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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: February 15, 1969 ; Vol. LII, No. 7
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: Revolt in the High Schools, by Diane Divoky. The High School independent Press Service: Secondary students go underground (See Education). Cover photo by David Fenton.

SR: IDEAS:
Beyond the Nation-State, by Lester B. Pearson. "The establishment of our international rule of law cannot depend on force. We have to do it by agreement. . . . We may have only years, perhaps, not centuries, in which to succeed.".
Light in the Tunnel of Hunger:
An Editorial.

SR: TRAVEL:
STUDENT TRAVEL, 1969:
"Our Student Contributors may not be familiar with the interior of a five-star hotel or a first class jet cabin, but no doubt they could tell Fielding a thing or two about travel.".
Summer on the Continental Campus, by Janet Mandelstam.
Thirty Thousand Innocents Abroad, by Wallace Roberts.
Marching to a Different Tourist Beat.
U.S. Odyssey on Raft, Bike, and Thumb.
Treks and the Single Girl.
Pubbing and Clubbing.
The End of the Great Tradition, by Peter Schrag.
The Price of Diversity, by John C. Hoy.

SR: EDUCATION:
The Men Who Govern the Academy, by James Cass.
Letters to the Education Editor.
Revolt in the High Schools: The Way It's Going to Be, by Diane Divoky. "As they seek to express their opinions, the students discover... they have no right to express an opinion at all.".
Big City Schools VI: St. Louis: City With the Blues, by Patricia Jansen Doyle.

SR: BOOKS -- REVIEWS:
"The Tragedy of Lyndon Johnson," by Eric F. Goldman: An essay review by Quincy Howe.
Book Review Editor: ROCHELLE GIBSON.
SR's Check List of the Week's New Books.
"The Tragedy of Lyndon Johnson," by Eric F. Goldman.
Book Forum: Letters from Readers.
Literary Horizons: Granville Hicks reviews "The Inland Island," by Josephine Johnson.
The Publishing Scene: David Dempsey reports on nominations for immortality.
"Harrison Gray Otis: The Urbane Federalist," by Samuel Eliot Morison.
"The Notorious Lady Essex," by Edward Le Comte.
"Richer Than All His Tribe," by Nicholas Monsar rat (Fiction).
"Himmo: King of Jerusalem," by Yoram Kaniuk (Fiction).
Pick of the Paperbacks, by Rollene W. Saal.
"The Strength of by McGeorge Bundy.
"Aspects of E. M. Forster: Essays and Recollections Written for His Ninetieth Birthday," edited by Oliver Stallybrass; "E. M. Forster's Other Kingdom," by Denis Godfrey.
Literary Horizons, by Granville Hicks.
The Publishing Scene, by David Dempsey.
Pick of the Paperbacks, by Rollene W. Saal.

SR: DEPARTMENTS:
Phoenix Nest: Martin Levin.
Literary Crypt.
Top of My Head: Goodman Ace.
Manner of Speaking: John Ciardi.
Chess Corner: Al Horowitz.
State of Affairs: Henry Brandon.
Trade Winds: Jerome Beatty, Jr.
Wit Twister No. 99.
The Theater: Henry Hewes. Theater Transplant: "Red, White and Maddox.".
Letters to the Editor.
TV-Radio: Robert Lewis Shayon WBZ Radio's "T-Group 15.".
Your Literary I.Q.
SR Goes to the Movies: Hollis Alpert. "If. . ." and "Decline and Fall of a Bird Watcher.".
Music to My Ears: Irving Kolodin. A Young Conductor from Bulgaria.
World of Dance: Walter Terry. Lawrence Rhodes--"a classical dancer of prowess and polish"; the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater--"powerful and beautiful.".
Kingsley Double.Crostic No. 1819.


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