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[|] ore er gH oe 1871 What a good time for all the good things of a Kent. Mild, smooth taste. King size or Deluxe 100’. es ) aes RN And the exclusive Micronite filter. OL. ‘ at Da 2 sy 4 faopea Yr a IN Sounds'n Kent! Ww A SPECIAL DOUBLE ISSUE VOL. 71 NO, 26 DECEMBER 31 1971 ‘CONTENTS ‘The Year in Pictures 2 ‘A gallery of grest scenes, from the tragedy of East Pakistan and Attica to the frivolty of ht pants and the open joy of a White House wedding The Cultural Scene 16-97 The Lie rites survey the year's ars: Cetons on TY, Richard Schickel on movies, Melvin Maddocks on books Nixon at Three-quarter Time al Hugh Sideyasseses the President as he goes into his Fourth year in fice Homosexuals in Revolt ___62 ‘A maior essay on America’s newest militants, the activists of "gay Hberation A Family and the News “4 John Neary’s personal story of the way his family lise through a barrage of hexdines Some Razzle-dazzle Fantasies __4 Walt Disney World opens in Florida, London Bridge comes tothe Arizona desert, the Kennedys almost re create Camelat—and Jackie and Avi have a chat A roundup of some people you ray recognize—with reports on what they have Been coing lately EDITORS’ NOTE We mortals sum it up In this special double sue we have set outto capture, most Jy in pictures, the essence ofthe year we have ll just lived through. Thomas Mann once observed that there is never a thunderstorm ora celestial blae of trumpets to announce the beginning ofa new yeu: Itis ony wemortals whoring bells and fie of pistols." Or, ke mirht have added, try 0 Jook ack and sum up the year past. Thisissueis an album, of 197 Fev years contain events so earthshanging that we recall precitely where we were and what ve were doing when we first beard some unforgettable piece of news: 1941, 1945 and 1963 were year ike that. Otherwise, we are Hikely to recall the recent pastin terms of our own modest lives: the year the family moved to Atlaeta, othe year Martha was born For most Americans, 1971 was a year that ellbetween e1- tremes. It as nota year of assessnation or riot or political savagery, a leat notin our own country, But looking bac, wwe find i full of events tht wll enlarge in perspective, th may be seen someday to have signaled seismic changes in ‘American life. ‘Abroad, we began our diplomatic adventure with Com- munis China, withdrew steadily from South Vietnam (ill wwe ever get caught inanother Asian land wae?) and watehet 4 nev nation stumble out of the biblical holocaust af East Pakitan. AL home, our esonomy get some massive medi- cation from Washington: awage-pricefreez, then wage-price tuidelines, then a bold i belated devaluation ofthe dolar Some ofthe best things about 1971 were events that did nor tappes, Campus an stret violence, familiar For some time, did not recur. Although prisons erupted tragically, tu- dents and blacks and Chicanos and feminists did not. They pressed their deoands but without the violesce that ve have seen in recent years. A hitherto silent minority, the Ihomesexusl, introduced the latest social revalution with adamant bat largely peace’ persuasion. We too often forget in the tremors of our tines. that lie does go on in some very nie olé ways, that beloved daugh- ters gat marred, and sport igures perform heroic mirsces, drew Hfe-styles ard fashions wake us up, and peeple do fry te accomplish good things and actually achieve them. ‘There were plenty of large tremors in 1971, as you will re member in these pages, but mont of us survived, and west on, Fortunately, thats the story ofall years. Ratt Graves, Managing Fditr Sidromarantienst MENS SRE: URAC at ool : See EAST PAKISTAN The anguished birth of Bangladesh ver all the earth in the year 1971, no place and no people suffered more teribly than East Pakistan and its tormented inhab- itants. Their suffering clings to our minds. Yet ‘out of that span of utter misery a kind of hope ‘emerged at last, because on a day in mid-Decem- ber East Pakistan itself ceased to-xist. In is place stood a new state called Bangladesh (Bengal Na- tion), enormously erowded, bitterly poor, the eighth most populous country in the world-—bat finally independent It happened convulsive, os if the agony ‘of common people had grown so great as to make ‘armics march and nations fall. United to West Pakistan only by the Muslim religion, East Pak- {stan’s second-clas status became desperately 0b- vious las! spring when the central goversment out- Jawed a local independence movement, clzppee its leader in jai, and ordered 80,000 West Paki- Stani troops to Festore control by force. Fleeing the error, Fas Pakistanis left their farms and vil lages and poured into India by the milions, pe- haps ten million in all. Disease, monsoon rains, hhunger, privations of every kind laid them wast, Still the Pakistani govemment refused to ease its bloody grip o1 the East. Atlast, moved parlly by the need to solve the refugee problem and partly by the urge to deal thei historic enemy a