1 407 résultats
ill., br. Una serie di episodi e aneddoti inediti tratti dai ricordi personali dell'autore mostrano un lato sconosciuto della vita di Lucio Dalla. Tra la giovinezza bolognese e la vita nomade dell'artista affermato, Carlo Poma dipinge a tinte vivaci il carattere scherzoso, ma sempre autentico, dell'amico d'infanzia. L'autore utilizza la poesia per commentare gli episodi brevemente narrati e che la sua mente rievoca con un ordine dettato dalle emozioni. Egli utilizza un linguaggio originale e ricco che attinge da diversi stili, quali il dialetto bolognese e l'antica lingua volgare italiana. Foto e lettere inedite testimoniano il legame che ha unito i due uomini per quasi mezzo secolo e che daranno al lettore la sensazione di conoscere da vicino il grande Lucio.
ill., br.
br. Lucia Dalla era un antropologo che viveva in mezzo alla gente, la osservava, la immagazzinava e poi la raccontava nelle sue canzoni. Lo ha fatto sempre in maniera spontanea, al contempo da giullare e da poeta: a Lucio, infatti, piaceva stare tra le persone comuni, vivendo intensamente i luoghi dove esse cuciono i fili delle proprie vite, quegli spartiti unici e irripetibili che lui sapeva mettere in musica, emozionando e divertendo. Il libro ci porta in esplorazione dentro il mondo sfaccettato del cantautore bolognese, fatto di attaccamento alle terre della sua infanzia e della sua maturità, di profonda sensibilità umana, mai venuta meno nonostante il successo, e instancabile sperimentazione artistica tra palchi, teatri e mari del Sud. Un ritratto inedito e intimo di un musicista, ricordato con affetto, che ha segnato la storia della canzone italiana.
ill., br. L'infanzia di Dori e quella di "Bicio", che mostra come la storia sia sempre stata una sola, anche quando loro non si conoscevano. Il primo incontro, a un premio musicale vinto da entrambi, durante il quale non smettevano di guardarsi. La nascita della figlia Luvi e la quotidianità campestre in Gallura. I mesi del sequestro, in cui a sostenerli fu proprio quel legame "fermo, limpido e accecante" che sarebbe continuato oltre il tempo. Un tempo sempre scandito dalla magia degli incontri: da Marco Ferreri a Lucio Battisti, da Cesare Zavattini a Fernanda Pivano. Tra bambine che chiacchierano con Arturo Toscanini e bambini che bevono cognac sotto i bombardamenti. Tra cuccioli di tigre allevati in salotto e un viaggio in nave con un toro limousine. Scritto assieme agli sceneggiatori di "Principe libero", il film TV sul cantautore, "Lui, io, noi" è una storia privata che s'intreccia con quella pubblica di chi, da sessant'anni, ascolta De André. Soprattutto è il racconto intimo, commovente, a tratti perfino buffo, di un grande amore.
96 pages, including thirteen pages of great color photos of the band, its members, and two past members. Published in the same year as the tragic plane crash which took the life of lead singer and founding member Ronnie Van Zant. Includes piano sheet music, guitar chords [not guitar tabs] and lyrics for these classic songs: Blue Yodel ("T" for Texas); Call Me The Breeze; Cry for the Bad Man; Don't Ask Me No Questions; Double Trouble; Free Bird; Gimme Back My Bullets; Gimme Three Steps; I Ain't The One; I Need You; On the Hunt; Saturday Night Special; Searching; Simple Man; Sweet Home Alabama; The Ballad of Curtis Loew; The Needle and the Spoon; Travellin' Man; Tuesday's Gone; Whiskey Rock-A-Roller; Working for MCA. Average wear. Binding intact. Faint scribble to botton of front cover. A wonderful vintage memento of this awesome southern rock band. Book
ill., br. Bob Dylan incarna da più di mezzo secolo lo spirito dell'America - e per suo tramite lo spirito del mondo. I suoi testi, fusi con le musiche cui hanno dato anima e senso, hanno generato canzoni che sono diventate le fondamenta di un sogno collettivo. I tre volumi di "Lyrics" raccolgono tutta la produzione poetica di questa voce inimitabile e inconfondibile, organizzandola cronologicamente e arricchendola di una traduzione e un apparato di note, entrambi a cura di Alessandro Carrera, che non hanno eguali per finezza e capillarità nel panorama mondiale.
