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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: JUNE 10, 1972; Volume LV, Number 24, Science
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: SCIENCE. Who's afraid of Vasectomy? Bug meets the Brain. Roy Jenkins on America's future as a world power. Cover: Ken Kay.

UP FRONT:
LETTERS:
EDITORIAL: A Lesser Role for Uncle Sam, but Still a Vital One By Roy Jenkins. The former Deputy Leader of Britain's Labour party assesses America's future as a world power.
Did the Pentagon Papers Make Any Difference? By Hans Koning. Just a year ago they shocked the American conscience, but did anything change? Author Koning asked the opinions of those most deeply involved in the publication.
Waiting for Nixon Slightly Below the Summit By Alan Levy. Holed up in Martin Bormann's old digs in Salzburg (near the palace at which the Nixons would later stay), Alan Levy found "the hills alive with the news of Nixon.
Here Come the Political Groupies! By Lynn Sherr. Steve Doyle dropped out of college to work for his idol--Hubert H. Humphrey. Even now, at almost the end of the primary road, starry.eyed Steve says: "I see him walking and think, My God, that's Hubert Humphrey!".
Does It Make Sense to the Man With the Beer Can? By Faubion Bowers. CBS-TV's remarkable Camera Three puts on everything from the Royal Cambodian Palace Dancers to men in tuxedos playing Scriabin, and--yes--it's box office! Of sorts.
Baseball Fans, You Should've Been There By Jeff Greenfield. You "have to be there" to get the full feel of baseball, but the bleachers are getting increasingly bare.

SCIENCE:
The Search for Man's Relatives Among the Stars By John Lear. Will a private philanthropist cough up $70 million so that we can begin to eavesdrop on our neig jbors in space?.
Who's Afraid of Vasectomy? By Marvin Grosswirth.
A lot of men--and women--are afraid, that's who. Writer Grosswirth examines the psychological implications of the sterility operation.
The Bug Meets the Brain By Tony Chiu. Volkswagen's new Computerized Self- Analysis System may soon replace Morgan and his pirates down at the local garage.
The Technology of TV Violence By Roger Field. Blend red pigment into a colloidal solution of methyl cellulose and you have synthetic blood, one of the major products of the video violence industry.
Domesticating the Musk Ox: The Gentle Agriculture By John J. Teal, Jr. The people of China recently gave us a pair of pandas; in return, we sent them Melvin and Matilda, a pair of musk oxen. Professor Teal tells how the musk ox can become the basis of a gentle agriculture.

SR/REVIEWS:
BOOKS :
Spring Snow By Yukio Mishima.
0 Jerusalem! By Larry Collins and Dominique Lapierre.
Arab Attitudes to Israel By Yehoshafat Harkabi.
Things Themselves: Essays and Scenes, By Reynolds Price.
The Edge of Impossibility:
Tragic Forms in Literature By Joyce Carol Oates.
The Goalie's Anxiety at the Penalty Kick By Peter Handke.
The Bride Wore the Traditional Gold By Talbot Spivak.
I Am Elijah Thrush By James Purdy.
The Devastating Boys By Elizabeth Taylor.
Book Forum: Letters from Readers.

MUSIC: From Igor With Love By Irving Kolodin.
DANCE: England's Royal Ballet and New York's Student Dancers By Walter Terry.
TRAVEL: The Pilot Said: "There's an Armed Man Aboard" By Neil Amdur.
FILMS: Hollywood Goes East Lansing By Arthur Knight.
PHOENIX NEST By Martin Levin.

GAMES: Literary Crypt. Wit Twister. Your Literary I.Q. Kingsley Double-Crostic No. 1992.


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