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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 19, 1971; Vol. LXXVIII, No. 3
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: LEE TREVINO. Golf's biggest money winner.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
GOLF'S BIGGEST MONEY WINNER: Golf's newest superstar is Lee Trevino, who last week won the British Open and thus became the first golfer ever to win the U.S., British and Canadian opens in a single season. In the process he also en- sured that he would wind up the year as the biggest money winner of any golf season. With Trevino dur- ing the match was Sports editor Pete Axthelm, who then turned in a virtuoso performance of his own. Axthelm repaired to his English hotel room and wrote the cover story, not as research material for rewriting in New York but precisely as it appears in this issue. (Newsweek cover photo by Ken Regan-Camera 5.).

THE 'IN' SCENE: NOW IT'S IBIZA: For footloose young Americans, the "in" place in Europe is Ibiza, a beautiful island off the coast of Spain. But there are troubles in the Ibicenco paradise, reports correspondent Steve Saler. The young visitors' free- wheeling ways with drugs and sex have outraged older foreign residents.

JAPAN WOOS A TOUGHER U.S. With U.S.-Japanese relations more troubled than at any time since World War II, Prime Minister Eisaku Sato packed a reshuffled Cabinet last week with pragmatic, pro-American politicians. But even that dramatic move seemed unlikely to ease the tension. From files by Tokyo correspondent Jonathan Kandell and the Washington bureau, Associate Editor Peter G. Kramer details the roots of the split.

ABORTION REFORM: HOW IT IS WORKING: The movement to reform the nation's abortion laws picked up considerable momentum last year when four states passed laws that provide for abortion on demand. Medicine editor Matt Clark reports on the results of the new laws-and the opposition to them.

WHY ECONOMIC RECOVERY LAGS: Although current White House economic policy is pegged to an upsurge in consumer spending, the consumer himself so far is refusing to play the game. He-or especially she-is salting money away and spending only on bargains. From reports by Rich Thomas in Washington and other Newsweek bureaus, Associate Editor Ann Scott examines the problem of the reluctant consumer and the `reasons behind an apparently nationwide wavering of confidence.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The Paris talks: room for movement?.
The heroin scandal in Indochina.
Colonel Lansdales Vietnam caper.
Candidate McClo key declares.
Ed Muskie's campaign starts to shape up.
George Wallace looks to '72.
The draft impasse.
Senator Hatfield s home-front troubles.
Peace feelers in the NAACP-Nixon flap.
Satanism-and death-in New Jersey.

INTERNATIONAL:
Japan and the U.S.: collision course?.
Ibiza, the new "in" place; with two pages of Color photographs.
The painful search for a Mideast peace settlement.
The Jewish Defense League goes to Israel.
Tough talk from Yevgeny Yevtushenko.
Hopeful omens in the SALT talks.
Moscow's Mediterranean investment.
Anguilla: setting the clock back.
Guerrilla warfare in East Pakistan.
Germany: black militancy on the rise.

SPORTS:
LEE TREVINO, golf's biggest money winner.
(the cover); with two pages of color photographs.
THE CITIES:
David Toma, Newark's supercop.
Urban renewal: new towns in old cities.
LIFE AND LEISURE: The people glut in the national parks.
EDUCATION:
The trend to deferred college admissions.
Should schools teach?.
MEDICINE: Legalized abortion: a progress report.
THE MEDIA:
Anthony Lewis of the Times.
The race to publish Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's newest novel.

BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Consumers and the lagging economy.
The thriving tobacco companies.
The Bon Vivant botulism case.
The Cunard take-over.
Will the franc and mark float together?.
The Teamster search for a brighter image.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Joseph Morgenstern.
Zbigniew Brzezinski.
Henry C. Wallich.
Clem Morgello.
Stewart Alsop.

THE ARTS:
BOOKS:
Calvin Tomkins's 'Living Well Is the Best Revenge".
"Tussy Is Me," by Michael Hastings.
"The Colony," by John Bowers.
MUSIC: LOUIS ARMSTRONG, 1900-1971. "Goodbye, Louis." [Full page, nice article, with photo]
MOVIES:
Taking Ann-Margret seriously.
George C. Scott in The Last Run".
Gordon Parks's Shaft".
ART:
"The Artist as Adversary" at New York's Museum of Modern Art.
Denise Rene's new avant-garde gallery.


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