Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1998
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the June-July 1998 (Vol. LXV No. 4) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Sabra McKenzie-Hamilton as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Matriarchs & Disciples by Katharine Temple (with topics Leah and Rachel; Martha and Mary); Swift & Indiscriminate Deportations by Deirdre Cornell (on the INS - United States Immigration and Naturalization Service); short Poverty Disguised by Joe Wells ("In America, it is much easier to dress the poor decently than to house, feed or doctor them decently"); Grief & Hope in Guatemala by Larry Rosebaugh, OMI; On Responsible Investment (excerpt from St. Basil's 'Second Homily on Psalm 15'); memorial tribute for Denise Levertov, 1923-1997 by Jack Thornton (with her poem "The Secret"); memorial tribute for Phil Maloney, 1940-1998 by Bob Gilliam; The Vermont Job Gap Study by Alexander Lee; The Early Church on War by Tony Korec (with topics Deserting Violence, Words of Conscience, and A Pacifist Tradition). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1998
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the January-February 1998 (Vol. LXV No. 1) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Sabra McKenzie-Hamilton as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Iraq: As The People Suffer by Rick McDowell ("The UN Food and Agriculture Organization reported in December of 1995 that more than one million Iraqis have died - 567,000 of them children - as a direct consequence of economic sanctions"); Advent Of The Cuban Church by Jeremy Scahill (which begins, "From January 21-25, 1998, Pope John Paul II will visit the island nation of Cuba, the first papal voyage to the island since the 1959 revolution. There is little doubt that the Holy Father will publicly, and more boldly, reiterate what he has already requested of President Clinton privately, the lifting of 'economic, commercial and financial sanctions against Havana"); Change Comes From The Margins of Power by Katharine Temple; Mohandas Gandhi: Some Lessons In His Experiments With Truth: Vision of Nonviolence by Arya Bhushan Bhardwaj; short Abraham Joshua Heschel by Bill Griffin; short 2,000 Protest at the SOA [School of the Americas] by Joanne Kennedy; A Place On The Land by T. Christopher Cornell (on Peter Maurin Farm). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1997
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the October-November 1997 (Vol. LXIV No. 6) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Sabra McKenzie-Hamilton as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Memories of Passion and Abundant Love by Kate Hennessy (on Dorothy Day, with her photo); Cassini: Mission Immoral by Jeremy Scahill (on Cassini-Huygens, which begins, "On October 6, 1997, the US government plans to take what is probably the single greatest act of jeopardizing the safety of humanity since dropping the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration - NASA - intends to launch the largest quantity of nuclear material ever into space. Ostensibly intended for a probing of Saturn, the $3.4 billion 'Cassini Project' will be laden with 72.3 pounds of plutonium 238, which is 280 times more radioactive than the isotope employed in nuclear bombs"); The Cruelty of Landmines by Jane Sammon; obituary and memorial Bobby West #731: 1964-1997 by Katharine Temple (on Robert Wallace West, Jr., which begins with a short letter, "Dear Katharine Temple, Our friend Bobby West was executed on July 29, 1997 by a lethal injection, at 6:41 pm. I hope there will be an obituary in 'The Catholic Worker.' He was a vital spokesperson for the voiceless thousands on US Death Rows. I first read his words in the CW. In Christ the Revolutionary, Gretchen Laugier"); pages 4-5 are devoted to three short articles on Dorothy Day (with five photos): We Must Choose Sides by Eileen Egan; Woman of Fortitude by Sister Peter Claver, MSBT; and Dorothy Day: Teacher and Mother by Tom and Monica Cornell; A Thousand Voices by Cathy Breen ("On August 7th, we gathered in the lobby of the NASA headquarters with banners and leaflets to protest the prospective launching of the Cassini space probe"); short She Chose the All and Nothing Less Would Satisfy Her (on St. Therese of Lisieux). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1997
