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With all the great features of the day, this makes a great birthday gift, or anniversary present! Careful packaging, Fast shipping, and EVERYTHING is 100% GUARANTEED. 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: AUGUST 19, 1972; VOLUME LV, NUMBER 34; EDUCATION 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: How do we learn today? by Michael Rossman. Sculpture by Jack Gregory, Photographed by Seymour Resnik. UP FRONT: No Hope in Woodlawn By Seth S. King -- In Chicago, the most strictly segregated city in the nation, a combination of forces has kept low-cost public housing for blacks from going up inside -- or outside -- the ghetto. The Chess Mob on West 10th By Peter Andrews -- At the Marshall Club in Greenwich Village, where Bobby Fischer once performed as a teen-aged wonder, members followed reports of the championship match in Reykjavik. On the day our reporter dropped in they were holding a deathwatch for Boris Spassky -- prematurely, as it turned out. Professor Westing Counts the Craters By Saul Braun -- "I went over to Indochina to study chemicals," says this scientific observer of the Vietnam War, "and came back having nightmares about craters.". Getting into Michael's By Peter M. Nichols -- In a burglar-proof house one misstep is cause for alarm. EDITORIAL: A Difficult But Necessary Decision By Ronald P. Kriss -- One can feel considerable sympathy for Thomas Eagleton, but the decision to replace him on the Democratic ticket was both right and necessary. EDUCATION: How We Learn Today in America By Michael Rossman -- One of the counterculture's brightest lights theorizes about current and coming changes in the nature of mass "higher education.". ABC's of City Learning By John Bremer -- The city's a classroom. Let your mind do the walking through the Yellow Pages of Learning Resources. Confrontations Long Ago -- the Student Leaders Look Back By George H. Strauss -- Four former high school activists look back on their battles with the system -- and draw some widely varying conclusions. They're Straight and They're Good By Barry Schwartz -- The forty-fifth National High School Art Exhibition revealed that students are no longer preoccupied with the "disjunctions of the Sixties." Yet, while the trend is toward realism in art, the works themselves tell us little of the impact schools have on creative young people. Innovation Is Tradition in West Harlem By Henry S. Resnik -- A husband-wife teaching team defies the rules of failure by giving their students a chance to fight the system. REVIEWS: BOOKS: Papers on the War By Daniel Ellsberg, Fire in the Lake: The Vietnamese and the Americans in Vietnam By Frances FitzGerald, Reviewed by Jonathan Mirsky. Eleanor: The Years Alone By Joseph P. Lash, Reviewed by Benjamin DeMott. Books for Children, Reviewed by Karla Kuskin. Inside Psychotherapy: Nine Clinicians Tell How They Work and What They Are Trying to Accomplish Edited by Adelaide Bry, Reviewed by Webster Schott. Roosevelt, New Jersey: Big Dreams in a Small Town & What Time Did to Them By Edwin Rosskam, Reviewed by Jon Margolis. THEATER: Heaven Is Murky By Henry Hewes. FILMS: A Patrolman for All Seasons By Arthur Knight. DANCE: Stravinsky Ballets Revisited By Walter Terry. MUSIC: Pierre in the Park By Irving Kolodin. TRAVEL: Fat Boys Are Better Than No Boys By Chris Chase. PHOENIX NEST: Measure for Measure Edited by Martin Levin. GAMES: Literary Crypt. Wit Twister. Your Literary I.Q. Kingsley Double-Crostic no. 2002. Cartoons by Edward Frasino, Al Ross. ______ Use 'Control F' to search this page. * NOTE: OUR 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. 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 |