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TITLE: Intellectual Digest Magazine
[RARE and interesting literary magazine!]
ISSUE DATE: March 1974; Vol. IV, No. 7
CONDITION: Magazine size: Approx 8½" 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: The Awakening of the Blue Collar Woman. Photograph by Gerald Zanetti.

Work in Progress / James Prescott: Touching. Touching is as basic as sex. Without it, children may become retarded, violent. With it, therapists can change behavior. ID interview by Barbara Boynton.

The Sundered Semites: The Israelis. The young come home to a home they have never known and find it is theirs, or isn't. By Harold Flender. From the new book The Kids Who Went to Israel.

Fresh Water. Masashi Hagiwara learned in childhood that one does not lightly offend the water god--a lesson for Americans now on trial before all the gods of nature. From Universitas / Tokyo.

Getting Back to Earth. The molecules of American society have been buffeted by exploding growth and change. We are now at uneasy peace. Exhausted. But hopeful. By Daniel P Moynihan. From the new book Coping.

The Awakening of the Blue Collar Woman. Forty million strong, she has burst out of the coffee klatch in hot pursuit of pleasure and fulfillment. By Burleigh B. Gardner. From the study The Awakening Giantess.

How To Create a Tyranny. Warning: continuing usurpation of power by the Executive is dangerous to your Constitution--and freedom By Vincent Ostrom. From the book The Intellectual Crisis in American Public Administration.

Not Making It: The Blue Collar Street People. Unlike the middle-class hippies they succeeded and are mistaken for, the new alienated generation is unequipped to stay afloat in the mainstream. By Celeste MacLeod. From The Nation.

The New Castle: Angkor Wat. In Buddhas smile a once bril-liant, now lost vision of the divine, the happy blessedness of being human. Sixth in Malachi Martin's ID series. From the forthcoming book The New Castle.

Chesterfield Smith: The Lawyers. The president of the American Bar Association suggests a kind of legal health insurance to make expensive lawyers accessible. ID interview by Jack Star.

Threescore and Forty. In three isolated cultures on three continents, people live to a ripe centenarian age. As one old Abkhazian woman observes, it is "something special in the life here." By Alexander Leaf, M.D. From Hospital Practice.

The Sundered Semites: The Egyptians. An Ameridan Jew discovers shared Semitic heritage is a wall, not a bridge to the love of an Egyptian family. By Vivian Gornick. From the new book In Search of Ali Mahmoud.

More Food. The scientific challenge is to control the breath-ing rate of plants that "waste" CO2 instead of converting it to sugar and oxygen--the stuff of food. By Arthur W Galston. From Natural History.

Energy: Supplement 1, Winds of Change. IDs pioneering energy series reprises with this rediscovered alternative: wind power. By Wilson Clark. From Smithsonian.

No Parking, Comrade! Burgeoning automobile production may be a glory of socialist progress, but to own a car is sheer bourgeois decadence By Natalia Ilyina. From Literaturnaya Gazeta / Moscow.

Marimekko / Joy. If she could change the world, Armi Ratia would make the sky purple. Instead, she paints the world of fabric with joy. ID Art Feature Text by Ellen Sweet. From Design Research.

Tear Down the Walls. We must get schoolchildren out into the community, where the learning is. Interview with Cor-nell's Urie Bronfenbrenner by Natalie Davis Spingarn. From Scholastic Teacher.

Body Image. Clothes oft proclaim the man, his status and his times. For our times, perhaps suits of armor in a Carnaby Street cut. By Ted Polhemus. From New Society / London.

Whole Grains. As Mae West said, When choosing between two evils, I always like to take the one I've never tried before:' This and more fun from the new book Whole Grains.

Newsletter/ Science.
Science Conquers All.
Newsletter/ Social Science.
The word.
Humane Letters.
Shorts/W. H. Auden.

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