Philip Morris
Philip Morris Magazine Summer 880000 the Best of America
Fields
- Type
- MAGA, MAGAZINE ARTICLE
- ENVE, ENVELOPE
- FORM, FORM
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The Philip Morris Magazine
Summer 1988
Voiume3, Number 3
The Philip Morris Magazine
Is distributed four times a year
compliments of Philip Morris U.S.A.
Frank Gannon, Editor
Owen Hartfey, Art Director
Cecilia Blount, Assoc. Art Director
David Hume Kennerly,
Director of Photography
George F. Meade,
Production Consultant
Guy L Smith, Publisher
Mary A. Taylor, Associate Publisher
Cheryl Waixel, Publication Manager
Marc Jordan, Publication
Coordinator
John R. Nelson, Jr., Circulation
Director
Michael Malik, Circulation Manager
Steven H. Weiss, Publicity Manager
Correspendemt
Senior Comtpondentt
V. Buccellato, L Glennie, J. Gillis,
0. Nelson, L Olson
Correspondents: Atlanta:
C. Johnson, K. Sass:
Battlmon: B. Pettinelli;
Boston: J. Keighley; Charlotte:
G. Bowers, H, Johnson, J. Jones:
Chicage: L. Scanlon. E. Van Oyke,
P. Wilson; Cleveland: C. Miller;
Dallas: C. Finch, W. Lott: Denver:
D. Atlord, B. Anderson, J. Gibson;
DetroR: B. Hopkins: Hartford:
A. Glaeberman; Houston: J. Love;
Juksonvlk.: G. Wren; Kansas
Cfty: J. Clary; Us Angeles:
JKuhlman. T. O'Hirok; Louisville:
0. Ison, B. Kohl; Miaml:
G. Burgess; Minneapolis:
P. Bainter: Nashvilla: R. Martindale;
New Orleans: W. Cashion;
New York: J. Boltz. M. Gold,
M, Irish. J. Kochevar.
D. Lauter. E. Moore,
A. Miller, H. Mize, J. Ramsay,
A. Roberts, G. Salvato, A. Sheridan,
S. Strausser, L. Zuke; Paterson:
P, Gregano; Philadelphia:
J. Chang, J. Chaump; Richmond;
T. Hanson. R. Mocre: St. Louis:
J. Petroski; San Diego:
C. Evarkicu; San Francisco:
S. Vasquez. T, Walls; Seattle:
J. Henry; Syracuse: J. Bartek.
Philip Morrls Magazine is published
by Philip Morris U.S.A.,
120 Park Avenue, New York,
New York 10017;
Frank E. Resnik, president.
Prepared by Gannon/Hartley, Ltd.
Editorial offices:
153 Waverly Place, 3rd Floor
New York, NY 10014
Copyrfght° 1988 Phillp Morris U.S.A.
All rights reserved.Reproduction
in whole or in part without written
permission Is prohibited. Publisher reserves
the rtght to accept or reject any editorial or
advertising matter. Publisher assumes no
responsibility for the return of unsolicited
manuscripts or art. The material Is provided
for the reader5 information and enjoyment
only. Philip Morris US.A. does not endorse or
assume liability for its contents.
Publication date: July 15, 1988
3 R1
KWue< rY4shas «,t,Krw
CONTENTS
INSIDE PMM
5
PWM RECOMMENDS
6
ATLANTA ON MY MIND, BY RON HUDSPETH
8
THE BIG EASY DOES IT, BY VANCE BOURJAILY
12
VIETNAM VETS' VOICE, BY LAURA PALMER
16
PITCHER PERFECT, BY SHEILA LUKINS
18
PM NOTEBOOK: READER SURVEY-THE WAY WE LIVE NOW
21
THE LIBERATOR OF BULGARIA, BY CHARLES KURALT
31
HUT! HIKE! HO!, BY FRANK GANNON
32
TRUE COLORS, BY JIM CALIO
37
SEASCAPE, BY JAMES DAY
40
FREEDOM AND LICENSE, BY MIKE WILKINS
44
THE GOLDEN ONE HUNDRED CIRCLE
46
ON THE COVER
,_Jofo Toeppner photographed by afichaelA, Smith.
PHILIP MORRIS MAGAZINE SUMMER 1988 3
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913A88-t1S35

