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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 13, 1975; Vol LXXXV, No 2
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

TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER: THE VERDICT ON WATERGATE: WAS JUSTICE DONE? Once they were among the most powerful men in Richard Nixon's Washington. But last week a Federal-court jury convicted H.R. (Bob) Haldeman, John Ehrliclunan, John Mitchell and Robert Mardian of complicity in the Watergate coverup -- a verdict that left only Nixon among the principals outside the reach of the law. Anthony Marro and Diane Camper, who covered the thirteen-week trial, were on-scene for the New Year's Day judgment, and Stephan Lesher interviewed some of the drama's stars for a companion piece. General Editor Sandra Salmans wrote the verdict story and Senior Editor Peter Goldman appraised the lessons of Watergate. (Cover photos by Wally McNamee -- Newsweek, Brian Alpert -- Keystone, Lee Romero, and Fred Ward -- Black Star.)

BACK TO REALITY: Gerald Ford was back in the White House, ruddy and relaxed from his skiing vacation. But the thorniest economic tangle in 40 years was waiting for him - including the worst unemployment rate since 1961. The December rate stood at 7.1 per cent, leaving 6.5 million Americans out of work, and the pressure was rising on the President to do something -- almost anything. But his available choices seemed distinctly unappetizing. With files from Washington by Rich Thomas, Tom Joyce and Thomas M. DeFrank, Associate Editor Allan J. Mayer wrote the story.

IMPRESSIONISM: "The Impressionist Epoch" now at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art is one of the most popular -- and controversial -- art shows in years. The Met has surrounded masterpieces by Monet, Manet, Renoir, Degas and their colleagues with a formidable apparatus of scholarship that both casts new light on this most popular of art movements and raises questions about how art should be shown. The story is accompanied by two pages of color reproductions.

A NEW SECTION: In this issue, Newsweek introduces a new department called On Scene -- a series of personal reports from the magazine's 68 staff correspondents on some of the people, places and glimpses of life they encounter in their travels through America and the world. The first entry is a story by Atlanta bureau chief Joseph B. Cumming Jr. (right) about an extraordinary Georgia jailbreaker and the, ballad-writing, back-country sheriff who has made him into a local legend.

ANIMAL ARCHITECTS: Nobel Prize-winner Karl von Frisch thinks instinct has been given too much credit in efforts to explain some animal behavior. Instead, he argues that builders such as the knot-tying weaver bird (left) have learned their skills. Ideas editor Kenneth L. Woodward wrote the story.

INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Ford and the jobless.
The Watergate verdict (the cover).
Was justice finally done?.
The CIA: the pot bubbles.
Wilbur Mills's confession.
Sniper: terror in Olean.
ON SCENE: The ballad of Lamar Fountain.
INTERNATIONAL:
Brezhnev's diplomatic illness.
Oil embargoes: a change in tactics.
A round table on the world economy.
'Earthquake in Pakistan.
A ray of hope in Ulster.
Okinawa's identity crisis.
A Peking-Moscow thaw?.
SPORTS: Baseball: the golden Catfish; A gift for the Trojans.
NEWS MEDIA: Purge at The Wilmington News-Journal; A 'people's magazine"; "Doonesbury": comics with political bite.
MEDICINE: The diving reflex and the heart; Cancer and the rejection riddle.
IDEAS: Instinct or intelligence?.
JUSTICE: The new Indian-treaty wars.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The great gold crawl of '75.
Chrysler's crisis.
Enter American Motors' Pacer.
Oil: Burmah's close shave.
The big fighter-plane competition.
Political contributions.
Ma Bell asks for more.
ENTERTAINMENT: Television's "second season".
SCIENCE: Superfish vs. superweed; Invasion of the fruit fly.
LIFE/STYLE: "The Thong"; a cheeky bathing suit; The great artichoke war.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Colman McCarthy.
Pete Axthelm.
Bill Moyers.

THE ARTS:
THEATER: "All Over Town": going crazy.
ART: A tribute to the impressionists.
MUSIC: Tom Scott: most valuable player.
BOOKS:
"Freud and his Followers," by Paul Roazen.
Lawrence Durrell's "Monsieur".
MOVIES: Two more on the occupation of France.


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