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Sonia Sotomayor’s “Beloved World” Shows Real Person Beneath the Robe

April 2, 2015 by etelfeyan

In “My Beloved World,” Sonia Sotomayor provides a template for the kind of revelation that every Supreme Court Justice should provide.  The book, which is as decent and inspirational a self-portrait as I have ever read, presents as close to a complete picture of the current Justice as I think she could have written.  In […]

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Fraternities: Anachronisms Whose Continued Existence Cannot Be Justified

March 24, 2015 by etelfeyan

I never pledged a fraternity, and, in retrospect, I’m glad I didn’t.  Don’t get me wrong: it was tempting in those first weeks of my freshman year at the small liberal arts college I attended.  The campus was abuzz with fraternity life when I arrived, and all of us newbies were getting “dates” to attend […]

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Republicans Run Amok in Letter to Iran

March 18, 2015 by etelfeyan

There was a time in the not-so-distant past of the nation’s history when matters of foreign policy were deemed beyond partisanship.  Presidents were accorded the constitutional prerogatives to negotiate treaties and otherwise engage in diplomatic endeavors without fear of the kind of back-biting and game-playing that was all too common in domestic affairs. The thinking […]

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E. Haig’s Review of Capital Stage’s “Rapture, Blister, Burn”

March 18, 2015 by etelfeyan

If Gina Gionfriddo’s “Rapture, Blister, Burn” is a feminist play, it certainly isn’t one that Betty Friedan would endorse.  The play, which was considered for a Pulitzer Prize when it debuted in 2012, seems more a refutation of Ms. Friedan’s views than an endorsement of them.  Instead, Phyllis Schlafly, hardly a proponent of the women’s […]

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