Sy Safransky
Philadelphia
As we waited outside the theater for Pam to arrive, the late-afternoon sun buttery and generous, I was struck by how healthy everyone looked: we could have been the bowling team, the swim club. AIDS seemed remote for a moment: distant, unreal, a bad dream from which the world would one day awaken.
October 1995July 1995
Where The Wind Comes Sweeping
House Speaker Newt Gingrich insists there’s no connection between reactionary rhetoric and reactionary violence.
July 1995This Land Is Your Land
Not surprisingly, they resisted encroachments on their land, first by the Spanish, and later by Americans. Navajo raiding parties regularly made off with the settlers’ horses and livestock, but the Americans kept coming — encouraged by a government that believed in its “manifest destiny” to occupy the entire continent. Finally, in 1864, U.S. Army General George Carleton — who called the Navajos “wolves that run through the mountains” — ordered Colonel Kit Carson to get rid of them.
May 1995March 1995
Just A Moment
The past rushes into the room, breathless, dressed in something outrageous she just threw together.
March 1995Their Turn
To the melancholy wailing of a Turkish flute, the dervishes enter the stage dressed in long black coats and tall woolen hats. It’s a dramatic moment even if you haven’t done your homework.
January 1995December 1994
Table Manners
The full-page ads by big corporations proclaim peace on earth, when all they really want is another piece of the earth.
December 1994I Read The News Today
I’m wary of men and women whose speeches are impassioned but who rarely listen; who know how to save the world but not their own neglected marriages. Rather than face the dark side of their consciousness, they exhort us to march behind them in the lengthening shadows, to live (and die) for their truth (or re-election).
October 1994Has something we published moved you? Fired you up? Did we miss the mark? We’d love to hear about it.
SEND US A LETTER

