Description: SEE BELOW for MORE MAGAZINES' Exclusive, detailed, guaranteed content description!* Careful packaging, Fast shipping, and EVERYTHING is 100% GUARANTEED. TITLE: NEWSWEEK [Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!] ISSUE DATE: May 10, 1971; Vol. LXXVII, No. 19 CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8½" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo) IN THIS ISSUE: [Use 'Control F' to search this page. MORE MAGAZINES' exclusive detailed content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date.] This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 TOP OF THE WEEK: HOOVER'S FBI: TIME FOR A CHANGE? Long sacrosanct, J. Edgar Hoover and his FBI are now at the center of controversy. Has Hoover, at 76, outstayed his welcome? Has his bureau overplayed its hand? To cover the story, Newsweek called in extensive reports totaling more than 75,000 words from correspondents in Washington and around the U.S., and commissioned a special poll on public attitudes toward the Director and his men. The Washington team included Robert Shogan, who regularly covers the Department of Justice, Nicholas Horrock, Tom Joyce, Thomas M. DeFrank, Nancy Ball and Congressional correspondents Samuel Shaffer and John Lindsay. Patricia Lynden and Tom Mathews in New York, Hugh Aynesworth in Houston and correspondents in half a dozen other cities interviewed past and present FBI agents, civil libertarians, police officials and radicals for this week's cover story by Senior Editor Peter Goldman. (Cover photo by UPI). THE MONEY MARKETS: A QUIET CRISIS: A flurry in Europe's money markets last week opened a new chapter in international financial history. Notice was being served on the U.S. that the rules of the game were being challenged. Reports from Newsweek's European bureaus, Rich Thomas in Washington and Ann Scott and Barbara Davidson in New York shed light on the changing picture. A companion piece examines the effect of U.S. policies on Europe's economic slowdown, and Clem Morgello's column assays the reaction in Wall Street. RACE AND INTELLIGENCE: Few scientific questions of recent years are quite so weighted with emotional and social impact as that posed by researchers who theorize that Negroes may be genetically deprived and therefore intellectually inferior to whites. Last week in Washington, the question erupted again before the National Academy of Sciences. Henry Simmons reports on a tense meeting and the latest wrinkles in a running controversy. A PRIEST IS AS A PRIEST DOES: In Detroit last week, America's Roman Catholic bishops dismissed the notion of marriage for priests. Drawing on his own perceptions as a Catholic layman, Religion editor Kenneth L. Woodward analyzes the decision--and the state of the U.S. Catholic clergy. BLACK AWAKENING IN SOUTH AFRICA: "Black man, you are on your own!' That cry by a black student leader in South Africa sums up a new mood of independence in the land of apartheid. After years of trying to achieve integration, many of South Africa's blacks have taken the race-haunted Afrikaner at his word and have adopted as their own the white man's concept of 'separate development." Newsweek's chief African correspondent, Peter Webb, describes the new black awakening. NEWSWEEK LISTINGS: NATIONAL AFFAIRS: Washington and the war protesters; with two pages of color photos. An arrest in the capitol bombing. A new indictment in the Berrigan case. J. Edgar Hoover's FBI: time for a change? (the cover). The acquittal of Army captain Kotouc. Americas population midpoint. INTERNATIONAL: The Mideast mission of Secretary Rogers. Behind the U.s-coma "thaw". France: Peking's Shanghai caper. Sudan: last days of a mercenary. The black awakening in South Africa. A talk with the Bengali rebel leader. South Korea: President Park's victory. Trouble boils up in placid Holland. THE WAR IN INDOCHINA: The plight of the uprooted rnontagnards. SPORTS: Hank Aaron's 600th home run; Curt Flood's second "retirement". SCIENCE AND SPACE: William Shockley and the delicate issue of racial differences in intelligence; Soyuz 10's abbreviated flight. RELIGION: Profile of the Roman Catholic clergy. BUSINESS AND FINANCE: The looming international money crisis. Europe: end of an economic honeymoon?. Rail workers who couldn't bear to loaf. The case of GM's purloined letters. Return of the proxy battles. A court finds cheating in UMW finances. THE MEDIA: Rupert Murdoch, the "new boy" on Fleet Street. The Amsterdam News changes hands. MEDICiNE: Clues to cancer control in the body's immunity system. THE CITIES: A day in the life of a welfare worker. LIFE AND LEISURE: Pros and cons of having babies at home; The first U.S. hotel for children. THE COLUMNISTS: Joseph Morgenstein. William F. Bundy. CIem Morgello. Paul A. Samuelson. Stewart Alsop. ART: Paris's Max Ernst retrospective. The achievement of Albrecht Durer; with a portfolio of color photographs. BOOKS: Willie Morris's "Yazoo". Cynthia Ozick's "The Pagan Rabbi". Albert Goldman's "Freakshow". MOVIES: Jean-Luc Godard's 'Vladimir and Rosa". Melvin van Peebles's "Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song". MUSIC: John Cranko's ''Camen" ballet. THEATER: A revival of 'Long Day's Journey'. Two short plays by Peter Handke. Brechts "St. Joan of the Stockyards". ______ Use 'Control F' to search this page. * NOTE: OUR content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date. This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
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Topic: News, General Interest
Publication Name: Newsweek
Publication Frequency: Weekly
Publication Year: 1971
Type: Magazine
Era/Year: 1970s