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TITLE:
The Saturday Review of Literature
[Each Saturday Review of Literature issue covers books, arts, literature, movies, ideas, music, science, poetry and much more. Many regular features and writers, and most reviews are also essays on the subject at hand. ALL the latest books had to have an ad in The Saturday Review! ]
ISSUE DATE:
JULY 8, 1972; VOLUME LV, NUMBER 28, SCIENCE
CONDITION:
RARE edition, standard magazine size, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)
IN THIS ISSUE:
[Use 'Control F' to search this page. MORE MAGAZINES' exclusive detailed content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date.] This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
COVER: Experiencing your Body: You are what you feel. Isaac Asimov on the Ultimate Speed Limit.
UP FRONT:
The Stars shone bright for George McGovern, by Richard Reeves. Actors may think that only politicians have a better high than theirs. But
with Beatty, Simon & Garfunkel, et al. to do the talking and singing, George kept it short at Madison Square Garden.
"Think It Over, Brodsky, but Decide Now" By Alan Levy. For the Soviet poet newly arrived in Vienna, freedom began like tyranny--with
interrogations.
Taking No Chances in Miami, By Jay Clarke. The conventions are at hand, and Miami Beach Police Chief Rocky Pomerance is ready for
anything.
Losers in the Betting Parlors Are Winners, By Paul Good. In one New York Off-Track Betting office former addicts stay straight by keeping
their hands in the till.
Corraling Jesus in the Cotton Bowl, By Edward B. Fiske. Gimme a J ... Gimme an E... Gimme an S yelled 75,000 voices at the Campus
Crusade for Christ's Explo 72 festival in Dallas.
EDITORIAL: Happy Birthday, U.S.A.--and What Will You Be When You Grow Up? By Ronald P. Kriss. The fourth of July is traditionally a time
not only for firecrackers, family outings, and slaughter on the highways but also for a national stocktaking. Where do we stand at the age of
196?
SCIENCE:
Experiencing Your Body: You Are What You Feel By Seymour Fisher. Do you really know what you look like? Probably not, say scientists
investigating body image. Yet this new area of psychological research indicates that your distorted self-impressions may be the crucial
determinant of your behavior.
Amphetamines Reconsidered By Lester Grinspoon, M.D., and Peter Hedblom. Despite claims by the drug industry and the AMA,
amphetamine abuse is a growing national problem. Amphetamines are truly dangerous and addicting drugs. Speed indeed kills.
Synthetic Crystals The Glittering Heart of Technology, By Joel E. Arem. Found in almost every electrical appliance, scientific instrument,
and communications device in use in the United States today, synthetic crystals are far more vital than is generally realized. Without them
our technological society would quickly grind to a halt.
The Ultimate Speed Limit, By Isaac Asimov. Is the universe at our feet? Can we break the light barrier and travel to the stars?
REVIEWS:
BOOKS:
Delusions, Etc.
By John Berryman,
Three Poems
By John Ashbery,
The Flag the Hawk Flies
By Ned OGorman,
Reviewed by Peter Dale.
Anthony Trollope
By James Pope Hennessy,
Reviewed by Leon Edel.
As Ever, Scott Fitz: Letters Between
F. Scott Fitzgerald and His Literary Agent,
Harold Ober, 1919--1940,
Edited by Matthew J. Bruccoli, with the
assistance of Jennifer McCabe Atkinson,
Reviewed by Alden Whitman.
Freedom and Beyond
By John Holt,
Reviewed by Nat Hentoft.
Dispossessing the American Indian:
Indians and Whites on the Colonial Frontier,
By Wilbur A. Jacobs,
Reviewed by Rarihokwats.
FILMS: A Chat With the Composer
By Arthur Knight.
THEATER: Joan Superstar
By Henry Hewes.
MUSIC: All Mozart, All Stravinsky
By Irving Kolodin.
PHOENIX NEST: "I Violated Him
With a Ticket",
Edited by Martin Levin.
TRAVEL: Harlem From the Back
of the Bus,
By Ellen Stock.
GAMES:
Wit Twister;
Literary Crypt;
Your Literary l.Q.; Kingsley Double-Crostic No. 996.
PHOTOGRAPHIC AND ART CREDITS:
Cover: woodcut by Randall Enos; pp. 5, 7, 8,
13 15 illustrations by Marvin Mattelson; pp. 27-32
woodcuts by Randall Ff05; pp. 35, 37, 39,
41, 46 assemblage by Vin Giuliani; pp. 47-49,
51-52 Joel F. Arem; pp. 48, 50 drawings by
Jack Taromina: pp. 54, 56 illustrations by
Charles B. Slackman; p. 78 LisI, Photo
Features International.
CARTOON CREDIT: Henry Martin.
______
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