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ISSUE DATE: July, 2 1973; Vol. LXXXII, No. 1

IN THIS ISSUE:-
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COVER: THE ACCUSER. JOHN DEAN (WATERGATE).

TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER STORY: It was the hour of the accuser -- time for John W. Dean III himself to bear witness against the President and the men who had been closest to him. Washington reporters John 1. Lindsay, Nicholas Horrock, Diane Camper and others sorted out the latest flurry of leaks -- and the White House response -- for Senior Editor Peter Goldman's report. (Newsweek cover photo by Wally McNamee.)

FESTIVALS: From Aspen to Istanbul, from Hollywood Bowl to the Baths of Caracalla, the summer music festival has girdied the globe, offering everything from the fingers of Richter to the feet of Fonteyn to the dimples of Liberace. Music Editor Hubert Saal writes an international guide to the festival scene.

GAS SHORTAGE: The gasoline shortage is a fact of life this summer -- but is it legitimate or the result of shenanigans by big oil companies seeking to maximize profits? Associate Editor David Pauly gives his assess- ment of the evidence on both sides of the issue.

UNDERSEA SAGA: An unlikely little vessel starred in a chilling, 32- hour drama off Key West. Trapped in a sunken destroyer's rigging, the four-man crew of the mini-sub Sea Link discovered that the sea gives no mercy to voyagers unprepared for the unexpected. Atlanta's Joseph B. Cumming Jr. reports.

GO, GO, GO?: The tourist season is off and walking, but many travelers have already begun to whimper. Some of Europe's in spots are grotesquely crowded -- and General Editor Richard Steele compiles a guide to the places to miss (page 32). Adding to the crush is the ever-growing wave of Japanese tourists (page 54). With files from NEWSWEEK bureaus around the world, General Editor Elizabeth Peer describes the burgeoning Japanese yen to see the world.

SUMMIT CUM LAUGHS: Leonid Brezhnev's playful antics captured the cameras all last week -- but the headline was a healthy boost for detente when Messrs. Brezhnev and Nixon okayed an impressive array of bilateral accords, including a historic nonaggression pact. With files from Henry L. Trewhitt, Leon Volkov and Samuel Shaffer, General Editor Richard M. Smith assesses the summit.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Nixon's test.
Dean (the cover): the accuser's hour.
Who's got the money?.
Those expensive Nixon properties.
Connally's farewell.
A new pornography standard.
What next for the FBI?.
Trouble in Chinatown.
INTERNATIONAL:
Brezhnev comes to call.
The summit communique.
The stormy homecoming of Juan Peron.
A talk with Chile's Allende.
Transvestites in Paris.
Where the jet set isn't.
Burundi: slaughter of the innocents.
Divorce China style.
Sikkim: Queen for a day.
SCIENCE:
Sea Link: tragedy below.
Skylab: triumph above.
The big eclipse.
EDUCATION:
Year-round schools.
The Court and segregation.
SPORTS:
Johnny Miller: golf's new generation.
Boycott at Wimbledon.
THE MEDIA:
Sally Quinn vs. Barbara Walters.
The big change at The Chicago Tribune.
LIFE AND LEISURE:
The Japanese are coming.
Hawaii's new invasion.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
What's behind the gasoline shortage?.
The shape of phase four.
The protein shortfall.
Airlines: the lounge war.
Investments: the European challenge.
Time running out for Swiss watches?.
Helping survivors claim benefits.
THE CITIES: San Diego's Mayor Wilson.
MEDICINE:
A drug for alcoholics?.
What makes arteries harden?.
A new treatment for hydrocephalus.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Richard Reeves.
Cyclops.
CIem Morgello.
Paul A. Samuelson.
Stewart Alsop.

THE ARTS:
ART: New York's World Trade Center. (Photo of the twin towers under construction, article about the buildings.
BOOKS:
Iris Owens's "After Claude".
"Good Old Modern," by Russell Lynes.
MOVIES:
"A Touch of Class": moralizing.
"The Hireling": captives of caste.
"The Friends of Eddie Coyle": best so far.
MUSIC: The summer festivals.

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