The Pope & The CEO

Our friends at World Youth Alliance are hosting a book signing event tonight with Andreas Widmer as he speaks about The Pope & The CEO: John Paul II’s Leadership Lessons to a Young Swiss Guard . Seating is limited so if you’re interested contact maria@wya.net to inquire about . . . . Continue Reading »

Please Listen To Me!

I’m talking to Romney, Santorum, Bachmann and Paul.  The Freddie Mac digs seem to be getting under Gingrich’s skin.  He said he would return all of his Freddie Mac money if Romney returned all of his Bain Capital money (what with all the layoffs and all.)  Big tactical . . . . Continue Reading »

God and Man at DIY U

This year was the sixtieth anniversary of William F. Buckley’s God and Man at Yale .  Here’s a taste of the bracing new proposals for higher education reform from another Yale graduate, entitled Do It Yourself University : Most people no longer feel the need to visit a large, stone . . . . Continue Reading »

Separation of Church and City?

By now, you’ve probably heard that the Supreme Court has denied certiorari in the Bronx Household of Faith case, letting stand an appellate court’s ruling that the New York City Board of Education can refuse to make public school space available to churches, many of which will be . . . . Continue Reading »

The Tree of Life and Melancholia

I crawled into bed last night just before 12, shaken and very quiet. I had just returned from seeing Lars von Trier’s new film Melancholia . Many readers of First Things likely took David Bentley Hart’s advice to eschew Atlas Shrugged in favor of Terrence Malick’s masterpiece, . . . . Continue Reading »

Bangs and Whimpers

Has American popular culture hit a dead end—-essentially stopped evolving and contented itself with endlessly regurgitating the past? That’s the premise of a rather  provocative essay  in the January issue of  Vanity Fair  which speculates that, rather than having . . . . Continue Reading »

On the Square Today

In today’s On the Square feature, Micah Mattix discusses  Nikolai Gogol’s  The Night Before Christmas : [P]erhaps no Russian writer is as foreign as Nikolai Gogol. He was even baffling to his own countrymen. “Gogol was a strange creature,” Vladimir Nabokov famously . . . . Continue Reading »