cation, and he has a re~pon=ive audience. The radical of the left has neither. MERICAN left-radicalism has a long and honorable history. Its greatest achievement, one which embraces the...
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Don't You Agree? By ED WILLOCK THERE is a logical sequence in Stuart Chase's literary concerns. His Rich Land, Poor Land, which we read in the mid-thirties, was a document of indignation at the...
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The Exterior Life By ED WILLOCK I CAN remember about ten years ago reading a column about "False Prophets" in a diocesan newspaper. The author had become suddenly apocalyptic and urged the...
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The Uncommon Man
By ED WILLOCK
IN THE story of the boy who cried "Wolf!" too often, there is a minor moral that generally escapes attention. The shepherd boy lost his life. We can't say that it...
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