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: JANUARY 1984; Volume 101, No.1
IN THIS ISSUE:-
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FEATURES:
ESQUIRE SPECIAL DUBIOUS ACHIEVEMENTS OF 1983: Enough already of 1983, the year that brought us Staying Alive, more of James Watt, the Hitler diaries, and much, much less.Esquire's annual salute to those people and events that made the past year what it was -- the fun couples, the religious converts, the wacky celebrities, the scientists and their amazing discoveries, and our inspiring leaders in' Washington.

PROFILE THE MAN WHO WOULDN'T BE KING byJudith Adler Hennessee. TED KOPPEL and Nightline are the perfect match of man and show. Even the glory job of network news can't tear it asunder.

ESQUIRE EYE ENDURING EXPOSURES by Andrea Heil. Scenes from nearly a hundred years of black history taken from the private collection of a man with a passion for the past.

IN QUOTES SNOOP by Howard Senzel. The modern detective is a good seducer -- he does whatever it takes to charm information out of the unsuspecting.

THE LITERARY LIFE WHY I LIVE WHERE I LIVE by Donald Hall. In the country, trying to describe exactly where you live is almost as difficult as saying why you choose to live there.

MODERN ROMANCE A SANDWICH by Lynda Bany. Asking a woman who isn't your mother to fix you something to eat may get you more than a sandwich.

WASHINGTON BRIEFING THE EDUCATION OF A HAWK byJerrold L. Schecter. John Negroponte worked in Vietnam with Kissinger. Now, as ambassador to Honduras, his association with him continues.

FASHION DATELINE: ITALY by Vincent Boucher. The latest for spring from the collections of four classic Italian designers -- Armani, Versace, Soprani, and Cerruti.

FICTION FILl by Francisco Goldman. While wandering in the midst of a cheerless city he saw bits of color that made it seem as though anything were possible.

MAN AT HIS BEST: Smart Money: The Quack Comes Back; Classics: The Harris Tweed Jacket; Practical Matters: A Base for Your Computer; Special Places: Where to Take a Dive; The Seasoned Cook: The Second Coming of a Sinful Pie; Good Thinking: As the World Turns; The Drinking Man: Another Morning After; What Every Man Should Know: How to Make a Toast.

THE ESQUIRE REVIEW:
MOVIES BRIAN DE PALMA'S DEATH WISH by Lynn Hirschberg.
HOLLYWOOD & VINYL THE NUCLEAR RIP-OFF by Paul Rudnick and Bill McKearn.
MEDIA LIFE AFTER FLASHDANCE by Richard M. Levine.
INSIDE MOVES THE BUSINES OF SHOW BUSINESS.
BOOKS SOUTHERN EXILES by James Alan McPherson.
OPENINGS CHRISTOPHER LEBRUN.

THE NEW AMERICA: WORK IN PROGRESS by Connie Zweig; THE "SMART" CARD: How TO MAKE A PLASTIC PAYMENT by Roger Rapoport; YOGA AND YOUR HEART by Valerie Andrews; KUNG Fu IN THE BIG LEAGUES by Joe Flower, ON-LINE JOB HUNTING by Stan Miastkowski; THE ARRIVAL OF PLANE CUISINE by Ron Rosenbaum; NEW NOTES.

DEPARTMENTS:
BACKSTAGE WITH ESQUIRE Identifying with Violence.
THE SOUND AND THE FURY Letters from Readers.
UNCONVENTIONAL WISDOM by Adam Smith Walking on Fire.
AMERICAN BEAT by Bob Greene Dog Days on Publishers Row.
ETHICS by Anthony Brandt Looking for an Answer.
SPORTS CLINIC by Robert Brody Competing with Cool.
SPORTS SCENES by Pete Dexter The Linebacker's Secret.
THE ENVIRONMENT by Geoffrey Norman Justice, Just in Time.
HIGH LIFE by Taki Wackos.
COVER PHOTOGRAPH -- JEAN Moss, PHOTOGRAPH OF JAMES WATT.

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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!