INSIDE PIVI~VI
Sheila Lukins is president of The Silver Palate, a gourmet food company in
Manhattan. She founded the company in 1977 with partner Julee Rosso.
Their books, The Silver Palate Cookbook (1982) and The Silver Palate Good Times
Cookbook (1985) total over 1.5 million copies in print. In 1987, La Cuisine des
Americains, a combination of both cookbooks, became the first Americam
cookbook ever to be translated into French. The Silver Palate also has two
retail stores in Tokyo, Japan.
In 1986, Lukins was named food editor (together with Rosso) of Parade
Magazine, following Julia Child's resignation.
Vance Bourjaily is the author of 11 books, including The End of My Life (his
debut); The Violated (a New York Times review called Bourjaily "a Dostoevsky
of the generation that officially came of age in World War II"); Confessions of
a Spent Youth; The Man Who Knew Kennedy; and Brill among the Ruins.
His most recent novel is The Great Fake Book (1986). Bourjaily taught for
many years at the Writers Workshop at the University of Iowa. He currently
lives in the Crescent City and teaches at Louisiana State University.
Ron Hudspeth grew up in the Ever-
glades "wrestling alligators and play-
ing cowboys" on his father's ranch.
He emigrated to Atlanta, where he
spent eight years covering the sports
scene. Since 1987, he has put out the
cwu.uro
fA1QOM
.AST
sTRf~Tf
monthly Hudspeth Report, a 36-page
Atlanta monthly.
He has eaten barbecue and talked
racing with Jimmy Carter; and has
interviewed Billy Graham, Joe Na-
math, Miss Universe and a gorilla..
Laura Palmer, a native of Evanston, Illinois, lived and worked as a journal-
ist for two years in Saigon. In 1975, she covered the fall of Saigon, leaving on
the last day in a chopper. She is the author of Shrapnel in the Heart, a collection
of letters and poems that have been left at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
Now in its third printing, due out in paperback this fall, "It's a perspective
on the war from the people who have lost the most, but have said the least."
A passionate Chicago Cubs fan and now a resident of Manhattan, Palmer
has run the New York City Marathon twice. She is the mother of a seven-
year-old daughter, Sabrina, and is planning her second book. Her articles
have appeared in GQ and Rolling Stone.
Joan Marcus was headed for graduate studies in landscape architecture,
but then she wasn't counting on the lure of her Nikon. She began shooting in
Washington, D.C. for The Washingtonian. Freelance and corporate work, and
performance photography for regional theaters led to a contract with the
Kennedy Center in 1985.
Marcus's photographs have appeared in W, M, and WWD, among other
magazines. Her forte is black-and-white; her preferred medium is a 21/4" for-
mat camera. Her sights aren't confined to lenses, though: "I'm a wonderful
cook," she confesses. "If I weren't a photographer, I'd be a caterer."
UPpATE
Two PMM contributors have gone
Hollywood: Jim Calio, who wrote for
People magazine about the 1985 TWA
hijacking, was co-executive producer
of the recent NBC movie about the
incident, The Taking of Flight 847: The
Uli Derickson Story, which enjoyed
boffo (as they say) ratings for its time
slot. His partner, PMM Director of
Photography David Hume Kennerly,
has also just finished a two-hour TV
movie for a Vietnam series based on
his book, Shooter, about Kennerly's
stint as a photographer in Vietnam.
Russell Martin, who wrote about
cowboy Dave Appleton in our Fall
BOT
SHOT
'87 issue, has just published his first
novel, Beautiful Islands (Linden Press/
Simon & Schuster).
Elizabeth Benedict, who profiled
country singer Lacy J. Dalton in our
Fall '86 issue, has just published her
second novel, The Beginner's Book of
Dreams (Knopf).
PHILIP MORRIS MAGAZINE/SUMMER 1988 5

` `~tP[lSURE ~ ~
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~'. ~-~uments the succulent Highway. The coffee-tObie-sized ~ac., 4ttt Park i~ve: South jNew
olors, majestic landscape, and California One, The Pacific Coast Yvrk, ItV 10016. Call (212)
inguiar lifestyles to be found Nighwayis $65.00 and is Sd4-M5.
i-i 1s 11 A r. i r- i C r 0 A s T M i G i-i W ar 8 r s T r r 14 r: N W f! i: ic 4

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ATLA11
Mfl
Jogging with a popular columnist through
Atlanta-where the Democrats will name
their candidate for president.
ome put on your running-
and partying-shoes and jog
through the city with me, on
a road that runs along the
crest of Atlanta's hills.
Its name is Peachtree.
Never mind that it has no peach
trees on it.
Never mind that there are no fewer
than 29 other streets in Atlanta with
the name Peachtree in them.
Peach trees mean a lot to us Atlan-
tans. It has to do with a feeling about
our city that's not easily put into
words. Although Atlanta lies hun-
dreds of miles from the nearest ocean,
it's an island unto itself.
We'll start downtown. And we
don't have to hurry, unlike the run-
ners who turn the city into a vast
course in the annual Fourth of July
Peachtree Road Race.
BY RON HUDSPETH
PHOTOGRAPHS BY LEE CRUM
See that businessman who stops to
look down at a full-blown scarlet aza-
lea? Or an explosion of dogwood
blossoms? Without knowing exactly
why, he takes off his tie and his pace
slows . . . and slows.
We've all been snagged by Atlanta
like that.
Even when your head's up, down-
town is beautiful to behold. Sun-
topped skyscrapers mix with giant
PHILIP MORRIS MAGAZWE/SUMMER 1988 9
v
I
.
