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TITLE: NEWSWEEK
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: April 9 1973; Vol. LXXXI., No. 15, 4/9/73
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:
THE COVER: The Great Meat Furor: Veal cutlets had soared to $6.50 a pound at some shops and the lowly hot dog had passed the $1-a-pound mark. With consumer boycott movements and Congressional criticism spreading, the Nixon Administration made another sudden and dramatic turnabout in economic policy. The President Imposed an indefinite ceiling on the wholesale and retail prices of beef, lamb and pork--a step that the Administration had sworn as recently as three weeks ago it never would take. The move left nobody happy and almost everyone confused. The meat boycotters vowed to press on this week. With files from Tom Joyce and Rich Thomas in Washington and from other Newsweek correspondents across the U.S., General Editor Tom Nicholson analyzes the situation. (Newsweek cover photo by Lawrence Fried, photographed at Lobel Bros. Meats.)

A SABER RATTLES IN CAIRO: EGYPT is girding for a "resumption of the battle." in an exclusive Interview in Cairo last week, Egypt's President Anwar Sadat told Newsweek Senior Editor Arnaud de Borchgrave that he had settled on a policy of "total confrontation" with Israel. De Borchgrave reports several hither-to untold tales of aborted Egyptian military plans that suggest Sadat's saber rattling may not be all bluff. The story is accompanied by the text of de Borchgrave's interview with the Egyptian leader --his fifth in two years.

POW'S: THE SECRET AGONY: As the last American POW's left Hanoi last week, their comrades already back in the U.S. broke a self-imposed silence to charge that their Communist captors had subjected them to a chilling ordeal by torture. The POW's described sadistic treatment as ingenious as It was inhumane. With files from correspondents Thomas DeFrank, William J. Cook and others, Associate Editor Tom Mathews wrote the story.

THE GLASS MENAGERIE: One kind of modern art that's easy to see through is fine glass. Our no-deposit age of bottles and jars had shoved this formerly high craft to the sidelines. Now something of a renaissance is under way in American glass art. Associate Editor S.K. Oberbeok describes a shimmering new show, "American Glass Now," that has begun a coast-to-coast tour.

OLD MASTERS: Two masters of the arts died last week. Sir Noel Coward and Edward Steichen were both colorful personalities, masterly artists and huge popular successes, and superbly disciplined craftsmen. General Editor Walter CIemons writes on actor-playwright-composer Coward, the epitome of sophisticated hedonism (page 117), and Senior Editor Russell Watson analyzes the career of Steichen (page 72), whose camera became a glittering theater for the faces and styles of an era.

THE CABLE BLUES: The airwaves these clays are alive with the sound of sex. Free-swinging call-in talk shows on radio have offended many listeners, and the FCC promised last week to stop it. But Media editor Harry F. Waters reports a potentially larger censorship issue is now posed by the appearance of blue movies and free-form nudity on cable television.

INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Mr. Nixon faces the nation.
The meat-price furor (the cover).
Watergate: the birds are singing.
Who Is James W. McCord Jr.?.
The POW tales of horror.
A CIA man's version of the ITT-Chile case.
The first veto.
Tepee tempest.
INTERNATIONAL:
Egypt's Sadat threatens to fight.
An interview with the Egyptian leader.
President Thieu comes to the U.S.
A talk with Vietnam's mercurial Ky.
The hunt for the missing Gl's.
The cave city of the Pathet Lao.
The Philippines: a reporter visits the war zone.
Ambassador Moynihan: man with clout.
The Irish Navy's big haul.
China's man in Washington.
SPORTS: UCLA's amazing Bill Walton, college basketball superstar; The "designated hitter" experiment.
MEDICINE: Getting away from the kidney machine; Blood clots and heart attacks; East Africa's flying doctors.
LIFE AND LEISURE: The woes of the Vietnamese war brides.
THE MEDIA: Sex on the airwaves.
EDUCATION: The occult craze on the campus; General Motors' university.
THE CITIES: Berkeley: challenge to the radicals.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The big postal snafu.
The no-strike steel agreement.
Solving the Northeast railroad crisis.
Saving the Waterman pen company.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Donald Reeves.
Cyclops.
CIem Morgelio.
Paul A. Samuelson.
Stewart Alsop.

THE ARTS:
ART: Edward Steichen, 1879-1973.
The American glass renaissance.
The Whitney's Winslow Homer show.
MOVIES:
Bury My Oscar at Wounded Knee.
"Godspell": more Jesus set to music.
A musical "Tom Sawyer".
BOOKS:
Ross Russell's life of Charlie Parker.
Sophy Burnham's "The Art Crowd".
John Leonard's "This Pen for Hire".
THEATER:
Noel Coward: hail and farewell. A Talent to Amuse: Sir Noel Coward dies last week at 72, article with photos.
Pirandello's "Henry IV".


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