erush- ing blow,the Indiars loosed thei tanks and troops across the border, Within [4 days the Pakistanis yieléed, Bangladesh gained its freedom, and the {year's most terrblestory drew to an aching close. Shouting "Jo! Bangi’ (“Victory to Bengal”) and ‘waving weapons, East Pakistanis weleome Indian lroops entering Jessore, At right an Indian sol ier herds Pakistani prisoners dows. a county road after their defet in te batle of Jamalpur EAST PAKISTAN ‘The real tragedy of Fast Pakistan took ace not te the rumble of tanks and the lo of gunfire but to Iss dramas ds: Mes buzzing, rain falling, chi ron and grown men wailing, Alluring the spring and summer months rfugess From the West Pakistan teror campaign staggered into India. Many walked for weeks, virtually withoet food, never find. ing shelter. Indian rie facilites cc Iapsed under the train, and Forign a ‘was pitifully inadequate. In June mon- soon rains began (below), and the death toll from bronchial sneumonia beast * to exceed the earlier chief tillers, cholera and starvation. The family 21 let had walked for 16 days. Within a ay of reaching India the wie fill sie with choles and. guickly died. The survivors mouened er, ctemated her compse then sraggled sway toward Cal- falta, 60 miles farther on. Death often came first tothe very young: dazed with Inunges, therefugee woman et right was passively fer her baby to fnish dying EAST PAKISTAN ‘The real tragedy of East Pakistan took Place notto the rumble of tanks andthe crackle of gunfire but to less dramatic sounds: fies buzzing, rin Falling, chil ren and growa men wailing. Alluring the spring and summer months refugees fiom the West Pakistani error campaign staggered into India. Many walked for wees, vitally without food, neverfind- ing shelter. Indian relief facilities col- lapsed under the stain, and foreign aid was pitifully inadequate. In June mon- soon rains began (below),and the death {oll from bronchial paesmona bean to exceed the earlier chiet killers, cholera and starvation. The family at left had valked for 16 days. Within a slay of rotching India the wife fll sik, with cholera and quickly ded. The ‘ame firstto the very yours: dazed with re Woman aL ght wats passively for her baby to finish dying EAST PAKISTAN The anguished birth of Bangladesh ver all the earth in the year 1971, no place and a0 people sutered more teribly than. East Pakistan and its tormented inhad- itants. Their suffering clings to our minds. Yet ‘out of that span of utter misery a kind of hope ‘emerged at last, because on a day in mid-Decem= ber East Pakistan itsel ceased toexit. In its place stood a new state called Bangladesh (Bengal Na- tion), enormously crowded, biterly poor, the eighth most populous country in the world but finally independent It happered convulsively, as if the agony cof common people haé grown so grea as to make ‘armies march and nations fall. United to. West Pakistan only by the Muslim reigion, East Pak- istan’s second-class status became desperately ob- vious lastspring when the central government out: lawed a local independence movement, clapped its leader in jail, and ordered $0,000 West Paki- stant troops to Fesiore control by force. Flseing the terror, East Pakistanis let thei farms and vile lages and poured into India by the milion, per- haps ten million in all, Disease, monsoon rains, hunger, privations of every kind laid them waste ‘Suil the Pakistani government refused (0 ease its bloody grip on the East. At last, moved party by the need to solve the refugee problem and partly by the urge to deal ther historic enemy a crush- ing blow, the Indians loosed their tanks and troops ‘across the border. Within 14 days the Pakistanis yielded, Bangladesh gained its Ireedom, and the your's most teniblestory drew wo an acking dose, Shouting "Yor Bangla” (Victory to Bengal”) ane wavirg weapons, Fas Pakitanis weleome Indian troops entering Jessore. At right an Indian sol ier herds Pakistani prisoners down a country road after thei defeat in the battle of Jamalpur A SPECIAL DOUBLE ISSUE CONTENTS The Year in Pictures A gallery of great scenes, from the tragedy of East Pakistan and Attia tothe frivolity of hot pants and the open joy of a White House wedding ‘The Cultural Scene ‘Taree Live res survey the year’s ars: Cyclops on ‘TV, Richard Schickel on movies, Melvin Maddocks of books Nixon at Three-quarter Time al Hugh Sidey ascesses the President as hs goes int his fourth year in office Homosexuals in Revolt ‘A major essay on Amesea's newest mitants, the activists of "gay Herat 2 A Family and the News John Neary’s personal story of the way his family led through a barrage of heaines m Some Razzle-dazzle Fantasies ‘Walt Disney World opens in Flavia, London Bridge comes to the Arizona deer the Kennedys slmos 1 éreate Camebt and Jackie und Ari have achat 84 Familiar Faces Revisited ‘A roundup of some people you may recognize—with reports on what they have been doing lately 90 EDITORS’ NOTE We mortals sum it up Tn this special double issue we have set