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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: September 11, 1972; Vol. LXXX, No. 11
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and FAIR condition. the pages are stiff, but all still readable. (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

COVER: OLYMPICS '72.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
OLYMPICS '72: Never had a Summer Olympics provided so much spectacle or quite such a glittering cavalcade of individual stars. America's Mark Spitz, Sandra Neilson and Micki King, along with Australia's Shane Gould and the Soviet Union's entrancing Olga Korbut, were some of the most celebrated. But many others helped delight the audience at Munich and TV viewers around the world. Sports editor Pete Axthelm wrote the cover story from Munich, aided by on-scene reports from Associate Editor Peter Bonventre and backed up in New York by Editorial Assistant Linda Backstein. (Newsweek cover photo by Bob Gomel.).

THE BEGINNING OF THE BEGINNING? George McGovern moved dramatically last week to get his Presidential campaign back on the track. He went to Wall Street to outline a new economic program and sought support from New York's Jews and Roman Catholics. In an interview with Newsweek editors (page 20) he predicted a dramatic turnabout in his race with Richard Nixon.

With files from correspondent Richard Stout, Senior Editor Peter Goldman writes of McGovern's quest for a fresh start, and Associate Editor Michael Ruby reports on Wall Street reaction to the new McGovernomics (page 53).

THEY WERE THERE:
Frank Morgan Jr. on the restless mood of the Kansas heartland (page 24).
Jay Axelbank on Moscow's renewed chill toward Americans (page 35).
Loren Jenkins on Libya's extraordinary strongman, Muammar Kaddafi (page 36).
Andrew Jaffe on a vast human catastrophe that frustrates relief efforts in Sudan (page 38).
Arnaud de Borchgrave on some blunt representations abroad by George McGovern's foreign-policy adviser (page 39).
Joseph B. Cumming Jr. and Sunde Smith on the social triumph and equine anguish of a Tennessee institution, the walking horse (page 62).
Martin Kasindorf on how well Britain's National Health Service really works (page 86).

BUILDER LEVITT'S FLOATING MANSION: Multiple-home-builder WILLIAM LEVITT has contrived a one-of-a-kind yacht that may be the last word in luxury afloat, as attested by correspondent Edward Behr, writer Daniel Chu and three pages of color.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
George McGovern's mission to Wall Street.
the new McGovernomics, and a talk with the Democratic candidate.
Mr. Nixon's Presidential hat.
New evidence in the Watergate affair.
The GAO's super-sleuths.
Who wants the 1976 conventions?.
Airlines: tighter domestic security.
Report from the heartland.
INTERNATIONAL:
The Nixon-Tanaka summit.
Korea's impossible dream.
Canada: end of a sideshow.
Britain's anti-Asian backlash.
W,Iliam Levitt's ultraluxurious yacht.
The chilly mood in post-summit Moscow.
A profile of Libya's mercurial leader.
Sudan: the agony of peace.
THE WAR IN INDOCHINA: The POW Gambit; The McGovern line on Indochina.
THE CITIES: Making civil servants work harder.
SCIENCE: Reducing the toll of major storms; The neutercane: a new kind of weather.
EDUCATION: Schools: the limitations of equality.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
How Wall Street sees McGovern.
Glenn Turner's troubles deepen.
The unions--and the future of controls.
General Motors and the Wankel engine.
Rebuffing Detroit on car prices.
The boom in male cheesecake.
Blimps: are they making a comeback?.
A dose of capitalism in Hungary.
SPORTS: The XX OLYMPIAD (the cover).
LIFE AND LEISURE: Tennessee's walking-horse fever; Hash oil: the fastest high.
RELIGION: Cambodia's monks go to war; The preacher glut.
THE MEDIA: The new TV season's bolder look; The end of The Newark Evening News; "Star Trek": a canceled show that lives.
MEDICINE: A close-up of the British health service; Bebe powder: a baby killer?.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Paul A. Samuelson.
Clam Morgello.
Stewart Alsop.

THE ARTS:
THEATER: The upcoming shows.
MUSIC:
How the JFK arts center is doing.
Rod Stewart--new London rock star.
BOOKS:
Vance Packard's "A Nation of Strangers".
John Berger's "G".
Susan Jacaby's "Moscow Conversations".
Jack Dillon's "The Advertising Man".
MOVIES: Filming the Olympic Games.


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