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TITLE: Intellectual Digest Magazine
[RARE and interesting literary magazine!]
ISSUE DATE: March 1973; Vol. III, No.7
CONDITION: 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: Robert Masters and Jean Houston: The Varieties of Postpsychedelic experience. Photograph by Enrico Ferorelli.

Work in Progress/ Rowland Emett. The mad Punch cartoonist now designs Victorian Rube Goldberg cars and fountains featuring bronze sunflowers that open to reveal animal orchestras in full concert An ID exclusive by Louis Botto.

Farther Out/The Varieties of Postpsychedelic Experience. Robert Masters and Jean Houston Foundation for Mind Research explores mind expansion beyond drugs in search of ultimate human potential An ID exclusive by Jerry Avorn.

A License To Steal offers an antidote to the random violence of amateur criminality. This modest (and droll) proposal suggests rigorous professional standards for thieves, like those for doctors and plumbers. By Ira Mothner.

Energy 4: The Radiant Nucleus.The atomic energy establishment holds a vested interest in stifling legitimate scientific alarm. Result: we are stumbling toward potential genocide, warns L)r. JohnW Got man.Ari ID exclusive by Jack Shepherd.

The Creator & the Commissars. Stefan Heym, East Germany's best-known novelist, is unpublished in his own country He describes how an official nonperson survives with honor. An ID exclusive by J. Robert Moskin.

Across the Fence. Heym demonstrates his storytelling power in a tale of a bloody-handed commissar who ran with the pack until he tired.

The Italian Alter Ego of Thomas Jefferson. Kenneth Clark discovers the intellectual ancestor of wilderness America's Renaissance man in the person of an elegant fifteenth-century Florentine" Leon Battista Alberti. From The Virginia Quarterly Review.

The Rain Came, and It Was Oil. Accepted belief holds that Oil was formed in sedimentary deposits. A chemical engineer tneorizes that atmospheric gases could have been the genesis 'Then. it rained. By Leon P. Gaucher. From CHEMTECH.

The Laius Complex. The somewhat ambivalent public reaction to the Kent State killings is rooted in a subconscious adult hatred of the young akin to Laius hostility toward his son Oedipus, says Thomas S. Vernon. From The Humanist.

The Aesthetics of the Kentucky Rifle, A native American art foi m troin bud to flower to baroque decline By Merrill Lindsay.

On No Longer Being Ashamed of America. Psychologist Carl Rogers sees a new society of "change and flow, of people rather than objects" emerging from the shattered dream we live in From Journal of Humanistic Psychology.

An Anarchist of the Deepest Dye. P.L. TRAVERS, who discovered Mary Poppins within her own free spirit, calls for children's lib as the guaranty for "all lib." An ID exclusive by Joseph Roddy.

A Theory of Defensible Space. Urbarmologist OSCAR NEWMAN analyzes why ghetto housing projects fail: buildings are too tall and corridors too long Their inhuman scale destroys the sense of community essential to safety. ID Book Selection.

BILL BRADLEY's Olympics. The ex-Olympian, pro basketball star argues for a four-month festival of sports and the arts, a UN-supported convocation open to all young people of excellence. From Forum for Contemporary History.

Acid: The Morality of a German Artist. While John Held Jr was visualizing the American flapper, George Grosz was pinioning the decadent Berlin of the 20s. Grosz's drawings seethe with repugnant life. By Harriet Shapiro.

The Greening of the Uniform. A liberal society is--by nature --antagonistic to military authoritarianism. An Australian Air Force officer charts the bumpy route to compatibility. By Raymond G. Funnell. From Air University Review.

Voices/Harold Lloyd, Student. Delightful and bilingual poetical nonsense from the whimsical intelligence of Rafael Alberti: "Alice, I have the hippopotamus" From Antaeus.

Damnable Puzzle 5. Damn!! By Al B. Perlman.
Salt of the Earth. Are you worth your salt (which is to say, your salary)? The 31/2 ounces of salt in your body are the difference between life and death By Catherine McLeod. From Realites.
Up with Dick Daley. Amateurs nominate sure losers like McGovern and Goldwater and so eliminate voter choice. The bosses in the smoke-filled room know best. By John D. May.
The Word.
Humane Letters.
Newsletter/Spaceship Earth.
Newsletter/Science.
Newsletter/Social Science.
ID Recommended.

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