outto capture, mos lyin piture, the essence ofthe year we have all ut lived through. Thomas Mann once observed that there is never a thunderstorm of @ cseatial blae of trumpets to announe the beginning ofa new year: “Its only we mortals who ring bells and fre of pistol” Or, he might have added, ty 12 look back and sum vp the yea past. This issue san album oni Fev years contain events so earth-shanging that we recall precisly where we vere and what we were doing when we st heard some unforgettable piece of news: 1941, 1945 and 1963 were years like that, Otherwise, we ae likly to recall. the reent pastin terms of our own modest lives: the year the family moved to Atlata, othe yar Martha was born. For most Americans, 1971 wat a yar that ellhetusen e:- tremes. twas nota year of assassination or riot or political savagery, at leet notin our own country. But looking bac wwe find it fll of evens cht wll enlage in perspective, that may be seen someday to have signaled scsi changes “American life ‘Abroad, we began our diplomatic adventure with Com: rmunist Ching, withdrew steadily from South Vietnam (ill wwe ever get caught in another Asian land war?) and watched 4 nev nation stumble out of the biblical holocaust of East Pakistan. At home, our economy got some massive medi- catioa from Washington: awagepricefreez, then wageprice ‘tuidlines, then a bold if belated devaluation ofthe dal Some ofthe best things about 1971 were events that did rot happet. Campus and street violence, Tamia For some timid not recur. Although prconserupied trpialy, st ents and blacks and Chicanos and feminists did not. They rested thir demands but without the violesce that ve hhave seen in recent years. A hitherto silent minority, the homosexual, introduced ihe latest social zevalution with adamant but largely peaceful persuasion, ‘We loo often Forget, i the tremors of our times, cha ke does go.om in some very nie old ways, that beloved daugh- {ers get marred, and sports nigures pervorm nerote miracles, and new liestyles and fashions wake usp, and people €o lay te accomplish good things and actually achieve them. There were plenty of large tremors in 1971, as you will r= member in these pages, But most of us survived, and went fn, Fortunately, thats the story of all year RALPH GRAVES, Managing Edit Shad ARIeEas a A Herne: Eeae eae ee ee THE ECONOMY Nowadays, all that glitters is the gold this wall ow York's ‘VIETNAMIZATION’ In Laos, a costly test of a crucial policy WHITE HOUSE WEDDING One rainy afternoon in a rose garden Eq 5 = n I | Et = = o oS a n ao = ia - @ a eS eo ow om Dw 3S HOT PANTS A short but happy career TELEVISION A medium where even the grass won't grow up Ma sort ofa year wasit? The mind is vacium tbe, The memory isatifcial tut, videotape,consstingof images of George Plimpton, Archie Bunker, Zorba the Mayor: beneath it lie the bois of four thow- sand Tobotomized nebwork viewpresidens, sen together at their pineal glands and Ach. ks heels. On te playing fel itll, congress rnen ard FCC commisiioners andthe bureau ‘eatso publi television scrimmage wth clea fel prose and padded brains. Above it all troods the moon of Mr. Nizon, out of phas, ‘making one ting pericly clear Why is it that one thinks of La Fontaine "ine age without py"? And of Rousseau "the sleep of reason"? La Fontaine ard Rousseau were talking ubovt childhood. One thinks of ellahood beeause one has jst fis ished reading a news bulletin: Sandy Duncan isreeuperatng from eye surgery and her show {s of the ait, a CBS substicure i something called Me snd the Chimp. And suddesly xe thing sctually is perfectly clear. This was the year tha childre’s pregrammingcame of 36 (on television, Iisa iden’ programming ‘Ym not talking about Sisame Street, The Hleetre Company, Story Theatre ot George Heinemann’s Take a Gian Sip, esimable programs all. They have identified and gone ler the appropriate age groups. But Whit bout ll the other hoers? Are 8year-lds the ‘only age group in the courtry? So it seems. How else explain the violence, which aftr all i 8 cartoon for people pretending to be aduls? Bugs Bunny with a submactine gun. “Two seasons ago the networks firted briefly with our social concerns; the relationship was never consummated. Now there is hardly a night of the week without atleast two cops nd-rabbers shows, not counting the made- for-tlevision movies that seem stiched to- gether out of fim footage left aver sfer The Untcuchales viped themselves out. Dele vn ith vacuity sarfously inc ‘other infirmities on «variety of mindless evil- ‘oes: gus, knives, bombs, car wrecks, hypor dermic needles, electric shock. All pornos- raphy is ultimately intended for eniren; the Violence high isaddicive ‘ariousness of sports? Football on Sat- urdays, Sundsys and Mondays. The WorldSeresatnight: Hockey basketball, rll- cer derby. moose-hunting and the FBLItisbe- Side the point that tevision isin the process of ruining mary of these sports for the pr. ticipants: \ime-outsfor commercials iterrept- ing the flow of an ise