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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:
July 6, 1968; Vol. LI, No. 27
CONDITION:
RARE edition, standard magazine size, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)
IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: Cosmic sweep of Solar Wind reduces Earth to tiny ball in magnetic cocoon. See Science. Painted for ESSA by Francis J. Krasyk.
SR/IDEAS:
Mafia-Client Politics,
by Danilo Dolci --
Our societies are being strangled by
cruel minorities. The solution is not
"tacit assent" hut the realization that
men have created these oppressors and
have the power to remove them.
"The Graduate" Makes Out,
by Hollis Alpert --
A cinematic breakthrough -- blessed
with myriad interpretations -- becomes
"a phenomenon of multiple attendance."
The Crusade for Law and Order: An Editorial.
SR: SCIENCE:
Forecasting the Solar Wind,
by John Lear --
SR's science editor describes the operation of a new solar storm prediction
service.
A Sun-Blown Legend --
Sydney Chapman --
Pioneer in the study of solar weather.
The Wind-Shaved Moon,
by John J. Gilvarry --
Solar tvind erosion of the moon's face
promises surprises for human visitors.
It's Blowing by Jupiter,
by James W. Warwick --
Signals front Jupiter indicate solar
wind passes there.
The Research Frontier:
Solar Storm Clouds,
by John P. Hagen --
Discovery of early stages in solar storm
development refines storm forecasts.
BOOKS:
Seventh Amy Loveman Award,
by David Dempsey.
European Literary Scene,
by Robert J Clements.
On the Fringe,
by Haskel Frankel.
REVIEWED IN THIS ISSUE:
"Dark as the Grave Wherein
My Friend Is Laid," by
Malcolm Lowry (Fiction).
Book Forum: Letters from
Readers.
Seventh Amy Loveman Award,
by David Dempsey.
European Literary Scene,
by Robert I. Clements.
On the Fringe, by
Haskel Frankel.
"The Algiers Motel Incident,"
by John Hersey.
"The Passionate People: What
It Means to Be a Jew in
America," by Roger Kahn.
"Up," by Ronald Sukenick
(Fiction).
"An Hour of Last Things
and Other Stories," by
George P. Elliott (Fiction).
"The Edwardian Turn of
Mind," by Samuel Hynes.
"Daniel Defoe and Middle-Class Gentility," by Michael
Shinagel; "Man Versus Society
in 18th-Century Britain: Six
Points of View," edited by
James L. Clifford.
"Sergei Prokofiev: A Soviet
Tragedy," by Victor Seroff.
"Ellen Terry," by
Roger Manville.
SR's Check List of the
Week's New Books.
SR/DEPARTMENTS:
First of the Month: Cleveland Amory.
Top of My Head: Goodman Ace.
State of Affairs: Henry Brandon
Student potver: The problems and
promise of campus militancy.
Wit Twister No 67.
Trade Winds: Herbert R. Mayes.
SR Recommends.
Letters to the Editor.
The Theater : Henry Hewes.
The Mark Taper Forum: Theater
venturousnes's in Los Angeles.
Literary Crypt.
Literary I.Q.
Music to My Ears: Irving Kolodin.
"Figaro" from Rome, "American"
Promenade.
World of Dance: Walter Terry.
Exploring the off-Broadway experiments: Cunningham, Sauasardo, Clouser, Condodina.
TV-Radio: Robert Lewis Shayon
Commercial TV in West Germany:
Cartoon pleasantries and the politics
of containment.
Booked for Travel: James Egan ++
Repatriating in 'Vermont: Exoticism in
the "citadel of Americana.".
Kingsley Double-Crostic No 1787.
______
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