br. Poliedrico e caleidoscopico come un albero dai cento fiori diversi, Gianfranco Manfredi ha scritto un libro sulla storia del big bang di quaranta anni fa. "Ma chi ha detto che non c'è" è uno zibaldone di riflessioni concetti che esplora le bellezze e angoli più oscuri di un anno converso, in un confronto serrato con vicende avvenute. Sono affreschi letterari che traggono ispirazione dalla sua famosa canzone, scritti in una prospettiva storica senza mai limitare lo guardo ai cliché o alle ideologie, senza perdere l'ironia e la tenerezza che caratterizzano l'intera opera di Manfredi. Sono percorsi inediti alla ricerca di ciò che si presume non ci sia, ma che in realtà sta nel fondo dei tuoi occhi, sulla punta delle labbra... Ma anche dentro la nube tossica di Seveso o nel funerale di Mao, nell'esplosione del punk o nella testa del reverendo Jim Jones, nelle contraddizioni tra la guerriglia urbana, l'ala creativa del movimento e la galassia della musica alt(r)a. Sta nella provocazione, nel lavoro della talpa, nel femminismo e in Porci con le ali, nella nascita dell'impero del porno e nella febbre del sabato sera. Sta nella battaglia antinucleare e nel blackout di New York, nelle radio libere, in Sandokan, in Ken Parker di Berardi-Milazzo e nel Pentothal di Andrea Pazienza. Sta in tanti di questi odori, forme e colori diversi riuniti in una radice comune da una stesura autoriale.
br. L'attitudine che ognuno di noi possiede all'ascolto della musica, l'interesse che ci muove ad ascoltare un artista piuttosto che un altro, la disponibilità ad ascoltare quella canzone e non quell'altra, può essere considerato, con ottime ragioni, come l'espressione manifesta di un proprio tratto di personalità, in altre parole il modo singolare con cui si compie un'azione nel tempo, in modo del tutto indipendente dai contesti e dalle situazioni della propria vita. In questo senso ascoltare musica accompagna il processo o meglio i processi che, step by step, contribuiscono alla formazione del nostro mondo interno. Scegliere di ascoltare musica in un luogo pubblico o da soli, in compagnia di alcuni amici per lungo tempo oppure per un lasso di tempo breve, scegliere un determinato genere musicale da approfondire, mette di solito in evidenza come la nostra mente, il nostro corpo e il nostro vissuto diventino insieme una specie di «cassa di risonanza» più o meno ricca di significati. Gli autori, in un percorso che tocca psicologia, fede e canzoni che hanno segnato la storia, hanno immaginato la musica come un esercizio spirituale, per scendere in profondità laddove sembra inimmaginabile, per consentirci di immergerci all'interno di un nucleo intimo e prezioso che prende il nome di inconscio. "Il tentativo di questo testo è fornire uno sguardo diverso facendolo diventare uno sguardo benedicente, cioè capace di saper coglierne il bene. Sono certo che molti faranno tesoro di quanto qui è contenuto e spero vivamente che si lascino contagiare dal metodo e dalla passione che ne traspare" (Don Luigi Maria Epicoco).
Mm 105x180 Collana "La chitarra, il pianoforte e il potere". Brossura editoriale, 189 pagine, copertina illustrata a colori con leggeri segni del tempo. Interventi di Paolo Hutter, Giovanna Marini, Gianfranco Manfredi, Stefano Segre. Molte armonizzazioni, 7 autobiografie, 105 testi di canzoni. In appendice "I motivi di una polemica per nulla interessante" un diverbio con Bruno Lauzi: Buono Stato. Spedizione entro 24 ore dalla conferma dell'ordine.