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the December 1997 (Vol. LXIV No. 7) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Sabra McKenzie-Hamilton as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Dorothy Day on Staten Island: Close To Nature's Heart by Jim O'Grady; Mother Teresa: Instrument Of God's Peace by Eileen Egan; God Will Not Abandon Me by Michele [incorrectly spelled as Michelle] Naar-Obed ("This open letter was written for the 'Faith and Resistance' retreat of the Atlantic Life Community, August 6-9. As we go to press, Michele's release date is November 3, 1997. However, conditions have been applied to her probation which forbid her to associate with 'known felons' - including forbidding her from returning to her family's home, Jonah House"); letter from Florence Anderson (on the passing and funeral of Paulo Freire); Counting by Michael J. Gent (on poverty in Namibia: "Many Namibians work as casual laborers and seasonal farm workers, for whom there is insufficient work throughout the year. Their standard of living is so low that, according to the World Bank, they live in 'absolute' poverty"); On The Question of Human Work ("This is an excerpt from the homily that Pope John [Paul] II gave at a June 2 Mass during his two-day tour of Poland this summer"). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1998
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the March-April 1998 (Vol. LXV No. 2) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Sabra McKenzie-Hamilton as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Downward Mobility by Diana Conroy; excerpt of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s last Sunday morning sermon, delivered on March 31, 1968, Passion Sunday, at the National Cathedral (Episcopal) in Washington, D.C.; Modest Hopes by Carmen Trotta (which begins, "On January 20, 1998, in an unusual, if not unprecedented move, fifty-four American Catholic bishops signed a letter to President Clinton calling for an 'immediate cessation of sanctions against Iraq'"); War Tax Resistance by Ernest Bromley ("The following is an excerpt from an article that Ernest Bromley - see obituary - wrote for the CW, June-July 1984"); memorial tribute for Ernest Bromley: 1912-1997 by Marian Mollin; memorial tributes for George Collins: 1915-1997 by Mary Anczarski and Daniel Dunn; My Catholic Education by Charles Barber; letter from Brother Maurice Held commemorating the life of Arthur Lacey; A Consistent Ethic of Life (brief excerpts from a statement from the New Zealand Catholic Bishops' Conference of April 18, 1997); Seamless Garment by Ciaron O'Reilly ("The following article is a version, edited for space reasons, of a talk given by Ciaron, a member of the Liverpool Catholic Worker Community, on July 12, 1996 in London"). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover; tiny closed edge tears along right edge of innermost sheet (to blank margin only).
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1998
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the May 1998 (Vol. LXV No. 3) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Sabra McKenzie-Hamilton as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Revolution from the Heart by Meg Hyre (on Peter Maurin, with selections from his poetry); Peter Maurin & Karl Marx (a comparison of Marx's 'Manifesto of the Communist Party' with Maurin's 'Easy Essays'); Aims and Means of the Catholic Worker Movement; Pope John Paul II And The Cuban Revolution, 1998 by Tom Cornell (with topics Gains of the Revolution and The Threat of Tourism); short [Prince of Peace] Plowshares Update; short SOA [School of the Americas] Sentencing; To Stand as a Community by Miriam Ford ("On risking arrest for the first time as a mother"); The Relevance Of Catonsville [Nine] After 30 Years by Carmen Trotta. Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1997
