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| PDF
of issue Cover sections Front section Back section Online Class Notes Archived Editions |
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| Women & men who are 'Making a Difference' | ||||||||
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The magazine’s annual selection of graduates who are affecting our world in positive ways includes a student from Nigeria; a Jesuit who spent most of his long career in Nepal and neighboring lands; a parent who is making a difference; the NFL’s youngest offensive coordinator; NASCAR’S marketing director ... and a number of other women and men who are bringing light to their world. Return to Top |
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| Season of Change | ||||||||
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In
late winter and early spring, JCU President Robert Niehoff SJ and the other
university leaders took decisive action to balance the university’s budget,
intensify student recruitment efforts, begin a dialogue about John Carroll’s
Catholic and Jesuit identity and pursue other paths leading to positive
change. As the cover story concludes: "It would be premature to see the
varied initiatives that occurred at John Carroll in late winter and early
spring as authoritative evidence of a metaphorical springtime for the university.
Nonetheless, it was indubitably a busy season for John Carroll and its
president, an in-between season in which unmistakable signs of new life
appeared." Return to Top |
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| Creationism & Intelligent Design | ||||||||
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Doctors
Joseph Kelly and Valerie Flechtner, longtime members of, respectively,
the faculties of Religious Studies and Biology, have co-written an engaging
explanation of why the fervently advocated alternative evolutionary theories
of Creationism and Intelligent Design are simply not good science. In a
feature in which Kelly and Flechtner offer two separate polemics, Kelly
concludes his argument with:"No thinking theist could possibly accept
either creationism or intelligent design. Both 'theories' leave us with
a creator/designer who is fallible, inefficient, dilatory, cruel and, most
importantly, unintelligent. Theists can believe in a God who acts in creation,
but they should not equate this deity with a pseudo-scientific Intelligent
Designer." Flechtner cuts to the chase by saying, " …we must
conclude that, whatever else ID may be, it is not science!" Return to Top |
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| A JCU family: Mother's faith, Father's courage | ||||||||
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When
polio victim Jerry Range applied to John Carroll in 1961, he was told that
the university was simply not equipped to accommodate a “cripple,’ the
title to the book Range wrote decades later. In the new millennia, two
of the standout students at the university have been Jerry and Mary Jean
Range’s sons, Peter’04 and Patrick’06. In the last of
the magazine’s four stories about John Carroll families, Michele
Brown explores a remarkable family whose faith and love have seen them
through great trials as they have. Return to Top |
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| Profiles | ||||||||
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Magazine profiles include pieces on Dr. Mariana Ortega, an award winning teacher who is a political refugee from Nicaragua; Doug Philips’06, last year’s starting quarterback, who had an a magazine career as a student scholar and leader; and Dominique Moceaneau’08, who won Olympic gold as a gymnast and “continues to glimmer after the gold rush.” Other features include pieces on this year’s Alumni Medal winners and the new class of Hall of Fame inductees. Return to Top |
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| -->Contact Editor Jerry Pockar | ||||||||
| Archived
editions: Winter '06> Fall '05> Summer '05> Spring '05> Winter '05> Fall '04/Annual Report> Summer '04>> Spring '04>> Winter '04> Summer '03> Return to Top |
Class Notes (Space limitations may require some Class Notes to be edited for the printed edition. To read unabridged copy as well as previous columns, click on the decade and then the year of your graduation.) |
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| Class
Notes columns from the Thirties 1935 1936 1937 Return to Top |
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| Class
Notes columns from the Forties 1940 1942 1943 1944 1947 1948 1949 Return to Top |
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| Class
Notes columns from the Fifties 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 Return to Top |
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| Class
Notes columns from the Sixties 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 Return to Top |
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| Class
Notes columns from the Seventies 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 Return to Top |
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| Class
Notes columns from the Eighties 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 Return to Top |
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| Class
Notes columns from the Nineties 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 Return to Top |
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Class
Notes columns from the New Millennium
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| What
Lies Behind That Red Wheelbarrow "So much depends upon a red wheel barrow glazed with rain water beside the white chickens." People have continually puzzled over this curious poem by William
Carlos Williams. I used to be mystified by it too. But now I see what
he meant in a purely straightforward way, for I own a red wheelbarrow
myself and put it into motion most everyday. Originally I bought it
to mix concrete in it to pour the foundation for the house. It’s been my handiest
tool around here ever since. I use it to haul wood, spread gravel, move
rocks, bring in groceries. It helps me lug soil & water to the garden
and leaves & weeds to the compost heap. And when I’m done
with it I make sure to stand it on end in the woodshed so it never gets “glazed
with rain water,” because it would make me sad to see it rust out
before its time. The wheelbarrow stands as the measure of the man. How
often he uses it and how well he treats it is sure to reveal a good deal
about what he cares to cultivate—or neglects to care for. And if
his wheelbarrow is falling apart, his place is probably falling apart
too. They go to hell hand-in-hand, to join the man already there. So
I’d tell Williams: That’s a pretty poem & all, but unless
that’s just some decorative wheelbarrow—I’d dump the
water out of it and put it away.
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Gone with the Geese For
this was on Saint Valentine’s Day, And in Midsummer Night’s Dream Shakespeare has: Good morrow, friends! St.
Valentine is past; I didn’t know how much coupling was going on among these birds, or who was cuddling with whom. But I did know that when those honking geese had hovered hotly overhead, and I was thrust into that trance looking up at their fevered flapping, some penetrating contact with the unknown had taken place. It had whispers of what went on between Leda & the Swan, and I knew it was worth whispering about.
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O My Lovely April You show no wear or worry yet. And when the sun’s jaw juts out to warm you
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| Trillium Time Trillium time is a flash of white time, Return to Top |
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John
Carroll University — 20700 North Park Blvd — University
Heights, OH 44118 — Tel: 216.397.1886 — Admission: 216.397.4294 |