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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 4, 1971; Vol. LXXVIII, 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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COVER: Has the Church lost its soul? A survey of U. S. Catholics.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
THE NIXON COURT: The death of Hugo Black and last week's retirement of John Marshall Harlan open the way to a "Nixon Court" and a conservative cycle in U.S. jurisprudence. From files by Robert Shogan, General Editor Kenneth Auchincloss writes of the High Court's possible new men and new directions, while Associate Editor Charles Michener bids farewell to the Court's two acknowledged recent giants.

JAPAN'S TIME OF DECISION: Americans traveling abroad sometimes find that the Newsweek on sale in foreign countries carries a cover different from the one at home. Covers for the Verseas editions are frequently chosen to point up stories more relevant to readers overseas. This week, the Emperor of Japan appears on the cover of Newsweek's international editions (left) as he meets President Nixon and tours Europe. With files from Tokyo bureau chief Bernard Krisher and Newsweek's Washington bureau, General Editor Russell Watson exam- ines the bitter differences be- tween Hirohito's Japan and the U.S.

(page 32) and brings to light some startling historical facts (page 38). Associate Editor Daniel Chu describes Hirohito's symbolic sheltered role (page 34), and Japan expert Edwin 0. Reischauer tells Senior Editor Edward Klein what must be done to repair relations between Tokyo and Washington (page 36).

HAS THE CHURCH LOST ITS SOUL? It used to be that the Roman Catholics in the United States--now 48 million strong and the nation's largest single religious denomination--formed a distinctive subculture, visibly different from their neighbors. But in less than a decade, the "unchangeable" Catholic Church has undergone a sweeping transformation and today Catholics in America are, in their religious practices and attitudes, increasingly indistinguishable from their Protestant co-religionists. To document the profound changes in American Catholicism, Newsweek commissioned a nationwide poll by The Gallup Organization that strikingly demonstrates how far many Catholics have moved from the formerly all- embracing mystique of "Holy Mother the Church." At the same time, Newsweek correspondents across the country filed reports on the mood among both Catholic clerics and laymen, and in Washington Kendra Heymann talked with key members of the hierarchy's national staff. Senior Editorial Assistant Merrill Sheils interviewed scholars and theologians, and coordinated the research. From all these reports, Religion editor Kenneth L. Woodward, a 1957 Notre Dame graduate, wrote the cover story.

CONTENTS/INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
vacancies speed the Supreme Court's transition to "the Nixon court".
Justices Black and Harlan, friendly foes.
Captain Medina's swift acquittal.
Senator Harris enters the lists for '72.
The Attica investigations.
Jesse Jackson's Black Expo trade fair.
WAR IN INDOCHINA: A personal appraisal of South vietnam's 'election'.
INTERNATIONAL:
Sizing up the newest Chinese puzzle.
Nixon-Hirohito meeting in Alaska and the troubled U.S-Japanese alliance.
Hirohito's unprecedented tour.
Interview with Dr. Edwin Reischauer.
How the Japanese renounced war.
Britain's mass ouster of Soviet "spies".
The U.N. Assembly's opening round.
Brezhnev's ambiguous Yugoslavian visit.
SPORTS: Bob Short takes the Senators to Texas; The Little Brown Jug upset.
EDUCATION: Viet veterans on campus; Haaren High's unique mini schools.
MEDICINE: A plastic coating to halt tooth decay; How to treat school phobia; An end to smallpox vaccination?.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
An edgy Administration eyes phase two.
The IMF meeting: a devalued dollar?.
Western business raps on China's door.
London's sizzling hamburger craze.
Escalating the transatlantic fare war.
Hard times for black capitalism.
Confusion on the cleaner-water front.
RELIGION: Has the church lost its soul? A survey of U.S. Catholics (the cover).
Where to find church leaders?.
The parochial-school crisis.
Sin and the empty confessionals.
A failure of spiritual imagination.
The search to find new meaning in an ancient religion.
THE MEDIA: Frederick Wiseman's "Basic Training". Has the prime-time access rule failed?.
THE CITIES: The taxicab of the future?; Suburbia's rising wave of burglaries.
THE COLUMNISTS: William P. Bundy; Paul A. Samuelson; CIem Morgello.

THE ARTS:
ART:
Rimpa at Japan House.
New York's "Art in Revolution" show.
MOVIES:
Norman Mailer's "Maidstone".
"The Steagle": welcoming Armageddon.
BOOKS:
"Honor Thy Father." by Gay Talese.
Wilf rid Sheed's "The Morning After".
"Japan's Imperial Conspiracy," by David Bergamini.
Theodor Rosebury's "Microbes and Morals".


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