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the March-April 1997 (Vol. LXIV No. 2) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Brian Harte as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: East Timor Referendum Hoped For by Jane Sammon; NYC Rent Laws Threatened by Joe and Sabra McKenzie-Hamilton; Peter Maurin Farm by T. Christopher Cornell; Mordechai Vanunu Meeting; Credit Card Conundrum by Kenny Gould; Work To Eliminate Child Labor by Sabra McKenzie-Hamilton; Henry Grossmann by Siobhan O'Neil ("The painful reality, however, is that Henry was not very successful at confronting or managing his own personal problems or looking out for his own physical and emotional well-being"); In Defense Of A Generation Of Objectors ("The following is a letter by Jack Cook to the editor of 'Naval History' in response to an article entitled 'The Vietnam Fault Line' by Robert Timberg that appeared in their August, 1996 issue"); Create And Reinforce Peace ("The following is excerpted from 'What Is Essential for a New Law of Peace,' an address given by Pope John Paul II to the diplomatic corps accredited to the Vatican on January 13, 1997"). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1997
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the January-February 1997 (Vol. LXIV No. 1) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Brian Harte as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Giving Reason For Our Hope by Joseph E. Mulligan, SJ; Lessons From Bishop [John Joseph] Hughes by Brian T. Hynes; Framework For Economic Life ("On November 12, 1996, the US bishops approved a 'Catholic Framework for Economic Life'. Echoing the bishops' 1986 pastoral letter, 'Economic Justice for All,' the ten-point ethical guide which follows here also has sources in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, recent papal encyclicals, and other statements of the US Catholic bishops"); Testimony To The Sacredness Of Life by Jane Sammon (on Cardinal Joseph Bernadin and his accuser, Steven Cook, who recanted his public testimony); Shorter Reach - Firmer Grasp by Harvey F. Egan ("Being an octogenarian becomes me"); Gone Was the Aura Of Anger by James Loney (on Peter Taylor, which begins: "I first met Peter Taylor in October of 1990. Dan, Bill and I had just rented a three-bedroom house on Mutual St. in Toronto and were making our first tentative steps toward opening a Catholic Worker house of hospitality. A friend called us who knew of someone who needed a place to stay for awhile, maybe a month. He was in the hospital and would be released the next day. He had tried to kill himself, and he was HIV positive"); A Sense Of Being Sent by Robert Ellsberg (on Henri Nouwen); St. Therese Of Lisieux: 'My God, I Love You!': Centenary Of The Little Flower's Death by Patrick Wynne. Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1995
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the January-February 1995 (Vol. LXII No. 1) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jennifer Belisle as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Death Is Not The Answer by The New York State Catholic Bishops (on capital punishment); Zero Tolerance For Usury by Peter Stiehler; poem The Money Lenders' Dole by Peter Maurin; Compassion Without Profit by Jennifer Belisle (on health care from a Catholic Worker standpoint); An Enigmatic Blessing by Bob Tavani ("I'm sure Jesus, Who came to bring more abundant life, never meant to bless a permanent state of inner poverty"); Political Myth - The Real Poor by Michael Tierney; Letters From Our Readers; Abolish The Death Penalty by Michael Ross. Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1997
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the June-July 1997 (Vol. LXIV No. 4) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Brian Harte as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Plight of NY Farm Workers by Kenney Gould; Neighborhood Park's Mixed Message by Sabra McKenzie-Hamilton (on First Park, a newly renovated children's park at the Lower East Side/East Village on the corner of Houston, First Avenue, and First Street); Captive Audience Organizes by Brian Harte (which begins, "June 15th marks the first anniversary of the firing of Miriam Fried from a Borders Book Store in Philadelphia, PA. She was a member of the Industrial Workers of the World - IWW - Organizing Committee trying to unionize the store - see CW, October-November 1996. The IWW called for a boycott of Borders Books and began picketing the company's outlets throughout the US. The organizing drive was defeated. There has been increased union activity at Borders Stores in the year since these events"); US Law Further Tightens Noose On Cuban People by Jeremy Scahill (with topics Economic Debate; The Torricelli Act; Human Rights Claims; and International Threat?); A Question Of Property And Human Needs by Brian Hynes; memorial tributes for Arthur J. Lacey, Patricia Bellew Host, and Paulo Freire; Is This A Fair Estimate? by Daniel Berrigan, SJ ("Fr. Daniel Berrigan, SJ, offered this commentary on '2 Maccabees 1:18-36 and 2:1-6 at the Festival of Hope held in support of the Prince of Peace Plowshares - His words, spoken on the eve of the start of the trial, in which all six Plowshares members were found guilty, are reprinted from the May 8, 1997 issue of 'The Church World'"). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1996
