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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:
February 1, 1971; Vol LXXVII, No 5
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
COVER: DISSENT IN RUSSIA: Soviet Novelist ALEKSANDR SOLZHENITSYN.
TOP OF THE WEEK:
THE WHITE HOUSE REPLIES:
Newsweek's Letters section is the usual place for
readers to rebut or comment on the views expressed
within the magazine. This week, however, the editors
open the news columns for a reader's reply -- for the
reply is news in itself. Early last week Washington
bureau chief Mel Elfin received a request from the
White House for the opportunity to answer his Jan.
25 appraisal of Mr. Nixon's first half term. Newsweek
agreed, and HEW Secretary Elliot Richardson wrote
the reply. It follows an account of the President's
State of the Union Message.
COVER: DISSENT IN RUSSIA:
Moscow, always a hardship post for Western
journalists, has recently been particularly inhospitable
to Newsweek correspondents. Last October, bureau
chief John Dornberg was expelled from Russia, and
three weeks ago the windows of reporter Jay Axelbank's car were smashed. Both incidents were related,
at least indirectly, to the spreading dissent in the
Soviet Union, best personified by Nobel novelist
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Last week, Dornberg, Axelbank
and other correspondents reported on the most important new turn in this dissent: the growing involvement of Soviet scientists. From their files and research
by Associate Editor Fay Willey,
General Editor Russell Watson
wrote this week's cover story.
In a companion article, Associate
Editor Richard Smith describes
the technological lag that has
alienated many Soviet scien-
tists. (Newsweek cover design by
Krouskoff-lnforgraphics; photo by
Edward Gladkov, courtesy of Frederick A. Praeger.)
THE NEW COLUMNISTS:
For the past year, Newsweek's overseas editions
have been publishing a foreign-affairs column written,
in rotation, by three outstanding experts: George Ball,
Zbigniew Brzezinski and William Bundy. Starting this
week, readers of the domestic Newsweek will share
their insights.
All three of the new columnists have had practical
experience in formulating foreign policy. George Ball,
lawyer and banker, served as Under Secretary of State
in the Kennedy and Johnson Administrations and,
despite his frequent criticism of U.S. policies in Viet-
nam, was appointed U.S. ambassador to the United
Nations by President Johnson in 1968.
Zbigniew Brzezinski, a specialist on the Communist
world, was a member of the State Department's Policy
Planning Council during the Johnson Administration.
He is currently director of the Research Institute on
Communist Affairs at Columbia University.
William Bundy, Assistant Secretary of State for East
Asian and Pacific Affairs during the Johnson Adminis-
tration, is now associated with MIT's Center for Inter-
national Studies. A lawyer, he has also worked in the
Central Intelligence Agency and as an Assistant Sec.
retary of Defense.
INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
State of the union: Mr. Nixon's "New
American Revolution".
Elliot Richardson on "the real Nixon".
Why Ted Kennedy lost the whip -- and the
Byrd who took it.
The Kennedy years -- what remains?.
Richard B. Russell, 1897-1971.
Senator McGovern announces.
THE WAR IN INDOCHINA:
The widening U.S. role in Cambodia.
Guerrillas blast Cambodia's air force.
INTERNATIONAL:
Dissent in Russia (the cover).
The growing Soviet technology gap.
Poland: Edward Gierek's patch-up effort.
Divorce in Italy -- no rush for freedom.
The British Commonwealth: crisis averted.
Hopeful auguries in the Middle East.
Mohammed Heikal -- Egypt's man to see.
Chile's land reform runs into trouble.
MEDICINE:
Detergent enzymes and lung disease.
THE MEDIA:
Ecological journalism;
The court vs. Esquire magazine and Lt.
William Calley.
EDUCATION:
Turmoil at the University of Texas;
Signs of change in college textbooks.
THE CITIES :
New York: bitter cops back at work;
More oil spills. East and West.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The Administration eyes wage-price controls more seriously.
Labor contracts -- a rough year ahead.
An interview with the USW's lW. Abel.
The Big Board calls in William McChesney.
Martin to head its reform study.
Bernie Cornfeld sells his lOS shares.
President Nixon blocks the Florida Canal.
A big-name securities scandal in Texas.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
Apollo 14's three men for the moon.
The unresolved lunar mysteries.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Joseph Morgenstern.
Zbigniew Brzezinski.
Milton Friedman.
Clem Morgello.
Stewart Alsop.
THE ARTS:
MUSIC:
The blues of Bessie Smith on new disks.
New York City Center undertakes to transform the vivian Beaumont Theater.
BOOKS:
Dee Brown's "Bury My Heart at Wounded
Knee".
"They Became What They Beheld." by Edmund Carpenter.
"The Prisoner and the Bomb," by Laurens
van der Post.
Dr. Rose Franzblau's "Middle Generation".
THEATER:
Peter Brook's brilliant production of "A
Midsummer Night's Dream".
A charming revival of "No, No, Nanette".
MOVIES:
"Love Story" and the critics.
"The Reckoning": hard truths.
Jules Dassin's "Promise at Dawn".
______
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