THE Commonweal A Weekly Review of Public Affairs,. Literature, and the Arts r..R -F.rr. ,EAR OF PUSUCAr.O. week by week "TOWARD A BETTER AMERICA" W HEN REPUBLICAN leaders late last winter...
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The People of India Although the typical Indian village may be des- perately poor, it is nevertheless full of beauty By BEDE GRIFFITHS I T IS DIFFICULT for a European, and I would think still...
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If ever a company asked for a strike, it was the mill in Henderson, North Carolina Turning Back the Clock By JOHN C. CORT N ORTH CAROLINA is generally regarded as one of the more liberal of...
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The worker-priest remained isolated, unattached, left completely to his own resources Passing of the Worker-Priests By ROBERT BARRAT T HE DIFFICULT experiment of the French worker-priest,...
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I do not wish to discuss here the personal merits of the members, lay and Religious, of the secular insti- tutes. All I can say, humbly, as an observer who seeks to be objective on the religious...
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and that "most costive of villains" (Shaw again), Don Johnmmove, in the fallibility of their vanity and love, through a chequered maze of truth and delusion. They are seen, neither as psychological...
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the young men who were the schoolboys at the time of the rebuilding are leaving for military service. Military service--is there no end to the cycle? The second episode takes viewers to Haiti where...
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"THEY TELL us: "The Russians were cordial to Nixon, so we must be cordial to Khrttshcheo. Q.E.D." We reply: "Jack the Ripper was nice to all the women he didn't murder, therefore all tke women...
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