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the August-September 1996 (Vol. LXIII No. 5) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Brian Harte as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Sweatshops, Brand Names, Huge Profits by Carmen Trotta; IWW [Industrial Workers of the World] Union Organizer Fired by Lenny Flank, Jr. (on Miriam Fried, general manager of the Borders Book Store in Philadelphia); CW Book List; The Right Place At The Right Time by Ciaron O'Reilly (on Andrea Needham and the war on East Timor); memorial tribute for Mary Angley by Katharine Temple; Solace And The Strength To Continue by Patrick Wynne ("In June of 1940, when Dorothy Day wrote the 'Our Stand' editorial, an unequivocal expression of pacifism, she was not professing a party line [rather] she was re-iterating an essential element in the unfolding of her faith, namely, the Sermon on the Mount"); excerpts from "Our Stand," an editorial by Dorothy Day (June 1940 CW). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1995
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the March-April 1995 (Vol. LXII No. 2) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jennifer Belisle and Brian Harte as Managing Editors, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: The Road To Peace Is Long by Joseph E. Mulligan, SJ; Work With Your Head & Hands: Interview With Peter Maurin (Excerpts from The Catholic Worker - April, May, June and July-August 1943); The Message Of Peace Down To The Pews by Gordon Zahn (on the 1983 pastoral "The Challenge of Peace: God's Promise and Our Response"); Re-Routing The Peace House by Karl Meyer; A Blight On The Countryside by Tim Nolan ("Amid Wyoming's vast open ranch land, unbeknownst to many of the families who live and work in its fields, lie over 200 Minuteman and MX nuclear missiles which remain on 95% alert, despite 'the ending of the Cold War'"); Images of Iraq by Anne Montgomery, RSCJ; memorial tribute to Eleanor Goff-Doerfler by Robert Steed; God Will Surely Require A Reckoning by Jennifer Belisle. Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1994
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the August-September 1994 (Vol. LXI No. 5) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jennifer Belisle as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Homesteaders In New York Neighborhoods by Matthew Lee (on the Inner City Press/Community on the Move Homesteaders); Help Thou Our Unbelief by Philip Berrigan; Western Aid Is Part Of The Problem by Florence Stratton ("One of the prevailing myths about aid is that it means 'gifts of food.' In fact, a considerable proportion of food aid - over 50% in the case of the US - rather than being given away, is sold on credit to a recipient government, which, in turn, can resell it to its citizens"); It's Not A Wonderful Bank by Jennifer Belisle (on the World Bank and International Monetary Fund); Ixcan [Guatemala] Community Rebuilt by Andres McKinley; memorial tribute for Linda Spulka by Jennifer Belisle; Crossing The Ocean Of Suffering Together by Dom Paulo Cardinal Arns [Paulo Evaristo Arns]; What Is A Person Of Conscience? by John Schuchardt; Open-Pollinated Approaches by Brewster Kneen (on the open-pollinated seed and hybrid seed). Small remnant of mailing label to upper edge of front cover; outer edges age-sunned.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1996
