Essays

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Page 62

The next pope

The case for a CEO pope

What the Catholic Church needs now is neither a saint nor a scholar but something it has really never had before: a turnaround specialist.
David Woods

David Woods

Essays 3 minute read
'Does Alaina really need these letters?'

Good riddance to the Post Office (a response)

Your post office, in peace and war

BSR's Reed Stevens pines for the days when the local post office was a community gathering place. I can assure her that it still is— and so is the 12th circle of Hell.
Alaina Johns

Alaina Johns

Essays 5 minute read
Pope Benedict XVI: Gaudy nonsense, or humanity's best hope?

Papal authority in a democratic world

More powerful than Jesus: Why the papacy still matters

As a new papal election approaches, the pope's absolute religious authority seems an anomaly in a democratic, secular world. But a glance at contemporary Protestantism suggests that Christianity itself may be at stake in the papacy's survival.
Robert Zaller

Robert Zaller

Essays 5 minute read
Some of the women patients were way ahead of me.

Heart attack, Part 8: Putting on the gloves

Take that, Fate! or: Boxing as therapy— and metaphor

My rehab regime put me on a punching bag, just like Sonny Liston. Next thing I knew, I was developing a right hook. Ridiculous for a 70-year-old heart patient, I know. But why was that fellow in the mirror smiling again?
Bob Levin

Bob Levin

Essays 5 minute read
No editor can ever come between us.

Why I blog (a response)

My own personal billboard (and you wonder why I blog)

Professional journalists can't understand why bloggers write for nothing. As a freelance writer in the Age of the Internet, I can think of plenty of good reasons. Let me count the ways.
Alaina Johns

Alaina Johns

Essays 4 minute read
You want us to give up Paris for diapers? No way!

Confessions of a female draft-dodger

America's going down the tubes, and it's all my fault

Conservative pundits are alarmed about America's declining birth rate. The future of American civilization, they say, rides on the shoulders of young married women like me. So why am I dodging this pregnancy draft?
Alaina Johns

Alaina Johns

Essays 5 minute read

Requiem for the post office

Growing up, and growing old, at the Post Office

I'm probably the last citizen who will miss post offices, because I haven't seen a child put anything in the Outgoing Mail slot for years. But not long ago the post office was a vibrant community center, and picking up the mail was a genuine treat.

Reed Stevens

Essays 6 minute read
Octavia Spencer in 'The Help': To dine, or not, with the family.

My parents and my housekeeper

If I knew then what I know now: A lesson from the help

My parents were appalled by the blatant race prejudice they found in San Antonio in 1958. But they lacked the standing and courage to do much about it. Yet in their own quiet way they passed a message to their more assertive children.
Susan Beth Lehman

Susan Beth Lehman

Essays 4 minute read
O Vince, our help in ages past...

The Holy Bowl: America's new religion

God and man at the Super Bowl, or: Who says Americans aren't religious?

Football was once a game. Now it's a genuine national religion, complete with rituals filched from Christianity, Judaism and Islam, not to mention the Mayans.
Bob Ingram

Bob Ingram

Essays 3 minute read
Why does a dance group need just five seconds to form a human sculpture?

Sound body, sound mind (a reply)

What Jane Austen could learn from Arnold Schwarzenegger

Are physical fitness and intelligence mutually exclusive? I used to think so, until my bodybuilder husband changed my mind.
Alaina Johns

Alaina Johns

Essays 5 minute read