File# | Title | First Line | Rev.Author | Citation | Year |
01 | Gandhi on Non-Violence by Thomas Merton | In Gandhi on Non-Violence Thomas Merton has assembled some fifty pages of the most interesting | Woodcock, George |
Pacific Affairs, 38.3/4 (Autumn 1965- Winter 1966): 104. George Woodcock
| no-year |
02 | Nonviolent Resistance Redefined | Non-violent resistance is one of the best-known and least-understood phrases in our language. Some | Rahtjen, Bruce D. |
Kansas City Star (5 November 1965). Bruce D. Rahtjen
| 1965 |
03 | Gandhi on Non-Violence | The texts, carefully chosen and edited, are arranged in sections, each with a brief but clear | Swaminathan, K. |
Mountain Path 3.2 (April 1966): 202. K. Swaminathan
| 1966 |
04 | | Obedient to his own advice "to contemplate with a pen," Thomas Merton copied by hand a whole series of excerpts | Cunningham, Lawrence S. |
Commonweal 135.6 (28 March 2008): 26-27.
| 2008 |
ANNUAL | | It has often been noted that the twentieth century, though rife with scientific achievements, also | Frazier, Julie |
Merton Annual 21: 268-272.
http://merton.org/ITMS/Annual/21/FrazierRevGNV268-272.pdf
| 2008 |