Features
Precarious vision: The U.S. role in a Middle East solution
Discard pile: Not every vote is counted
Forty-some years ago, chances were you knew it if you were being denied the right to vote. Perhaps, like Mississippi civil rights leader Fannie Lou Hamer, you climbed those courthouse steps, taking your life and livelihood in your hands, then failed to interpret the Constitution to the registrar’s satisfaction.
Renewing spaces: Designing distinctive churches
Houses of worship have certain physical characteristics that appeal to the senses. Building materials are often precious and placed with care. They include carvings of symbolic and allegorical meaning. Through their design and decoration, churches tell stories of the faith. Stained-glass windows lift one’s spirits from earthly concerns. Vast interiors not only accommodate those who come to worship but are symbolically big enough for God to join us. The shafts of sunlight that spill from upper windows to the cool stone floors below seem like ladders to the heavens.
Indecent exposure
Whenever Hollywood has tackled the subject of Joseph McCarthy and the work of the House Un-American Activities Committee, the results have tended to be fatuous if not downright embarrassing. George Clooney breaks through the barrier in Good Night, and Good Luck, a compelling portrayal of the last days of McCarthy’s influence.
Books
Science under siege
American souls
The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century
Departments
In distress: The designer jeans industry
Open-door policy: Churches worth visiting
Kashmir winter: Relief is us
What kind of Christian? The man on the train: The man on the train
Divestment: Corporate actions
News
Americans idolize model family but see limits, study shows: Recognizing gap between ideals and reality
Briefly noted
People
Methodist court says pastors may bar gays from membership: No automatic right to membership
Century Marks
Bryan Rehm sued the Dover, Pennsylvania, school district over its requirement that intelligent design be taught as an alternative to evolution in the ninth-grade biology class. Rehm says he's been accused of atheism. “They don’t know that I’m the co-director of the children’s choir at church, or that I run the music at the second service, or that my wife and I run vacation Bible school,” he said. He maintains that intelligent design is not credible science, and that evolution does not explain away the existence of a divine Creator (beliefnet.com).