48 pages. Features: Nice colour ad for International Trucks inside front cover features a pop (beverage) truck at work; Supita (fiction); Design for a new Dominion - The Rowell-Sirois Report is charged with significance for every individual Canadina living today and for his children and his grandchildren after him - with photo of the Dominion-Provincial Relations Committee; Sam Small's Better Half (fiction); Gerard Cote - Canadian Marathon Champ - article with photo; Twilight for Neville Chamberlain; Check Rein (fiction); Treasure in Iron - article and photos of the Steep Rock Mine near Atikokan, Ontario; Murder Off Stage (fiction); A Century in Steam - the story of the first transatlantic steamship to dock at a Canadian port on June 1st, 1840; Nice full-page ad for RCA Victor audio products; Gifts for the Bride; Full-page Dodge truck ad. Front cover nearly loose. Back cover badly chipped and loose. Above-average wear. A worthy reference copy. Book
72 pages. Features: Great Volvo photo ad shows six Volvos stacked on top of another!; Two-page Mutual Life shows photos of dozens of their top sales agents from across Canada; Colour photo Canadian Club ad shows Mr. and Mrs. Tony Parkinson firing darts at elephants in Kenya; Alden Nowlan's Canada; What Went Wrong for the Class of '71? - feature article by Barbara Frum with statements from six university valedictorians from across Canada; Three men from three generations talk to Adrienne Clarkson on love, sex, adultery and what marriage is all about; The Guess Who - Canada's richest and raunchiest rock band - article with large photo of band on stage; The radicalization of Robert Lemieux - lawyer for the FLQ; The West is Ready to Revolt - John Barr and Owen Anderson state their case for separatism; The Table Talk of Marshall McLuhan - article by Peter C. Newman with nice photo of McLuhan; It's No Longer Possible to be an Indian - Chief John Henry describes the impact of white man's ways; Paris Smiles Again; Nice full-page CBC Radio/TV colour photo ad shows a group of famous Canadian athletes wearing their gear - including Mel Profit of the Toronto Argonauts and boxer Clyde Gray; and more. Average wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. A sound copy of this great vintage issue. Book
76 pages. Features: Politics in Khaki - The Inside of the Canadian Army High Command - McNaughton and Crerar stepped on Monty's toes - here's the record, revealed for the first time; Childhood's No. 1 Enemy - rheumatic fever; Battle of the Peacemakers - meeting at Paris; Witch of Endor - fiction; Kate Holliday gets a Hollywood makeup makeover; It rained poison after Bikini Islands' fifth atom bomb test - with photo; Hard rock miners; Honor of the Company - fiction; Flivvers in the Sky - fly your own plane; The Good Catch - fiction; Golfing Cop - Henry Martell - article with photo; Hell's Gate is open - upgrades allow Fraser River salmon to get further upstream - article with three photos; Nice ad for Waterman's pens with cheerleader theme; Fantastic full-page colour photo ad for Good Year tires features Mountie helping young lady in mountain valley; Superb Caterpillar bulldozer ad - "Boss of the Bulldozers"; Nice Fleet Aircraft ad; Nice colour photo Studebaker ad inside back cover; Fantastic painted Coke ad on back cover features partying group of young people at table; and more. Above-average wear. Covers present but detached. A worthy vintage copy. Book
48 pages. Features: Rave Reviews for Ed Koch; Quebecois Flock to the beaches of the south coast of Maine; Fairy-Tale Wedding of Charles, the Prince of Wales, to Diana Spencer - nice photos; Abolhassan Bani-Sadr; VIA Rail drops 15 Runs; World Record Swim for Alex Baumann; Strikes at Algoma Steel and Stelco; Straight-speaking Laura Sabia; B.C. Hatchery Accident results in many blind fish; Saskatoon aims to become a prairie Tivoli Gardens; Shorts - Fashion; Stopping the Suicide Cycle; Rock Music - with picture of Michael Anthony of Van Halen and Loverboy. Unmarked. Above-average wear. A worthy reference copy. Book
