Esquire
"The Magazine for Men" -- Including all the great writers, illustrators, pictorials, vintage advertisements, fashion and more -- Exclusive MORE MAGAZINES detailed content description, below!

Issue Date: JUNE 1984; Volume 101, No. 6
IN THIS ISSUE:-
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COVER: Special Collector's issue of 1984: A Celebration of the New American Woman. Professional, Lover, Competitor, Mother, Daughter, Activist, Partner. Cover (Esky) Illustration: Arnold Roth.

FEATURES:
PROFESSIONAL: She is in the workplace in greater numbers than ever before, a formidable colleague, competing for responsibility, power, and respect.

HAVING IT ALL by Sara Davidson: A balance of loving family and absorbing career is all it takes to be fulfilled. Easier said than done.
THE MYTH, FABLE, AND REALITY OF THE WORKING WOMAN by Adam Smith. What's new is not that women are working, but that they are working in what used to be a man's world.
THE $100,000 A YEAR Woim by Peter Davis. She's bright and attractive and earns far more than her peers. She s a success addict who can t afford to lose.
WHY ARE WOMEN CRAZY? by Lynda Barry: Dating, working, and worrying about makeup and social issues is too much to handle without occasionally cracking.

LOVER: She loves completely, with the passion of her body and the sparks of her mind.

THE CHEMISTRY OF LOVE by Ron Rosenbaum. The mystery of love may be a mystery no more. Scientists have now discovered that it may be merely a matter of molecules.
DESIGNER DOUBLE TAKES by Vincent Boucher. Selections from five designers who play dual roles as arbiters of style for men and women.
SOMETHING'S MISSING IN HOLLYWOOD by Richard Schickel. Women may have come a long way, but it'll take a while before the real world shows up on the big screen.

COMPETITOR: Is her body more durable?.
SHE SHOOTS TO CONQUER by Geoffrey Norman. From scaling a 24,757-foot peak to mastering the biathlon, Jan Reynolds accomplishes almost everything she sets out to do.

MOTHER: She often works at two jobs--at home and in the office. And she learns to manage both.
THE CASE FOR STAYING HOME by Hary Stein. Say what you will, day-care centers just don't compare with a mother's full-time attention to her child.
ADVICE AND COMFORT FOR THE WORKING MOTHER by Terri Minsky. Pediatrician T. Berry Brazelton says working mothers are a necessity, so we might as well make it easier on them.
MAKING IT WITHOUT A MAN by Christopher Buckley. The "illegitimate" baby boom may have arrived, but still, raising a child without a father will never be a bed of roses.

DAUGHTER: She's no longer a family member to be coddled. She's an ally and a friend.
MY FATHER'S LIFE by Susan Cheever. Whether you're the daughter of a writer or the father of one, your life is under special scrutiny.
LIVING WITH MODERN DAUGHTERS by George Leonard. We've heard quite a bit about the women born in these perilous and changing times--what about their fathers?.
CAITLIN by Judith Rossner. For eight years she lived with them as a mother with no authority, a daughter who cared for them instead of requiring care.

ACTIVIST: She has such great political strength that her values, needs, and convictions command attention. She is on the verge of true emancipation.

LIBERATION'S NEXT WAVE, ACCORDING TO GLORIA STEINEM by Betsy Carter. It's time to take stock, to incorporate the lessons of the past. And the future, Steinem says, looks bright.
ER1 vt BOMBECK GETS THE DIRT OUT by Roy Blount Jr. In her no-nonsense way, Erma Bombeck tells the truth about themodern American home, and the truth is not pretty.
THE REAL AND EVER-WIDENING GENDER GAP by Barbara Ehrenreich. On crucial issues, statistics say, women are more liberal than men, and "the values gap" is still growing.
THE POLITICAL WoMAN'S LONG, HARD CLIMB by Nicholas von Hoffman. There are more women in office now, but they've had to work twice as hard to get there as their male colleagues have.

PARTNER: She's smart and just as ambitious as he is. has her own Ii she's better able to share herself with him as an equal, as his mate, and not as anybody's Mrs.
THE PARTNERSHIP by Anthony Brandt. The modern marriage is a match of equals in which nothing is taken for granted.
She SEX AND THE MARRIED MAN by C.D.B. Bryan. In the course of a marriage, the relationship between husband and wife takes many turns, but it endures.
GOOD FoRM: Though the old rules of etiquette no longer apply, social courtesy still exists; the game's just played with new rules.
DARK SECRETS by Erica Abeel. Despite drastic changes in a woman's role in society, psychoanalysts report that the basic anxieties remain the same.

MAN AT HIS BEST: SMART MONEY: SEMI Is PRECIOUS.
THE ENLIGHTENED TRAVELER: PLYING THE OLD-TIME ARTS.
FIRST-RATE: CANOES WITH CHARACTER.
SPECIAL PLACES: TREKKING LIGHTLY.
THE SEASONED COOK: CROWD PLEASERS.
THE DRINKING MAN: SWEET ON SOURS.
THE RIGHT STUFF: A CATCHY DESIGN.
CLASSICS: THE SANDAL.

THE E5QUIRE REVIEW:
MUSIC THE GREENING OF MOZART by Barney Cohen.
HOLLYWOOD & VINYL STEVEN SPIELBERG'S NIGHTMARE by Paul Rudnick and Bill McKearn.
INSIDE MOVES THE BUSINESS OF SHOW BUSINESS.
MEDIA STAR BUSINESS by Richard M. Levine.
BOOKS SECONDHAND SUIT by Tobias Wolff.
OPENINGS JAMES L. CROAK.

THE NEW AMERICA:
WORK IN PROGRESS by Connie Zweig.
INDUSTRY IN SILICON VALLEY: LOOKING FOR THE HUMAN ELEMENT by Joel Kotkin.
ZAPPING THE KILLER T CELLS by Tom Ferguson.
STANDARDIZING THE SOFTWARE by Stan Miastkowski.
DUBIOUS ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS by Ron Rosenbaum.
NEW NOTES.

DEPARTMENTS:
BACKSTAGE WITH ESQUIRE: Friendship Between the Sexes.
THE SOUND AND THE FURY: Letters from Readers.
AMERICAN BEAT by Bob Greene. The Woman in the Photograph.
SPORTS CLINIC by Michael Kiefer. Art of Control.
THE ENVIRONMENT by Geoffrey Norman. The Debate Goes On.
SPORTS SCENES by Pete Dexter. Fighting the Game.

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Magazine is COMPLETE and in VERY GOOD condition. (see photo), Approx 8 1/2" X 11" Standard magazine Format. Vintage Esquire magazines are more and more sought after as time goes by, and they are getting more scarce on the market!