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TITLE: NEWSWEEK
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: December 2, 1974; Vol. LXXXIV, No. 23
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 Economy: HOW BAD A SLUMP? Cover illustration by Robert V. Engle--Newsweek.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
GERALD FORD'S PASSAGE TO ASIA: President Ford flew off to Asia last week, leaving behind a nation beset with a gathering storm of economic woes. Many Americans thought that Ford was going to the wrong place at the wrong time. Yet Ford succeeded in stilling fears that he would trip on the unfamiliar ground of foreign affairs. And at a promising Siberian summit with Communist Party chief Leomd Brezhnev, he appeared to have given a new boost to the stalled strategic arms talks with the Russians. With files from Washington bureau chief Mel Elfin and correspondents Thomas M. DeFrank and Bernard Krisher, Richard Steele chronicles Ford's promising passage through Asia.

WAR OF NERVES: A week after Israel ordered a partial army mobilization, the commonest sound on the tense Golan Heights was the click of tourists' cameras. But last week, Arab terrorists struck Beit Shean, a small Israeli border town. The threat of a fifth Arab.Israeli war loomed just over the horizon. With files from correspondents Jay Axelbank and Milan J. Kubic, Tom Mathews describes the deadly war of nerves.

HARD TIMES--HOW BAD A SLUMP? With depressing regularity, news of growing layoffs spread across the land last week, and millions of Americans were forced to come to terms with recession and hard times. The picture is grimmest in Detroit, where auto sales have nose- dived and tens of thousands of autoworkers have been fur.

loughed. Detroit bureau chief James C. Jones and correspond. ent Jon Lowell toured auto plants and city streets to measure the auto industry's woes. Rich Thomas, Tom Joyce and Sam. uel Shaffer in Washington and other correspondents also filed for Tom Nicholson's cover story. Allan J. Mayer examined how the recession is hurting minority and women workers. (Cover illustration by Robert V. Engle--Newsweek.).

FIGHT TO THE FINISH: With assets of $67 billion, AT&T is the world's largest corporation, and last week the U.S. Justice Department brought the biggest antitrust suit in history against it. AT&T vowed it would fight to the end.

INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
President Ford's Siberian summit.
A reporter's notebook.
What makes Rockefeller tick?.
Democrats: "There's no left left".
The Navy vs. a pie thrower.
Nixon's tapes: "That's a real bomb".
Carl Albert, standby for the Presidency.
Congressional roadblocks against Ford.
Fanne Foxe in Boston's "Combat Zone".
INTERNATIONAL:
War of nerves in the Mideast.
Britain: terror bombings in Birmingham.
The US-Soviet trade boom.
Doing business the Russian way.
Belgium's gospel swingers.
ENTERTAINMENT:
Anne Bancroft's comedy hour.
Quipster-critic Gene Shalit.
SPORTS:
Hockey's upstart Los Angeles Kings.
Reliving the bad old days.
Crowding--not all bad.
RELIGION: Cardinal Mindszenty's memoirs; A Mennonite shunned.
EDUCATION: Opening student files--but how far?; Cartooning: Bill Mauldin at Yale.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
How bad a slump? (the cover).
Depression in Detroit.
"Last hired, first fired".
How SUB helps the idle--for a while.
The trustbusters tackle AT&T.
Greyhound's drivers leave the driving.
SCIENCE: A surprising new subatomic particle.
MEDICINE: Living with death; Help for heart patients.
NEWS MEDIA: Public TV and private sponsors.
JUSTICE: End of the pot watch?; Experts as witnesses.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: James MacGregor Burns.
Pete Axthelm.
Bill Moyers.

THE ARTS:
MUSIC:
Doubling up at the Met's helm.
Vladimir Horowitz on the road.
THEATER: Two remarkable South African plays.
BOOKS:
Show biz in hard covers.
Shelby Foote's third Civil War volume.
Ian Young's "The Private Life of Islam".
MOVIES: "Earthquake": a worthwhile disaster.


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