hockey or basketball ame; the artifiial turf that looks sogreen on your color screen sending half the National Football League to th hospital So much tele- vised funsand-gimesamounts mostto a pro- pphylaxisagins the disease of reality.Our only ‘Sweat is dectronie; Howard Cosll becomes the president of our awareness, H: alse esplain our drowning inthe vi And take our President Please. Tere'schil- dren's programming. Decisions—freeze the wages, a9 to China—are made on prime-time TV. Surprise! Just what you least expected ‘Caught you vith your preconceptions down und your knees. Government by jack-in- theshox. No time fer questions, no newspaper reporters, no Senate heatings, not ever any Niteen ratings. Look what daddy brought home from the offie: at invasion of Cambo- dia! A Henry Kissinger dol: wind Fim up and he disappears Poltesisthear of thecommer- lal. Onelimagines Mr. Nixon, hisaumsalofein the famous “Y." 28 a singsto, lnging our Pheu throug the T st into stunned apathy. Infanilism. Meanwhile, Shirley MacLaine and Aruhony Quian have been knifed, and Henry Fondais being shufledaround for pro- fessional football. The Good Life, Sarge, The Pertnersand The Funny Sie havesoured, been ‘ited, divorced and rus out of lahs. Make way for Me andthe Chinp or Sanford and Son {a black Allin the Fanily, provirg the net- works are willing to inal the intligence of everyone, regardless of race, color or ered). “Thor's Japenese siencefcton movi on to night... Ganmera the Invincbl. A sian pre bisorc turtle threatens to destroy frst Brian Dnevy and finaly the world. Why bother? Turles don’t watch enough television. Thave seen the world, and it s Romper Room. hy Cyclops on the latest edition of the world famous ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA ‘You HAVE A DOUBLE OPPORTUNITY TO WIN ‘The winning numbers have already been selected at zandom by-a compater—-and the sumbee on the attached card may de one of them. But even it ‘sn, you sll have a chance t wis, If any ofthe Wining numbers are not reamed, winners wil be Selected—on 1 in 10 basis—in'a drawing ftom ‘smong all entries submitted. So got sour ed isthe rmailteday. yi ‘Whether you wie or not—wvith Britamica you can receive Britannica Tunor t no additonal cost ius the Briana PreSchool Library! ‘The Britannica PreSchool Library—inst Adven- tures in Learning-—is now available (rom Britannica. 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For students Britannica is indispensable, Itis the fines, mest complete ref- creace published in Amesica. If develops the active, alert minds that brig success ia school and ifs, 1 card is detached, witeoEneyelopactia Britannic, Dep. 471-C, 425 N. Michigan Ave, Chicago, Il 60811 Your chances of winning are Simply by returning the attacked card (Limit one entry per family) in discounts reserved only for readers of Life Plus Britannica Junior included at And also included Britannica’s Pre-School Library FREE Preview Booklet For Entering! Fil ia and mail the attached postpaid eard today to leara if You're a winner an toveceive without cot or ‘bigarion «a copy of our beautiful nsw booklet Which coniaias an exciting preview of the latest cition of Encyclopaedia Uitannica, IPs yours ‘absolutely free! Beautiful Full-Color Introducing EKoorectimterlkte (a) ERNE occa oek Introducing PRe Ta lepreloeb iter. EMA tK «rca m The frontwheel drive Renault 12. 1972. You can finally get a reliable piece of transportation that doesn't ask you to sacrifice .g0od road holding, oc trunk space, ‘orpeople space, or your bank. account. It gets up to 30 mpgand ues for $2189" We can promise you uncanny road holding and better handling because the drive wheels are in front, and the engine is over them for better traction. We produce more front-wheel drive cars than anybody in the world. Over a million a year. So it shouldn't be surprising that we iow how to bring you the best that front wheel drive ha to offer. Iis7" longer than the Pinto.Sc besides more leg room, it has almost asmuch trunkas Pinto and Vega combined, 12.8 cubic feet. I youneed even more trunk, the Renault I2station wagon has tip to 58 cubic feet Itsengineisessentially the same superb power plant that swept MonteCarlo.Asis the ultra precise rack and pinion steering, With this car, we think we have «solid goid winner. And we know America fkesa winner. Itis something we earned in 1909. RENAULT worlds largest of frontwheel drive cars. MOVIES How do you short-circuit the Fiddler Connection? yh most important thing about movies in i aac Sei hae through the calculator and came out with the dismaying fact that over the pas three years the major produceralstributors had, all told, rranaged to lose $525 million. Only two concerns cecaped this disaster of histerie proportions, but their success consoles x0 one but thei own fore {nat stockioldrs fer American-International fyecialaes in lov-cost expoitavon fim, and Malt Disney Productions derives around half its revenues {rom nonfilm endeavors. Both compa ‘es deminate