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Global Neighbors

By Kelly FosterOctober 20, 2011

In the last few years, my school has made a huge push towards what our Global Studies’ Director refers to as “glocalism.” In essence, glocalism encapsulates the idea that we are all of us citizens of various communities, both local and global, and that being glocal citizens entails envisioning ourselves as active members of both…

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In Line with Truth?

By Peggy RosenthalOctober 19, 2011

When I first began to think of myself as a writer, a few decades ago, I’d type onto file cards the wisdom of writers I wanted to emulate and thumbtack the cards to the bulletin board above my desk. I had several lines about the writer’s vocation by Flannery O’Connor and G.K. Chesterton. But the…

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A Bluegrass Wake

By Andy WhitmanOctober 18, 2011

My sister died on a day when I was in Nashville. She went to be home, and I was five hundred miles from home, and another two thousand miles from my sister. It wasn’t supposed to be this way. A one-to-three-months-to-live death sentence wasn’t supposed to only last two weeks, and vacations—taken in part as…

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Nothing Less than Love

By Richard ChessOctober 17, 2011

U’v’tuvo mchadesh bchal yom tamid maaseh breishit: In your goodness, day after day you renew creation. Even as an infrequent worshipper, I’ve said this prayer hundreds if not thousands of times since I began taking Judaism seriously more than thirty-five years ago. I like the concept: creation is dependent on creator; the creator may choose,…

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Welcome to the “New Normal”

By David GriffithOctober 14, 2011

This semester I’m honored to be teaching in a pilot program that introduces first-year students to the academic rigor and habits of mind of college, while also helping them to become more digitally sophisticated. All of the students receive iPad2s for participating in the program, which they then must use to complete many of the…

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Bare Ruin’d Choirs

By A.G. HarmonOctober 12, 2011

Whenever I pass old buildings with bricked up windows, I shake my head. Of all the architectural sins of the modern world, it’s the sealing of ingress and egress that bugs me the most. I can put up with glass boxes and weird shapes and wild uses of steel. Sometimes that’s part of the profession’s…

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Original or Copy?

By Jeffrey OverstreetOctober 11, 2011

This is about a new film called Certified Copy. But it’s not a movie review. It could be. I could describe the story. I could tell you about its awards and honors. I could assess the actors’ performances (Juliette Binoche is better than ever, and William Shimmel, an opera singer, is arresting in his first…

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The Only Answer is Voyage

By Jessica BrownOctober 7, 2011

Impressions flood in on me: grayness; verticality; burning; ice, splitting; verdancy. The distant; the present. Wild swathes of light, of intense growth—is that a tree? a body of water? fire? Cold, crisp, thin air? I am standing in a small, warmly lit gallery. Paintings on the third and fourth days of creation surround me. Substances…

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Shop Talk with Priscilla and Aquila

By Sara ZarrOctober 5, 2011

My one-year Bible has me in Acts. It also has me in Kings, but I’ve temporarily abandoned the rulers of Aram, Elisha and his floating axe heads, and the mysterious woman of Shunem. I’m hoping to regain some sense of the world depicted on the pages as at least distantly related to present reality as…

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The Golf Course, the Polis, and September 11

By Caroline LangstonOctober 5, 2011

The things you do for your children. Or rather, the things you unwittingly do for yourself. It was an early autumn Thursday afternoon, four days after the ten-year anniversary of September 11, 4:25 p.m. If we didn’t leave the house right then, we were never going to get to my seven-year-old son’s inaugural golf lesson…

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