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NEWSWEEK
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ISSUE DATE: JUNE 1, 1981; Vol. XCVII, No. 22

IN THIS ISSUE:-
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COVER: CAN YOU AFFORD TO RETIRE? Cover: H. Aoki Studio, photo by George Hausman.

TOP OF THE WEEK [Major Top Stories]:
CAN YOU AFFORD TO RETIRE? Since the historic day in 1935 when Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed the Social Security Act, a revolution has taken place: many Americans have come to view a secure retirement as an inalienable right. But today, a crisis of confidence threatens America's complex retirement system. Each of its pillars- individual savings, the pension system and social security itself-is in jeopardy, the casualty of inflation, shifting demographics and rising expectations. NEWSWEEK examines the growing retirement mess and analyzes the conflicting-and politically explosive- reforms proposed to correct it. Page 24.

NEGLECTED MASTER: Cezanne called him "humble and colossal," but Camille Pissarro has never had the acclaim given to the other great French impressionists. A superb exhibit at Boston's Museum of Fine Arts shows that this modest painter was a major influence on later artists and a brilliant master of light. Page 76.

HABIB PLAYS FOR TIME: Amid more gunfire, U.S. diplomat Philip Habib (above, right) continued the search for a solution to the Lebanese missile crisis, con- sulting with Israel's Prime Minister Menachem Begin and the leaders of three Arab nations. Peace was not yet at hand, but neither, it appeared, was another war, and that alone was an impressive achievement. Page 46.

TRANSIT TROUBLES: Ridership is up, but mass-transit sysems are suffering a fiscal crisis that will worsen as the Reagan Administraion cuts back Federal operating subsilies. The result: higher fares and reluced service. Page 44.

RIDDLES OF MEMORY: Memory rules man's life, from his sense of self to his civilization, yet no one has ever quite understood how it works. Now, however, scientists are starting to see how the brain's chemicals and neurons interact to select and preserve some of our fleeting experiences and allow others to disappear forever. Page 89.

[FULL NEWSWEEK LISTINGS]:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Reagan's first setback.
Can you afford to retire? (the cover).
The crisis in social security.
The turmoil in pension plans.
War of the wolf PAC's.
Earl Butz pleads guilty.
The government's brain drain.
The mass-transit jungle.
NTERNATIONAL:
Mideast: Habib plays for time.
Crises in the alliance.
Ulster: signs of a British split.
Laos: a secret mission searches for MIA's.
The breast vs. the bottle.
Finding France's ship of ghouls.
The Pope is on the mend.
Argentina: let's be friends again.
JUSTICE:
The juvenile-court mess.
The Court vs. the psychiatrist.
EDUCATION:
Atlanta: opting for competence.
God and man at Dartmouth.
BUSINESS:
M-G-M buys United Artists.
$50 million for basic research.
Corporations: how to cope with terrorism.
When employees take over.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: A. Lawrence Chickering.
Jane Bryant Quinn.
Meg Greenfield.
NEWS MEDIA: Dallas's newspaper war; The press vs. UNESCO.
SCIENCE: The mystery of memory.

ART: Boston's Pissarro retrospective.
TELEVISION: The writers' strike fallout.
BOOKS:
"Dad," by William Wharton.
"Tracks," by Robyn Davidson.
"An Imagined World," by June Goodfield.
Four on Jonestown.
MOVIES:
"Polyester": salacious soap.
"Outland": high noon on lo.
"The Fan": horror chic.
MUSIC:
Juilliard's four bowmen.
Hyping the "next Liszt".
SPORTS: The Islanders take the Stanley Cup.

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