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Everything O.J. does is for show and for pleasure, and even spending a year in prison has not disrupted his shallow life. Upon his release, finding that Los Angeles was no longer enough fun--neither his neighborhood nor his country club welcomed his return--he simply left for Florida, girlfriend in tow, to party and play golf...

Author: By Corinne E. Funk, | Title: O.J.'s Halcyon Days | 11/7/1995 | See Source »

...been drinking, whoring and mocking his professors for several years, sneering as his negligee-clad girlfriend reads him a letter from home. "Your father is dead," she reports. "To hell with him," says he. Just then his mother's portrait falls off the wall to the floor. His shallow rebellion vanishes at this omen. He sinks to his knees, repents and returns home to preach hellfire to amazed and grateful peasants. If Dreams is regarded not as a novel but as a marvelous trunkful of loosely related funny bits like this one, it is a great success...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: PETER HOEG: OLD TRUNK | 11/6/1995 | See Source »

These students want professors who will tell them what they want to hear, to satisfy their own shallow opinions, rather than to challenge them and force them to defend their views...

Author: By Steven A. Engel, | Title: Just Go Home | 9/27/1995 | See Source »

There was a time when suicides were not permitted ceremonious burial--they were indeed dumped in shallow graves at crossroads, their names pronounced taboo. Surely this custom evolved in part out of a desire to dissuade potential suicides from believing they would be celebrated in death. Today, of course, we realize that there exist' legitimate reasons why an individual might wish to terminate his or her life; we also know that mental illness sometimes induces a person to self-destruct. So, for the most part, we afford the same respects to suicides as we do to anyone else...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Tadesse Did Not Merit Victimhood | 9/13/1995 | See Source »

ROBERT HUGHES' ATTACK ON CRITICS OF the NEA and NEH has an all too familiar ring. In its partisanship and preference for diatribe over argument, it resembles much of what today passes for scholarship and sometimes art. While a case can be made for preserving the endowments, Hughes' shallow, sneering polemic does it little justice. Indeed, the persistently ad hominem character of his essay only fortifies the impression of an intellectual culture too coarsened to be much worth supporting. Much more than the future of two federal agencies is at stake. STEPHEN H. BALCH, President National Association of Scholars Princeton...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Aug. 28, 1995 | 8/28/1995 | See Source »

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