What the Kennedy who lived on had to offer/The Huffington Post
Actor Alec Baldwin remembers a Kennedy who lived on to face the ebb and flow of an over 40-year political career in the US Senate. Other men of his family may have died young but Senator Ted Kennedy lived on to love his country,his countrymen and his family. Baldwin writes about how after 1980,his presidential aspirations laid to rest,Kennedy began the slow and deliberate effort to become a great lawmaker. Kennedy,the Lion of the Senate,inspired Baldwin to remember that politics,though spiritually demoralising much of the time,is really the Great Calling.
Germany Recalls Myth That Created the Nation/Der Spiegel
David Crossland looks at the Big Bang of the German nation and its first hero,Arminius,or Hermann,a young chieftain who led Germanic tribesmen to a devastating victory over three Roman legions at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest. As the 2,000th anniversary of that battle comes up this September,Crossland tells us that playwrights,writers and political leaders of the 18th and 19th centuries portrayed Arminius as a blond,muscle-bound warrior; and how a gigantic statue of his,erected in 1875,became a focal point for a brand of nationalism that8230; culminated in the Nazi quest to subjugate Europe and eradicate the Jews. He also looks at how Germany is marking the event with noticeable restraint.
The Notting Hill carnival is still ours/The Guardian
Londons black population is a culturally shifting and increasingly diverse demographic. Lloyd Bradley feels that exactly because of this phenomenon,the Notting Hill Carnival,despite having changed over its 50-year history itself,continues to reflect us the citys black population with considerable accuracy. Inaugurated in 1959,the carnival stuck to the Trinidadian template of mobile steel bands and wildly costumed dancers. By 1974,however,another generation had embraced the carnival and it had become a manifestation of who they were; it had also gone from being a strictly Caribbean affair to reflect the different shades of black in the UK. Bradley wants to emphasise that black London continues to be at the heart of the carnival: an equally relevant expression of what it means to be black in London in the 21st century8230;a far more diverse,mixed up and inclusive state of affairs.
The main characters of tennis,and style/The New York Times
Holly Brubach looks at Roger Federers monogram,his entry into a club of two joining Tiger Woods as the only other Nike athlete to be marketed on the basis of his initialsand an escalated exercise in personal branding. Federers monogram was in the spot light at Wimbledon,it was on his shoes,jackets and his racquet bag. Federers 15 jacket didnt go down well with some,giving rise to speculation as to whether it was pushed upon him by Nike,or was it his own idea. Brubach suggests that the whole thing sits well with Federers conviction that he was destined for a place in history,a sense of entitlement to victory,even when it eluded him.