Esquire
Issue Date:
APRIL 1983; Volume 99, No. 4
"The Magazine for Men" -- Including all the great writers, illustrators, pictorials, vintage advertisements, fashion and more -- Exclusive MORE MAGAZINES detailed content description, below! IN THIS ISSUE:- This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. Any unauthorized use is strictly prohibited. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 COVER: The Man who would leap Twenty-Nine feet. CARL LEWIS and the longest jump. FEATURES: ESSAY: HOW TO THINK ABOUT MONEY IN CHANGING TIMES by Paul Hawken ... The economic future holds both good times and hard. The value of traditional investments will be erratic. Some tips on the art of saving. THE SPORTING LIFE: THE LONGEST JUMP by Charles Siebert ... Carl Lewis is double trouble in track and field. Already he has outrun and outjumped his competition, and he's only twenty-one. He'll improve. FIRST PERSON: THE SECRET OPERATION: by David Morse ... A vasectomy is a simple procedure, but an emotionally complex one. At thirty-seven, this father of three ended his reproductive days for good. THE LITERARY LIFE: DO YOU HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO BECOME A NOVELIST? by John Gardner ... Guilt, shame, psychological wounds help. Self-sufficiency and financial independence are good too. Then years of writing and maybe one day. FASHION: DISCOVERING JAPAN by Vincent Boucher ... Their clothes reflect a mix of the traditional and the modern. From Japan come four designers heralded for their approaches to fashion. WASHINGTON BRIEFING: THOUGHTS ON THE '84 PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN by Alan Baron ... Voters look for a candidate to correct the flaws of the previous President. Reagan's negatives aren't enough to defeat him; the economy is. FICTION: FRANK OF OREGON by Todd McEwen ... It's all about alienation: those who have nothingknow it; those who have something don't realize it yet. All it takes is a bump on the head. MAN AT HIS BEST: Smart Money: The Magic of Mantle; Good Thinking: How to Find a Lawyer; Classics: The Button-down Shirt; First-Rate: Zero-to- Sixty -- Fast; Special Places: Home on the Road; The Seasoned Cook: A Not-So-Common Perch; A Guiding Hand: Where to Live; The Enlightened Traveler: Tracking Whales; The Right Stuff: Printing Your Own; The Drinking Man: Respectable Sweets. THE ESQUIRE REVIEW: MOVIES: THE HEADY HEYDAY OF A HOLLYWOOD LAWYER by Paul Attanasio Ken Ziffren: A new deal-maker. VIDEO: WHO OWNS THE AIR? by Peter W. Kaplan Broadcasters want deregulation of the airwaves; it's their Holy Grail. MUSIC: THE SEDATING OF ROCK 'N' ROLL RADIO by Michael Goldberg The radio doctor tells stations what to play. ALBUMS: THE CRY GUYS by Charlie Haas Misery is what country does best. Sadly, it's been in short supply in country music lately. BOOKS: SEASON OF SPIES by Martin Cruz Smith Stories from two masters of espionage: John Le Carre and Paul Theroux. THE NEW AMERICA: WIND: THE NEXT MuLTIBILLION-DOLLAR BUSINESS UyJessica Maxwell; A NEW GENERATION OF ROBOTS IN THE WORKPLACE by David Breskin; TONIC AID; THE ALTERNATIVE BIG MAC by Ron Rosenbaum; POLITICS: DO-IT-YOURSELF GOVERNMENT by Mark Satin; NEW NOTES. DEPARTMENTS: BACKSTAGE WITH ESQUIRE The Mr. Lewis in Us All. THE SOUND AND THE FURY Letters from Readers. UNCONVENTIONAL WISDOM by Adam Smith ... Surviving on the Rim. AMERICAN BEAT by Bob Greene ... After the Last Knockout. ETHICS by Anthony Brandt ... Good Guys Make Great Enemies. SPORTS CLINIC by John Slote ... The Opponent. OUTDOORS by Geoffrey Norman ... Power Plays. HIGH LIFE by Taki ... The Eurotrash Invasion. Cover Photograph -- Jean Moss. This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. Any unauthorized use is strictly prohibited. 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Magazine is COMPLETE and in VERY GOOD + condition (see photo), Approx 8 1/2" X 11" Standard magazine Format. Vintage Esquire magazines are more and more sought after as time goes by, and they are getting more scarce on the market!
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