Features: Great colour Sweet Caps (Caporal) ad inside front cover; Editorial - how Gulf Oil vetoed Ottawa's pipeline plans; Gorgeous colour-photo two-page ad for General Motors four-door hard tops, Oldsmobile Ninety-Eight De Luxe Holiday Sedan and Buick Special 4-door Riviera; The Unknown Man who bought the Globe and Mail - who's R. Howard Webster? - sparked by Howard's financial wizardry, the five Webster brothers mushroomed the fur and fuel empire their father, Lorne Webster, left into a private trust that virtually blankets North America in the fields of Fuel, Stevedoring, Tankers, Hardware, The Imperial Trust, and more; Why I'm out of TV - Choir leader Dr. Leslie Bell bowed out when the singers became dancers and he was made to act; The Race to sell new cars - the market has been turned topsy-turvy by the hottest competition since the horseless carriage replaced the buggy - great black and white photos!; The blonde who leaps from the clouds - RCAF Para-nurse F/O Marion Macdonald; How they'll blow up Ripple Rock - for decades this underwater monster in the Strait of Georgia has been wrecking ships and drowning sailors; When a Canadian Ruled Oregon - Towering John McLoughlin from Riviere du Loup was king of Columbia - the Oregon and Washington of today; The doctors in overalls who've changed your life - the research done by Ontario Veterinary College; That Yellow Prairie Sky - Robert Kroetsch; Is there Really an Abominable Snowman?, by Willy Ley; Nostalgic full-page colour photo ad for Toro (fortieth anniversary) mowers; Colour Visking Weiners ad; nice colour full-page ad for the all-new 1955 Plymouth; Nice colour full-page ad for the Oldsmobile 88-98. Average wear. Binding sound. Address label on front. A quality copy. Book
88 pages. Features: Lovely cover illustration of Perce Rock, Gaspe Peninsula, by Gabriel Bastien; Nice colour photo ad for Labatt's India pale ale inside front cover; Football star and Canadian Negro Rollie Miles writes about racial prejudice; Nice black and white photo full-page ad for Hammond organs; Let's Keep A-Bombs Out of Canada, by Ross Munro; Craven "A" ad claims its straight cigarette ash indicates it provides 'a superior, far gentler smoke'(!); Full-page 2-colour ad for Dominion Royal Tires/Dominion Rubber; Colour photo ad for F.T.D.; Is Air Travel Obsolete?, by Ken Lefolii; Montreal's Les Panseurs gourmet club - article with colour photos; The Artist Who Draws on Everything - George Feyer - article with photo; Will Cash Ever Come Back? (after the advent of credit cards), by Alan Phillips; Corporal James N. Kirk, RCAF Returns to his Dutch Wartime Hide-Out - article with photos; Chief James Mackey Tells You How to Deal With the Criminals You Might Meet - rapists, burglars, robbers, pickpockets; Arthur Lismer teaches a new generation of Canadian artists; Feature photo-illustrated article on Larry Mann by June Callwood; Bartender Charlie McCauley gives his Inside Observations on the habits and humors of his customers - and their ladies; Caterpillar equipment ad discusses Highway 7 construction and shows highway 401 construction; The Seven Careers of Eileen Stubbs; Interesting ad for the Victor Champion adding machine - priced at $199.50; 2/3 page black and white photo ad for The Watchmakers of Switzerland features Foster Hewitt; Nice colour ad for Cinci beer inside back cover; Colour-photo ad for Coke on back cover shows couple under raincoat on park bench. Please note: Missing pages 65-66 which included an ad for the Pontiac Parisienne Vista Sport Sedan and part of the bartender article. Unmarked with moderate wear. A nice vintage copy. [Loc'n: Bern. Showr.] Magazine
68 pages. Features: Editorial - Our TV's Hamstrung Before it Starts; Nice 1952 Monarch car ad; Who is to Blame for the Foot-and-Mouth Disease Epidemic in the Regina Area? - article with photos; The Beautiful Black-and-White Pinto - story by Elizabeth Ann Cooper, illustrated by Jack Bush; The Hotel with the Elegant Air - Manoir Richelieu - article with photos of this hotel on the St. Lawrence at Murray Bay/La Malbaie in Quebec; I Was a Prisoner of the Chinese Reds - Bonus-length feature article with photos of Dr. A. Stewart Allen, a veteran Canadian miissionary who saw friends turn into foes as the poison of communism crept through the soul of a nation he served for 21 years; Sir