thar peculiar corners ofthe mar Ket so shllflly that would require more rerve than sense to challenge them For thers, its hit And mas, hit and miss mostly the later)” Movie (elon ar eqeeienes wks bier soe omie x they find themseles in ‘Nor i i slply the raw Nigurs shat are de pressing them. There vas atime, a quarter of a entry ago, when Americans trcoped of to the ‘movies 75 million strong every week. After tele= ‘ion established ite that number vas et by {wosthrds, Though 25 millon tekets per week ‘was obviously not a magie number, the indutey Adjusted toi, By raising admission pies, nak ing sales to TV and cutting overhead, i bumped slong cheered bythe fat that throughout the "Sean Dyn good years snd bad, that 25 mi lion igure remained stale. Then st year, some one dicovered that admistone had sagged to around 17 milion. There were, it seemed, new depths to explore Far worse, what was left of the movie audic cree appeared tobe & highly voltile crowd. A cupleot years ago, following th success of such movies as The Graduae and Eas) Rider, eery- fone decided that since the audience was mostly Kis they would sve them kid stu. Te Failures ofthis polly liter aerit’s memory, but vt ally no one e's The youth market sometow sot the impression thatit was beng exploited by ‘esperete old crocks and stayed avay. Last year, as Love Story and Ryw's Doushier heaved into view, everybody (including me) was running around predicting a reurn to Romance. Noth~ ing, much eame of that, possibly besause the ‘human digestive system can withstand only one Lose Story ina lifetime. Thisyear,nobedy is pre= detinganything except furter sorrow. The sod en tea leaves of recent movie history are vi. tually impossible to read ‘Consier some of the nonromantic (to say the least successes of 1971. Willard and The French Connection would seem to indicate that there i stil a market for violence, fantastical and real- istic respectily, The Sewandesser demonstrates there is some kind of audience for soft-core por hnosraphy. Fiddler on the Royse tinshes a3 it has begun, shows the continang viability ofthe ronal haracicket, expensively mounted, Tusicl entertainment. Shaft, catering #0 the black audience, the subgroup most loyal 10 ‘movies in general and to the ation gene in par= {ular seems to prove that relaively low-ost ‘movies, aimed directly ata specialize part of the ‘populace, havea feture-Sinlrly, the wrban mide ‘leclasy, midle-brow crowd willl ally round something like Cerna! Knowledge, with ts fash fonable despaic ard its arty air. There may even ‘beayouth market afterall athe ruecess of Sum mer of 42 and The Lax Plewre Show indicate. ‘The later even comfort those who think that there isan audience for works making serious ar- fisicstatements on serious and universal theme. cease of paranoia I've ever observed amone pro- ducers. They are lashing out at everyone Who ould possibly be blamed fr thei failures—ert- ies, exhibitors, the unions, stats, directors, the seddam recession. Worse, tey ave filed with a profound desir todo nothing to wait until some trend emerges so they can once again pretend to berational merchants making rational jadgments ona rational market. orrs, gang. Ths is cealy what your favorite old author, Paul Tilich, called a shaking of the foundations. Things will ever be what they once were, What you should do is get serious about the new, easly availabe technologies tat could radically reduce the cost of every sort of movie, ‘You could also cease 10 go along With a cow arily rating system that seems t0 satisty only those people who like to meralize about Mevies Without ever going to see them. At the moment {is inhibiting youngsters fom see some pet~ fectly harmless movies (Summer 0/42) and some they should te positively encourage (0 see (Phe Lest Piture Show). Both of these could have ‘ben even more sucessful i they tad been fee available to the very audiense—aolescent un ‘dec 7-which has the greatest interest in thelr subject mater ‘But the movis business aever has been no table for courage, vision of inelect. And, no doubt, i will somehow stagger through another ‘year—pechaps several more—in is preset ferm. [get will hive to charge. Ie wil have to Bed = new, nonbureaucratie, ronindustrial producton, distribution and exhibition system, one suitable to 197Sinstead of to 1925. I will nally have to cease all pretense of being a mass entertainment Industry and start o operateas what it hs, in = ality, become—a purveyor of (presumptive) art toa relatively smal, near-eite audiencein which failures should be the honorable felures of striv- ing artists, not the corrupt ones of busnessmen ‘who guessed wrong on the latest fashion line by Richard Schickel ¢ Yu Cw Maiti Cet oy Rome c : xX COUNTRY invites you To Join irs SAFARI AFRICAN ANIMAL ROUNDUP! 