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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 22, 1972; VOLUME LV, NUMBER 30
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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SR/ UP FRONT:
"I Didn't Bring Anyone Here, and I Can't Send Anybody Home" By Kenneth Lamott -- Author Lamott, who once taught at San Quentin, talked
to four prison guards about life en the right side of the bars.
Getting Busted in Good Company By Milton Viorst -- If you have to be jailed for protesting the war in Vietnam, why not do it with Candy
Bergen, Dr. Spock, and George Plimpton?
The Atom Bomb Still Takes Its Toll By Claude Lewis -- More than a quarter century has passed since the A-bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.
A hospital set up to care for its victims has never stopped receiving new patients.
The Fischer Defense By Ralph Blumenthal -- Shortly before he flew off to play for the world chess championship, Bobby Fischer surfaced in
Queens. Our writer was invited in for an exclusive chat.
EDITORIAL: The Guardians of Virtue Mount a New Offensive -- By Kenneth B. McCormick and W. L. Smith.
EDUCATION:
Myths, Money, and Catholic Schools -- Most of the nation's 11,000 Catholic schools are struggling to stay alive, and many have already closed
down. A personal account of how much the schools have changed -- and a provocative proposal to change them even more.
When the Apple Hit the Teacher's Toupee, and Other Stories -- By Caryl Rivers.
The Politics of Aid -- and a Proposat tar Reform -- By Louis B. Gary and K. C. Cole.
Head Start in the Grand Canyon -- Two sensitive teachers use unconventional methods with Havasupai children to ease the transition from
the reservation to the outside world.
No Silver Spoon for Higher Education By Eric Wentworth -- The new higher education bill promises far more federal aid to college students
than to the institutions they attend.
The Free School Nonmovement By Peter Mann -- Why is the free school movement splintered? The author, himself a critic of the public
school system, candidly discusses the different approaches of the reformers and their inability to find a common language.
What the Coleman Reanalysis Didn't Tell Us By James B. Guthrie -- Educational research is a valuable tool.
But when unsubstantiated
findings are used as a basis for national policy, the results can be disastrous.
When Blue-Collar Students Go to College By Leonard Kriegel -- The unfashionable children of middle- and lower-income families deserve
better than they receive from their urban universities.
REVIEWS:
BOOKS:
George S. Kaufman: An Intimate Portrait
By Howard Teichmann;
People in a Diary: A Memoir
By S. N. Behiman;
Reviewed by Eliot Fremont-Smith.
Enemies, A Love Story
By Isaac Bashevis Singer;
Reviewed by Geoffrey Wolff.
Berkeley Journal: Jesus and the Street
People -- A Firsthand Report
By Clay Ford;
The Jesus People: Old-Time Religion in
the Age of Aquarius
By Ronald M. Enroth, Edward E. Ericson, Jr.,
and C. Breckinridge Peters;
A Time to Be Born
By Brian Vachon;
Photographs by Jack and Betty Cheetham;
The Jesus Trip: Advent of the Jesus Freaks
By Lowell 0. Streiker;
Reviewed by David Poling.
Seen Through Our Eyes
Edited by Michael Gecan;
Reviewed by J. B. O'Hara.
THEATER: A Princely Rain
By Henry Hewes.
FILMS: Portnoy Has His Complaint,
I Have Mine
By Arthur Knight.
MUSIC: Nielsen in Minneapolis;
Boito in Cincinnati
By Irving Kolodin.
DANCE: Ballet: On the Civic Level
By Walter Terry.
PHOENIX NEST: The Crackowe
and Others,
Edited by Martin Levin.
GAMES:
Your Literary I.Q.
Wit Twister.
Literary Crypt.
Kingsley Double-Crostic No. 1998.
PHOTOGRAPHIC AND ART CREDITS:
Cover: Doug Johnson; Steve Myers;
Jerry McDonald; Doug Johnson;
John R. Hamilton ;
illustration by Robert Grossman;
Barry Kiperman; Brown Brothers;
CARTOON CREDIT: Ed Fisher.
______
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