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Careful packaging, Fast shipping, and EVERYTHING is 100% GUARANTEED. TITLE: NEWSWEEK [Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!] ISSUE DATE: November 27 1972; Vol LXXX, No 22 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: ALL ABOUT THE NEW SEX THERAPY: At least half of the married couples in the United States have problems with sex. Now, as a result of the pioneering work of Masters and Johnson, sexual-therapy clinics offering simple, fast cures are rapidly spread- ing across the country. But some critics raise moral questions about the clinics' workshop techniques, and many psychiatrists believe that simple sex therapy leaves deeper problems untouched. To produce this week's cover story, Newsweek correspondents, including Gerald Lubenow, Mariana Gosnell and Jerome Gram, vis- ited sex clinics and talked to therapists, critics and patients. From their reports and his own investigation, Medicine editor Matt Clark wrote the story. (Newsweek cover photo by J. Frederick Smith.) TOP OF THE WEEK: THE RETURN OF EL VIEJO: Seventeen years of exile have not destroyed the panache of Argentina's swarthy ex-dictator, Juan Peron. A military coup forced Peron to flee Buenos Aires on a Paraguayan gunboat in 1955, but ever since then he has undermined every attempt by others to rule the country he left behind. Faced with elections next March, Argentina's ruling military junta last week let Peron come home. Newsweek's Latin American bureau chief John Barnes covered the return of El Viejo (the old man) and explored the Peron mystique. Miguel Acoca filed on Peron's long exile in Spain. Associate Editor Tom Mathews profiled Peron's return. JESUS CHRIST'S SUPERSTARS: A fresh generation of evangelists is bringing something old and something new to the pursuit of salvation. From files by Kent Biffle in Houston, Merrill Sheils in New York and others, Religion Editor Kenneth L. Woodward describes the new look of the old-time religion. A companion piece reports the Bible Belt's reaction to the movie "Marjoe," the confessions of an evangelical con man. AFRICA'S MINI-VIETNAM: For the past eight years, a small but nasty guerrilla war has simmered in Mozambique, a Portuguese colony in the southeast corner of Africa. But recently, the struggle has entered a new and more dangerous phase, raising the specter of an escalating conflict that could engulf most of southern Africa. Last week, Newsweek's Nairobi bureau filed an appraisal of Africa's mini-Vietnam as each side sees it. Bureau chief Peter Webb had extensive conversations with Gen. kaulza de Arriaga, commander of the Portuguese forces. Correspondent Andrew Jaffe trekked 200 miles through the bush with the guerrillas, spoke at length with guerrilla leader Samora Machel and emerged foot-weary but better informed in Tanzania. INDEX: NATIONAL AFFAIRS: can the sky pirates be grounded?. The ransom dilemma. Henry Kissinger in Paris: moving toward peace. The Democrats turn to the center. The GOP's agonizing reappraisal. Homosexuals and the ordeal of prison. Ex-Senator Brewster is found guilty. The state of the State Department. Baton Rouge: blood on the campus. Deaths in the family. case of the spicy enchiladas. INTERNATIONAL: Juan PerOn's return to Argentina. The West German elections. Mr. Nixon focuses on Europe. cuba and the u.s.: are talks close?. Mozambique's widening guerrilla war. On patrol with the Frelimo insurgents. A challenge to France's abortion law. THE MEDIA: Alistair cooke's tour of America. The strike at CBS. Saturday Review: new home, new format. MEDICINE: The new sex therapy (the cover). SCIENCE: Poisoning the seas. Brain food. BUSINESS AND FINANCE: The economy: good times ahead?. British labor's reaction to the freeze. The Dow hits 1,000. Saudi Arabia comes of age. Pepsi-cola's deal with the Soviets. America's angry fishermen -- and hopeful. fish farmers. Japan's irate career women. The new chief at Sears. RELIGION: Mod evangelism. Marjoe: the "fallen" preacher. EDUCATION: Schools and the growing problem of racial "tipping". The liberated Etonian. THE COLUMNISTS: My Turn: Daniel P. Moynihan. Shana Alexander. Milton Friedman. Clem Morgello. Stewart Alsop. THE ARTS: MUSIC: Bluegrass: the Wheeling feeling. THEATER: "The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild"; venal. "Much Ado About Nothing": honey-sweet. "The Kid" and "Tooth of crime": anti-macho. "Mourning Becomes Electra": middling. MOVIES; "Rage": George Scott's directorial debut. "The valachi Papers": gangster's memoirs. "1776": an off-key Revolution. BOOKS: Woodham-Smith's biography of victoria. Black Mountain college in perspective. A new O'Hara anthology. George Bailey's "Germans". ______ Use 'Control F' to search this page. * NOTE: OUR 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. 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 |