WEEK BY WEEK 'Going It Alone'— And With No Map To Go By AT ONE point in his testimony to the investigating committees of Congress, General MacArthur spoke of the long-standing desire...
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The State and Human Freedom Does citizenship limit or enlarge the liberty of men? By EUGENE J. McCARTHY WHEN one undertakes to analyze the problem of the state and human rights, he does so...
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Labor: the Counterrevolution THE artist is always more perceptive than the historian, for he knows that there are facts of life which rebuke evidence. The artist knows that the life of man is...
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A New Life for Old Calabria ANY morning early, that is at about four or five o'clock, go to any railway junction south ox west of Naples in the migratory season. You will see there men sleeping...
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The Stage THE LITTLE BLUE LIGHT EDMUND WILSON begins his play by projecting us into the not too distant future, when American liberalism shall be all but defeated at the hands of pressure...
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The Screen THE WALRUS SAID READERS of that peculiar brand of story known as science fiction may consider "The Thing from Another World" pretty tame stuff; but since I'm more or less a newcomer...
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The Unspoken Ism By JOHN COGLEY THE title of Blanshard's second variation on a single theme {Communism, Democracy and Catholic Power. Paul Blanshard. Beacon. $3.50) is somewhat misleading. The...
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Books The Journals of Andre Gide. Volume IV 1939-1949. Alfred A. Knopf. $6. IT IS HARD to resist beginning a review of the last volume of Andre Gide's Journals with an aphorism like, "One...
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