James Douglas, The Mulatto King of B.C. - a Maclean's Flashback The Courting of Jenny - story by L. Johanne Stemo, illustrated by Bruce Johnson; Hard Rock Miner - Canadians like Dusty Miller blast out one seventh of the world's gols - article with photos; Mickey Spillane's Giving Murder a Bad Name - interview of the famous writer with photos; Nice vintage centerfold ad for Frigidaire refrigerators; O'Keefe's Brewing Company colour ad honouring the Governor General's Horse Guards; Vintage colour-photo ads for the Sunbeam Mixmaster and Sunbeam toaster; Nice Sweet Caps ad; Sisman Scampers shoe ad; Man and His Mate - cartoon by Peter Whalley; Outstanding two-page black and white Buick ad with huge illustration of a 1952 model; Nice Coke ad on back cover shows empty bottles and scattered caps. Unmarked with moderate wear. A quality copy. Book
84 pages. Features: John Gerald Benson - Banana Doctor; China's handmade "Red Flag" luxury auto - only 400 exist; Mistaseni Rock is blown to bits behind the future site of the Gardiner Dam; The Caribbean - our sunny new frontier; Canadians in the Caribbean - they've found their own personal paradise; The pleasures of paradise in the Caribbean; Dalton Camp - the man who finally belled the cat; Big-Money Cattle - Holsteins have been taken over by the jet set; Comeback for the one-room school?; Could India Feed Us?; The Lonely death of Charlie Wenjack; Edna - where are you?; The Eccentric oracle of Barrett's Landing, Nova Scotia; Full-page Volvo car ad; Canadiana - Gerald Stevens' column; Great full-page colour photo ad for the '67 Buick Skylark; Wonderful colour ad for Smirnoff Vodka featuring Zsa-Zsa Gabor wearing lots of diamonds. Unmarked with somewhat above-average external wear. A worthy vintage copy. Magazine
Contents: Commodore 64 computer ad inside front cover; Legacy of massacre at Sabra and Shatila camps; Can we Afford Public Enterprise, by Dian Cohen; Trudeau delivers ultimatum - greedy wage and salary demands not to be tolerated; Rene Levesque in Paris with Mitterand; Ottawa and Alberta sign energy pact; Western Canada Concept (WCC) in tatters - leader Gordon Kesler sent packing; Italy's search for stability; Poland - dealing with the Vatican; Debategate; Arafat wins a respite; War in Chad; Expos and Blue Jays in first place - feature article; Minor league baseball in Canada; Leo Rautins goes to the NBA; TD Bank ventures toward discount brokerage; Belzberg's First City Trust takes over Pocklington's Fidelity Trust Co.; Simpson's Sears fined $1 million over diamond promotion; Japan in the 21st century, by Peter C. Newman; Growing Canadian AIDS alarm; Legal Heroin in Holland?; Pain of the Triathalon; Women inch toward equality in the workplace; Phil Edmonston and the squeeze on lemon cars; Proposals for dealing with illegals in Canada; Newfoundland's Wonderful Grand Band offers a raunchy combination of satire, slapstick and rock; The annual Stampede Art Auction in Calgary; Alden Nowlan - obituary. Unmarked with moderate wear. A sound copy. Book
64 pages. Features: The Rothschilds' fabulous stake in Canada - very rare 6-page article by Peter C. Newman, with photos; What you don't need to know about rock 'n roll - "it works on man's emotions like the music of the heathen in Africa"; Just look at the old ice-creem parlor now - George Dawson's drive-in can have twelve thousand people drop in on a Sunday; The Great Cross-Canada hike - five people walked from Halifax to Vancouver - here's the footrace that stirred all Canada back in 1921; The alarming truth about Konrad Adenauer - we call him a friend but this Grand Old Man of Germany is really a threat to pro-Western policy; When Every woman looked like Regina Lee - Blance Howard discusses the Liberal stranglehold on Ottawa; How to handle your kids in the holidays; The miracle that saved our son's mind - Frank Barkey's 'perfect baby' was on the dim edge of consciousness, his body wracked by convulsions, his brain a shattered blank - this is the story of that ordeal. Interesting ad inside back cover shows iron lungs with Caterpillar backup power. Somewhat above-average wear. Please note that page 5/6 is missing. It appears to have contained the London letter by Beverley Baxter. Fantastic colour ad for the 1956 Buick on page 10. Nice colour Coke ad on back cover. Bit of writing atop back cover. Magazine
