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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: January 17, 1972; Vol. LXXIX, No. 3
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: AMNESTY for the (Vietnam) WAR EXILES?

TOP OF THE WEEK:
AMNESTY for the WAR EXILES? Should amnesty be granted to the tens of thousands of young men who fled the country to escape the draft or deserted the armed forces to avoid fighting in Vietnam? For General Editor Kenneth Auchincloss's assessment of the amnesty controversy, Newsweek reporters canvassed opinions from Main Street, U.S.A., to Sweden. Washington correspondent Thomas DeFrank talked to government officials, while Bernice Buresh and Gerald C. Lubenow monitored the Canadian scene along with Contributing Editor Karl Fleming, who wrote a personal report on how the exiles are faring. And a special Newsweek poll by The Gallup Organization sheds the first light on the American public's attitude toward amnesty. (Newsweek cover photo by Carl Fischer; inset photos by UPI and Tony Rollo.).

A PEEK BEHIND THE SCENES: For the public, it was a rare glimpse into the inner sanctum of government, and an even rarer look at an angry President whipping balky bureaucrats into line. The peek behind the closed doors of the Nixon Administration came when columnist Jack Anderson released the minutes of secret strategy sessions during the Indo-Pakistani war. With files from diplomatic correspondent Henry Trewhitt, Associate Editor Richard Steele assesses the impact of the disclosures, and General Editor Harry F. Waters profiles Anderson (page 83).

TITO CRACKS DOWN: Alarmed by a recent outburst of Croatian nationalism, Yugoslavia's Josip Broz Tito has launched a sweeping purge of his country's Communist Party. But his effort to reimpose the strict discipline of a generation ago faces stiff opposition Kubic --especially from the nation's young people. From files by Vienna bureau chief Milan J. Kubic, Associate Editor Richard M. Smith wrote the story.

SUPER BOWL: WHO ARE THOSE GUYS? When the Miami Dolphins meet the Dallas Cowboys in Sunday's Super Bowl game, Dolphin fans will sound their pop-culture battle cry: 'Who are those guys?' Sports editor Pete Axthelm explains the origin of the chant and ventures an opinion as to which team may win the Battle of New Orleans, 1972.

'CHILDREN OF CRISIS': Harvard psychoanalyst Robert Coles is a prolific author who has brought both literary grace and unique insights to the field of "social psychiatry." Now Coles has published the second and third volumes of his monumental study, "Children of Crisis," a probing look at the lives of migrant workers and poor Southerners. From his reading of the new volumes, Religion editor Kenneth L. Woodward profiles Coles and his views on "the emotions and purposes and beliefs that make us human beings.".

CONTENTS LISTING:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The "Anderson papers': a glimpse of crisis managers at work.
The U.S. Navy in the Indian Ocean.
A parade of Presidential candidates.
John Ashbrook's anti-Nixon insurgency.
George Wallace's Southern strategy.
Should the war exiles receive amnesty? (the cover).
How the public feels about amnesty.
The U.S. exiles in canada revisited.
The safe-deposit bomb plot.
New York's Hotel Pierre robbery.
INTERNATIONAL:
Bangladesh: Mujib's problems.
China: the welcome mat's still out.
Mrs. Nixon's African trip--just great".
Resurgent nationalism in Yugoslavia.
Mr. Sato meets Mr. Nixon.
Muffling the Soviet dissenters.
THE WAR IN INDOCHINA: Election-year strategies and the POW's.
SPORTS: The Miami Dolphins' heroes; Walt Frazier of the Knicks comes of age.
LIFE AND LEISURE: The SS France's "ultimate" in cruises; Germany's pervasive standards system.
MEDICINE: Hyperlexia--a rare reading disease; Clues to disease from human hair; Checking up on non-prescription drug.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Confusion on the wage-price front.
Phase two: a lawyer's boon.
The detergent makers' dilemma.
The Penn Central conspiracy case.
Kaiser's Canadian stock deal.
Prettying up the personal check.
Free time for anti-commercials?.
AMC's all-out car guarantee in action.
Charles E. Wilson, 1886-1972.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Cranking up for an aerospace shuttle; Will car engines be clean enough by '75?.
EDUCATION: Berkeley's "resegregation" dispute; Getting a B.A. in three years.
RELIGION: A study of Robert Coles.
THE COLUMNISTS:
William P. Bundy.
Paul A. Samuelson.

THE MEDIA: Jack Anderson--voice of the voiceless; Edward R. Murrow in retrospect.
THEATER:
Edward Bond's "Narrow Road".
ART: John Hightower resigns from MOMA.
MUSIC: Supper-club singer Bobby Short.
MOVIES: "Made for Each Other": brilliant comedy.
BOOKS:
The journal of a Chinese Red Guard.
Vlas Tenin's "Moscow Nights".
Christopher sherwood's "Kathleen and Frank".
Bharati Mukherjee's "Tiger's Daughter".


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