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the January-February 1996 (Vol. LXIII No. 1) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jennifer Belisle and Brian Harte as Managing Editors, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: A Justice Based On Healing by Jim Consedine (on "New Zealand where, for the past seven years, a restorative philosophy of justice has been practiced with youth offenders under a marvelous piece of 1989 legislation called 'The Children, Young Persons and Their Families Act'"); Economics - Our Catholic Tradition ("Excerpted from "'A Decade After 'Economic Justice For All'; Continuing Principles, Changing Context, New Challenges," a pastoral statement from the US bishops, issued November 1995"); memorial tribute Bill [William] Kunstler, My Teacher by David Walsh-Little (reprinted from 'Enthusiasm,' the newspaper of Viva House Baltimore Catholic Worker); four memorial tributes for Robert Ludlow 1914-1995 by Gordon Zahn, Tom Cornell, John P. Whelan, and Joseph D. Whelan (with excerpts by Robert Ludlow from the May 1951 and June 1955 issues of CW); memorial tribute for Father Martin Clarke by Jeannette Noel; Our Complicity In Sierra Leone's War by Florence Stratton; A Tax Resister's Letter (to the Internal Revenue Service from Andrew P. Connolly). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the August 1993 (Vol. LX No. 5) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Jennifer Belisle, Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: The Life of Muriel Lester by Jo Roberts; lengthy report War At The Crossroads: Background On The Balkans by Bill Weinberg and Dorie Wilsnack (with topics The Balkans As Theater Of Imperial Rivalry; The Emergence Of Nationalism; From The First Yugoslavia To World War II; The [Josip Broz] Tito Era; Yugoslavia Self-Destructs; War In Croatia, Tension In Bosnia; War In Bosnia; Dangers Of A Wider War; Never Again?); Teach Anew That Interest Is Immoral by Estelle and Mario Carota ("Interest directly harms the poor when they, without any safety net or personal resources, are forced to turn to the local loan sharks for loans to cover emergencies"); On Dirt Roads With The Peace House by Karl Meyer; memorial tribute for Bede Griffiths by James Stout; Live The Revolution Now! by Michael True (on Ammon Hennacy).
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the June-July 1993 (Vol. LX No. 4) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: memorial tribute CESAR CHAVEZ 1927-1993 by Marion Moses; news Guatemalan Refugees Return; GATT: An Ethical Void by Eileen Egan (on the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade); letter from Robert L. Jackson, inmate at the Mississippi State Prison, to the Catholic Worker (headlined "Nothing Left But God"); Power & Nonviolence by Cesar Chavez (two excerpts from the June 1968 and June 1969 issues of The Catholic Worker); CW: Our Diverse But Common Lives (travels by Jo Roberts and Paul Wells); There Are No Safe Corridors For The People Of Sudan by Marj Humphrey; Reunited With Our Ancestors by Pol Castel (on Judaism); Living In The New Germany by Kristin Schonfelder. Small mailing label to upper edge area of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1994
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the June-July 1994 (Vol. LXI No. 4) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jennifer Belisle as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: APPEAL from The Catholic Worker Family ("Can we continue to publish The Catholic Worker eight times a year when the current costs are so high, and another postal rise is in the offing? A mere twenty years ago, it cost $2,000 to print each issue and another $2,000 to mail it. It now costs $5,900 to print and almost $11,000 to mail an issue"); Develop The Habit of Peace by Dom Paulo Cardinal Arns (Paulo Evaristo Arns); Boycott Table Grapes: UFW Marches In California by Fr. Victor Salandini; Peter Maurin Farm by Tom Cornell; 'Famine 33': A Tragedy Kept In Silence by Eileen Egan (on the Ukranian human-made famine of 1932-1933 in which over 7,000,000 perished); memorial tribute for Jacques Ellul by Katharine Temple; memorial tribute for Bishop [Antulio] Parrilla-Bonilla by Tito Roman; A Mother's Long Journey Across Borders by Anne Pilsbury (on Teresa Melendez from El Salvador and the struggle to visit her son, Aristides, who was dying of AIDS in a Brooklyn city hospital); Agreement Sets Out To Bear Fruit by Pol Castel (on the "signing in Jerusalem of the accord establishing diplomatic relations between the Vatican and Israel"). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover; outer edges age-sunned; narrow chip to upper edge of rear cover (to blank margin only).
