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1966 / November | View All Issues |

November 1966

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Untitled

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Letters

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Letters

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The easy chair

18, 23-24, 26, 28, 30, 33-34 PDF

Boston’s bristly Mr. Logue

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How it is

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Apologies to an unbeliever

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How it is

36, 38-39 PDF

How it is

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After hours

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Toscanini and the others

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After hours

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Philistine-of-the-month

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Article

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How good are the junior colleges?

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Article

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Joe Pool of HUAC

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McCarthy in the round

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O beautiful for spacious skies

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Article

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Yankee lawyers in Mississippi courts

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Poetry

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Country house

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Article

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Comments on the human condition

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Article

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New York’s best new theater group?

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Article

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Scientists vs. animal lovers

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The conflict that never ends

Poetry

110 PDF

Drought in London

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The fight at Monkey

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Washington insight

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The view from Africa

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The new books

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America appreciated, especially New England

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Two on stage

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The Constitution as hero

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The vision of Norman O. Brown

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Books in brief

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“Wakin’ up in an empty bed”

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[Coming in Harper's]

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Coming in Harper’s

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[Editor's Note]
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“During the early 1990s, farmers throughout the Great Plains began to notice a decline in their wells. Irrigation systems from the Dakotas to Texas dipped, and, in some places, have been abandoned entirely.”
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Years of consideration preceding the inclusion of the word “phat” in Random House’s 1996 Compact Unabridged Dictionary:

4

Scientists created crash helmets that stink when cracked and fruit flies to whom blue light smells delicious.

In Belize, a construction company bulldozed a 2,300-year-old Mayan temple to make road fill.

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