Scandal, by Suzanne Garment by Paul Johnson Suzanne Garment has written a racy and illuminating book which asks important questions.
AIDS So Far by Michael A. Fumento One of the last books published on AIDS in 1990 bore the ominous title, The AIDS Disaster.
Is Secular Humanism Good for the Jews? by Our Readers To the Editor: Irving Kristol, in “The Future of American Jewry” [August], maintains that “the death of socialism” and “the…
Multiculturalism by Our Readers To the Editor: Midge Decter has done it again. Her article on multiculturalism [“E Pluribus Nihil: Multiculturalism and Black Children,”…
Poverty and Compassion, by Gertrude Himmelfarb by Commentary Bk Ever since Lytton Strachey's 1918 hatchet job, Eminent Victorians, the Victorian age has had a bad press among bien-pen-sant intellectuals:…
Race, Lies & Democrats by Noemie Emery A sex crime—a black man, a white victim—and Willie Horton, the convict furloughed by Governor Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts, who…
Scandal, by Suzanne Garment by Paul Johnson Suzanne Garment has written a racy and illuminating book which asks important questions.
Spike Lee by Our Readers To the Editor: Congratulations to Richard Grenier for his incisive debunking of the Don King of film-makers, Spike Lee [“Spike…
Suicide Made Easy by Leon R. Kass Americans have always been a handy people. If know-how were virtue, we would be a nation of saints.
The Litigation Explosion by Our Readers To the Editor: Regarding Terry Eastland's review of The Litigation Explosion, by Walter K. Olson [Books in Review, September], does…
The Politics of Public Television by David Horowitz Created by the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967, the present system of public television is by now one of the…
The Rise & Fall of Deconstruction by Peter Shaw The intellectual and moral disaster that overtook the academic world in the 1970's and 1980's is hardly a secret.
We Must Take Charge: Our Schools and Our Future, by Chester E. Finn, Jr. by James Q. Wilson There are essentially three kinds of remedies for the widely acknowledged shortcomings of our schools. (I do not consider simply…