SEE BELOW for MORE MAGAZINES' Exclusive, detailed, guaranteed content description!*
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: JUNE 24, 1972; Volume LV, Number 26, 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: Spearpoint! Sylvia Ashton-Warner on America Today. Cover illustration by Thomas Upshur. SR/UP FRONT: How to Get Interviewed by Dick Cavett--in Several Tricky Lessons By George Malko. An author who was screened by Cavett and Cc. explains who makes it--and who doesn't. They Don't Burn Buses Anymore in Pontiac, By William Serrin. In a factory city that responded explosively to bused integration, author Serrin finds the system working and the children happy. Rumors in the Vatican: The Next Pope May Not Be Italian By Nino Lo Bello. If Pope Paul retires this fall, who will replace him? Nino Lo Bello describes four likely "foreign" successors. Singles in the Suburbs, or, You Can Go Home Again By Mary Alice Kellogg. Singles are migrating to the suburbs, and in Schaumburg, Illinois, that means everybody out for beer and volleyball. EDITORIAL: Random Terror in the Middle East By Ronald P. Kriss. The Japanese fanatics who turned Israel's major airport into a charnel house gave the world a bloody lesson in the uses of unfocused, generalized terror. Now the Israelis are spoiling to give a lesson in return to the people who sponsored them-- the Palestinian guerrillas. EDUCATION: Spearpoint By Sylvia Ashton-Warner. Traditional education has its shortcomings, but adapting and surviving in an American free school are not for the fainthearted. The Society School: The Outside World Is In By Lillian Foster. An Alternative to the Deschooled Society By George Richmond. A ten-year-old carries a credit card? At P.S. 126 students have created economic and social systems as part of their own microsociety. A new theory of what schooling should be and how it should work. Black Land-Grant Colleges: Discrimination as Public Policy By Peter H. Schuck. Despite the colleges' success in educating blacks, federal and state fiscal policies deny these institutions equality under the law. SR Education Update: A report on the latest developments in the Amish battle against compulsory education and in Duluth's efforts at class integration. The Union Merger Movement: Will 3,500,000 Teachers Put It All Together? By Myron Lieberman. The merger movement among teacher organizations may soon result in the largest --and most powerful--union in the nation. SR: REVIEWS: BOOKS: The Jewel in the Crown, The Day of the Scorpion, The Towers of Silence, By Paul Scoff, Reviewed by Nancy Wilson Ross. My Michael By Amos Oz Reviewed by Milton Rugoff. The Quiet End of Evening By Honor Tracy Reviewed by J. 0. O'Hara. Gehlen: Spy of the Century By E. H. Cookridge, The General Was a Spy: The Truth About General Gehlen and His Spy Ring By Heinz Hbhpe and Hermann Zolling, The Service: The Memoirs of General Reinhard Gehlen, Gehlen: Master Spy of the Century By Charles Whiting, Reviewed by Robert 0. Deindorfer. Intuition, By R. Buckminster Fuller, Reviewed by Finite Capouya. Myth and Modern Man By Raphael Pafai, Myths to Live By By Joseph Campbell, Reviewed by Emmett Wilson, Jr. The Enormous Despair, By Judith Malma, Reviewed by Anthea Lahr. Off-Broadway: The Prophetic Theater, By Stuart W. Little, Reviewed by Richard Horwich. DANCE: ViIleIla: At Home and Across the Hudson, By Walter Terry. FILMS: Whodunit Didn't By Arthur Knight. THEATER: Summer Summary By Henry Hewes. MUSIC: The Legendary Lily By Irving Kolodin. TRAVEL: "Hommage a Fromage" By Rene Lecler. GAMES: Wit Twister; Literary Crypt; Your Literary I. Q.; Kingsley Double-Crostic No. 1994. CARTOON CREDITS: William P. Hoest, Peter Paul Porges. ______ 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 |