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the March-April 1993 (Vol. LX No. 2) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: IWW Organizes Small Shops by Lenny Flank, Jr. (on the Industrial Workers of the World "Wobblies"); U.S. Political Prisoners - A Wall of Silence by Bonnie Kerness; Crimes Laid Bare by Carmen Trotta (on Noam Chomsky's book "Deterring Democracy" - "In it, he suggests seeing an informal capitalist plutocracy at work behind a democratic facade as the only tenable way to understand American history"); two memorials of Cindy McCall (by Annie Boagni and Brian Hynes); short poem "Easy Essay" by Peter Maurin; In the Shell of the Old by David Mastrodonato (on U.S. labor history); Unnatural Growth Hormone by Tim Atwater (on Bovine growth hormone, or BGH); Cuba - "We Manage" Despite the Blockade by Noemi Escandell. Small mailing label to upper edge area of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the May 1993 (Vol. LX No. 3) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: We Have To Leap Into Faith by Dorothy Day (excerpts from earlier writings in The Catholic Worker); Peter Maurin: I Am A Radical by Meg Hyre; Do Not Conform Yourselves To This Age by Jane Sammon (on the teachings of Peter Maurin); The Green Revolution: What We've Learned by Joan and Chris Montesano; Baking And Breaking Bread by Claire and Scott Schaeffer-Duffy (on the "Bread Not Bombs Bakery" at the Saint Francis and Saint Therese Catholic Worker in Worcester, Massachusetts); The Aims And Means Of The Catholic Worker Movement; Active & Messy Personalism by Fr. Frank Cordaro (which begins, "I remember well my first encounter with the Catholic Worker movement"); AIDS and Hospitality by Tom Heuser; God In Many Disguises by Michael Kirwan; memorial tribute to Dottie Whaley by Jeannette Noel; memorial tribute to Katie Campbell by Jo Roberts; Herald Of A Renewed Church by Eileen Egan ("For Dorothy Day, the central task in the life of the followers of Jesus was the right relationship between human beings - that of meeting the needs of other human beings"). Narrow chip to lower edge of each page (to blank margins only); small mailing label to upper edge area of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1996
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the December 1996 (Vol. LXIII No. 7) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Brian Harte as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: For A Virgin Shall Conceive And Bear A Son - Emmanuel (two articles: As We Wait In Joyful Hope by Sabra McKenzie-Hamilton and Those Who Sow In Tears by Katharine Temple); Witnesses For Justice in East Timor by the Editors; A Heart Fit For The Habitation Of God by Steve Bosch; [Rose] Hawthorne Sisters Celebrate 100 Years by Bill Griffin (on the Dominican Sisters of St. Rose of Lima); lengthy memorial tribute for Thomas Masciotta by Carmen Trotta ("Thomas Masciotta died in the bed he had occupied for some nine years, here, at St. Joseph House" - "Although Tommy's death at fifty-two was unexpected, given his health and habits, it could not be deemed shocking"); memorial tribute Eternal Rest, Henri [J. M.] Nouwen. Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover; pages lightly crinkled.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1996
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the October-November 1996 (Vol. LXIII No. 6) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Brian Harte as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: How Are We To Govern Ourselves? by Brayton Shanley; Autumn At Peter Maurin Farm by Tom Cornell; November Is The Month Of The Dead by Dorothy Day (Reprinted from the November 1959 CW; with her photo - topics discussed are One World; The Womb of This Life; Holding Fast); Two More Letters From Aurora, Guatemala (from David and Linda Mastrodonato); Urban Pesticides by Sabra McKenzie-Hamilton (on the book "Designer Poison: How to Protect Your Health and Home from Toxic Pesticides" by Dr. Marion Moses). