Esquire
"The Magazine for Men" -- Including all the great writers, illustrators, pictorials, vintage advertisements, fashion and more -- Exclusive MORE MAGAZINES detailed content description, below!

Issue Date: MAY 1983; Volume 99 No. 5
IN THIS ISSUE:-
This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. Any unauthorized use is strictly prohibited. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
COVER: ROY SCHEIDER: He is Jacobo Timerman, the political dissident struggling to keep his sanity in an Argentinlan jail. He is Officer Frank Murphy, fighting a lonely battle to wrestle a powerful and insidious flying machine away from the forces of evil. Moving this month from NBC's stark Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number to Columbia Pictures' comic strip Blue Thunder, Roy Scheider remains an actor of awesome versatility and craft, playing men whose conscience and ingenuity might be lessons to us all as we consider the direction of a rapidly changing, over more complex America. Cover Photograph by Jean Moss. FEATURES:
ESSAY: THE LATINIZATION OF AMERICA by Thomas B. Morgan -- An Anglo awakes to find Hspanic America at a critcal juncture, pushed by ethnicity, pulled by assimilation.

PROFILE CAR POOL: by George Leonard -- Hangihg like a sword over U.S. schools is the threat of the most serious crisis our education system has faced.

DOCUMENTARY: THE MAss PRODUCTION OF ENGINEERS by Frank Rose -- In this postindustrial age the U.S. needs more than just additional engineers. We need engineers with vision.

THE LITERARY LIFE: THE REVENGE SYMPOSIUM -- In which the authors battle their tormentors, comforted by the thought that books go on but reviewers die.

FASHION: MIGHTY WHITES by Vincent Boucher -- Turn this summer to the sturdy whites, to breeze-weight linens and shipshape sailcloth. Go Great Gatsby white.

IN QUOTES: MR. INDUSTRIAL POLICY by Randall Rothenberg -- Meet Robert Reich: diminutive ex-actor Rhodes Scholar intellectual, and one of Washington's hottest gurus.

MEN AND WOMEN: MEN COMPETING WITH WOMEN by Frank Satterthwaite -- Your opponent in a league match is a woman and she beats you. Do you congratulate her or kill yourself?.

WASHINGTON BRIEFING: ANDROPOV'S AMERICAN CONNECTION by Jerrold L. Schecter -- As the new Soviet leader advanced so did top America watcher Georgi Arbatov -- a man to be watched himself.

THE SPORTING LIFE: 1983: THIs Is THE YEAR THAT WAS by Bill James -- The Brewers won the American League East, the Cards took their division, Yaz bowed out, and much more.

HUMOR: MY LIFE AS A BALLERINA by Daniel Okrent -- In ballet, the dance of hops popular with swans, how you look is everything. Our poor guy didn't look so good.

MAN AT HIS BEST: Smart Money: Yesterday's Trains; Good Thinking: Smart Comics; Classics: The Rep Tie; The Seasoned Cook: Good Fast Food; Special Places: The Pick of the Bluegrass Festivals; The Drinking Man: A Wicked Way to Unwind; The Enlightened Traveler: Fishing for an Education; What Every Man Should Know: How to Smoke.

THE ESQUIRE REVIEW:
MOVIES WHEN GEORGE AND FRANCIS WERE FRIENDS by Dale Pollock.
MUSIC MORE 'N LIKELY, THERE'S A LI'L HARLAN HOWARD IN YOUR HEAD by Andrea Heil.
VIDEO THE CONGRESSIONAL NETWORK by Peter W. Kaplan.
BOOKS THE BEATLES WEREN'T FOR CYNICS by Hany Stein.

THE NEW AMERICA: REDEFINING THE ROLE OF THE EMPLOYEE by Joel Kotkin;THE ELEVENTH MEGATREND by Connie Zweig;Tips ON THE ART OF ORDERING ORGANIC byRon Rosenbaum; ENDORPHINS: AN EMOTIONAL STORY by Howard Rheingold; FUTURE FILMS: YOU'RE IN THE PICTURE by Bob Spitz; JACK KILBY'S MILLION.DOLLAR CRYSTAL by Paula Span; NEW NOTES.

DEPARTMENTS:
BACKSTAGE WITH ESQUIRE: America, Where Are You Going?.
THE SOUND AND THE FURY: Letters from Readers.
UNCONVENTIONAL WISDOM: by Adam Smith Fourteen Years to Midnight.
AMERICAN BEAT: by Bob Greene The Sky's the Limit.
ETHICS: by Anthony Brandt Truths and Consequences of Taxes.
SPORTS CLINIC: by Geoffrey Stokes The Fit Foot.
OUTDOORS: by Geoffrey Norman The Taming of the Wild.
HIGH LIFE: by Taki Your Time Is Up.

This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. Any unauthorized use is strictly prohibited. 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Magazine is COMPLETE and in VERY GOOD + condition (see photo), Approx 8 1/2" X 11" Standard magazine Format. Vintage Esquire magazines are more and more sought after as time goes by, and they are getting more scarce on the market!