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...popular success; in Trebetherick, Cornwall. The son of a prosperous businessman, Betjeman flunked out of Oxford and worked in a variety of jobs, from journalist to insurance salesman, before his Selected Poems (1948) won the prestigious Heinemann Award. Critics were divided on Betjeman's poetry; many found it trivial or derivative, perhaps because of its simple musical rhymes and accessible themes. An astute architectural critic, he waged passionate campaigns to preserve England's historical treasures and opposed the spread of urban development. In 1972, Queen Elizabeth named Betjeman poet laureate, a title once held by Tennyson and Wordsworth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: May 28, 1984 | 5/28/1984 | See Source »

...sense, too thorough a tour--one which takes us into too many obscure nooks and crannies of the Irish literary landscape. And too often these unremarkable "bits and pieces" detract from the more important voices--limiting our visit to Swift, for example, to a few rather trivial verses in praise of gardens. The result, then, of this compilation is a thinly disguised anthology. It includes, for the sake of thoroughness, a host of contributors that should be, and for the most part have been, anthologized but that are not appropriate to such a brief tour as this...

Author: By Mark Murray, | Title: Uninspired Tourist | 5/8/1984 | See Source »

UNABASHED FANNAISM about the game has never a good baseball book but you can only take a good heart so for Charles Alexander is no doubt an unabashed tanatic about baseball as his detailed and trivial tilled biography of early great Ivy Cobb amply demonstrates skilled social historian and so his effort to detail a by gone era in American sports history had to excite the non-addles those limentable creations who really don't care that Harry Heilmann, the superb Detroit higher outrider goes four batting lives in odd numbered years...

Author: By Michael J. Abramowitz, | Title: TYrant of the Diamond | 4/25/1984 | See Source »

Mostly the council attracted complaints from those not satisfied by a letter to the editor but unwilling or unable to sue. Some came from media harpies who make a living harassing the press. Complaints often seemed self-serving or trivial. Editors begrudged the time they spent being meticulously cross-examined by council investigators about stories. A jury of prominent laymen and experienced journalists then ruled on each case, and in one-third of them found the complaints at least partly justified...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newswatch: Watchdog Without a Bite | 4/9/1984 | See Source »

...insensible to the central lesson of Watergate, that a seemingly trivial act can take on such Aeschylean significance as to threaten the balance of the world. But it would be wrong to assign all the blame for that state of affairs to Nixon. There were abuses, and actions that were worse than abuses, on all sides. One need not describe the damage, not the least of which is that the U.S. now has a precedent for the removal of an elected President from office through a process of denunciation rather than due process...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Alexander Haig | 4/2/1984 | See Source »

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