‘There is no longer any violence in the eyes of O.J. Simpson,’ October 6, 1968


1968_october_06_cover

 Nixon leads Humphrey in state poll

1968_october_06_simpson01
By Keith Thursby
Times staff writer

It’s easy to pick apart an old profile of a famous person. The
celebrity talks of hopes and dreams and you can see what went according
to the script through the years and what went wrong. Charles Einstein’s
profile of O.J. Simpson in West magazine provides a window into
Simpson’s senior season at USC, when he would win the Heisman Trophy as
the nation’s top college football player. It’s familiar territory but
still interesting reading.

Eisenstein deals with Simpson’s remarkable (and relatively short)
career at USC and looks back on his 64-yard touchdown run the previous
season against UCLA. There’s even an artist’s re-creation of the run
that leaves no doubt the story was published in the 1960s.

But anyone reading about O.J. wants more than details about football.

Simpson talks about how the game changed his life. "I was somebody
who didn’t care about anything and the best thing you can say about me
and trouble is that I was borderline," he tells Einstein. "Maybe I
didn’t actually do anything but I was there when it happened and that’s
all you have to be, is there. Then they pick you up anyway."

He also discusses how he’d like to eventually work with young people, probably in his old San Francisco neighborhood.

"In a way it will be good to have money because money is what
impresses people who don’t have any," Simpson says. "On the other hand,
there’ll be a problem because if my money comes from football what do I
say to a kid who isn’t an athlete? That if he studies hard he can be
like me?"

The author says this is "a practical dilemma" for Simpson in part
because of old friends who were gifted athletes but didn’t get a
college scholarship.

"The publicity mills at Southern Cal make a point of describing
Simpson as ‘humble.’ If they are right, it is likely for a deeper
reason than they know, for Simpson’s humility does not masquerade as
under-confidence," Einstein writes. "Instead, it reflects his
admiration for the ability of others–including those who, perhaps
through no fault of their own, didn’t make it."


1968_october_06_simpson02
Page 2

1968_october_06_simpson03
Page 3
1968_october_06_simpson04
Page 4
1968_october_06_simpson05
Page 5 

Unknown's avatar

About lmharnisch

I am retired from the Los Angeles Times
This entry was posted in #courts, @news, broadcasting, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Homicide, LAPD, Sports, Television. Bookmark the permalink.

1 Response to ‘There is no longer any violence in the eyes of O.J. Simpson,’ October 6, 1968

  1. schnee's avatar schnee says:

    good bye OJ
    hello HOMER!!!

    Like

Comments are closed.