WHAT PRICE, UNCLE SAM? PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S insistence that heavier taxes be levied on the incomes and legacies of very rich men raises many questions of grave importance. One has been...
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Week by Week /"^ONGRESS apparently settled down to sevV> eral weeks of hot weather and bitter wrangling. The inability of Mr. Roosevelt to drive his party forward in a...
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July 12, 1935 The Commonweal 277 THE CALLES ECLIPSE By E. R. PINEDA A /^~\ ^ THE occasion i^ A 1 1 of a recent inter^*~S view with Senator Padilla at his country residence...
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BLUE-PENCILING THE EDITORS By RICHARD REID THOUSANDS of Catholics are complaining about the secular press, and the communications departments of Catholic magazines and newspapers are...
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282 The Commonweal July 12, 1935 MIGHT I SUGGEST, MR. PRESIDENT? By JAMES F. CUNNINGHAM MY DEAR Mr. President: The NRA is gone, and with millions of my fellow citizens I am sorry. But...
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Reaper Paint me a woman in a field of wheat Yellow and full against the shining heat Of afternoon. But do not let her bind The lovely sheaves, having within her mind A care of winter. Let...
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July 12, 1935 The Commonweal 285 Seven DausS\ 'ays survey TTie Church.—The Holy Father has named Cardinal Hayes of New York as Papal Legate to the Seventh National Eucharistic Congress to be...
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288 The Commonweal July 12, 1935 Communications THE LAY FACULTY Winooski Park, Vt. TO the Editor: One probably needs a sense of humor when one is bold enough to enter the lists of...
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'Books Sympathy Young Joseph, by Thomas Mann; translated by H. T. Lowe-Porter. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. $2.50. I i \ MONUMENTAL novel," the publisher calls l\ "Joseph and His Brothers."...
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