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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: July 10, 1972; Vol. LXXX, No. 2
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

COVER: The REAL ISSUES OF '72. A Spectrum of views.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
The Real Issues of '72: What should America be thinking about in this Presidential campaign year? For this Independence Day issue, the editors of Newsweek posed this question to eight articulate Americans of varying political persuasions. The contributors to this symposium are: DANIEL P. MOYNIHAN, the former domestic-affairs counselor to President Nixon; MARY MCCARTHY, the novelist ("The Group") and critic; RICHARD GOODWIN, the onetime Kennedy-Johnson idea man; RICHARD J. WHALEN, another former Nixon aide and author of a new critique of the GOP; GLORIA STEINEM, the editor and feminist leader; IMAMU AMIRI BARAKA, the black nationalist writer and political organizer formerly known as LEROI JONES; KEVIN P. PHILLIPS, a young Republican political theoretician, and GEORGE W. BALL, former Under Secretary of State under JFK and LBJ. Their responses appear in a special section edited by National Affairs editor Edward Kosner. The essays are as diverse as their authors-a sampler of views on the public and the hidden issues of 1972. (Newsweek cover photo by Peter C. Costas-Shostal.).

CAN MCGOVERN BE STOPPED? In a bold show of power politics, a new ABM (for Anybody But McGovern) bloc within the Democratic Party voted to strip him of more than half his 271 California delegates. The gambit slowed McGovern's first-ballot bandwagon, called up unhappy memories of Chicago 1968 and set the stage for a dramatic showdown at the convention next week. With files from Hal Bruno, Thomas DeFrank, John J. Lindsay and Richard Stout and others, Senior Editor Peter Goldman describes the tense new Democratic situation.

IN RECENT AIR STRIKES, ISRAELI jets hit two Lebanese farming villages. Was it a mistake or a deliberate at- tack? Loren Jenkins examines the evidence. Page 45.

To many Americans, the idea that WESTERN EUROPE IS IN DANGER of becoming a Soviet sphere of influence seems absurd. But in Europe itself, reports Arnaud de Borchgrave, top policymakers now take that possibility very seriously. Page 41.

Fury in the ring. That's what New York saw last week when PANAMA'S ROBERTO DURAN took the world light- weight title away from Scotland's Ken Buchanan in a no-holds-barred brawl. Sports editor Pete Axthelm wrote the story. Page 84.

For beach dwellers, PETER S. PRESCOTT provides a dossier of current detective fiction. Book lovers in general should pack in their beach bags "Soundings," a collection of Prescott's reviews, just out from Coward, McCann & Geoghegan. Page 91.

WHEN A BABY CRIES, It may be signaling hunger, anger-or something far worse, such as evidence of mental retardation. Associate Editor Peter Gwynne reports on the growing use of infant crying as a diagnostic tool. Page 97.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
can McGovern be stopped?.
The Democratic platform: something for everyone.
Security at the Democratic convention.
John Mitchell quits the Nixon campaign.
The Supreme Court rules against capital punishment.
THE REAL ISSUES OF '72 (the cover).
INTERNATIONAL:
Europe: the new Soviet threat.
An interview with NATO Secretary-General Joseph Luns.
Lebanon: the innocent and the dead.
Ulster: a tale of two families.
Eastern Europe: a Communist jazz festival.
Thailand: the happy executioner.
THE WAR IN INDOCHINA: The Paris peace talks resume: the more things change.

THE CITIES: Peekekill, N.Y.. shakes the Federal money tree.
EDUCATION:
Amherst's unconventional president.
Eckerd College: an improbable marriage.
THE MEDIA:
TV goes blue-collar.
The High Court rejects journalistic immunity.
The Democrats' fund-raising telethon.
The President cracks down on Public Broadcasting.

BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Foreign exchange: the slide toward controls.
Spotlight on food prices.
Ecology: Chrysler foots the bill.
Wall Street: Casey at bat.
The economy: Agnes's toll.
Business and the blacks.
Labor: Tony Boyle goes to jail.
SPORTS:
Boxing: Roberto Duran, the ghetto champon.
Tennis: Chris Evert at Wimbledon.
Hockey: What price Bobby Hull?.
LIFE AND LEISURE: vermont: the natives vs. the outsiders.
MEDICINE:
Why babies cry.
cancer: a probe into its causes and a new detection device.
SCIENCE:
A vanishing coffee cup.
How rats resist poison.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Clem Morgello.
Paul A. Samuelson.
Stewart Alsop.

THE ARTS:
MUSIC:
The great Stravinsky week.
A summer-festival guide.
BOOKS:
Beach books: the search for a summer thriller.
Ronald Fraser's In Hiding: The Life of Manuel Cortes".


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