If we’ve constrained the movement of the Holy Spirit within our churches’ walls on Sunday, Jason Sexton suggests, then perhaps our virtual gatherings have offered a vision of the Spirit unloosed.
Joseph Wakelee-Lynch
Articles by Author
The Laws of Dance
The compression of movement has become a symbol of the pandemic. If dance is a compressed art on our computer screens, we may value more the theaters and environments where space and human motion intersect.
COVID and Careers
The virus has reshaped the economy, the job search and how employers seek employees. Branden Grimmett reflects on what career development means now and post-pandemic.
Ingenuity Amid Crisis
The pandemic has thrown another harsh light on barriers to equity in K-12 education. If this era teaches us to address those inequities, suggests Ernesto Colín, we will have learned a valuable lesson.
The Entrepreneurial Challenge
What was true pre-pandemic and is true in mid-pandemic will be true in the aftermath: a bedrock quality of good entrepreneurs is the ability to adapt to changing circumstances, says David Choi.
Connection Remains Recruitment’s Bedrock
Despite the impact of the coronavirus on all areas of university life — especially one-to-one interaction, communication, says Ashley Armstrong, remains at the heart of athletic recruitment.
In Memoriam January 2021
George A. Carroll, S.J. [LibArts ’44] on Oct. 23, 2020 George Jennison [LibArts ’44] on Nov. 8, 2020 Vincent Migliazzo [SciEng ’48] on Jan. 6, 2020 Charles Hovorka [LibArts ’49] on Aug. 17, 2020 Raymond Appel [LibArts ’50] on Sept. 23, 2019 Henry…
Dispatches January 2021
1968 Trish (Johnson) Evans [LibArts] has published her first novel this past October. “Katy’s Ghost” is about a former teacher, haunted by a phantom, who learns to move beyond fear and toward acceptance. 1969 Amata C. Radewagen [LibArts], delegate to the…
The Hard Road To Reconciliation
The journey toward reconciliation and justice probably isn’t short or painless, says Judith Royer, C.S.J. But education, example and dialogue will surely help us get there, if we’ll accept the invitation.
Click Here For Open Democracy
When he was confronted as a student with misinformation about proposed laws, Patrick Utz started thinking about an app to improve transparency in the legislative process. It’s now in use.