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RHINO @uoy ROUNDUP Lion Country Salar ‘ican Tours, In. is launching unique adventares ‘o African bate arse starting in February During these 22day adventures you wil asset our Capture Crews the sllesion and shipmert of 50 White Rhinoceros (Certothraum sna) 20 Elephant (Loxodonea africana) ‘0 Zeta Eeyooe burchells Eo. htsnemes) 30Cheetah (Acisonyxjubats) 15 Giraffe (Gialfacarselopardalis) plus sores of various smaller specs of anteloe and primate, slong with Sach etic Africas birds as extch and crowned crane "Your ip ireludes vests to Lion Country Safar affiliated Aftican same farm and the Hlubuweand Umfolar game reserves, ‘You wil aso visit Kroger National Park, Zulland, Swaziland, ‘Victoria Falls, Capetown, Durban and Jehannesburg ‘Allinlusite coms, based on current ar excursion are between New York apd Johannesburg: $2,746. ‘lon Country Salant curreny containing the world’s largest assemblage cf fee foaming Mrican animals nits wldifepreservescperating inFlorda sed Calforis, now reqres hundreds of ditional animale fo ‘ew big game parls opening ext ay in Georgia ad Texas ‘share the Grills with Lion Country Sela'e ‘eastern and southern Afric in rounding (cot ne an observer but a participant). ‘ing organized ‘expert Capture Crews in ‘ip the need amale Initial safaris arenow Fr conseedctaleconarning isexctig. endl Aion ahem ‘8600 Mouiten Pari, aguna itl Cai, 92683 Prone (759897 200. ' [Deo iy doi af 8250 per pesca ' foro people | Sreaestnd ne ute intermatinatoatyour | nV AFRICANSAFARI-RhineRounup®™ t t i ! t 1 { (crete one) Fel 35 Nar 31 Ape 25 May 26 June 30 uly 8 Aug 25 Sep 29 Ose 2? Nov Dae 29 ip. Stte 2p. Mire Age THEATER Broadway's game of Simon Says 1 an efit ci tried to sum uo ‘what happened to Boadvay in 1971, the might simply tl what happened to Neil Siman. Fr Broadway and Sion are st clos tha if Simon snaetes Broadway get sola ps) chosomatic cold caused by the fear that if Sinn sickens, Broadiay ght de. This year Sion offered wo plas, ‘och simplomatic of ‘Browdnay’s shfting halth Is The Gingerbread ‘Leds, Son stempled 10 bust loose {om his usual rippling comedies and vite a tragic study ofan alcoho. Frally, afer 2 grit tryout, he gave sway his oun exential optimism, substitied& happy endirg, ana won. ffir success. In hi next py Sinn fade another stab at worhedony and hit he jackpot with The Prsoner 9f Second Avenue nhs excursion, the word's most succesful living Broadway would have found alarm farde influence of Eugene lonesco text, But hints of gay cos alicnated man. Mel lies wih his pueblo where he crazy ait-condition- the tie is rlotant to sh, walls ek, water and slctricty goot of ‘Why do welvelike this?” wails Mel fof dollar a month to ive in an eg bow that ee ‘Surors Elva ard Mel hiscomicactrsevary chance toshine (Chunky Peter Falk, 25 Met isa low: ably embatled tof altiough never fate dexeredthesupers LeeGran sshis wife And when Simon’sinven- tory of ils runs thin, be ings in Fenny Jie family scene, whish sug fst tat Simon and Breadway ares Fieleureasy with heir nenfangld d does ard want 1 gt back fora is ‘ue to ae ground. In this reliable ep- ‘ode, Mel other nahi three ters dcus, with magifcent logis, the nancing of his psychiatric ter ‘py. Clearly this acting ert! coe hve separstecarr ofits om, ane Trpropese, alter Sinon’s play close, ‘ar they hie themselves Out se piece for ater Jewish comedies “That fine mac to admire in The feel sore dation with prob. fist. The pay ends cn a ope Final tableau, standing wi his wie, ‘oncoming blzard with he same de- “Antrobus fl 30 years ago in Thorn fon Wider Shin of Our Toth, Be {eday en weagree tha mpl decen fy and a deve for suri slice? Tint seething more rede? Ang Tam not at odds with Simon's ba se hopefuls, bt rather wth the simplisic shape ofhis ope. Is ice to thine that the Mes of this wore canbe rehabilitated to face comple. future bya we psysbisnstand ani 1) wife, But fam rot comvines, [Xs for Soon» soerng lowaré avant-garde drama, this should cause Broad fear a al, Av th se son proves, Broanay eds, a fom Off Becadvay and othe enter. ‘most aciaimed acting jobis byan OF rowdy ares, Sada Thompson {nthe row hi, Tes, and 50 far the tection of Two Gentlemen of Veron peace teats in Central Park. toi stipes together: the prognosis fer ther mntaton is hort hy Tom Prideaux There was atime when the stories were more interesting the vegetables. Inside every man, lives a little boy who ligt like his vegetables. Ask any man who was ever a kid. ‘Il tell you mother could turn peas into buried tréasure andgarrots into rabbits and make asparagus ‘taste as good ascottoncandy 4." at the circus on a Saturday afternoon. o~ Until the impossible happened: Little Jimmy opened his mouth as wide as his eyes and in went the vegetables, vitamins and all. At Birds Eye; we never forget that little boy. That's why we've come up with Birds Eye Combinations? We started with the simple vegetables of old, like carrots _ = and beans and peas. But Birds Eye Combinations aren't like the vegetables that gave all the problems to yesterday's mothers. re We've combined green beans, peas, F yellow corn and baby limas. All swimming in.an onion sauce. Puta delicious brown sugar glaze