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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 30, 1972; Vol LXXX, No 18
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: NIXON'S VIETNAM DEAL: When the Vietnamese Communists overran the French bastion at Dienbienphu, correspondent Arnaud de Borchgrave covered the story for Newsweek. Last week, de Borchgrave was back in North Vietnam--for an exclusive interview with Premier Pham Van Dong. The Premier assured him that all U.S. prisoners of war would be freed as soon as a general agreement is reached to end the war--without waiting for actual U.S. withdrawal. Hanoi, he said, is willing to discuss the political future of South Vietnam in direct negotiations with Saigon-- a major concession to U.S. demands. In Saigon, Nicholas C. Proffitt gathered extensive details on the blueprint for evolving the postwar Saigon regime and described President Nguyen Van Thieu's resistance to the U.S.-Hanoi agreement. In Washington, Henry L. Trewhitt analyzed the diplomatic impact of the maneuvering. From their reports, Associate Editor Richard Steele describes the hour of reckoning in Vietnam. (Newsweek cover photo by John Robaton.).

THE U.S.-SOVIET TRADE PACT: The three-year trade agreement signed last week by the U.S. and the Soviet Union marked a giant step toward peaceful relations. But it came as no surprise to Dr. Armand Hammer, whose 50 years' experience of trading with Communist Russia, gives him an inside track in the new gold rush. With files from Jay Axelbank in Moscow, Rich Thomas and Leon Volkov in Washington and Stephan Lesher in Los Angeles, General Editor Tom Nicholson analyzes the pact and recounts Hammer's trading feats.

BAG OF TRICKS: Some intriguing new evidence of GOP political espionage surfaced last week: a young Indianapolis Republican recruited to try to disrupt Democratic campaigns in Midwestern primaries to weaken strong candidates. Washington correspondents Nicholas Horrock and Tom Joyce uncovered the story, which was written by General Editor Richard Boeth (page 30). Related stories describe the campus political machinations of a network of University of Southern California alumni now in the White House (page 35) and the renewed hostilities between the Administration and the press in connection with the Watergate affair (page 76).

CONTENTS/INDEX:
THE WAR IN INDOCHINA:
Mr. Nixon's Vietnam deal (the cover).
Hanoi's pledge on the POW's.
The blueprint for a postwar regime.
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Political espionage: a case history.
Old school ties in the White House.
The campaign: into the homestretch.
How McGovern stands in his own state.
The search for Hale Boggs.
Two congressional rebuffs for Mr. Nixon.
A look at some key Senate races.
De Mau Mau--a black terror gang?.
The New York mob's trailer HQ.
INTERNATIONAL:
Martial law in South Korea.
A talk with Philippines President Marcos.
A Nobel Prize for Germany's Heinrich Boll.
chile: Most serious challenge to Allende.
Japan's World War II holdouts.
changes in Soviet policy on Jews.
The common Market summit feat.
EDUCATION: Grading the big foundations.
LIFE AND LEISURE: Fashion: a Norman Norell retrospective; New electronic television games.
THE MEDIA: covering the Watergate story; The networks gird for the elections; A new chief for Harper's Bazaar.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Big breakthrough for U.S.-Soviet trade.
Armand Hammer: doing business with the Russians from Lenin to Brezhnev.
The move to break up IBM.
The economy: pitfalls in the future.
Fads: pipe organs in pizzerias.
On sale--the Hughes Tool co.
Arthur Goldberg quits the TWA board.
RELIGION: Atlanta's free-for-all black Baptists; The evangelicals and the election.
MEDICINE: Foster grandmothers for retarded children.
THE CITIES: Same crime, different sentence; Traffic: freeing the freeways.
SCIENCE: A second Nobel Prize for a U.S. scientist.
THE COLUMNISTS: Shana Alexander; Henry C. Wallich; CIem Morgello; Stewart Alsop.

THE ARTS:
MUSIC:
"Jacques Brel": alive and well on Broadway.
The Metropolitan Opera's first black conductor.
BOOKS:
Sixteen books by Edward Gorey.
Three on Africa.
Two on East Germany.
The David 0. Selznick papers.
THEATER: The Broadway season struggles to open.
MOVIES:
"Fellini's Roma": celluloid feast.
Marcel Ophuls's "A Sense of Loss".


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