From US Squash Play to 11, win by 2.

By Kevin Klipstein Tony Halstead and I used to play squash in Seattle fairly regularly. I think I’m a better player, but it’s not totally...

From US Squash Turn Your Computer Off, Put Your BlackBerry Down And Report To...

By Kevin Klipstein Growing up, we had a New Yorker cartoon on our refrigerator that showed a man in bed, telling his wife, who seemed...

From US Squash Change in the Air

By Kevin Klipstein Not to be outdone with all the talk of change in politics these days, whether it’s “change you can believe in” or...

From US Squash In Between Games

By Kevin Klipstein I’ve been in and out of squash my entire life. I started at age 11, playing junior and then college squash. I...

From US Squash What I Do

By Kevin Klipstein It’s not unusual for people to ask me what I do for a living after I have told them what I do...

From US Squash New Schools of Thought

By Kevin Klipstein By coincidence, two pieces from my past appear in this issue: Rochester, NY, and the boom in middle and high school squash. The...

From US Squash Boxing out the Ladder of Inference

By Kevin Klipstein The word ladder invokes images from every walk of life. Step ladders, rope ladders, the corporate ladder, even the fire department’s ladder...

From US Squash Sports for Life

By Kevin Klipstein I started playing squash when I was 11 years old. My father, who had played recreationally in college, introduced the game to...

From US Squash The Association Formerly Known As “USSRA”

By Kevin Klipstein As many of you have likely noticed, perhaps by the different title of this monthly piece, we have changed the name of the...

From US Squash Why Change?

By Kevin Klipstein In the 1998 Nora Ephron film You’ve Got Mail, change is everywhere as Joe Fox (played by Tom Hanks) of “Fox Books” opens...