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ISSUE DATE: September 20, 1971; Vol. LXXVIII, No. 12

IN THIS ISSUE:-
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COVER: JFK's MEMORIAL.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
JFK'S MEMORIAL: For one glittering moment last week the Kennedys recaptured Washington. The occasion was the opening of the nation's official memorial to John Fitzgerald Kennedy-- a $70 million white marble cultural center on the banks of the Potomac. Washington correspondent Nancy Ball and General Editor Kenneth Auchincloss were on-scene for the opening-week festivities, which Auchincloss describes in his report on the Kennedy Center. In a companion piece, Music editor Hubert SaaI gives his appraisal of the controversial work that marked the center's opening--Leonard Bernstein's swirling, eclectic "Mass." A four-page color portfolio rounds out the cover section. (Newsweek cover photo by Dennis Brack--Black Star.).

THE MUSKIE CAMPAIGN: Maine's Sen. Edmund Muskie is universally regarded as the current front runner for the Democratic Presidential nomination in 1972. But how is Muskie's early-season campaign faring? How good is his staff? How ample his war chest? Washington correspondent Richard T. Stout barnstormed the West Coast with the senator last week and filed some answers to the big questions about the man from Maine.

NEW RULES FOR A NEW GAME: Investing in the less-developed countries isn't the bonanza it used to be. Sophisticated and suspicious governments are making things tougher for the multinational companies, whose own enthusiasm is consequently cooling. From files by James Bishop Jr. in Washington and correspondents in South America and elsewhere, Associate Editor Ann Scott writes the story.

COLLISION COURSE: Until recently, most Americans looked upon Japan as a pliable Asian protégé. But as last week's acrimo- nious economic conference in Washington between members of the U.S. and Japanese cabinets demon- strated, the Japanese are beginning to assert a new independence, in international politics as well as in economic affairs. Drawing upon files from Newsweek's Tokyo bureau chief Bernard Krisher and Washington correspondent Henry T. Simmons, Associate Editor Peter Kramer examines the widening rift between the two industrial giants. In a companion piece, Krisher provides an exclusive interview with Prime Minister Eisaku Sato.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Mr. Nixon's soft sell.
The Muskie campaign.
The big welfare cutback.
The Attica prison riot.
Opening the Kennedy center, with four.
pages of color photos.
Leonard Bernstein's moving "Mass".
School-integration buses roll in Pontiac, Mich., and Jackson, Miss.
INTERNATIONAL:
The U.S. and Japan: on collision course.
A talk with Japan's Prime Minister Sato.
Nikita Khrushchev, 1894-1971.
The Moscow globetrotters.
uruguay's Tupamaro jailbreak.
Ireland's distress: the talks at chequers; and IRA leader Joe cahill.
Social notes: statesmen's convention.
christiaan Barnard's es-wife tells all.
A fatal case of crossed wires in Yemen.
LIFE AND LEISURE: Seventh Avenue's new Chinese look; Helping smokers to kick the habit.
SPORTS: Chris Evert. girl tennis star; Superstar Gordie Howe quits hockey.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Project Stormfu ry: defusing hurricanes.
MEDICINE: Should an analyst sleep with patients?; The spreading lice problem.
THE MEDIA: The lively upstart called Foreign Policy; Is "Sesame Street" authoritarian?; Italy sends a woman reporter to Peking.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
After the freeze, rough sledding ahead?.
Confusion on the world monetary front.
The new rules for investing in the less-developed countries.
CBS's new president.
Xerox's social-service leave plan.
EDUCATION: B.F. Skinner's latest battle; A "graduate school" in cold-war strategy; IQ tests and "retarded" children.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Zbigniew Brzezinski.
CIem Morgello.
Henry C. WaIIich.
Stewart Alsop.

THE ARTS:
THEATER: Previewing the new season.
MOVIES:
The rise of Warren Oates.
"See No Evil": sadism for scares.
BOOKS:
Two volumes on the CaIley case.
George Garrett's "Death of the Fox".
Graham Greene's "A Sort of Life".
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