Saturday Evening POST
ISSUE DATE: September 15 1962; Volume 235, Number 32 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. Part of the fun of owning a sports car stems from coping with minor inconveniences such as having to put up your top in a sudden rainstorm. Artist JOHN FALTER approached this "fun" with feeling. Once he owned a sports car himself -- a 1947 English Singer Drop-Head Coupe with Self-Canceling Trafficators. It wasn't waterproof. ARTICLES: Last Chance for the Moon (Speaking Out) ... By Sen. Clinton P. Anderson. My Life With Juvenile Gangs (Part 1 of 3) ... By Vincent Riccio as told to Bill Slocum. Star Without an Image ... By Lois Dickert. "Outspoken, unpretentious JOANNE WOODWARD manages to hide herself behind a hundred make-believe roles." [NICE 2 page article, full page photo.] Ghana:Neutral on the Left ... By Smith Hempstone. Taming the Colorado ... By Jack Goodman. Strong Boy of the Twins ... By Shirley Povich. Stylish Entertaining at Home ... By Florence Pritchett Smith. Living High on $6500 a Year ... By Darrell Huff. The Decline and Fall of Friendship ... By Morton M. Hunt. Nelson Rockefeller (Does he have a future with the GOP?) ... By Peter Maas. [In-depth article, with multiple photos!] FICTION: The Ebony Bed ... By Frank Farnham. Illustrated by Joe Kaufman. After the Kids Have Gone ... By Steve McNeil. George Porter. The Riot Maker ... By Paul Jones. Illustrated by Douglas Crockwell. DEPARTMENTS: Letters. Post Scripts. Hazel. Editorials. KID GANGS. "Juvenile delinquency," warns Vincent Riccio, "is getting worse. The record is clear. Nobody is actually helping these kids." Riccio tried. For five tension-ridden years this muscular ex- boxer shared the shattered lives of kids who used narcotics, stole and fought gang battles in a teeming Booklyn slum. Today, as a physical education instructor, he has more time to spend with his wife and two children. But he's never been able to sever his emotional ties to the kids in the city slums. His collaborator, Manhattan-born Bill Slocum, is a columnist for the New York Daily Mirror. OTHER BY-LINES. Lois Dickert is a free-lance writer who covers the film colony from her home in Los Angeles. . . . Smith Hempstone, who probes Ghana's leftward list, has spent six of his thirty- three years in Africa. Researching this article, he "talked with tribal chiefs in the remote North, ate stewed rat (it tastes rather like squirrel) and slept in abandoned castles built by 16th century mariners." . . . As a Salt Lake City newsman, Jack Goodman has made several trips to record progress at Glen Canyon Dam.... Washington Post sports columnist Shirley Povich first got to know Harmon Killebrew when the youngster joined the Senators in 1954, and has retained a keen interest in the slugger's career ever since. . . . Florence Pritchett Smith is the wife of a former U.S. ambassador to Cuba.... Author of several books on probability (among them: How To Lie With Statistics) dollar- stretcher Darrell Huff insists that the hard-to- believe figures he gives on page 60 are accurate... THE DECLiNE AND FALL OF FRIENDSHIP, says Morton Hunt, "represents a small effort to do some original thinking. It shouldn't upset my real friends." . . . An up-to-date acquaintance with modern art was the ice-breaker when contributing editor Peter Maas set out to profile New York's fast-moving governor. "He relaxed," Maas recalls, "the moment I mentioned the subject." The interview flowed smoothly from Picasso into politics. * 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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