Saturday Evening POST
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ISSUE DATE:
April 11 1964; Vol 237 No 14, 4/11/64
IN THIS ISSUE:-
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COVER: IKE rips into the Democrats. The cover portrait of former President Eisenhower was taken at his Palm Springs, Calif., home fy contributing photographer Lawrence J. Schiller.
ARTICLES:
TUESDAY PAST, TUESDAY PRESENT . . . by Richard Warren Lewis. "Once Hollywood's enfant terrible, TUESDAY WELD is working hard to erase the oddball reputation she used to court." [VERY nice feature article with PHOTOS, and quotes.]
THELONIUS MONK: High priest of jazz . . . by Leuis L Lapham. "His onstage antics have been called goofy, and his music has been labeled far-out, but having survived 20 years of neglect, pianist Thelonius Sphere Monk finally has gained recognition as one of the dominant jazz figures of our age." [NICE feature article, with photos of him with family, and playing (the piano is reflected in his sunglasses), quotes!]
Stop pampering gifted children (Speaking Out) . . . by Bruno Bettelheim.
Affairs of state . . . by Stewart Alsop.
The sky is falling . . . by Trevor Arwbrister.
Pass Go and retire . . . by Roy Bongartz.
The boy who survived Auschwitz . . . by Ernst Papanek with Edward Linn.
The fighting Yankee of Seville . . . by Robert Daley.
Fair trade or foul, the battle rages again! . . . by Martin Mayer.
All the fit that's news to print . . . by Gad Greene.
Why I am a Republican . . . by Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Just 12 years ago Dwight D. Eisenhower was called upon to make the greatest
personal decision of his career. Democrats and Republicans were both wooing
his attentions, and the national elections were only months away. Before he
could even think of a future for himself in politics, he had to determine which
of the parties more closely suited his own beliefs. Now, for the first time, the
former President sums up those beliefs -- abidIng faith in the individual, limited
powers for government, freedom and equality, national unity and world responsibility -- and tells how they guided his choice then. And he explains what they
mean to him in the context of current affairs. "For the administration of our
Government," he warns, "is not a political game but a serious human business."
FICTION: The pilgrim project (Part 1 of 2) by Hank Searles.
DEPARTMENTS: Letters; Post scripts; Hazel; Editorial.
THE AUTHORS. Trevor Armbrister, who reported last month on the riots in Panama, describes a different kind of crisis in neighboring Costa Rica. During his visit to the Parker Brothers factory in Salem, Mass, Roy Bongartz acquired some little steel balls called Scoots. "They're supposed to be for relaxing,' he explains, "but they've become a compulsion instead. Now I just sit around all day nervously rattling these things in my hand."., . Freelance writer Richard Warren Lewis interrupted his interviews with actress Tuesday Weld to play tennis with her on two Wednesdays, a Thursday and a Monday. "I would have won," he insists, "but she wouldn't keep score".. Ernst Papanek, a leading Austrian politician and educator before World War II who later devoted himself to the rescue and rehabilitation of children fleeing Hitler, now teaches at Queens College in New York; Edward Linn is a contributing writer. . . New York Times sports correspondent Robert Daiey, an art collector by avocation, was naturally fascinated with matador John Fulton's artistic career. "He's a painter, mainly of bulls and bullfighting, and he works in bull's blood instead of oil. The effect is quite striking, and the pictures sell as fast as he can make them." . . . Martin Mayer is the author of Wall Street: Men and Money . . . While visiting with Thelonious Monk, contributing writer Lewis H. Lapham was invited to play at the jazz musician's piano. "He listened to my Beethoven from the bathroom, insisting he could hear it better that way. And all he said when I had finished was, 'Yeah, I heard you."'. . . Gaei Greene, author of Sex and the College Girl, developed such an inferiority complex while scanning the pages of Women's Wear Daily that she has opened four new charge accounts and is replacing her entire wardrobe.
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