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TITLE: NEWSWEEK
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: April 17, 1972; Vol. LXXIX, No. 16
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, GOOD condition, a small cut from the cover. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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TOP OF THE WEEK:
VIETNAM: THE WAR THAT WON'T GO AWAY: Year after year, Americans have been assured that the war in Vietnam is coming to an end and that the U.S. will soon be able to disengage from Indochina. Yet Vietnam is the war that refuses to disappear. Last week Hanoi launched an offensive that threatened not only South Vietnam but President Nixon's policy of an honorable withdrawal through Vietnamization. Using files from Nicholas C. Proffitt, Maynard Parker, Proffitt Ron Moreau and Alex Shimkin in Vietnam and from Newsweek's Washington bureau, Associate Editor Richard Steele examines the newly escalated war and its impact on the U.S. In companion pieces, Associate Editor Richard Smith analyzes Vietnamization and Associate Editor George Alexander describes the enemy's sophisticated air defense systems. (Cover photos by UPI and U.S. Air Force.).

NOW IT'S A THREE-WAY RACE: Suddenly the term "front runner" was out of vogue in Democratic Presidential politics. The Wisconsin primary cut the sweepstakes down to a three-way race: McGovern vs. Humphrey vs. Muskie. With files from chief political correspondent Hal Oruno and others, General Editor Kenneth Auchincloss surveys the Democratic contest. Using reports by Chicago bureau chief Frank Maier and his own field notes, General Editor Richard Boeth profiles George McGovern, the man who got the biggest boost from last week's primary returns. And Associate Editor David M. Alpern analyzes a notable failure: the short-lived campaign of New York's John V. Lindsay.

THE UNHAPPY NEIGHBOR: Canada has been the one country that the U.S. always felt it could take for granted. But that time is past. Now, Canada is caught up in a wave of nationalism--which is often translated into a kind of anti.Americanism. Above all, many Canadians are determined to de.Americanize their country's economy. The question is: Trewhitt How? Newsweek's diplomatic correspondent Henry L. Trewhitt recently traveled through Canada. From his reports and those of Editorial Assistant Susan Agrest, General Editor Raymond Carroll writes about Canada's new mood.

APOLLO 16: TO THE LUNAR BADLANDS: On the next-to-last mission of the U.S. Apollo moon-exploration program, the astronauts will head for the high lunar badlands. If the mission goes as planned, blast-off will come shortly after noon EST on Sunday, April 16, with the lunar landing scheduled for 3:41 p.m. EST, Thursday, April 20.

SECOND THOUGHTS ON SECOND HOMES: The second home has replaced the second car in the aspirations of countless Americans; but after being stung by escalating prices, haphazard development and shady real-estate operators, many fresh-air seekers are having second thoughts. General Editor Tom Nicholson writes the story.

NEWSWEEK LISTING:
THE WAR IN INDOCHINA:
The war that won't go away (the cover).
Putting Vietnamization to the test.
North vietnam's tough new air defenses.
NATIONAL AFFAIRS: Narrowing down the Democratic Presidential race.
George McGovern, guerrilla politician.
John Lindsay drops out.
Lyndon Johnson's heart attack.
Jimmy Hoffa, prison-reform crusader.
Adam Clayton Powell, 1908-1972.
The confused Berrigan verdict.
A hostage's vivid account of the San Quentin shoot-out.
More questions in the ITT affair.
Joey GalIo's gangland assassination.
INTERNATIONAL:
Canada's surging new nationalism.
Bangladesh: healing the wounds.
Egypt's break with Jordan.
Solzhenitsyn vs. the Kremlin.
Glimmerings of peace in Ulster.
Assassination in Zanzibar.
RELIGION: An Orthodox rabbinical court in action; Converting Jews into Christians; The New York Archdiocese: how much is it worth?.
MEDICINE: willing bodies for the sake of science; The FDAs' new methadone program.
SCIENCE: Apollo 16's goal--the lunar badlands; Verdict for the AEC on pollution rules.
THE MEDIA: The Bell system's documentary on the U.S. national parks. Magazines and soaring mailing costs.
LIFE AND LEISURE: It's chic to look pregnant; Religious tours under attack; Crackdown on aerial fox hunting.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE: The U.S. economy: waiting for the reluctant consumer; Is Ralph Nader spread too thin?; America's biggest pickle packer; Bugs in the second-home boom.
SPORTS: Will the strike by the players cast baseball its fans?. Gil Hodges. 1924-1972.
THE COLUMNISTS: Zbigniew Brzezinski; Paul A. Samuelson; CIem Morgello; Stewart Alsop.

THE ARTS:
THEATER:
Satiric actress Lily Tomlin.
"Black voices": the power of reality.
MOVIES:
Charlie Chaplin's homecoming.
Cuba's outstanding new movies.
BOOKS:
"White Knight: The Rise of Spiro Agnew," by Jules Vditcover.
Alan Friedman's Hermaphrodeity".
MUSIC: Nina Van Pallandts' New York debut.


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