Saturday Evening POST
ISSUE DATE:
June 15 1963; VOL 236, NO 23, 6/15/63
Own a piece of history, fascinating to read! The POST is famous for its great illustrators (on the cover and inside!) -- each issue also features articles, stories by famous authors, photographs, and great vintage advertisements! -- Exclusive MORE MAGAZINES detailed content description, below! * MORE Saturday Evening Posts HERE! IN THIS ISSUE:- [Detailed contents description written EXCLUSIVELY for this listing by MORE MAGAZINES! Use 'Control F' to search this page.] * This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 THE COVER photograph by John Launois shows a cardiac-surgery team performing an open-heart operation to repair a constricted aorta. ARTICLES: JEAN SEBERG's Cinderella Career . . . By Pete Hamill. "After a hazardous trek that has included nine movies, one shattered marriage and some of the worst reviews of our time, a modern Cinderella has arrived." [Article, nice full page photo!] Are We Too Peaceful in Space? (Speaking Out) . . . By Sen. Howard W Cannon. Martin Luther King, Apostle of Crisis . . . By Reese Cleghorn. Greece: The Storms Ahead . . . Photographs by Constantine Manos. The American Doctor: End of a Legend . . . By Evan Hill. What Ever Happened to American Cooking? . . . By Eleanor Perenyi. The Last Days of Rogers Hornsby . . . By Bill Surface. Is There Any Hope for Haiti? . . . By Trevor Armbrister. FICTION: The Sweet Forever . . . By Miriam Rugel. Illustrated by David Passalacqua. A Suit Like New . . . By Robert Fontaine. Illustrated by Arnold Roth. The Beautiful Travelers . . . By Roy Bongartz. Illustrated by Roy Bongartz. DEPARTMENTS: Letters; Post Scripts; Hazel; Editorials. BLOOD in Haitian streets is traditional, for the Caribbean nation's 159-year history is a story of recurrent violence. Dictator Francois Duvalier keeps the tradition alive, but lately this tradition has been making it increasingly difficult for Duvalier to keep alive himself. (An estimated 40 percent of the national budget is used to pay for Duvalier's personal protection.) Recently associate editor Trevor Armbrister spent two weeks in Duvalier's festering island domain. As he traveled about, even when accompanied by a top Duvalier aide, there was sometimes unnerving harassment from the Tonton Macoutes, the dictator's ragtag corps of "bogeyman" irregulars. ("Death to thewhites," yelled one, pointing at Armbrister and Post photographer Lynn Pelham. Another, fingering his two-footmachete, gazed menacingly at the reporter and said cryptically, "Tomorrow.") Although five American newsmen were expelled from Haiti during Armbrister's stay, he managed to bring back a significant report from a troubled nation poised at revolution but held in check by incredible brutality and political murder. This week he tells of the misery of a country which cannot sink much lower and still exist as a nation, and which is skidding steadily downhill under a willful tyrant's constant oppression. OTHER BYLINES. Reese Cleghorn, an editorial writer for the Atlanta Journal, first met Martin Luther King in 1949 when they were both students at Atlanta colleges. When he saw King next in 1956 the integration leader was already making good on his plan "to see Negroes fill the jails of the South." . . . Pete Hamill, co-winner (with Post contributing editor Lewis Lapham) of the 1962 Meyer Berger Award for distinguished journalism, is a free-lance writer based in New York . . . . Photographer Constantine Manos, born in South Carolina to Greek parents, presents a sensitive portrait of his ancestral land . . . . Evan Hill, who writes of the virtual disappearance of the general practitioner in America, is himself the patient of a family doctor in whom Hill has "utmost faith and confidence." In preparing his article, Hill interviewed scores of physicians who were uniformly "concerned about their own profession -- and not just talking, but doing something about it." . . . Eleanor Perenyi spent much of her childhood in exotic areas of the world as the daughter of a U.S. naval officer, but she remains a staunch fan of American cooking . . . . Free-lancer Bill Surface, who collaborated with Rogers Hornsby on the late Rajah's autobiography, is also the author of Freedom Bridge, a book about Chinese refugees that was published last month. * NOTE: OUR content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date. This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Oversized magazine, Approx 10" X 13". COMPLETE and in VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)
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