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ISSUE DATE: SEPTEMBER 5, 1988; Volume CXII, No 10

IN THIS ISSUE:-
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COVER: Will we ever get over THE 60's? Secrets for sale: Cracking a NATO spy ring. Cover: Montage by Ed Gallucci; photos (top left) John Olson, (bottom right) Jason Laure.

TOP OF THE WEEK [Major Top Stories]:
THE SIXTIES COMPLEX:The controversy over Dan Quayle's Vietnam-era service in the National Guard has quieted down. But his nomination has sparked a re-examination of the excesses, tragedies and triumphs of that complicated time. In an essay and two personal reflections, NEWSWEEK looks back at the decade that refuses to just fade away. National Affairs: Page 14.

LUCKY LENNY: America's best-known wunderkind turned 70 last week, and the music community saluted him at an emotional, celebrity-packed birthday concert. LEONARD BERNSTEIN, conductor, composer, pianist, teacher and political gadfly, refuses to slow down. This month he begins an international tour with the Vienna Philharmonic, and he's contemplating composing an opera about the Holocaust, some song cycles and a ballet.

The Arts: Page 54.

BREAKING UP A NEST OF SPIES: With the arrest of former Army sergeant Clyde Lee Conrad, U.S. and European investigators announced they had broken one of the most dangerous East-bloc espionage rings in recent years. International: Page 38.

AX'S PICKS: This week's National Football League opening will be a study in extremes. Wyche of the Cincinnati Bengals may be about to lose his job, and Ryan of the Philadelphia Eagles is going to the Super Bowl. Lifestyle: Page 62.

GIVING BACK: As federal funds dwindle, cities are using a process called "linkage" to make developers help provide the community with affordable housing, jobs and services. Business: Page 46.

[FULL NEWSWEEK LISTINGS]:
National Affairs:
Coming to grips with the '60s (the cover).
Obsessed with a decade.
Confessions of an ex-radical.
What did you do in the war, Daddy?.
Dukakis on the defensive.
Dan Quayle's record.
Yellowstone: up in smoke.
A mogul's wife is kidnapped.
The rogue cops of Detroit.

INTERNATIONAL:
NATO's secrets up for sale.
Poland looks for a way out.
The perils of glasnost.
A people's revolt in Burma.
Moscow's new tennis stars.

BUSINESS:
The business of linkage.
Inflation makes a comeback.
The real Hunt brothers story.
Selling beyond-the-pale books.
Busting a state-of-the-art call-girl ring.
Robert J. Samuelson.

THE ARTS:
Music: He's so lucky to be Lenny.
Recording a grand career.
Books: The lady on cell block 112A.
Movies: Thunder on the far right.
Movies: Amy Irving in a pretty pickle.

LIFESTYLE:
Sports: Changing of the guard.
Family: A bummer in the burbs.

SOCIETY:
Education: Prospecting for alumni gold.
Technology: The rocket, the swan.
Environment: A cold war over hot water.
Ideas: "A huge leap into unreason".

DEPARTMENTS:
Periscope.
My Turn, by Larry Voeller.
The Mail.
Perspectives.
Newsmakers.
Transition.
Meg Greenfield.
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