundamental kind. But the country as a whole does not see the case as I have presented it. The statistics have received nationwide publicity and...
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Walking in Switzerland: A Poem
(July 1957)
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WALKING IN SWITZERLAND Requires balance. Altitudes are for Angels, but mankind can not stay put when a mountain's the view. Dance of its urge in him, expanse of spirit needs an entrance to the...
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Propositions South of Montaup Mountain: A Poem
(January 1957)
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PROPOSITIONS SOUTH OF MONTAUP MOUNTAIN
A: There, all's silence, . music before sound of music, at the same center where silence is sleep taking breath, and we see ourselves simplified by adoration;...
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Book Reviews
(November 1955)
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Life and the Dream MARJORIE MORNINGSTAR. By Herman Wouk. Doubleday. $4.95. By R. T. HORCHLER M R. Wouk's designation of Mar]orie Morningstar as a love story and an entertainment...
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Monday's Vision: A Poem
(October 1955)
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MONDAY'S VISION I SAW a gust of birds rise in a hurry of gale like a moment mountain into the sun, an avalanche of disappearance; they caught my breath: I had to scale a new alp in the...
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The Flowering: A Poem
(September 1955)
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THE FLOWERING N the reverent wind, in the religious sun, baptist of the seed's fine miracle, all summer long, all summer mild, the flower below the tip of the sky, spun in the root of His...
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Fandel, Larry Rubin, Michael Cadnum, Paul Petrie, John
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Fanning, William H.
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Fantino, Eileen
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Farachain, Riobard O
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Faracháin, Riobárd Ó
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Faramelli, Norman J.
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Farber, Charles
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Farber, Manny
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Farber, Norma
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Farbstein, W. E.
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FARENELL, MIKE
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Farge, Bancel La
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Farge, John La
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Farley, Ambrose
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Farley, John Arthur
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Farley, Margaret
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Farming, The Hidden Damage-The Soviet Impact on the Western World-The Year of Stalingrad-Understandi
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Farneth, Molly
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FARNSWORTH, ALMON G.
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FARRELL, ALICE M.
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Farrell, Frank B.
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FARRELL, JAMES M.
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Farrell, James T.
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Farrell, John
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Farrell, John W.
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Farrell, Paul V.
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Farrow, John
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Fassler, Joe
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FASSLER, MARGOT E.
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Faulhaber, Claire Will
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FAULHABER, CLARA WILL
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Faulhaber, Michael Cardinal von
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Faulhaber, R. W.
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Faunce, W. H. P.
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Faust, Henri
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Fawcett, W. McRae
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Fay, Bernard
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Faÿ, Bernard
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Fay, Stephen
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