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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: October 11, 1971; Vol. LXXVIII, No. 15
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

TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER STORY: PIERRE BOULEZ--NEW MAESTRO FOR A NEW MUSIC: America's more than 1,100 symphony orchestras, short of money and in a changing culture, face a problematic future. Now the oldest, NEW YORK'S PHILHARMONIC, has dared to hire composer-conductor Pierre Boulez, music's leading radical figure. From his own interviews, and files from bureaus and reporter Abigail Kuflik, Music editor Hubert Saal tells the story, with a separate look at the state of U.S. orchestras. (Newsweek cover photo by Lawrence Fried. Inside photo: Conductor Pierre Boulez (left) and Music editor SaaI.) THE MONEY CRISIS PERSISTS: When President Nixon cut the dollar's peg to gold, the world's financial wizards--each out to protect his own country's interests--were pressed into a round of hard bargaining to produce a new international monetary system. There were signs of long-range progress at last week's annual meeting of the International Monetary Fund; but the crisis persisted. With files from Washington correspondent Henry Simmons, Associate Editor Ann Scott writes the story.

THE SCOOP ON JACKSON: Washington's Sen. Henry M. (Scoop) Jackson, though still a dark horse, is in many ways the most broad-based of Democratic Presidential aspirants. General Editor Kenneth Auchincloss, using files from correspondent John Lindsay, analyzes Scoop's candidacy.

MOSCOW'S NEW SPIES: When Britain expelled 105 Soviet "spies" who had been fingered by defector Oleg Lyalin, it focused attention on Moscow's global espionage network. Drawing on files from Washington and abroad, Newsweek profiles that network and the new breed of Soviet agent.

A RAZOR IS BORN: Last year, studies by the Gillette Co. uncovered a serious threat to its dominance in the safety-razor market--Wilkinson Sword's new blade in a plastic cartridge. Shaken, Gillette immediately launched a highly secret, all-out search for a product that would guarantee its lead. The result: a two-blade razor, out just in time for the company's traditional World Series commercials. Boston bureau chief Frank Morgan reports on the high-level Corporate cloak-and-dag ger affair.

CONTENTS/INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
U.S. brinkmanship in the money crisis.
Supreme Court: Richard Poff withdraws.
Easier sailing for defense-fund bills.
Mr. Nixon--happy in his work.
Democratic dark horse "Scoop" Jackson.
Lindsay's first big U.S. political swing.
San Francisco: Alioto's re-election push.
The Kennedy Center ticket mess.
Illinois's racing-and-politics scandal.
A court ruling on integration in Detroit.
INTERNATIONAL:
How Russia spies.
What's going on in China?.
Andre Malraux finds a new cause.
Cardinal Mindszenty goes into exile.
Toward a ban on germ warfare.
Uruguay prepares for a crucial election.
Greece: Lady Fleming's conviction.
Iran: the Shah's one-man revolution.
Ralph Bunche retires.
THE WAR IN INDOCHINA: South vietnam's no-contest election.
RELIGION: The bishops' synod under pressure; Words of advice for troubled Protestants.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: PCB, the newest pollution peril.
EDUCATION: At the University of Wisconsin, a return to "normalcy"; Contract education in Gary pays off.
MEDICINE: Sleuths with scalpels: the art of the forensic pathologist; A hazardous drug gets the FDA's OK.
SPORTS: The ragtag but victorious Giants; Baltimore's pitching stars.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
A public-opinion vote for Nixonomics.
The coal and dock strikes.
Postponing the auto-safety air bag.
The great Dodge estate auction.
Chile's copout on copper compensation.
Gillette's twin-blade razor campaign.
The ruckus over postal bonds.
THE CITIES:
The fight over vanderbilt University's expansion program.
San Francisco's cemetery strike.
THE COLUMNISTS: Zbigniew Brzezinski; Henry C. Wallich; CIem Morgello; Stewart Alsop.

THE ARTS:
MOVIES: Peter Bogdanovich's "Last Picture Show".
MUSIC:
Conductor Pierre Boulez (the cover).
U.S. symphonies: vigor--and some blues.
THEATER: Peter Weiss's "HoiderIin".
BOOKS:
"Maurice," by E.M. Forster.
"Atlantic Brief Lives": essays on the arts.
Joyce Carol Oates's "Wonderland".
A compact Oxford English Dictionary.


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