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TITLE: NEWSWEEK
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: November 6, 1972; Vol LXXX, No 19
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: Good-Bye Vietnam. "Peace is at Hand"

TOP OF THE WEEK:
GUIDE TO THE ELECTION: Few news events can upstage the closing days of a U.S. Presidential election -- but with the quickening movement toward a cease-fire in Vietnam last week, Newsweek's editors decided to substitute the peace cover for one planned on the election (photo). The ten-page election package includes a special Newsweek! Gallup poll of the Big Six industrial states and a 50-state Listening Post survey, both pointing toward a Nixon landslide; a report on the winding down of a spiritless electoral autumn; close-ups of the McGovern challenge and the Nixon non-campaign; and an election-night voters' guide, including a chart on the offices at stake Nov. 7 and a memo from Newsweek's elections consultant, Richard Scammon, on what to look for as the returns come in.

'PEACE IS AT HAND': "Peace is at hand," Henry Kissinger announced, and it seemed that the long war in Vietnam was finally ending. Although bits and pieces of the accord remained unresolved, it appeared that Richard Nixon had forged a triumph of diplomacy -- a Vietnam settlement in which Hanoi gave in to most of Washington's terms. With files from Henry W. Hubbard and Henry L. Trewhitt in Washington and Nicholas C. Proffitt in Saigon, Associate Editor Richard Steele describes the breakthrough in Vietnam and Associate Editor Richard M. Smith analyzes why the settlement was reached now rather than four years ago. (Newsweek cover photo from UPI prepared by Martin J. Weber.)

PERSONAL TOUCH: Several Newsweek writers and correspondents bring a special personal touch to their stories this week. General Editor Bill Roeder, who usually handles the Newsmakers section, contributes a memoir of baseball's Jackie Robinson -- whose debut Roeder covered a quarter century ago as a newspaperman assigned to the Brooklyn Dodgers (page 103). Education editor Jerrold K. Footlick returns from a nationwide college tour to describe the uneasy new peace on the campus (page 108). Associate Editor Tom Mathews stumped Canada with Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau for his preview of this week's election (page 57). And in Los Angeles, Malcolm MacPherson profiles the budding showbiz career of Olympian Mark Spitz (page 73).

'MY TURN': A NEW COLUMN: This issue marks the debut of a Newsweek feature -- "My Turn," a quite personal page of commentary to be written each week by a different guest columnist. More than twoscore contributors -- many of them well- known, others gifted young people with their own special perspective -- have agreed to take their turns in our pages in coming weeks.

THE COLUMNISTS: My Turn: Bill Moyers. Milton Friedman. CIem Morgello. Stewart Alsop.

OTHER ITEMS OF NOTE: MORE national and international news. Presidential Election has the look of a landslide. Pierre Trudeau, Superstar. MUSIC: Bejart. Bonnie Raitt. MEDIA: Mark Spitz in the media (Interview). BUSINESS: Market is tough on Brokers, too. Housing: How Ed Logue does it. Can we Halt Laviathan, by Milton Friedman. SPORTS: Watching no 42 make history, Jackie Robinson dies. MOVIES: "The discreet charm of the Bourgeoisie", Interview with Luis Banuel. "Tout La Bien". BOOKS, MORE.

FULL PAGE vintage ADS include:
GALE SAYERS for The Mens Store at SEARS; MORE


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