Contents: Pittston battles for New Brunswick refinery in Eastport; Explosive student woes in France; Can we trust our spies?, by Barbara Amiel; Joe Clark searching for second ballot support; Robert Kaplan under attack for his new CSIS; Dave Barrett bows out leaving no heir; Militant Nova Scotia lobster fishermen; The trial of Gilles Gregoire; Inside Canada's Prisons - cover story with photos; Texas Instruments PC ad; British national election campaign; Scandal in Somalia; Congress approves the MX missile; Deadly new phase of warfare in South Africa; Canadian shipyards fighting to survive on government contracts; On the Nissan Assembly Line in Japan, by Peter C. Newman; NHL faces anti-trust challenge after refusing to allow the sale of the St. Louis Blues to a Saskatoon group - Bill Hunter; Commodore 64 computer ad; Into the tomb of HMS Breadalbane - interesting underwater photos; Bruce Allen - the most successful manager in the history of Canadian rock; Fotheringham on the Hitler diaries hoax. Unmarked. Average wear. A sound copy. Book
Over one inch thick. Some of the many topics include: Beirut Hostages; American Protectionism; Sting; Closing the Levesque Era; Air India Flight 182 is blown up; Peter Loughheed's Legacy; Office Politics; Jenilee Harrison; Judy Chicago; Paul Desmarais (?) stalks Southam Inc.; Forty Years after Hiroshima; Nagasaki then and now; Fighting the fires of Summer; Boris Becker wins Wimbledon; Tina Turner; Reagan's surgery; Tears are not enough - starvation in Africa - Live Aid; Prairie Drought; Moves to buy Gulf Canada; South Africa Under Seige - the world debates sanctions; Bryan Adams - Superstar; Rock Hudson and AIDS; Toyota announces plans for Canadian plant; Debating Star Wars; Whale Watching; New Terror of AIDS; Paul Reichmann and his brothers buy Gulf Canada; Recovery in Tibet; The Race to Dominate the Arctic - the Polar Sea in Canada's north; Pierre Marc Johnson; Maple Leaf coins gain in popularity vs. the Krugerrand; Apartheid inferno in South Africa; Two-day Major League Baseball Strike; The Crisis of Canada's Water; Mulroney's first visit to B.C.; Year of the Dragon - Movie by Michael Cimino; The Takeover Frenzy; Botha's defiant stand; Cover photo of The Boss - Bruce Springsteen; Mulroney Cabinet Shuffle; War in Afghanistan; Pressure on Canada's wheat industry; Hard days for Canada's Navy; Special Report on Mulroney's Second Year; Pia Zadora; South Africa - a nation on the brink; Beer Battle; Quebec's garish crime press; Free Trade - climax to a historic debate; Swedes prepare to elect a new government; Canada's rapidly vanishing wilderness; Agnes of God - film; Joshua - Canada's costliest movie; Travels of Joseph Savimbi in Angola; Collapse of the Canadian Commercial Bank; Marcel Masse; Cover Photo - The Blue Jays race to the World Series; Mexico's week of death; The Tainted Tuna Scandal; TV Shows; Fishing Treasures of the Bow River. Light wear. Firmly bound. Former library copy with usual markings. Book
Features: "Europe Won't Go Communist"; Funny Business - The Comic Strip Industry; Built-In Glasses - Contact Lenses; Beverage Room - Alcohol Controversy in Ontario; Ah Nuts! - Meet George Corsan of Islington, Ontario who, at age 88, operates the Echo Valley Nut Farm; London Letter - Farce at Belsen; Washington News; Ottawa Debates Tariffs; Homes To Rent, American Style - An account of how the U.S. has tackled the problem of low-rental housing; Big Iron - The Steep Rock Iron Mine near Atikokan; and more. Short Stories: I'm the Girl; It Helps to Cry; Dream Acres. Ads include: A fascinating one-page ad by the bankers of Canada featuring a U-boat with black flag raised; One-page Imperial Oil ad entitled "The Story of a [oil well] Failure"; Aunt Jemima; Frigidaire; Peposident tooth paste with Irium; Canada Dry (Christmas moif); Longines watches; Eveready batteries ad features photo of Saskatchewan-born soprano Marguerite Gendron; Stanfield's Unshrinkable Underwear; Arrid ad features photo of Hollywood star Jean Parker; Seagram ad encourages investors to hold on to Victory Bonds; Two-page Maclean's subscription ad; Gruen watches (inside back cover); Community Silverplate (back cover). 68 pages. Unmarked with average wear. A quality copy of this historic vintage issue. Book
