September 1968

In This Issue
Explore the September 1968 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
Britain
Aimez-Vous Brahmins?
Pink Badge of Courage
The Volunteer Fireman
Shoot-Up in Detroit
The Peripatetic Reviewer
The Revolt of the Composers
Bartók: 44 Duos for Violins
Britten: The Burning Fiery Furnace
Régine Crespin Recital
George M!
Hair
Ives: Symphony No. 1; Three Places in New England
Janáček: Choral and Orchestral Works
Mahler: Das Klagende Lied
Mozart: La Betulia Likerata, K. 118
Mozart: The Complete String Quintets
Stereo Strings
Schoenberg: Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte; Webern: String Quartet, Opus 28; Stravinsky: Concertino for String Quartet, Three Pieces for String Quartet
The Art of Lawrence Tibbett
Voices of the Middle Ages
The Rise of Anthropological Theory
Black Rage
Famine on the Wind
The Permissible Lie
The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test and the Pump House Gang
Fong and the Indians
The Blacking Factory and Pennsylvania Gothic
The Book of Pearls
Scotland
The Art of Archaic Greece
The American Heritage Pictorial History of the Presidents and the Presidency of the United States
1897 Sears Roebuck Catalogue
The Autobiography of a Runaway Slave
Boxiganga
South Carolina
Singapore
Washington
Faculty Power
The economic problems of American colleges and universities, though immense, are soluble. “The heart of the matter today is political,” says the president of the Ford Foundation, and the requirement is nothing less than “the reshaping of the political process'’ in higher education. A graduate of Yale, Mr. Bundy taught government and was dean of the faculty of arts and sciences at Harvard before serving Presidents Kennedy and Johnson in the White House.
Rape in the Engineering Building
