Project: Dialogue - Have Sports Gone Too Far?
with Retired Sports Writer and Sports Novelist, Mike Conklin
Sunday, February 5 | 11:30 am | Teen Center
Join the Fran Park Center for Faith and Life as we welcome career sports journalist, Mike Conklin, to discuss "Have Sports Gone Too Far?" The love of sports goes back to the beginning of humanity. We thrive off competition and love to play. We take pilgrimages to places all over the world to see our favorite teams and athletes. We worship them with bumper stickers, jerseys and signed memorabilia that could cost as much as a house. We engage in strange rituals and superstitions in deals with the devil for our favorites. Sports creates a discipline like no other with requirements to show up in the rain and snow whether or not you are a participant. Sports bonds communities and crosses socioeconomic boundaries. They can be incredibly wonderful, but have they become too much at the same time? Join us as we discuss sports!
More about Mike Conklin
Mike Conklin is a career journalist, whose feature, news and daily column writing was familiar to Chicago Tribune readers for three-plus decades. His assignments were local, national and international, often appearing in Tribune Syndication distributed to over 300 newspapers. Other work appeared in the New York Times, Encyclopedia of Chicago, Encyclopedia of American Journalism, History Magazine, textbooks, and a variety of other publications.
Conklin left The Tribune to join the full-time faculty at DePaul University, where he taught, served as student newspaper advisor, and helped found the school’s Journalism Department. He also taught communication at Xiamen University in China and writing as an adjunct at Cornell College (Ia.), Lake Forest College (Ill.), and University of Illinois-Chicago. Other projects have included editing, writing, and contributing to five nonfiction books, publishing two fiction novels, and peer reviewing for Northwestern University Press. Currently he is working on a nonfiction Dust Bowl novel. Conklin lives in Arizona in the winter, where he teaches writing and consults as a volunteer in the Scottsdale Public Library and Phoenix Public School systems.