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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: December 25, 1972; Vol LXXX, No 26
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER STORY: THE ACTIVIST: PAUL MOORE JR. is the very model of an activist 1960s churchman -- a patrician Episcopalian who marched for civil rights, picketed for peace and took his ministry to the slums of Jersey City. But now Moore has been brought into the Establishment as the Bishop of New York, his church's most prestigious and troubled post. How Moore applies the moral verve of the '60s to the intractable problems of the cooled-off '70s is symptomatic of the challenge facing progressive religious leaders. Reporters Merrill Sheils, Jane Whitmore and others interviewed the bishop's family, friends and critics. And Religion editor Kenneth L. Woodward followed Moore on his rounds for the week's cover story. (Newsweek cover photo by Lawrence Fried.)

OPPRESSED RACE: They are the most oversurveyed and undercared-for people in the world, says a doctor in Sydney bitterly. And it was once assumed that the aborigines of Australia, like the Tasmanian tiger, were doomed to extinction by the end of this century. So far, however, they have defied the prediction, and their number has actually increased nearly threefold over the last three decades. Yet, today the descendants of an ancient race remain an oppressed and ill-used minority whose plight is as desperate as any other in the world. On his first extended visit to his homeland after twelve years as a foreign correspondent, Tony Clifton made an in-depth study of the "original Australians." After traveling to reservations in the remote Outback and visiting the slums in cities, Clifton files a personal account of his country's long-neglected black citizens.

FAT FARM: The glossy Gold Door in Escondido, Calif., is the ne plus ultra of reducing salons. After a bloating four months on the political campaign trail, Newsweek's Elizabeth Peer spent a week behind the Golden Door in pursuit of her erstwhile size-8 figure. Hiking, dieting, bouncing, rolling, Peer and a sweaty crew of glamorous guests suffered through an orgy of constructive self-punishment. The result was a loss of 15 inches variously distributed on Peer's frame -- and her entertaining account of the experience.

THE SOLID-WASTE MESS: While the environmentalists have vigorously attacked air and water pollution, the equally serious problem of solid-waste disposal has been largely ignored. Now, both the government and the private sector are working to recycle some of the billions of tons of garbage that the nation throws away in a year. But so far, the economics of recycling has been discouraging. With files from Jim Bishop in Washington and bureaus across the nation, Associate Editor Michael Ruby tells the story.

TO: Our Readers.
FROM: The Editors and Staff of Newsweek.
RE: The Holiday Season.
Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Peace will be a little late.
Mr. Nixon's moveable christmas.
Mrs. Hunt's handbag.
Ambassador Moynihan.
Republicans: Bush in for Dole.
Southern U: who pulled the trigger?.
LBJ: once more to the barricades.
Warren Burger -- the advocate.
Son of "French connection".
Population: the baby bust.
INTERNATIONAL:
France: thunder on the left.
Bitter harvest in the Soviet Union.
Asia: the specter of famine.
Down Under's downtrodden.
Japan: furor over U.S. bases.
The end of Tanaka's honeymoon.
The New Delhi-Washington thaw.
SCIENCE: Apollo 17 strikes paydirt.
SPORTS: The Pittsburgh Steelers: winners at last; Don Maynard's pro pass-catching record.
THE MEDIA:
TV: "Bridget" plays it safe.
Will the real Bormann stand up?.
Scoops for a Washington reporter.
RELIGION: Activist Bishop Paul Moore Jr. (the cover).
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Controls: how phase three shapes up.
Christmas sales: very merry.
The miners' Tony Boyle is ousted.
The solid-waste mess.
West Germany: the flap at Krupp.
An airline fare-cut war?.
MEDICINE: And now, English flu; Brain surgery for strokes; Don't do it yourself.
LIFE AND LEISURE: Life on the fat farm; A hit feminist record.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Joyce Maynard.
Shana Alexander.
Paul A. Samuelson.
Clem Morgello.
Stewart Alsop.

THE ARTS:
MUSIC: Sounds from a Christmas stocking.
THEATER:
"Great God Brown": a vehement intensity.
"The Bar That Never Closes": touching.
"The Last of Mrs. Lincoln": only a nibble.
BOOKS: The best of the Christmas books.
MOVIES; A Jerry Lewis retrospective.
"The Getaway": the bank heist as myth.
"The Heartbreak Kid": fascinating.


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