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TITLE: ESQUIRE
["The Magazine for Men" -- Including all the great writers, illustrators, pictorials, vintage advertisements, fashion and more!]
ISSUE DATE: APRIL 1984; Vol. 101, No. 4
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, 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: The Esquire Summer Traveler: The Best Beaches in the World. Jumping into summer waters. The Esquire Traveler: This second semiannual travel section has tips for anyone who travels for business or pleasure. Included are trips to work in around business in exotic places, restaurants and hotels not to miss, and ways to spend a summer vacation. Cover Photograph: Gilles Tapie.

DOCUMENTARY: THE GREAT SCHOOL REFORM HoAx by George Leonard. The big plans to overhaul the nation's schools sound good, but won't work. What's needed is a fundamental reform.

HUMOR: GOD SAVE JOHN CLEESE by Laurence Shames. In England he's thought of as more than a funny man who does funny things. He's sort of a national safety valve. "Ever since his appearance in Monty Python's Flying Circus the cantankerous comic has become an outlet for the English and their National Angst." [NICE article, with FULL page photo of a Bearded Cleese, with the caption: "Cleese's Comedy could warp your mind"]

UNCONVENTIONAL WISDOM: IF "SMOKESTACK AMERICA" SHRINKS, CAN PSYCHOLOGY CURE THE DEPRESSION? by Adam Smith. Steelworkers in Johnstown are fighting back.

ESSAY: THE WASHINGTON MONOCLE by Nicholas von Hoffman. If you're anyone in Washington politics, this establishment is where you'll do your drinking, dining, and waiting.

PROFILE: ON THE TRAIL OF RAMBLIN' JACK ELLIOTT by Randy Sue Coburn. This folk singer helped popularize the music of Woody Guthrie and set the stage for Dylan, but remains an elusive figure.

IN QUOTES: THE OTHER ISRAEL by Lesley Hazleton. There's long been a gap between the Ashkenazic elite and the Sephardic majority, but now the majority is claiming its own.

MODERN ROMANCE: THE FIRST DATE RULEBOOK by Lynda Barry. Don't talk about your physical problems, don't confess your inadequacies, and don't mistake one good night for love.

THE LITERARY LIFE: WHY I LIVE WHERE I LIVE by A. Alvarez. High art and high seriousness meet in Hampstead, a pretty little village just twenty minutes from the heart of London.

THE SPORTING LIFE: POLO RIDES AGAIN by Adam Shaw. Shifting national tastes have brought polo back into favor, only now this game of kings is the game of commoners.

FICTION: ESKIMO LOVE by Max Apple. He imagined his perfect woman with high cheekbones and a face framed in fur. The real thing would've surprised him.

MAN AT HIS BEST: Smart Money: Angels Wanted; Bibliophilia: The Falcon Flies Again; First-Rate: A Little Shift in Luxury Cars; Classics: The Umbrella; The Drinking Man: Mixing It Up; The Seasoned Cook: Dining on Fish Roe;The Enlightened Traveler: Mind Over Topspin; What Every Man Should Know: Proper Papers.

THE ESQUIRE TRAVELER, SUMMER 1984:
THE AMERICAN TRAVELER: L.A. BEACH TOWNS by Charlie Haas.
THE BUSINESS TRAVELER: NEWS & ADVICE by David Reed and Jane E. Lasky.
BUSINESS & PLEASURE: ON THE TOWN ON THE JOB by David Robertson.
PACIFIC ITINERARY: SEVEN TRIPS TO WORK IN AROUND WORK by Andrea Heil.
THE ACTIVE TRAVELER: 36 WAYS TO SPEND YOUR SUMMER VACATION by Wendy Lowe and Mark Ingebretsen.
UPDATE: REVISITING PARIS by Richard Z. Chesnoff.
THE FOREIGN TRAVELER: JAMAICA by Bobbie Ann Mason.
FASHION: PRACTICAL PACKABLES by Vincent Boucher.
ROAD NOTES: GOING HOME by Max Apple.
GEAR LIGHTWEIGHTS.
OFF THE BEATEN TRACK: THE DANUBE BLUES by Alan Furst.
BOOKS: THE WELL-READ TRAVELER by Robert Tine.

THE ESQUIRE REVIEW:
MOVIES: INTRODUCING JIMMY WOODS by Lynn Hirschberg.
HOLLYWOOD & VINYL: THE AUTHOR by Paul Rudnick and Bill McKearn.
MEDIA: THE ACTOR AND THE AD by Richard M. Levine.
INSIDE MOVES: THE BUSINESS OF SHOW BUSINESS.
BOOKS: THRILLED TO DEATH by Alan Furst.
OPENINGS: CHRIS BURDEN.

THE NEW AMERICA: WORK IN PROGRESS by Connie Zweig; MARCHING (TO THE B r4K) TO THE BEAT OF A DIFFERENT DRUMMER byJackMcDonough; ROBERT BLY ON FATHERS AND SONS by Keith Thompson; BHT: THE NATURAL END TO HANGOVERS? by Ron Rosenbaum; CHECKING OUT THE PUBLIC LIBRARY by Stan Miastkowski; NEW NOTES.

DEPARTMENTS:
BACKSTAGE WITH ESQUIRE.
THE SOUND AND THE FURY.
ETHICS by Anthony Brandt.
AMERICAN BEAT by Bob Greene.
SPORTS SCENES by Pete Dexter.
SPORTS CLINIC by Barbara Kevles.
THE ENVIRONMENT by Geoffrey Norman.


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