84 pages. Features: Nice colour ad for GWG womens' slacks inside front cover; Nostalgic full-page colour ad for GE fridges; Brief write-ups and photos of two very successful Canadians - prospector Franc. Joubin who discovered Uranium at Blind River, and Claude Bissell who will soon become the U of T's youngest ever president; Full-page Royal Bank of Canada promotes their savings and personal chequing accounts; Photo of British Rock 'N' Roll King Tommy Steele; Fantastic colour photo full-page ad for the 1958 Chrysler Windsor; Is There a Drug to Cure Cancer?; The Eisenhower Tragedy - the president is a broken man and the west is leaderless; James Couzens of Chatham - The Canadian Behind Henry Ford - article with photos; Why They Won't Publish Your Song; I Married a Wrestler - by Leah Layton, wife of Lord Athol Layton - article with photos; The Best Fishing Hole in B.C.- short story; Franc. R. Joubin and Dr. Claude Bissell offer their views on what should be done about the education crisis; Are Our Children Growing Up Too Fast?; Don Harron and his losing battle to sidestep stardom - article with six photos; Nice full-page colour ad for Labatt's Pilsener beer; Colour centerfold ad for Canadian Pacific Air, Sea and Land travel services; Superb full-page colour ad for the 1958 Chevrolet's features a black convertible with red interior - what sets this ad apart is the black background - awesome!; CNR rail travel ad; Nice Coke ad on back cover shows a Bermuda waterfront scene; and more. Average wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. A sound vintage copy. Book
92 pages. Features: Glorious cover illustration by John Little of wedding scene on St. Urbain St. in old Montreal; Editorial in favour of banning atomic tests until their harm is known; One-page International (Harvester) Construction Equipment ad features St. Lawrence Seaway construction and the 24-ton Payhauler used to move rock; Communism, too, bears seeds of freedom; J.B. Priestly's Canadian play sizzles, fizzles; Nice one-page Matinee cigarette ad features illustration of fashionable couples at yacht club; Federal Election - why should we vote for you?; Will Harry Ferguson Revolutionize the Car Industry Too? - he did it to farming with a pint-sized tractor that even Henry Ford marveled at, and now he's designed a new car the world's been waiting for; The Wonderful World of French-Canadian TV - article with great colour photos; The Shy Baroness of Brokerage - Muriel Sprague Richardson of James Richardson and Sons Limited; Look Now, Horseman... - Novelette; The Embattled Ringmaster of Fighting Words - photo-illustrated article on Nathan Cohen who, when he isn't inciting guests on his TV panel to mayhem is committing it himself as Canada's toughest drama critic; John D. Hayes runs 127 Laura Secord chocolate shops and 401 Fanny Farmer chocolate shops in the U.S. - and he's almost blind - article with nice photo; Nostalgic centrefold federal election ad for the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada features one-page black and white photo portrait of John Diefenbaker; Nice one-page colour ad for the Pontiac Laurentian (white convertible); One-page ad for the Polaroid Land Camera; Hugh Maclennan's most memorable meal - a Greak feast on a ruined roast; One-page ad for Trans-Canada Airlines features illustrations of their DC-8, Vanguard and Viscount planes; One-page election ad for the federal Liberal party features photo of Louis St. Laurent; Nostalgic Oldsmobile ad features colour photo of man leaning on hood of red car; O'Keefe ad features colour photo of man in armour riding horse in front of a CF-100 fighter jet; Nice colour ad for Black Label Beer features "Mabel"; Great colour GWG ad inside back cover features various denim and other garments; Back cover Coke ad features illustration of sailboat social scene; and more. Moderate wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. A sound copy of this wonderful vintage issue. Magazine