Saturday Evening POST
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ISSUE DATE:
June 29-July 6 1963; 236th Year, issue no 25
IN THIS ISSUE:-
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THE COVER photograph by John Bryson shows
a Venezuelan soldier on the alert in Caracas after
Communist saboteurs had blown up an oil pipeline.
ARTICLES:
Little girls are too sexy too soon (Speaking Out) . . . by Cleo Shupp.
The Communist plan to win Latin America. . . by Richard Armstrong.
Moving from country to country throughout Latin America, a three-man Post
team talked with presidents and peasants, revolutionists and reactionaries, in a
three-month survey of a continent threatened by the spread of Communism.
All told, contributing writers Richard Armstrong and Trevor Armbrister and
photographer John Bryson logged 65,000 miles to bring back this week's special
report, a significant evaluation of Latin America's disturbing drift to the left.
Let's nix the sickniks . . . by Robert Ruark.
The American who conquered Mt. Everest (Big Jim Whittaker) . . . by Murray Morgan.
Color movies find hidden cancers . . . by George J. Jaffe.
Last chance on death row . . . by Harold Lavine.
The world's newest, longest bridge . . . by Roger Vaughan.
Who stole the drug formula? . . . by John Kobler.
Tragedy of a vertical slum . . . by Roul Tunley.
FICTION:
Your husband loves me! . . . by Leland Webb. Illustrated by David Stone.
One month during the summerby . . . Walt Grove. Illustrated by Joe Cleary.
DEPARTMENTS:
Letters;
Post Scripts;
Hazel;
Editorial.
THE AUTHORS. Veteran reporter Harold Lavine,
whose 30-year career includes experience as a war
correspondent and reporter on murder trials, has
always approved of capital punishment. Working on
this week's story changed his mind . . . . Novelist and
historian Murray Morgan has himself climbed a couple of Alaskan mountains but prefers to limit his
ascents to peaks with bus service. . . . Associate
editor Roger Vaughan did his climbing on the 690-
foot tower of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge. He
descended by a catwalk, unlike some workmen who
come down by sliding along a swooping suspension
cable, the world's longest banister.". . . In three
weeks of research on the new "stomach camera,
free-lancer George Jaffe saw more of the human
stomach than most doctors see after 30 years in
practice . . . . Contributing writer Robert Ruark, who
has written extensively about hunting, draws a bead
on sick comedians and entertainers who don't entertain.. . . Cloak-and-dagger intrigues opened the way
for contributing writer John Kobler's interviews with
chemist Robert Aries -- especially elusive because
he was trying to keep several steps ahead of the
law . . . . RouI Tunley is a POST contributing writer.
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