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TITLE: NEWSWEEK
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: April 26, 1971; Vol. LXXVII., No. 17
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: CHINA: A New Game Begins: "I joined the State Department to solve the problems of the world, and here I sit, analyzing the political impact of a Ping Pong game." Despite that flip statement by a U.S. diplomat, last week's tour of China by an American table-tennis team marked a major watershed in postwar history: a thaw in relations between the U.S. and China. After two decades of implacable hostility, the two nations were back on speaking terms--and that development had immense significance for the rest of the world. To assess the importance of the diplomatic breakthrough, Newsweek called in files from Maynard Parker, Sydney Liu and Tony Clifton in Hong Kong and from its bureau in Washington. The magazine also commissioned team captain Jack Howard to write his impressions of the trip. From these and other reports, General Editor Russell Watson wrote the cover story. In companion pieces, Associate Editor Richard Steele profiles Premier Chou En-lai, the architect of Peking's new policy, and Associate Editor Daniel Chu looks ahead to the time when mainland China may become a tourist stop for many Americans. (Newsweek cover drawing by David Levine.)

QUARTET:
The worst drought since the 1950s has seized the Southwest, evoking memories of "The Grapes of Wrath." Associate Editor Arthur Zich writes the story from files from Kent Biffle.
According to a survey, a majority of U.S. Catholic clergymen believe they should be allowed to marry. But the church excommunicated a priest who had married without permission.
Newark, N.J., is about as close to ruin as a city can come, and a bitter teachers' strike is making things even worse. From on-scene reports by Ruth Ross, G. Bruce Porter wrote the story.
Providing a constant musical obbligato on the nightly talk showsare studio orchestras filled with some of the best musicians in the country. Newsweek reports on the talk-show bands.

INDEX:
CHINA AND THE U.S:
A new game begins.
The American visitors.
A China Baedeker.
Chou En-lai: the indispensable man?.
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The growing criticism of the FBI.
How G-men won their letter at Swarthmore.
Mr. Nixon's run of good news.
An antiwar spring offensive in Washington.
The confessions of Charles Evers.
David Poindexter's surprise acquittal.
L.A.'s hard-line police chief.
The Southwest: dust bowl 1971.
INTERNATIONAL:
The Pakistani war: could the conflict spread?.
Ceylon--making new friends.
For Egypt: the world's hottest plane?.
Haiti: after Papa Doc, what?.
Morale crisis in the West German Army.
THE WAR IN INDOCHINA: Fire Base 6 and u.s. air power; Cambodia: the return of Lon Noi.
MEDICINE: The gonorrhea epidemic; The chemistry of homosexuality.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Trials of the STOL transport; New signs of life in space; A black market in A-bombs?.
LIFE AND LEISURE:
Now she's Ms.--not Miss or Mrs.
'Massage parlors"--there's the rub.
THE MEDIA: What the liberated woman reads; New "chef" at The New York Times.
SPORTS: Charlie Coody, Masters winner; Bob Nevin, the N.Y. Rangers' quiet man.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The economy: signs of a warm-up.
The shipping jam in the English Channel.
Nader's Waders--the water's lousy.
The great mail speed-up?.
Railroad earnings--a numbers game.
Airlines: mixed blessings from the CAB.
A book that tilts at foundations.
THE CITIES: Newark at the brink; The rebirth of Los Angeles Harbor.
RELIGION: U.S. Catholicism: priests vs. bishops; The Rev, and Mrs. Robert F. Duryea; The creation: just a game of chance?.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Joseph Morgenstorn.
Zbigniew Brzezinski.
Henry C. Wallich.
Clem Morgello.
Stewart Alsop.

THE ARTS:
MUSIC: The bands that back up TV's talk shows.
MOVIES:
"The Phantom Tollbooth": boy's fun.
Robert Mulligan's "Summer of '42".
BOOKS:
Peter Matthiessen's "Blue Meridian".
"The White Dawn," by James Houston.
Jerzy Kosinski's "Being There".
B.H. Liddell Hart on World War II.


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