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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: July 17, 1972; Vol. LXXX, 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: New wave hits MIAMI. (Democratic Presidential Convention).

TOP OF THE WEEK:
THE NEW WAVE HITS MIAMI: Now it was time for the ultimate test-the struggle between George McGovern and the old Democratic pros. In this week's convention report, a Newsweek political team assesses the showdown for the nomination, describes the back-room stop-McGovern coalition, measures George Wallace's physical and political health and profiles the men around the front runner. (Newsweek cover drawing by David Levine.).

JAPAN'S NEW PRIME MINISTER: After eight years of cautious rule by Prime Minister Eisaku Sato, Japan's Liberal Democratic Party opted for a new style of leadership. To fill Sato's shoes, the party chose outspoken Kakuei Tanaka, a self-made businessman without a college degree. With files from Newsweek's Tokyo bureau, Associate Editor Richard M. Smith looks ahead to the problems Tanaka will face. A companion piece profiles Tanaka, and, in a third article, Tokyo bureau chief Bernard Krisher plumbs the Japanese character.

CHESS: THE ICELAND CAPER: As chess fans around the world devoured the latest bulletins from Iceland, America's Bobby Fischer conducted a bizarre campaign to psych out world champion Boris Spassky of Russia. Newsweek correspondent John Barnes covered the action, and Pete Axthelm wrote the story.

IS ART UNNECESSARY? At the international art exhibition called Documenta 5, some of the artists and their works radically question the very value of art itself. Art Editor Douglas Davis traveled to Kassel, West Germany, to attend the show's opening.

MUSIC, MUSIC EVERYWHERE: The NEWPORT Jazz Festival invaded New York last week in a triumphant nine days and nights of music by the greatest in the field, including some legendary veterans. Music Editor Hubert Saal, with the help of Ruth N. Ross and Susan Malsch, reports.

JOURNALISM + FEMINISM: Two important changes appear this week on Newsweek's masthead (next page). In one, Osborn Elliott, Newsweek's chairman of the board, reassumes the title and function of editor, which passed from him to Kermit Lansner in 1969. Lansner moves into the new post of editorial director. In the other change. Shana Alexander joins the roster of Newsweek columnists who are listed among the magazine's contributing editors. Beginning next week, with her view of the Democratic convention from Miami Beach, Ms. Alexander's column will appear biweekly. It will cover the same broad range of subjects that her well-known "Feminine Eye" column has scanned in the past.
A native New Yorker and former writer for Life, Ms. Alexander has recently been editor of McCall's, a vice president of Norton Simon Communications and an activist in the women's movement. Says Newsweek's first woman columnist: "Feminism and journalism are the two most exciting things going today-because together, at their best, they add up to humanism.".

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Showdown in Miami: the Democrats meet in convention.
The ABM (Anybody-but-McGovern) alliance.
George Wallace: which way will he go?.
How a young McGovern delegate sees it.
McGovern's brain trust.
Clark MacGregor: in for Mitchell.
The horror of a bloody skyjack.
THE WAR IN INDOCHINA:
Box score on the Paris peace talks.
The struggle for Quang Tn.
INTERNATIONAL:
How the world views the U. S. campaign for the Presidency.
The malaise affecting France.
In Asia, the flowers of detente.
Japan: Kakuei Tanaka takes over.
Crisis of confidence in the Land of the Rising Sun.
A profile of the new No. 1 man in Tokyo.

MEDICINE:
The hazards of summer.
The case of vitamin-induced psychosis.
LIFE AND LEISURE:
Training tor the roller derby.
Charge cards for the single woman.
Holland's muskrat problem.
RELIGION:
A landmark Jewish encyclopedia.
A new era for the Mormons.
SPORTS:
Chess: Bobby psychs Boris.
Wimbledon: Billie Jean's still the queen.
The U.S. Olympic trials.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The U.S. economy and the election.
The NAACP's war with the building unions.
New casualties in the world money crisis.
The ad game becomes more businesslike.
Those costly auto recalls.
Trouble for the Hummel figurine makers.
Boeing's jetliner deal with China.
THE MEDIA:
The burgeoning black magazines.
Geraldo Rivera, journalist with passion.
EDUCATION:
Anthony Amsterdam, scholar-activist.
Canada finds summer jobs for students.
THE COLUMNISTS:
CIem Morgello.
Henry C. Wallicli.
Stewart Alsop.

THE ARTS:
ART:
Documenta 5: discordant and provocative.
Motherwell: work in progress.
BOOKS:
"Stravinsky," by Robert Craft.
Two theatrical memoirs by S.N. Behrman and Howard Teichmann.
MOVIES:
Ernest Tidyman's "Shaft" sequel.
"The Candidate": no spine to lose.
MUSIC: New York's Newport Jazz Festival.


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