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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: November 2, 1968; Vol LI, No 44
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: KATHERINE HEPBURN and PETER O'TOOLE in "The Lion In Winter" (See movies). Photo courtesy Avco Embassy Pictures.

SR: IDEAS:
The End of the Two Party System, by Harvey Wheeler ... "A new system of campaign communications has replaced the old, and there is a new electoral coalition to go along with it.".
Student Power: The Rhetoric and the Possibilities, by Charles Frankel ... "No reforms can be discussed intelligently unless we take the phrases.., and ask seriously what they mean, and what assumptions are behind them.".
The Public and the Police: An Editorial.
SR: SCIENCE:
Caution on the Pill, by Louis Lasagna, M.D. ... "Is it really defensible to assure women -- as many doctors do -- that the pill has been proved as safe and harmless as water?".

SR GOES TO THE MOVIES: Arthur Knight ... "The Lion in Winter": everything to roar about. (2 page review, Cover story)

SR: BOOKS:
European Literary Scene, by Robert J. Clements.
One Thing and Another, by John K. Hutchens.

REVIEWED IN THIS ISSUE:
"The Literary Life," by Robert Phelps and Peter Deane.
Book Forum: Letters from Readers.
European Literary Scene, by Robert J. Clements.
One Thing and Another: John K. Hutchens reviews "The Rich: Are They Different?," by George G. Kirstein; "The Right People," by Stephen Birmingham, and "The Aristocrats," by Roy Perrott.
"Women in American Politics," by Martin Gruberg; "Few Are Chosen: American Women in Political Life Today," by Peggy Lamson; "Developing Woman's Potential," by Edwin C. Lewis; "Born Female," by Caroline Bird "They," by Marya Mannes (Fiction).
"Under the Boardwalk," by Norman Rosten (Fiction).
"The Crying Game," by John Braine (Fiction).
"The Birth of the Nation," by Arthur M. Schlesinger.
"Struggle Against History," by Neal D. Houghton.
Check List of New Books.

Music to My Ears: Irving Kolodin ... A Treigle-Sills "Faust"; Talvela as Recitalist.

World of Dance: Walter Terry ... Shankar -- the one called Uday -- bridges East and West; "Fanfarita": a "splendid vehicle for the dynamic, exuberant, glowering Lids Fuente.".

The Theater: Henry Hewes ... "We Bombed in New Haven"; "The Misanthrope"; "The Cocktail Party" that wasn't worth attending.

The Fine Arts: Katharine Kuh ... Appreciative Notes on the Fresco Show: "It recalls a world so contrary to our own as to become a revelation.".

Booked for Travel: Mary Wallace ... Roanoke Island: history and mystery. "Dull must be the man who is not moved.".

TV-Radio: Robert Lewis Shayon "The People Next Door" recalls the plight of Job.

SR: DEPARTMENTS:
Wit Twister No. 84.
First of the Month: Cleveland Amory.
Top of My Head: Goodman Ace.
State of Affairs: Henry Brandon ... Leningrad's "Enf ant Terrible" -- "He was not an avant-garde artist, but an avant-garde human being.".
Trade Winds: Herbert B. Mayes.
Letters to the Editor.
Classics Revisited -- LXXIII: Kenneth Rexroth ... "Bhagavad Gita": It is "above all else a manual of personal devotion to a personal deity.".
Literary Crypt.
Literary I.Q.
SR Recommends.
Kingsley Double-Crostic No. 1804.


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