The State of Integration in the United States

In 1954, the Supreme Court handed down its landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision, unanimously striking down state-ordered racial segregation in schools as unconstitutional. In the majority opinion, Earl Warren argued, “separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.” Therefore, according to Warren, even if the separate facilities were of equal physical quality, segregation still inflicted … Read more

A Values-Based Order

“This is not a clash of civilizations,” John Kerry declared on November 16, 2015, standing before a world shaken by the November 13 Islamic State-coordinated attacks on Paris. The Secretary of State, speaking at the American embassy in Paris, argued, “This is a battle between civilization itself and barbarism, between civilization and medieval and modern … Read more

Who Will Be the One? Vice Presidential Possibilities for the 2016 Presidential Race

Editorial note: The following article appeared in our print magazine as it was being sent to press at the height of the primary campaign season.  If and when America has sufficiently caught up with the Kardashians, it should perhaps turn to reruns of this year’s presidential primary debates for its trashy TV fix. In some … Read more

To Love This World

Two thousand sixteen is a rather curious number. Though it is not a prime number itself, it can be written as the product of three distinct primes, said explicitly as two times two times two times two times two times three times three times seven. It is also what mathematicians call a triangular number, which … Read more

Committing to Service: A Neighborhood and Its Hospital

What happens when you travel north from Manhattan’s downtown and Midtown, away from the eye-catching commercial billboards and throngs of office dwellers? You abandon the visual rush for a new intensity: cerebral, emotional, raw. The buildings remain nearly as tall, nearly as crowded, still grouped together for a purpose. In East Harlem, that purpose is … Read more