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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: MARCH 21, 1983; Vol. CI, No. 12
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: Left Out: The Human Cost of the collapse of Industrial America. Cover: Photo by Wally McNamee --NEWSWEEK.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
LIFE IN THE DEPRESSION BELT: As the U.S. economic recovery picks up speed, one group of Americans is in danger of being left behind: the laid-off workers of the industrial heartland. From the gray and gritty steel towns of the Monongahela Valley to the red-iron ore pits of the Mesabi Range in Minnesota, the new unemployed have poignant tales of hope and disappointment, of families in stress, of hunger and the gnawing fear that their old jobs may never be restored. This region created America's industrial might, and now it is searching for reasons to be optimistic. NEWSWEEK'S Wally McNamee provides a photographic portfolio of life in the Depression Belt.

THE IRISH CONNECTION: With a fervent IRA supporter as its grand marshal, the Saint Patrick's Day parade in New York this year has turned into a nationwide propaganda battle involving some of the biggest names in American politics. The issue is the future of bloody Ulster--and the prize for both sides is the support of 44 million Irish-Americans.

A PLAN TO WIN IN EL SALVADOR: Sometime soon, government troops will launch a massive attack on rebel strongholds in El Salvador. Then civic-action teams will move in to rebuild the area, distribute land to its peasants and provide lasting security. The operation, the details of which NEWSWEEK uncovered last week, is the first effort to combine military action with social reform and economic development. The Reagan administration, which sent Ambassador Deane Hinton (above) to visit a nearby area last week, is gambling that the plan will be a winning strategy.

A NEW FREE-SPEECH MOVEMENT: U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick is having a hard time being heard on college campuses these days. Students have drowned out her lectures with jeers and accusations, raising fears among administrators for the free speech of controversial guests.

MUSHING ALONG: No mere sporting event, Alaska's Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race is a celebration of the harsh, arctic territory that was once a haven for individualists. Oldtime mushers and new enthusiasts are weathering 200-inch snows to try their luck in the 1,137-mile mushathon. This year's surprise favorite: a 28-year-old woman.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:.
A plan to win in El Salvador.
Return of the cold warrior?.
Sizing up Moscow's might.
Will EPA change after Burford?.
A donnybrook for Saint Patrick's Day?.
A vicious rape in Massachusetts.
The girl on Gritz's A team.
Left out: the human cost of the collapse of industrial America (the cover);.
INTERNATIONAL:.
The hard-times summit.
The junta's man takes on Reagan.
West Germany: Kohl's daunting agenda.
Walesa: back to the barricades.
France: revival on the right.
Zimbabwe: Nkomo's dash into exile.
Iran: the youngest martyrs.
JUSTICE: Men join the fight against DES Life and death and the law.
NEWS MEDIA: The camera's cold eye.
BUSINESS:.
OPEC: the crumbling cartel IBM takes aim at Japan.
An Imperial farewell.
Hollywood's new screen tests.
Some old ideas--with a new twist.
Psst, wanna buy a satellite?.
Baileys creams the competition.
THEATER:.
Gotta have Rodgers and Hart.
Cold Harbor": American scalawag.
MUSIC: Toto's cash-register sound.
TECHNOLOGY: A state-of-the-art junkyard.
MOVIES:.
Choice of Arms": when worlds collide.
Britannia Hospital": this England?.
Tales of Ordinary Madness": beautiful losers.
BOOKS:.
A General's Life," by Omar N. Bradley and Clay Blair.
Secrets," by Sissela Bok.
Vital Signs," by Fitzhugh Mullan.
Temple," by Robert Greenfield.
EDUCATION: The mob vs. Kirkpatrick.
RELIGION: John Paul's blunt message.
LIFE/STYLE: Mushing along.
OTHER DEPARTMENTS.
Letters.
Update.
Periscope.
Newsmakers.
Transition.
THE COLUMNISTS:.
My Turn: Joseph E. Perslco.
Milton Friedman.
Pete Axthelm.
Meg Greenfield.


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