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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: January 24, 1972; Vol LXXIX, No 4
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER: VD -- The Epidemic PAGE 46 From every quarter of the nation, the statistics flood in. Venereal disease in the U.S. is epidemic, and the incidence of syphilis and gonorrhea is rising sharply among the middle and upper classes, whose members hither-to fancied themselves above the scourge. Now the VD victims in- Clark dude bank presidents, physicians, executives and an ever-rising number of young people, particularly high- school and college students. The life-style of the young is one major contributing factor. Medical men sum up the causes under the heading of the Three P's -- Permissiveness, Promiscuity and the Pill. From reports gathered by Newsweek bureaus across the country and major files from San Francisco correspondent Elisabeth Coleman, Los Angeles correspondent Marvin Kupfer and New York reporter Manana Gosnell, Medicine editor Matt Clark describes the crisis. (Newsweek cover photo by Carl Fischer.)

THE GREAT HOWARD HUGHES FLAP: The autobiography of Howard Hughes? McGraw-Hill and Life magazine announced in December that they planned to publish the reclusive billionaire's recollections -- the product, so they said, of Hughes's collaboration with novelist Clifford Irving. Then, last week, Hughes himself -- or at least his voice -- was heard publicly for the first time in fifteen years, denying any knowledge of the autobiography. The result was the biggest publishing flap since Jacqueline Kennedy battled William Manchester. In New York, Tom Mathews talked to Irving and others; John Dotson and Martin Kasindorf interviewed Hughes associates on the West Coast. General Editor Richard Boeth recounts the whole fantastic story.

MUJIB TAKES COMMAND: In joyous pandemonium, hundreds of thousands of people welcomed Sheikh Mujibur Rahman home last week. Meanwhile, Mujib moved with vigor to take command of the new nation of Bangladesh. With files from Simon Dning in Dacca and correspondent Edward Behr in India, Associate Editor Daniel Chu reports on Mujib's hectic first week home. And in the first private interview granted after his return, Mujib describes his nine-month ordeal in West Pakistan.

THE LATIN CONNECTION: The "French connection" is passe. Instead, a burgeoning Latin American network is now the largest single supplier of hard drugs smuggled into the U.S. Reporters Event Clark and Nicholas Horrock in Washington and John Barnes in South America pulled together the intricate tale of the "Latin connection" and its kingpin, Auguste Ricord. From their files, Associate Editor Richard Steele wrote the story, and General Editor Raymond Carroll describes the "Bianchi bust" -- key anti-smuggling arrests.

INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Vietnam-- a '72 campaign issue?.
Anti-crime funds for eight cities.
The State of the Union -- and Congress.
The great Howard Hughes flap.
Iowa -- the first McGovern-Muskie test.
The Richmond school decision: a new.
move against de facto segregation.
Hunting the safe-deposit bomber.
Racial violence in New Orleans.
THE WAR IN INDOCHINA: The widening Communist offensive.
INTERNATIONAL:
The Latin connection: a new battleground in the U.S. war against narcotics.
How one drug smuggler was nabbed.
Bangladesh: Mujib takes command.
An interview with Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.
China: the curious funeral of Chen Yi.
Britain vs. Malta.
President Mobutu's change of name.
Ghana's army coup.
Reign of terror in Guinea.
Frederik IX of Denmark, 1899-1972.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Mariner 9's spectacular Mars photos; The male chauvinist computer.
THE MEDIA: How the Nixon China trip will be covered; TV violence -- not very harmful?; Radio's thriving telephone talk shows.
MEDICINE: The VD epidemic (the cover).
THE CITIES: Grim times at Scotland Yard.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The stubborn unemployment problem.
Wall Street's embarrassing boy wonder.
Aberdeen, Scotland's oil-boom town.
Mexico's thriving industrial border zone.
Mixed omens on the economic front.
No-fault's record in Massachusetts.
The swing away from monetarism.
EDUCATION: A Stanford radical on the skids; Houston's controversial school; superintendent wins reappointment.
LIFE AND LEISURE: For sale: the homes of the stars; will the snowmobile be tamed?.
SPORTS: Record-setting girl swimmer Shane Gould; Basketball: the rise of Long Beach State.
THE COLUMNISTS: Zbigniew Brzezinski; Henry C. Wallich.

THE ARTS:
MOVIES:
The black market in film prints.
"The Cowboys": junior caricatures.
BOOKS:
Ladislas Farago's "Game of the Foxes".
Iris Murdoch's "An Accidental Man".
"Report From Engine Co. 82," by Dennis Smith.
MUSIC:
Pianist Misha Dichter.
Opera's professional couple.
ART: washington's Soviet art exhibit.


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