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TITLE: Saturday Evening POST [ 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! * ]

ISSUE DATE:
February 8, 1964; 237th Year, Issue No 5, 2/8/64
CONDITION: LARGE magazine, Approx 10½" X 13½". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
[Use 'Control F' to search this page. MORE MAGAZINES' exclusive detailed 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. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

THE COVER portrait of Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson was taken in the yellow Oval Room of the White House by free-lance photographer Mark Kauffman.

FICTION:
The whole cherry pie . . . by JOHN O'HARA. Illustrated by David Passalacqua.
A good day for Miss Tulle . . . by William Murray. Illustrated.
Sidney on skis . . . by Jeff Brown. Illustrated by Des Asmussen.

ARTICLES:
PAULA PRENTISS: actress with an appetite . . . by Gene Grove. ("Born with a perfect face for the camera, driven by a boundless appetite and a fierce temper, an ex-collegian has emerged as Hollywood's brightest young comedienne.") [NICE 2 page article, 2 large photos!]

Berlin: Let's stop courting disaster (Speaking Out) . . . by Sen. Claiborne Pell.
Affairs of state . . . by Stewart Alsop.
Have pawn, will travel . . . by Lewis H. Lapham. [Double page article about BOBBY FISCHER, with photos!]
Our new First Lady Bird . . . by Nan Robertson.
A flashy lawyer for Oswald's killer . . . by Richard Warren Lewis.
Basketball's Irish czar . . . by Terry Smilh.
Art from nobody knows where . . . by William Jerome Gill.
A tale of fish and chips . . . by John Skow.
A crazy way to fly . . . by Pete Hamill.
The quandary of Henry Cabot Lodge . . . by Stanley Karnow.

SPECIAL REPORT: Television ratings on trial by Bard Lindeman and Alan Patureau. Every day 1,100 Nielsen families across the nation take part In what is probably the most closely watched numbers game ever played. They are cogs in the broadcasting ratings systems, which report the country's TV viewing habits. Post contributor Bard Lindeman and Newsday TV writer Alan Patureau examine the inside workings of the TV and radio surveys which have been challenged by congressional investigators. The authors tell why the congressmen made their charges; what some members of the TV samples are really like, and how the broadcasters still use the ratings to decide what programs you will see.

THE AUTHORS. Lewis H. Lapham, a contributing writer who enjoys a challenging game of chess, insists that playing with champion Bobby Fischer is 'about the same as sparring with Sonny Liston, except that at least with Liston you can keep your ego intact". . .A member of The New York Times Washington bureau. Nan Robertson found Lady Bird Johnson so interested in people she meets that the interviewing situation was almost reversed . . . . Reporter Richard Warren Lewis profiles the con- troversial career of Melvin Belli, the flamboyant lawyer chosen to defend Jack Ruby . . . . Contributing writer John Skow feels that his own disastrous experience qualifies him to write about poker; "I've been losing," he says, since I was nine, and nine was a long time ago." . . . Former newspaperman William Jerome Gill spent two weeks in Mexico with the people who supply the world market with contraband pre.Columbian art. He returned to the U.S. with a smuggler who was hustling a load of the illicit goods across the border. . . . Terry Sipith, a New York Herald Tribune staffer, is the son of sports columnist Red Smith; Terry worked for the Stamford (Conn.)Advocatewhen Walter Ke inedy was mayor of the city. - . . Pete Hamill, who de- scribes man's continuing efforts to fly like a bird, is afree-lancewriterwhose only flying experience has been in four-motor planes . . . . Gene Grove, who tells of the Hollywood successes of angry young comedienne Paula Prentiss, is a New York Post reporter.


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