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the October-November 1993 (Vol. LX No. 7) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Jennifer Belisle, Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Resistance Leads to Arrest After Squatters' Eviction by Felton Davis (which begins, "On August 17, 1993, New York City authorities evicted the residents of one of the oldest squatters' camps in Manhattan, known as 'The Hill' or 'Tepee Village'"); Enthusiasm, Enthusiasm, Enthusiasm! by Stanley Vishnewski ("It amuses me to think that I once rejected the idea of living in a formal religious community because I didn't think that I could live up to the vows of poverty, chastity and obedience"); God Wants Our Freely Bestowed Love by Dorothy Day (from an appeal letter in the November 1955 issue of CW); Technicolored Dreams Of a New Society by Harvey Egan (on the founding in 1935 of the Saint Joseph's House of Hospitality near the Bowery); A Saintly Tax Resister by Katharine Temple (on St. Hugh of Lincoln); Peace Brigades In North America by Christophe Pochon (on Peace Brigades International); Tribute To The Noble Pipe Organ by Kevin Daly; More Guatemalans Prepare To Return Home by Linda Mastrodonato; near-full-page article Free Mordechai Vanunu! by Carmen Trotta (which begins, "For the past seven years, Mordechai Vanunu has been left to rot in solitary confinement in Israel's Ashkelon prison, a prisoner of conscience of whom many here in the States are unaware, and others appear shamefully close to forgetting"). Small remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1994
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the March-April 1994 (Vol. LXI No. 2) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jennifer Belisle as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Bride Between Two Cities by Anne Montgomery, RSCJ (on the Mostar bridge); 36 East First Street by Joe McKenzie-Hamilton; poem Ambassadors Of God by Peter Maurin; Peter Maurin Farm by Tom Cornell; No To Death & War, Yes To Peace & Life by Felton Davis (on the Spirit of Life Plowshares); From A North Carolina Jail (letter from the Spirit of Life Plowshares); Peace Work In The Balkans by Carmen Trotta; memorial tribute for Paulette Enman by Janet Zajac Shartle; Hunger & The Bread Of Life by Christopher Allen-Doucot (on the House of Bread soup kitchen in Hartford, Connecticut). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover; outer edges age-sunned.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1995
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the December 1995 (Vol. LXII No. 7) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jennifer Belisle and Brian Harte as Managing Editors, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: New Hope And Rebirth In El Salvador by Joe and Sabra McKenzie-Hamilton; [The Book of] Ruth: A Hidden Spring of Redemption by Katharine Temple; Pope [John Paul II] Speaks Of Duty To Poor; Whose Bank? Whose World? by Jennifer Belisle (on the march and rally on Columbus Day "to cast a different light on the [World] Bank's policies worldwide"); memorial tribute for Helen Nearing by Margaret Mudd; memorial tribute for Carmen Mathews by Bruce Harmon; memorial tribute for James "Bird" Taylor by Joe McKenzie-Hamilton; memorial tribute for Duane Whelan by Robert Ludlow; A Mother's Reflection On War Toys by Linda Bunce. Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1995
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the August-September 1995 (Vol. LXII No. 5) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jennifer Belisle and Brian Harte as Managing Editors, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: We Go On Record by Dorothy Day (on the atomic bomb, from the September 1945 issue of CW); St. Joseph House by Siobhan O'Neil; short End The Death Penalty Now! ("As we go to press, Mumia Abu-Jamal has been given a Stay of Execution"); For What We Have Done And Failed To Do (Joseph Gerson interviewed by Harry James Cargas; "The going argument seems to be that dropping the bombs saved American lives" - "This is the myth that has now been accepted at one level for the better part of fifty years"); Letters From Our Readers; memorial; tribute Preston Colby Lewis 1917-1995 by Jane Sammon; A Neglected Work Of Mercy by Daniel Dunn ("On the feast of St. Mary Magdalene"); Words Are Not Empty Sounds by Katharine Temple (on St. Jerome). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover; a few small edge chips to blank margins.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the September 1993 (Vol. LX No. 6) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Jennifer Belisle, Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Can Nature Be A Commodity? by Brewster Kneen ("Property is created by enclosure"); Lessons In Terror At The School Of The Americas by Roy Bourgeois and Vicky Imerman ("For decades, nations in Latin America with the worst human rights records have consistently been primary clients of the US Army School of the Americas"); Usury - Cents Of Conquest by Kevin Craig; Horsepower, Machines And Human Beings by Christopher Ringwald; memorial tribute for Ann Manganaro, S.J. by John Kavanaugh, S.J.; memorial tribute for Sister Evangeline Mercier by Nina Polcyn Moore; A School To Teach The Life Of Faith by Liam Ford ("I write to suggest an alternative to the Catholic high school program now available in the New York metropolitan area. To mark our Catholic Christian community's solidarity with the people of El Salvador, and to further our work for justice here, I propose the founding of a co-ed, alternative school named 'El Colegio de los Martires' - 'Martyrs High School'"); poem For The Good Of The World by Peter Maurin. Small remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1996