on the carrots. Added crisp, toasted almonds to French green beans. With Birds Eye Combinations on the table you can forget about the vegetables, for a change. And concentrate on more important things. Like what you're going to serve him tomorrow night. And the night his mother comes to dinner. Birds Eye Combinations. The vegetables mother never had. Lae] e on the rice mings that may save a me: Minste Rice Mixes can make ameal that wast ‘mach to star with endup tasting great. ‘When it comes to flavor ‘our drumstick mix is any” thing but hum-dram. Our ri roast tastes pretty price, too, For varity, see what your family thinks of ourbarbecte, park, Spanish, or fied rice raixes. They ike the change, ‘And youll ke the change ‘youll save # youelip out the oupoa below and bring Itto your grocer. Gs MUSIC A season saved by the belles 197k as & bad year forthe musi damn sight worse if atthe last mo- cavalry of women'sieration. Whom nd cranky and decadent» crow of por gold proweston ay cree dipped ther pare in the col! water oftheir How else can you characerize that “Those stars who have deped te lessparaoids re drei ourng the hua reise of te hits oF beter ears Iscead, Mick Jggeris marie, John otis spooky eiental missus Hem fim but when you Took at Jes Taslorceenine around the sree Two-Lane Blacktop you Faiz bow immortat ii that some performers bebeardand not sor. As orthekids who once worshiped these boys, they bev his anymore. And with row ingmatunit as grown therealization that aman whomakesmilignsof dol. las out ef the puicand then simpy squander it on hime not a hero fr even a man bt simply sli Sulzent dd who makes sense only to other children, Men: a the women’s liber onpeopiehave ban posting ‘ou, thes sae male “heros” have Turned back theclock of eat equa ityloaprintmdvaybetween the Vie tora er andthe Stone Age. Set is in eee, the rook boys have ‘who follow them ss groupies and fatate generations of heroes near the ‘Astor women with the ste cas of any real enthusiasm was Janis Jop- Finlereey Bests ch pte wel ofthe charters of her sex and Star amowy thelades,Joas Bae, be Aion, ard her role someting ike ‘hat of + Ronan rmatror: the em ‘odimen ofthe famiy’s honor pide and puri Tes high ine, therefore tat the women pt thes, aod got Without falingito thesame poses ndescess hat have characterized their male prelesewors. Afler all the srdency ofthe eeuntercltre, whe nesds ‘en moe strident counter counter allure? Nothing of he sort actually Seems to be in prospec. What char fcterizes the new women inthe so busines is tat each of them sai ferent and ead of hem fs adopted the stance and rhetoric nt of wom ‘5 ltaron, but ofthe pariclar Isic ration in hich she hs lo- Carole King is a maker of slily Bidingrmetodies—the sta hat gets onto thetop- chats ands repayed ‘Meldy maker Carole King fon the oldeymoldey-gliey shows {Tauro Nyro ia fartasist ofthe De ‘aforeig hertone up sete into that range of Broek querulonness nce explored by Janis fan, bur us ally fending to es el-time riverboat Istria 4 note of infectious pity Cry Simon longs the new genre ofthe satemene-setl-mesi, stone ‘otter auiet but imense tleelles Carole King. telongsin the wie he English fok tradition, What vate ‘These women do not sonstite & movement ore "teed what hey do Soest sity the upwelling of been fepesed ands now lieing waters ef pop culture. With the ook idiom exhauwied an the youth cl use rend, the appearance of such ew talents ia precous san ofhope ‘and al the more hope fr com ing without proseans or banners oF Slogans 9¢ any pretense of slutions beyond ihe posiilifes of individual truth a expensive Beauty a the satsaction of seeing that everbody but erry body—eets turn infront oftha selPaegranding nizeopnone by Albert Goldman Pete eR es Spec se pris no SAVE ON TYCO HO SCALE PAORCLOCO GTEMIER Bf er Seen mate: PRECISION-ENGINEERED LOCOS, _ os ‘ene dee: THE STAND FORO ERS aor Ea eer ALREADTORUN | oe ee Faroe se ia cocearemiage evosason fM ErERTICEE Tue aoe See ag anos AIAN, CRRERCAR ve Rian hsth oA re sa BEA cass hscass Vou oss SenounesTones GevINTEATR TR #3 persons TBR ass Be Earth ere cass ish maaiee. gouge tn ie etarte TR 88s ‘pacgmen car 93,74 power oan cor NEUE Sins No ABM Beit Stnlehes THe “EXTRA DISCOUNT” SALE bel Pre Price agksanortt—voster ot ns 58 nar ae Youve soe 538 sa 598 598 598 TU at (Sin OTT Ones Yoo taka your pick of thse great ite ig now! Choase any 5 Stero LPs (worth up ie $94.90) or any 2 Soreo Tapes (a or assets, worth up to $15.96) FREE‘ as your woicome ut fom Record Cub of Aerca when you jomat fe ow iictise ‘Pembership fee et $5.00. You can deter your seleton of FREE tems and ‘choose from an expanced ist later you ea B]LPs or 2 tapes here. We make his amachg ofr to Invoducs you te tne ony record and lap cub offering guaranteed discounts of S35 to 19% on al lbels_wth no blgaton of commit! to buy anything ee ember of this one-of @kine club Jouwil be ate to order any record ortape commorcilly svall chiding al musa preferences: No automatic Shipments, no cards to