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Elmuts said that "at practice on Tuesday, I was thinking about how my lifting and cardiovascular work was really making a difference, and not fifteen minutes later...

Author: By Patty W. Seo, CONTRIBUTING REPORTER | Title: Tennis Teams Prep for Weekend Tourneys | 11/5/1992 | See Source »

Opportunities are available for both public and private schools, and they will be there in the future: half of the nation's 2.5 million teachers in the public schools alone are expected to retire or resign in the next ten to fifteen years. With the increasingly diverse student population, minority teaching candidates are especially in demand...

Author: By Cathy Huchinson, OFFICE OF CAREER SERVICES | Title: UTEP Offers Students Teaching Certification | 10/9/1992 | See Source »

Well we've sunk just about as low as we can. If this entire issue takes you more than fifteen minutes to read, you need the Bureau of Study Council's seminar on skim reading. Virtually a complete issue of blurbs, from our Cultural Elite list to the Crimewatch page. Blurbs, yes, but serious blurbs. For Chrissakes, Lawrence, Mass. is burning down in a wave of arsons and after a year and a half the two full-time cops on the Mary Joe Frug case haven't any idea who murdered her. So give it a year. Next year, send...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Nothing Doing: | 10/8/1992 | See Source »

Harvard students' bland tastes aside, Dirty is one the best things to happen to music this year. The disc features fifteen songs of raw energy, biting political commentary and visceral passion captured superbly by Butch Vig, the producer of Nirvana's last album. It ranks with Daydream Nation as one of Sonic Youth's best releases...

Author: By Steven V. Mazie, | Title: SONIC ATTACK | 10/1/1992 | See Source »

...attacked, so that many young artists have come to doubt the most basic experience involved in comparing one artwork with another -- namely, that there are differences of intensity, articulateness, radiance, between works of art; that some speak more convincingly than others; and that this is not a political matter. Fifteen minutes in any room of this sublime exhibition is enough to blow such stale and peevish trivia away. Matisse did much, at the beginning of this century, to dispel the mustiness of academic art. At its end, he may still do the same to the mingy products of end-game...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Matisse The Color of Genius | 9/28/1992 | See Source »

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