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the March-April 1996 (Vol. LXIII No. 2) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Brian Harte as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan and Jane Sammon. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: The Catholic Worker Movement & Dubious Welfare Reform (two articles: Catholic Social Teaching by Brian Hynes and From The Ground Up by Brian Harte); "If Anyone Hears My Voice" by Karl Meyer; Peter Maurin Farm by Daniel Dunn; memorial tribute for William D. Miller by Marc H. Ellis; Economics In The Covenant by Janet Somerville (reprinted from the January-February 1996 issue of "Compass" out of Toronto, Canada); Sacrifice For Others' Sake by Jennifer Belisle; Communal Life In Guatemala (a letter from David and Linda Mastrodonato); Two Cases: Whistle Blower and Paid Spy by Sam H. Day, Jr. (on Mordechai Vanunu and Jonathan J. Pollard). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1995
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the October-November 1995 (Vol. LXII No. 6) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jennifer Belisle and Brian Harte as Managing Editors, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: The World's Seeds Fall On Thorny Times by Jennifer Belisle (on agricultural patents); The Arc Bends Towards God's Justice by Felton Davis ("The following is a statement that Felton prepared for his defense. The case was dismissed before he got a chance to deliver it"); Peter Maurin Farm by Tom Cornell; A Revolution Against Usury (an excerpt from 'His Errands' by Estelle and Mario Carota); IRAQ: The War Goes On By Other Means by Eileen Storey, SC; From Ground Zero To The Streets Of NYC by Joe and Sabra McKenzie-Hamilton ("We were told by Maryknoll Sister Jean Fallon, who has been in Japan since 1951, that it is said 'to understand Hiroshima one must come to Hiroshima'"). Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1994
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the December 1994 (Vol. LXI No. 7) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jennifer Belisle as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: As God Has Promised From The Beginning by Katharine Temple (on the Magnificat); Street Vendors Of NYC by Jennifer Belisle (on Harlem's 125th Street); Peter Maurin Farm by Tom Cornell; The Message Of Love by Dorothy Day (from the December 1950 issue of CW); Excerpted from The Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius Loyola (translated by Anthony Mottola); What Is Work Anyway? by Steve Donahue; The Evil Of Indifference (James W. Douglass interviewed); Francis Xavier Ballem (letters to Sister Peter Claver in 1986 while incarcerated at Graterford State Prison in Pennsylvania); Report From Rawandan Refugee Camps by Joseph Ngala. Small remnant of mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Language: English
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1995
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the May 1995 (Vol. LXII No. 3) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jennifer Belisle and Brian Harte as Managing Editors, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: A Lesson From History by Dorothy Day (reprinted from the February 1945 CW; on voluntary and involuntary poverty); St. Joan of Arc: The Primacy of Conscience by Jennifer Belisle; Peter Maurin Farm by Larry O'Toole; The Aims And Means Of The Catholic Worker Movement; Correspondence On Usury (a letter to the CW from John Papworth, Editor of the Fourth World Review out of London, England, with reply from Brian Harte); Once A Catholic Worker [Always a CW] by Robert Stelling; memorial tribute of Cynthia Burnett by Katharine Temple; The Nature Of Our Work by Jane Sammon; Dhammayietra - Walk of Peace by Bob Maat, SJ (on Cambodia: "They say grief leaves the face of the Cambodian quickly, but goes down to the heart and stays there a long time"); A Jubilee Of Justice by Pope John Paul II. Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.