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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: February 22, 1971; ; Vol. LXXVII, No. 8
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: The War against CANCER. A Progress Report. Researcher Howard M. Termin.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
CALIFORNIA'S QUAKE: Like almost everyone else in Los Angeles, Newsweek bureau chief John L Dotson Jr., correspondents Paul Brinkley-Rogers, Martin Kasindorf and Nicholas C. Proffitt and Contributing Editor Karl Fleming were jolted awake at 6 am. last Tuesday by a rumbling earthquake. They were luckier than many: the damage The quake in their respective households amounted to little more than broken crockery and scattered books, and they quickly made their way to the areas where the quake had hit hardest. From their files, General Editor Richard Boeth wrote the story of the Los Angeles area's most disastrous earthquake in 38 years. An account of one family's ordeal and an assessment of the chances of worse quakes to come, plus four pages of color photographs, round out Newsweek's coverage of the disaster.

THE WAR AGAINST CANCER: Fresh winds are blowing in the cancer-research laboratories of the nation, and although no cure is in sight, recent strides made in both research and therapy have lifted knowledge of the causes and treatment of the fearsome malignancy to an exciting new plateau. There is also the prospect of a massive, federally financed drive to achieve still greater breakthroughs during the next several years. Medicine editor Matt Clark wrote this week's cover story, with assistance from material gathered by reporters Matt Clark Mariana Gosnell and Jean Seligmann. In a separate report, correspondent William S. Gray provides an intensely personal account of one man's struggle to survive the malignancy--his own. (Newsweek cover photo by Lawrence Fried.).

SADAT SPEAKS: Until recently, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat was frequently dismissed as "the man who succeeded Nasser." But last week, Sadat was engaged in a major diplomatic offensive that seemed to open new avenues toward a settlement with Israel. In an exclusive interview with Newsweek Senior Editor Arnaud de Borch. grave, Sadat spelled out more specifically than ever before the terms upon which he is prepared to make peace with Israel.

APOLLO 14: Back From the Moon: Apollo 14's astronauts were back from the moon, ebullient over the success of their mission and chafing under the restraints of their quarantine at the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston. They are scheduled to remain under observation by NASA physicians and scientists until sometime late next week. If no bacteria or other organisms show up by the end of the quarantine period, NASA officials say future astronauts will probably be permitted to forgo quarantine. Meanwhile, scientists were already examining the moon rocks the spacemen brought back, and NASA headquarters released the first of the pictures taken by the fifth and sixth men to walk the moon. The story, by Science editor George Alexander, carries with it four pages of color photos.

WHAT COLLEGE STUDENTS ARE THINKING: Campus uprisings--most recently last spring--have convinced many Americans that U.S. students are radically different from their elders. But a special Newsweek poll by The Gallup Organization indicates it's really not so. In an analysis of the poll findings, Education editor Jerrold Footlick profiles college students as they actually are. And Associate Editor James Doherty considers why the public's image of college students differs from the reality.

PLUS MORE National and International news, and OTHER ITEMS OF NOTE:
THE COLUMNISTS: Zbigniew Brzezinski. Henry C. Wallich. CIem Morgello. Stewart Alsop.
MOVIES: Citizen Darryl Zannuck. (With photo). "Puzzle of a Downfall child". Books. Music: Eubie Blake (Article with photo). MORE.


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