Essays

1091 results
Page 85
Nussbaum: Critical thinking?

Martha Nussbaum's ivory tower

Do as I say, not as I do: Martha Nussbaum defends the humanities

Professor Martha Nussbaum deplores the decline of liberal arts education, which she sees as the engine of democracy. And she champions Socratic dialogue as the stimulant for the liberal arts. So why was her recent Free Library appearance more monologue than dialogue?

Norman Roessler

Essays 4 minute read
Wooden: One small gesture.

Coach John Wooden: A remembrance

A coach's tone of voice

UCLA's legendary basketball coach John Wooden won ten championships and hundreds of games. But one of his lowly substitutes remembers Wooden for a small gesture of acknowledgment.

John L. Erlich

Essays 2 minute read
Refrigerator at bay: Who took the doors?

Canoeing through the Meadowlands

Up shit's creek (with nothing but a paddle)

Searching for the ultimate battleground in the endless war between Man and Nature, an obsessed artist finds himself paddling in a canoe through the notorious New Jersey Meadowlands, whose ground is literally constructed of garbage.
Matthew Green

Matthew Green

Essays 5 minute read
Barnes: From punk criminal to martyr.

Double jeopardy: A Philadelphia scandal

‘Vengeance is mine,' saith the DA

The recent double jeopardy prosecution of William J. Barnes for a crime he'd already served his sentence for shows that the vengeful spirit of Lynne Abraham is still alive and well in the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office. Although Barnes was acquitted this time, the story, alas, doesn't end there.
Robert Zaller

Robert Zaller

Essays 5 minute read
Up at 85 feet, no gimmick could save him.

High Diver: A Wildwood memory, 1954

Tricks of the diving trade: 'Supermen' at Wildwood, summer of ‘54

High Diver had been a water bug all of his relatively short life. Then at age 15 he joined the Aqua Follies at Wildwood and was introduced, for the first time, to the highest of high dives.
Bob Ingram

Bob Ingram

Essays 10 minute read

The forgotten MOVE victims

A tale of two bullets, and one blaze: Justice in Dallas, justice for MOVE

Twenty-five years after the Osage Avenue bombing and more than 30 years after the Powelton shootout, Philadelphia's bizarre MOVE math remains clear: One police officer killed, nine life sentences; 11 men, women, and children killed, no indictment ever issued.
Robert Zaller

Robert Zaller

Essays 6 minute read

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Articulate, conscientious... and he could pitch, too.

Robin Roberts: Gentle warrior

Robin Roberts finishes one last game, principles still intact

This was the great lesson I learned from Robin Roberts: Whether you're mowing the lawn or writing a book, you finish what you start. On the field and off he remained the same unique symbol of baseball's bygone integrity.
Robert Zaller

Robert Zaller

Essays 5 minute read
Guthrie: The unkindest cut.

A new soccer team's fight song

Julia Ward Howe, call your office

Woody Guthrie's “Union Maid,” the unofficial anthem of the American labor movement, has now been appropriated by Philadelphia's new professional soccer franchise. Of course, it could have been worse: They could have chosen "La Marseillaise."

Gerald Weales

Essays 3 minute read
The late Dan Henley's life is just beginning.

Virtual goodbyes: Death and the Internet

Life after death, on the Internet

Since the jeweler Dan Henley died unexpectedly last year at the age of 49, his life has assumed a dimension it never possessed before— on the Internet.
Kristen Eaton

Kristen Eaton

Essays 3 minute read
'Judas,' by James Tissot: If only he'd had a nickname....

What's in a nickname?

A rose by any other

As I've moved through life, I've also moved through a succession of nicknames. “Robert” lingers only on the lips of my 98-year-old mother and one or two ossified cousins. So what will my classmates call me next month when I show up at my 50th high school reunion?
Bob Levin

Bob Levin

Essays 3 minute read