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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: November 29, 1971; Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 22
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 Bunkers" -- 'ALL IN THE FAMILY' -- Every Saturday night, 35 million Americans tune in to "All in the Family," CBS's controversial blend of blue-collar insularity and ethnic epithet. Drawing on files from Martin Kasindorf, who interviewed the show's stars and director in Los Angeles, plus his own reporting, Contributing Editor Joseph Morgenstern wrote the cover story. In addition, Ann Ray Martin profiles some "All in the Family" fans and Morgenstern assesses the program's sociological impact. (Newsweek cover photo by Lester Sloan.). TOP OF THE WEEK:
'Mr. Nixon Knows What He Can Do': The President's economic-controls program hit a bump last week--a coal wage settlement triple the guideline--and Mr. Nixon himself had the wrench of a confrontation with big-labor leaders. With files from Tom Joyce at the AFL-CIO convention in Miami Beach and Henry Simmons and Rich Thomas in Washington, Associate Editor Michael Ruby writes the story.

THE NEW, OLD U.S. MARINES: A permissive age is changing the u.S. armed services--but not the Marine Corps. Using files from Lloyd Norman in Washington, Paul Brinkley-Rogers in California and Stephan Lesher in the Carolinas, General Editor Christopher S. Wren tells how the Marines hew to tradition in girding for their postwar role.

COMPOUND INTEREST:
Toxoplasmosis is particularly cruel to unborn children. Now researchers report the house cat is a major carrier. Jean Seligmann wrote the story.

Sports editor Pete Axthelm presents a guide to zone defense, the strategy that many pro football teams have revived this year with sharp effect on both the scores and the Monday-morning quarterbacking.

With the new interest in the truth about the American Indian, a show at New York's Whitney Museum, "200 Years of North American Indian Art," adds some unexpected insights. Art editor Douglas Davis reports.

In pursuit of an enduring dream, Commerce Secretary Stans flew to Moscow for talks with Premier KDsygin about stepping up U.S- Soviet trade. Associate Editor David Pauly assesses the prospects.

Broadway has a new star, the brilliant Sada Thompson, whose years of quiet critical acclaim have now paid off in the applause of celebrity for her virtuoso four-character role in a new play, "Twigs.".

INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Phase two and the balky labor unions.
campaign '72: Senator Jackson declares.
The Democrats' campaign-financing plan.
The Marines: hewing to a tough tradition.
Congress's foreign-policy war.
Dolorous days for Spiro Agnew.
The busting of a nark.
California's Dr. Strange Cop is fired.
INTERNATIONAL:
The escalating Mideast arms race.
Israel's crime problem.
Ulster's women terrorists.
Dissension in Britain's Labor Party.
The sticky Anglo-Rhodesian talks.
Thailand's government-run coup.
The U.N.: China gets down to business.
RELIGION: Egypt's Copts choose a Pope; U.S. Catholic bishops elect a president.
THE MEDIA: Norman Cousins quits Saturday Review; The flap over New York's secret trial; TV's "All in the Family" (the cover); How Archie Bunker's real-life neighbors see him; Does the show promote racism?.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Low-level pollution's deadly effects; Skiers' bind.
MEDICINE: Heroin and LSD for the dying; Toxoplasmosis and the house cat; A new early test for pregnancy.
LIFE AND LEISURE: Handicrafts from China; My wife the football fan.
SPORTS: A guide to the zone defense.
THE CITIES: Forest Hills fights a housing project; Birmingham's air-pollution crisis; The debate over "victimless" crime.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Can the U.S. do business with Russia?.
China's bustling Canton Trade Fair.
Peace in the airlines' fare war.
Boom days for the new street peddlers.
Dry holes in Southeast Asia's oil hunt.
A pro-consumer anti-corporation.
THE COLUMNISTS:
George W. Ball.
Milton Friedman.
Clem Morgello.
Stewart Alsop.

THE ARTS:
ART:
The Whitney's exhibition of Indian art.
Kansas: the Gene Swenson collection.
MUSIC: The Met's new 'Tristan und Isolde".
MOVIES:
Peter Brook's "King Lear".
Director William Bayer on filmmaking.
BOOKS:
Herman Wouk's "The Winds of War".
Gen. Raymond E. Lee's "London Journal".
THEATER:
"Twigs," and a talk with Sada Thompson.
"The Black Terror"; "Sticks and Bones".
Harold Pinter's "Old Times".


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