Volume > Issue > New Oxford Notes: March 2001

New Oxford Notes: March 2001

"Crime Must Not Go Unpunished" — Or Was That "Unpaid"?

The "Seven [Remaining] Dirty Words You Can't Say on TV" just became six.

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The Game Plan for Sudden Death

Who among us is rightly prepared for the inevitable?

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Reviews of Power Trips and Other Journeys... Feminism Without Illusions... The Poet's Work: An Introduction to Czeslaw Milosz... The Moral Vision of Dorothy Day: A Feminist Perspective... Naming The Silences: God, Medicine, and the Problem of Suffering... Tradition in a Rootless World: Women Turn to Orthodox Judaism... Liberalism, Conservatism, and Catholicism: An Evaluation of Contemporary American Political Ideologies in Light of Catholic Social Teaching... Anarchy and Christianity... Praying by Hand... Letters to Jess...Newman the Theologian: A Reader

Portals to Apostasy?

Francis X. Clooney, S.J., offers us a choice regarding "which images of the divine" — Christian or Hindu — are "most theologically cogent today."

Breaking the Silence Barrier

That we are out of harmony with nature is a circumstance that arises not merely from noise per se, but from the instruments that make that noise.