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TITLE: NEWSWEEK magazine
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS! -- See FULL contents below!]
ISSUE DATE: August 11, 1986, Volume CVIII, No. 6
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
[Use 'Control F' to search this page. MORE MAGAZINES' exclusive detailed content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date. ] This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

TOP OF THE WEEK:
THE DRUG CRISIS: TRYING TO SAY NO. Despite all the arrests and huge drug seizures of recent months, there has been hardly a ripple in the tide of illegal drugs. Slowly, the nation is deciding to try a new approach: if we can't curb the drug supply, maybe we can cut the demand by going after users. That requires nothing less than a change in the national attitude toward drugs, but the process has already begun. As political pressure mounted in Washington, Congress started work on a tough new drug bill and Ronald Reagan moved to seize the issue by announcing his own demand-side program this week. It was more jawbone than bite, and its centerpiece was a controversial order to start drug testing on federal employees in sensitive jobs, so it was sure to be assailed from all sides--but it will probably do some good. A new NEWS-WEEK Poll shows strong public support for cracking down on users. National Affairs: Page 14.

SIMPLY DIVINE: It's a miracle no one thought of it before: a Jesus theme park, part Disneyland, part summer retreat. TV evangelist Jim Bakker is developing Heritage USA, a family entertainment center near Charlotte, N.C., with tennis, camping and weekly baptisms. For "Christ-loving people," says one follower, it's nirvana. Society: Page 46.

SOCIAL SISTERS: Once a bastion for wealthy, well-bred women, the Junior League now wants a grittier image. The prim and proper organization has taken off its white gloves to tackle such unladylike problems as adolescent pregnancy and rape. But social activism and social status often clash, creating new social problems for the league. Lifestyle: Page 42.

A MIND JAIL: For the offense of asking to leave the Soviet Union, a little-known Soviet dissident is thrown into a Moscow mental hospital, where burly orderlies and nurses forcibly inject him with drugs that blur his mind but not his spirit. Serafim Yevsyukov has not made headlines, and he doesn't fit into the neat categories of more famous Soviet dissidents. His plight is still no less poignant--and it is chillingly common. His daughter makes a painful visit to his hospital, where psychiatry serves the state. International: Page 26.

NEWSWEEK FULL LISTINGS:
National Affairs.
Saying "no" to drugs.
An interview with Reagan.
Deglamorizing drugs on film.
Questions about Rehnquist.
Lagging front runners Chicago: war on graffiti.
A dyslexic sues Boston's police scandal.
A cup of AIDS?.
International.
A jail for minds.
Philippines: can Cory handle.
dissent?.
Marcos: Honolulu has-been.
The mines of apartheid.
Father Jenco's warmest amen.
Summary justice Beirut style.
South Pacific: a Soviet move?.
A capital best seller.
The Fridge hits London.
Business.
Playing blindman's bluff.
Report card on Reaganomics.
Squaring off at Big Steel.
A chip of hope.
Japan's corporate bouncers.
Ads on albums.
Undressing for success.
Robert J. Samuelson.
Lifestyle.
Trends: No more white gloves.
Family: A day at the movies.
Sports: USFL's dark "victory.
Society.
Religion: A divine Disneyland.
News Media: Bad days at CBS.
Medicine: Giving life after death.
Justice: Roy Cohn's last fight.
Space: A telltale "uh-oh.
Environment: Acid rain's.
fingerprints.
The Arts.
Movies: The new go-go boys.
Books: Eric Ambler's years of writing dangerously.
A most uncommon census.
The last catch for the fishermen.
Sadie's slow burn.
Music: Some magic on the mesa.
Departments.
Periscope.
My Turn.
Perspectives.
Newsmakers.
Meg Greenfield.


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