|  1920s | 
    
    
      |  1930s | 
    
    
      |  1940s | 
    
    
      |  1950s | 
    
    
      |  1960s | 
    
    
      |  1970s | 
    
    
      |  1970 | 
    
    
      |  1971 | 
    
    
      |  1972 | 
    
    
      |  1973 | 
    
    
      |  1974 | 
    
    
      |  1975 | 
    
    
      |  1976 | 
    
    
      |  1977 | 
    
    
      |  1978 | 
    
    
      |  January | 
    
    
      |  February | 
    
    
      |  March | 
    
    
      |  April | 
    
    
      |  May | 
    
    
      |  June | 
    
    
      |  July | 
    
    
      |  August | 
    
    
      |  September | 
    
    
      |  October | 
    
    
      |  November | 
    
    
      |  December | 
    
    
      
      |  Vol. 105 Issue 024 (December 8 1978) | 
    
    
      
      |  Vol. 105 Issue 025 (December 22 1978) | 
    
    
      |  ••Cover Page•• | 
    
    
      |  ••Contents•• | 
    
    
      |  Correspondence | 
    
    
      |  | 
    
    
      | Correspondence  The historian's eye  Washington, D.C. To the Editors: The article of John Jay Hughes on the election of Pope John Paul II in your issue of November 10 was one of the best I have... | 
    
    
      |  Editorials | 
    
    
      |  | 
    
    
      | Contents  Volume CV, Number 25  Correspondence 802  Editorials 803  Prematurely Saved: John Garvey 805  The Illusion in Iran: Thomas Powers 806  God, man, history & the totalitarian... | 
    
    
      |  Prematurely Saved: | 
    
    
      | Garvey, John | 
    
    
      | Monsignor Higgins and also canceling the abolishment of the only an unheeding bureaucracy, all these are happy de human values committee which deals with urgent biomedical opments, and we... | 
    
    
      |  The Illusion in Iran: | 
    
    
      | Powers, Thomas | 
    
    
      | we know God and try~to use God for our ends, we are idolators. It is possible, I think, to have an idol and call it Jesus.  To be a follower of Jesus, do I have to know how I feel about it, or have... | 
    
    
      |  God, man, history & the totalitarian temptation | 
    
    
      | Domenach, Jean-Marie | 
    
    
      | I I  BEHIND THE ATROCITIES IS AN IMMENSE NEED FOR GOD 
 God, man, history & the totalitarian temptation  IIII   lEAN-MARIE DOMENACH   T  HE CHURCH has fallen into the very trap it set for... | 
    
    
      |  Sight Unseen(verse) | 
    
    
      | Fremantle, Anne | 
    
    
      | further of himself: "Never for a moment did he stand at the side of the road to watch the soldiers pass by. The soldiers were himself. Not for a moment did he stand by the side of the road to watch... | 
    
    
      |  The parable of the unresponsive witnesses: | 
    
    
      | Forest, James H. | 
    
    
      | A VIETNAMESE MARTYR 
 The parable of the unresponsive witnesses  JAMES H. FOREST  URING the latter '60s, when giving talks on the ways and  reasons for resisting the Vietnam war, I very" often... | 
    
    
      |  Screen: | 
    
    
      | Westerbeck, Colin L. Jr. | 
    
    
      | Buddhist Church of a Draft law making no provision for conscientious objection and shortly after a vigorous protest of the attempted confiscation of an orphanage, there was a night raid on the... | 
    
    
      |  Meditations: Thomas Traherne(verse) | 
    
    
      | Little, Geraldine C. | 
    
    
      | detail. On the contrary, her sensitivities, though selective, are also incredibly acute. As might be expected when a child from a Chicago slum finds herself in the wilds of Texas, Linda is... | 
    
    
      |  Visions of Glory | 
    
    
      | Miles, Jack | 
    
    
      | leaves one man dead, Linda's narrative resumes in the same dry, philosophical vein as before. "Nobody's perfect," she comments. "'There was never a perfect person around." The loss of innocence... | 
    
    
      |  Evita,First Lady | 
    
    
      | Page, Joseph A. | 
    
    
      | will sound, and the dead will be raised incorruptible. And when this corruptible nature has put on incorruptibility, this mortal nature immortality, then will the words of Scripture come true: Death... | 
    
    
      |  Dasher/Yankee from | 
    
    
      | Lanouette, Georgia William J. | 
    
    
      | To her ent/miesi Evita, as she was popularly known, was a tacky, vindictive ex-whore who parlayed limitless energy and ambition, native guile and her rela- tionship with Coionel Juan D. Perdn into... | 
    
    
      |  Education for Justice/The Faith that Does Justice | 
    
    
      | Marciniak, Ed | 
    
    
      | sisting negative lines about Carter, to the point by late 1977 of dismissing him as a one-term President.  "But the two need each other--that is to say, the nation and its capital city need what is... | 
    
    
      |  Milton and the English Revolution | 
    
    
      | King, Robert L. | 
    
    
      | lights the moral dilemmas latent in any discussion with "learners-teachers." Together they try to understand the "problem" they have discovered and to find ways to solve it. Such adult educa- tion... | 
    
    
      |  Uncommon Prayer | 
    
    
      | True, Michael | 
    
    
      | lights the moral dilemmas latent in any discussion with "learners-teachers." Together they try to understand the "problem" they have discovered and to find ways to solve it. Such adult educa- tion... | 
    
    
      |  Index to Volume CV | 
    
    
      |  | 
    
    
      | I suggest that neither a liberal society nor a constitutional order are responsible for the evils he mentions. The "fault" does not reside in principles of political liberalism but in the type of... | 
    
    
      |  1979 | 
    
    
      |  1980s | 
    
    
      |  1990s | 
    
    
      |  2000s | 
    
    
      |  2010s | 
    
    
      |  2020s | 
    
    
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