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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:
October 2, 1972; Vol LXXX, No 14
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:
COSELL: At home, with Malamud; at the game, with Waters This Is Howard Cosell: "Isn't it absolutely incredible what wondrous verbiage flows from my mouth?" asks sportscaster Howard CoselI. Wondrous indeed. Despite his hangdog face, cantankerous nature and nasal staccato, CoselI has become one of television's hottest celebrities. Adding controversy and humor to the bland old formula of sports broadcasting, he is a key element in the success of ABC's pro football coverage on Monday nights -- the show that changed the nation's viewing habits. To get the full flavor of the man, General Editor Harry F. Waters rode Cosell's turbulent wake in New York and at the season's Monday-night opener in Bloomington, Minn. From his own observations and reports by Assistant Editor Phyllis Malamud, Waters profiles the man millions love to hate. (Newsweek cover photo by Lawrence Fried.).
How will the youth vote go this fall? A special Newsweek Poll conducted by The Gallup Organization and coast-to-coast Newsweek reporting produce some discouraging tidings for George McGovern. At this stage, Richard Nixon holds the lead among newly enfranchised 18- to 24-year-olds -- and the young seem as bored as their elders with the campaign. Associate Editor David M. Alpern wrote the story.
The New Arab Terror: Letter-Bombs: Arab commandos gave a macabre new twist to international terrorism last week -- the letter-bomb. Working with files from correspondents, Associate Editor Richard Steele describes the success of the guerrillas -- spearheaded by the Black September group -- at keeping the Middle East in turmoil and sending shock waves into Europe and the United States.
Will the Pope Retire?: Pope Paul VI turns 75 this week -- one of the most closely watched papal birthdays in the history of the Roman Catholic Church. In an effort to infuse new blood into the hierarchy, the Pope has asked all bishops to submit their resignations at 75, and now the big question at the Vatican is whether the same principle will apply to the Bishop of Rome himself. Jane Whitmore reports from Rome how church authorities are divided on whether Pope Paul will -- or should -- step aside.
The NORTH SEA OIL Bonanza: Oil finds in the North Sea are proving far richer than expected, promising to supply much of Europe's needs. Martin Kasindorf reported the benefits for Britain, the biggest beneficiary, and the mixed blessings for Scotland and the wind-swept Shetlands. From his files and other reports, Associate Editor David Pauly wrote the story.
INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
President Nixon's wooing of Democratic
voters.
An Administration investigates itself.
The Agriculture Department and the
Soviet grain deal.
The First Lady on the campaign trail.
Nixon's edge in "the youth vote": a News-
week Poll.
Defeat for Allard Lowenstein.
The candidates' TV spits.
Jay Rockefeller's West Virginia campaign.
An FBI veteran retires under fire.
The rodeo: a link with the frontier.
INTERNATIONAL:
Bombs in the mail: new Arab terror tactic.
chutzpah behind the lines in Lebanon.
Martial law in the Philippines.
Premier Tanaka's missien to Peking.
The invasion of Uganda.
A prisoner in Uganda tells his story.
Willy Brandt loses to win.
The editor of Foreign Affairs steps down.
THE WAR IN INDOCHINA:
Zero death toll for the U.S.
The freed POWs as pawns.
Why Lavelle says he did it.
SPORTS:
Canada's hockey humiliation in Moscow;
Muhammad Ali's show of respect.
THE CITIES:
Recruiting black cops in Detroit;
Pollution and crumbling landmarks.
THE MEDIA:
Howard Cosell, the sportscaster you love
to hate (the cover).
Job changes at The New York Times.
RELIGION:
Will the Pope retire?.
SCIENCE:
New Jersey opts for offshore A-power.
The deadly "red tide" off New England.
Sex change and status in the fish world.
MEDICINE:
The aversion diet;
The 130 year-old man;
A new study of female orgasm.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
A Federal tax hike? The big debate.
Mitsubishi's gift to Harvard.
The big oil find in the North Sea.
Monetary reform: new hopes.
The boom in pocket calculators.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Shana Alexander.
Paul A. Samuelson.
Clam Morgello.
Stewart Alsop.
THE ARTS:
MUSIC:
The Metropolitan Opera's new "Carmen".
and a talk with Schuyler Chapin.
BOOKS:
W.A. Swanberg's "Luce and His Empire".
More Shaw letters.
Auberon Waugh, embattled critic.
ART:
Robert Venturi -- elitist pop architect.
MOVIES:
Martin Ritt's "Sounder".
Jan Troell's "The Emigrants".
______
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