Description: 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, 1972, VOLUME LV, NUMBER 43 CONDITION: RARE edition, standard magazine size, Approx 8½" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo) IN THIS ISSUE: This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 COVER: "Getting out the vote in Nashua NH., by Dan Wakefield." COVER STORIES: "On Tax Reform: Ralph Nader znd Tom Stanton, Herbert Stein, Al Capp, Michael Harrington, Ayn Rand, Stanley Surrey, and Robert Nisbet. COVER STORIES: DO OUR TAX LAWS NEED A SHAKE-UP?: A SYMPOSIUM: Our tax laws favor the Rich, and complexity makes it worse, by RALPH NADER and TOM STANTON. Money made by money is already taxed more than money made by Men, by HERBERT STEIN. What this country wants is more tax loopholes, not less, by AL CAPP. "Americans don't want so much to soak the rich as to be the rich." Ideally, we should abolish every subsidy in the Internal Revenue Code, by MICHAEL HARRINGTON. McGovern is the first to offer full-fledged statism to the American People, by AYN RAND. [This is an ORIGINAL ARTICLE for his magazine, NOT REPRINTED elsewhere!] Taxes are a moral issue, by STANLEY SURREY. Vaseline is no cure for a smallpox epidemic, by ROBERT NISBET. GETTING OUT THE VOTE IN NASHUA, N.H., BY DAN WAKEFIELD. You could almost call it a microcosm, what with Nixon headquarters in a Howard Johnson's, the manager of McGovern's office a bearded student half- afraid to visit the Polish-American Club and things like that. UP FRONT: DON CORAN'S DISASTER AREA, BY JACK STAR. If you had any remaining doubt that the welfare system needs reform, consider the plight of Dan Coran, a welfare caseworker on Chicago's South Side. How would you handle some 630 "clients"?. BUMPY COURSE FOR THE DENVER OLYMPICS, BY MILTON VIORST. "For Denver, Colorado, a City trying to remain erect through the planning stages of the 1976 Winter Olympic Games it is scheduled to host, the bumps are coming hard on each other.". THE FLOWER-CLUB HOUSE-TOUR CAPER, BY GENE SMITH. One afternoon recently 300 people trooped through author Smith's revolutionary-era house in New York State. "Someone must be in every room at every minute," he was warned. "Otherwise...Well, souvenir hunters, you know,". "IF THEY CAN PLAY HOCKEY, WE CAN MAKE VODKA", BY MICHAEL SMITH. How Canada's national dream almost turned into a nightmare. TRAVEL: STOPPING THE HIJACKER, BY ROBERT MEYERS. At a recent conference of airline security men the government told the gathering that combating hijacking would soon be the airlines' responsibility. There was a distinct feeling that a hot buck was being passed- and real doubts that the industry could handle the problem alone. THE SOCIETY: THE DOOMSDAY SYNDROME, BY JOHN MADDOX. The environmentalists, a leading British scientist charges, may be the most insidious of all plunderers of our planet. Using "a technique of calculated over- dramatization," they have deflected attention from the genuine ecological issues we face. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN RE: CALIFORNIA, BY HERBERT GOLD. When Saturday Review moved its editorial offices to San Francisco last summer, we asked Herbert Gold, one of California's leading writers, to tell us what to expect of the nation's most populous and, some say, most wondrous state. THE DEVELOPERS ARE COMING, THE - DEVELOPERS ARE COMING, BY J. ANTHONY LUKAS. The alarm is being sounded in secluded communities across the country, but perhaps nowhere with greater apprehension than on Nantucket Island, the site of a famous fictional "invasion" by Russians. SINCE GRANTSMANSHIP DOESN'T WORK, WHY NOT ROULETTE?, BY JAMES ABORT. The present system of federal money giving is neither fair nor rational, says an expert. Accordingly, we should take a tip from the Selective Service System and award federal grants on the basis of a lottery. Yes, he's really serious!. SR REVIEWS: BOOKS: Supermoney By 'Adam Smith' Reviewed by Eliot Fremont-Smith. Black Mountain: An Exploration in Community, By Martirt Duborrnan, Reviewed by Judson Jerome. The New Chastity and Other Arguments Against Women's Liberation, By Midge Doctor, Reviewed by Linda Wolf. The Clock of Columbus: The Literary Career of James Thurber, By Charles S. Holmes, Reviewed by William Hogan. Shorter Reviews. FILMS: Thanks for the Memory By Thomas Meeltan. THEATER: Off Is On By Henry Hewes. MUSIC: New Symphony By Irving Kolodin. GAMES: Wit Twister; Literary Crypt; Kingsley Double-Crostic No. 2011. LETTERS. EDITORIAL: The Anemic First Amendment, By Ronald P. Kriss. The courts and the administration have combined to weaken the constitutional guarantee of freedom of the press. PHOTOGRAPHIC AND ART CREDITS: Cover: Douglas Kirkland: pp. 6, 14, 20 illustrations by Masami Daiiogo; pp. 33, 35-36 illustrations by Doug Johnson: pp. 38-44 Douglas Kirkland: p. 46 left, UPI, right, Chase Ltd.: pp. 47-49 Wide World Photos: p. 51 Wide World Photos: p. 52 Better Books: pp. 53-57 illustrations by Lionel Kalish: pp. 58-63 James Karales; p. 70 courtesy of North Carolina Museum of History: p. 71 Jonathan Williams: p. 74 Hartford Courant.
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Location: San Diego, California
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Publication Month: November
Publication Year: 1972
Publication Frequency: Weekly
Language: English
Publication Name: Saturday Review
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Topic: Literary