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TITLE: The Saturday Review of Literature
[Each Saturday Review of Literature issue covers books, arts, literature, movies, ideas, music, science, poetry and much more. Many regular features and writers, and most reviews are also essays on the subject at hand. ALL the latest books had to have an ad in The Saturday Review! ]
ISSUE DATE: January 20, 1979; Vol. 6, No. 2
CONDITION: RARE edition, standard magazine size, Approx 8oe" X 11". 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

COVER: OVERREGULATION? Industry's stuggle with government. Cover by Paul Giona.

ISSUES: Schoolyard Blues: The Decline of Public Education by Fred M. Hechinger. The public schools once represented our shared vision of the future; today they are unloved, unpaid for, and often unattended.

A SPECIAL SECTION: OVERREGULATION?:
Arsenic and Old Factories by Roger M. Williams. Federal regulators have come down hard on the Tacoma copper smelte, whose owners consider the standards prohibitively expensive. How are pollution and profitability to be balanced?.
Is Government Regulation Crippling Business? by Robert Crandall. The author, a Brookings economist, notes that the real problem with regulation may be the method: With little accountability, officials set standards recklessly and expensively.
The Experts Polled Ten major public figures, from Ralph Nader to Jack Kemp, explain their views on regulation.

PLEASURES:
Lookouts.
The Author and His Image by J. P. Donleavy As it glows, or glowers, waxes briefly, and wanes again.
Photography by Owen Edwards Lartigue, recorder of life.
Television by Karl E. Meyer Rootless mini-series.
Music to My Ears by Irving Kolodin De los Angeles's first stage Carmen.
Theater by Martin Gottfried Of mice and masters.
Travel by Horace Sutton The Bayside hillbillies.
Books Derwent May on the long and occasionally happy life of E.M. Forster; Ross Feld finds that Wilfrid Sheed knows all the moves.
Books in Brief.
Trade Winds by Walter Arnold America's reading.

Letters.
Front Runners.
Editorial by N.C. Getting serious about inflation.
Light Refractions by Thomas H. Middleton How the other half talks.
Notes From the Blue Coast by Anthony Burgess The art of the unconscious.
The Back Door by Carl Tucker Cooking our own goose.
Wit Twister No. 134; Literary Crypt No. 123; Double-Crostic No. 163.
CARTOONISTS: Clarence Brown, Don Dougherty, James I. Giddings, William Haefeli, Joseph Kohl.


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