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NEWSWEEK
Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS -- Exclusive MORE MAGAZINES detailed content description, below! ISSUE DATE: June 12, 1972; Vol LXXIX, No 24, 6/12/72 IN THIS ISSUE:- [Detailed contents description written EXCLUSIVELY for this listing by MORE MAGAZINES! Use 'Control F' to search this page.] * 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 cynics call it "Woodstockholm." Thirty thousand hippies, diplomats, scientists and radicals converge on the Swedish capital this week for a United Nations conference on the environment, designed to promote international cooperation in confronting earth's ecological plight and prospects. To assess the state of the big cleanup, Senior Editor Lawrence S. Martz rode herd on a major Newsweek effort. Working with files from Bruce van Voorst in Stockholm, Associate Editor Peter Gwynne analyzes the conference's prospects. Science editor George Alexander outlines America's pressing power crisis, and Associate Editor Michael Ruby -- using reports supplied by James Bishop Jr. in Washington and all of Newsweek's domestic bureaus -- describes how the U.S. is tackling the polluted environment. Frank Morgan went to Lincoln, N.H., to report the story of one factory's closing, written by Associate Editor Sandra Salmans. In opening and closing articles of the Special Report, General Editor Kenneth Auchincloss analyzes the environment movement's achievements and challenges. (GeoPhysical Globe on cover , Rand McNally & Co. Art prepared by Welbeck Studios.) HOME TO THE HILL: Richard Nixon came home from the summit last week -- and found his popularity rating soaring. With files from Washington bureau chief Mel Elfin, who covered the summit, and others, General Editor Richard Boeth assesses the trip's domestic impact. A companion story analyzes Simmons the global effects. And Washington's Henry Simmons and Lloyd Norman filed to Associate Editor Richard M. Smith on why the U.S. can retain its strategic edge under the missile treaty. THE BLACK HOPE: How much clout will black politicians really wield in Presidential 1972? A coast-to-coast reading suggests that the high hopes blacks held in early 1972 are be- ing tempered by political realities. THE LYDDA MASSACRE: In a bizarre four minutes of terror, three Japanese extremists unleashed a barrage of machine-gun fire in Tel Aviv's Lydda Airport, killing 26 people and in- juring scores more -- all in the name of the Palestinian guerrilla movement. With files from Mi- chael Elkins in Tel Aviv, Edward Behr in Paris and reports from Beirut and Tokyo, Associate Edi- tor Richard Steele tells the story of the airport massacre. A com- panion piece traces the link -- forged in North Korea -- between the Japanese terrorists and the Palestinian guerrillas. INDEX: NATIONAL AFFAIRS: The summit's domestic afterglow. The new u.s-soviet relationship. Henry Kissinger's reflections on Moscow. The nuclear balance sheet. Is George McGovern backpedaling?. Black power slips into low. The Democrats start drafting a platform. Battling the boom in cocaine smuggling. Skyjacking tripleheader. SPECIAL REPORT: Environment: the big cleanup. The world view in Stockholm. vietnam's war-ravaged ecology. Can we fuel a clean world?. How the U.S. is tackling pollution. The price of cleaning up a mill town. Where the planet goes from here. INTERNATIONAL: The Lydda massacre: murder by proxy. Germany's Baader.Meinhof gang. Japan's pro-Arab guerrillas. vietnam: what's Hanoi planning next?. North Korea: Kim II Sung's new line. Hints of hope in Northern Ireland. SPORTS: Black stars on the U.S. fencing team. Bright spots in horse racing's dim scene. Hank Aaron hits his 648th. RELIGION: A church for singles; Should a priest be a civil servant?. MEDICINE: Acupuncture U.S. style; Saving liver patients with perfusion. THE MEDIA: The biting wit of political cartoonist Pat Oliphant. Naming the "enemy" in Vietnam. EDUCATION: Microsociety: a way to dignify learning; Chicago's Spertus College -- a lesson in survival. BUSINESS AND FINANCE: Iraq's nationalization of oil. Autos: tough times for the imports. A new high price for gold. Controls: picking on the little guy. And now, the U.S. postique. U.S. tourists feel devaluation's pinch. LIFE AND LEISURE: The boom in pickup trucks; Scouting's new look. THE COLUMNISTS: Clem Morgello. Milton Friedman. Stewart Alsop. THE ARTS: MOVIES: Louis Malle's "Phantom India". "Joe Egg": hope and despair. BOOKS: Roderic Gorney's "The Human Agenda". "The Confessions of a Child of the Century," by Thomas Rogers. Two volumes of poetry by Vietnam veterans. ART: Chicago art's monsters and totems. THEATER: John Whiting's "Conditions of Agreement". * NOTE: OUR 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. 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Standard sized magazine, Approx 8½" X 11". COMPLETE and in VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)
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