Home | New | About Us | Categories | Policy | Links
Time Passages Nostalgia Company
Ron Toth, Jr., Proprietor
72 Charles Street
Rochester, New Hampshire 03867-3413
Phone: 1-603-335-2062
Email: ron.toth@timepassagesnostalgia.com
 
Search for:  
Select from:  
Show:  at once pictures only 
previous page
 Found 161 items 
next page
 0139 ... m355 ... sny19811102 sny19811207 sny19820104 sny19820118 sny19820322 ... sny19930118
New Yorker Magazine - January 4, 1982 - Cover by Edward Koren
Item #sny19820104
Add this item to your shopping cart
Price: $24.99 
$6 shipping & handling
For Sale
Click here now for this limited time offer
Check Out With PayPalSee Our Store Policy

My items on eBay

Any group of items being offered as a lot must be sold as a lot.
Gift Certificate
Unique & Fun Nostalgic Items
Quality Packing And
Postal Insurance
Quantity Discount Prices
(when available)
Fast Dependable Service
We have an extensive inventory that is not yet on our web site. If there is something you are looking for and did not find, please send us your wish list.
It's never too late to
have a happy childhood!
An Ever Changing Inventory
 
New Yorker Magazine - January 4, 1982 - Cover by Edward Koren
New Yorker Magazine   Back-Issue
The picture shows the cover of this complete copy of the January 4, 1982 edition of the New Yorker Magazine. This vintage magazine has been carefully stored flat, high and dry and is in excellent, fresh condition. It has a bright, colorful cover.


Cover artist: Edward Koren
Publication Date: January 4, 1982
Page Count: 92 pages
In this issue:

The Current Cinema FLAG NAG by Pauline Kael.

The Current Cinema by Pauline Kael. Review of "My Dinner with Andre." This film creates the illusion that we are simply listening in on the dinnertime conversation of the playwright Wallace Shawn and the former avant-garde theatre director Andre Gregory...

The Talk of the Town Receptions by Wallace White. Talk story about attending a number of receptions. At the Whitney Museum about 900 people turned out for the opening of a show called "Cerainic Sculpture: Six Artists". At Books & Co., on Madison Ave. at 74th St., about 75 people gathered to examine a new, illustrated edition of "Moby...

Fiction The Stuttgart Folders by Ian Frazier. Parody of the idea that any book about Nazi Germany is fascinating. Opens with four quotes from historical novels which depict leaders staring out of windows. A fifth quote states that, according to its author, "To the Eagle's Nest" has the most commercial opening line of any novel ever publishedN...

The Talk of the Town The Return of Mr. S. by Lillian Ross. Stanley Talk story about travelling via Executive Coach, a new bus service which makes the New York-to-Boston and Boston-to-New York run daily in four hours each way, door to door. That is, if your doors happen to be the Essex House on Central Park South, and...

The Theatre ENERGY by Brendan Gill.

Fiction Refugees by Elizabeth Tallent. Alfred Upsinger is a poet who teaches at the University of Colorado at Boulder. For nearly a year now, he has been writing to an African poet named Zinbanti. Upsinger, the chairman of the English Department, hopes that Zinbanti will accept the Telemann Endowment, which involves a series of lectures...

Comment by Jonathan Schell. Several weeks ago, before martial law was declared in Poland, a French opinion-polling organization managed to ask some six hundred Poles what sort of party they would vote into office if free elections were held in their country. The most successful party was a Christian Democratic Party, which got...

A Reporter in Washington FIRST YEAR by Elizabeth Drew. REPORTER IN WASHINGTON about the Reagan Administration. In December, Senator Alan Simpson, a conservative Wyoming Republican, told his constituents, "The Honeymoon is officially over for the President.O In the Administration's early months, Republicans in Congress who had misgivings about the President's economic programNand there were manyNwere co perative. One told...

Musical Events Blazing, Radiant by Andrew Porter.

Our Far-Flung Correspondents J.D. ROSS'S VISION by Bill Barich. OUR FAR-FLUNG CORRESPONDENTS about the writer's visit to the Skagit River, in northwestern Washington, where the city of Seattle was considering building a new dam. Gives history of the Skagit River hydroelectric project, which is largely the vision of James Delmage Ross, who died in 1939. Ross was the...

Books Naipul by V. S. Pritchett.

Poetry Song of the Navigator Five Poems by Herberto Padilla. My invisible amulet against thirteen at table...

Click on image to zoom.
New Yorker Magazine - January 4, 1982 - Cover by Edward Koren


Powered by Nose The Hamster (0.09,1)
Thu, Nov 14, 2024 at 15:18:37 [ 599 0.06 0.08]
 
© 1997-2024, Time Passages Nostalgia Company / Ron Toth, Jr., All rights reserved