return. We ship only what you ord ‘egurant ‘satisfied 5 es %, § ee Rae RAE meee, RTE nea ae me Sa Bios seh mee auanaae TEE NOW YOU ri ai ‘angt RE gre, cass Tons set lim oss CHARGE Sater, cass Mal hs MES aos fabs FE case oO Soe ctu oO AMEREA | AT LAST A RECORD AND TAPE CLUB WITH ae peas ‘ONLY are! rome PennsyuraNia 17405. voo7e | See ‘sy ther ferent ergata, Sear ictled ale i o's Bill Yor a-amall ling and 1 Se rR ea | eran aria {pane af yor erat cscs We hoe! aor ae ' art fae a secure =i fareaoet Sf Yes eet aes os cra REET ! Soe ty to ' Buea Cee fe : & SEeee aia What i sees i Torn pt age a a Nc co aerate Pas i ete crea Perens tt aor . Sitar ee Reoaral ai Chek ou] SuwreCh oer Cage RTE Owe | ec aon Mao ox ean JE GU LAL yee oy a se een é Bay. (© 1971 RECORD CLUBOF AMERICA #69 Sara ee UR RS aL L Ping" .0mg. coin av por cigarette. FTC Repor (ug) “Put some more flavor in your life. it Copyrighted material ‘Smoke trom the finesttobaccos filtered through a bed of real charcoal to enrich the tlavorand solten ithe taste. Checking the literary scene from 35,000 hooks up Lt WAST. fellow withthe Bloodshot eyes, tosses aide i tifeela for Vincealars and becomes ‘Trend Tracker, If Constant Reade is the pedes- trian om the thruvay, fighting 35,090 new books year for hisvery life, Trend Tracker isthe man In the helcopter Scanning trac pattres below. For this high-ler, three books make a tread. Henotes, for instance, tat William Blay's ov el The Exorcist topped the Publicher’s Weekly bestseller lstin Augustand September. He draws to4 pair with Colin Wikon's report on The Oc ct, When ib eye falls ona third ttle—say, The Occult Resolution by Richard Woods —he promptly decaces 1971 the Year ofthe Demon. Tracker would bene Isee—and no more right toptocliim itthe Year of the Indian. Fhe is eyn- fealand Trackers usally long t bee will sneer in his W. C. Fields voice that all you nsed towritea hit these daysis a now Japanese tapere= corer and an old Sioux chief. Dost bother tll. ing him that Chief Red Fox's Menoirs and Doe Brown's Bury My Heartat Wounded Knee—num- pen to be fine books. Remember, a Trend Track fe doesn't read books, he only watshes them, The special gift of the Treed Trackerisforin- stant obsession, Feed a Tracker tiles like Dave Megayesy's Our of Ther League, Curt Flood’s The Wey It Isand Bernie Parish’s They Call ta Game. Forgeting ll previous obsessions, he wll oavince one and all that 1971 was devoted ex- clusively ta books about ll the Sad Young Jocks, ‘So whatelssisnew beside the Boo!-Frank-Mer- T: isthe season when Constant Reader, the rinall trond? World War II, Would you believe nether biography of Mussolini? Ever since Ale ben Speers Inside the Third Reich, a populat oii has been—how to put "The Most Un forgettable Fascist Ever Met The next fetion bes-seller (afer Arthur Hailey’s antomobilesn- dustry manual Wheels runs ott of gas) stould be Herman Wouk's The Winds of Wer, a veritable Berchteseades gossip column. ‘Which points tothe Tracke's dirty litle trade secret: most tends arent ne a all Either they spinoff earlier trends or. worse. they should prop erly be called Permanent Trends. know, is sem, period. In 1970 there was Every thing You Always Wanted to Know, and in 197, Any Weorsan Cen! This ge identified wo the Rew ‘ben, Resben trend. Meanwhile, The Sensuous Woman, J. bas been chased BY The Sensuaus Maz, M., and Freud only knows who—or what lt come ater tis Band Couple Sia may now consist largely of water pellution, Butno bestseller is i complete without ts ne fashioned gospel of salvation, Earlyin 197 twas ‘The Greening of America which reached the one- lasthopeforsmankind. Later it was. Without Marx or Jesus same erisis, diferent church, “Trackers will remark thatthe nonfiction stars of 1971—Charles Reich, Jean-Frangois Reve, David Reuber, Dee Brown were never heard ‘of five years ago but tha! most ofthe high-scer ing novelists bave been houschald names since the 40s: James (Tie Drifters) Michener. Irwin (Rich Man, Foor Man) Shaw. Leon (QB Vil) Uris, Helen (ifessoge from Malage) Mactnnes. Irving (The Passions ofthe Mind) Stone Moral: Novel readers are always buying their author's previous book oF the one before that ‘The old Stick-with-Brand-Nares trond Atthispoim, the bette: Trend Trackers should corelude that the only trend really worth track ings from bad books to good books—books ss uncasifables John Upike's Rabbit Red and The Portable Jung. ‘And se God restus, t's back to constant read ing again, If that’s » trend, make the most oft by Melvin Maddocks THE YOUTH SCENE This was the year the kids cooled it year earlier, young people had been tearing up campuses in inst war and in despair at unresponsive 20¥- 1971 produced a different picture. Spurted by bargain air fares, they moved to Europe for a protracted, unin- 4ignant summer. Despite nostalgia for the spirit of Woodstock, they took with good heart the death throes of the rock festival. In the fall, they registered in droves to exercise the 18-year-old vote that gave them a chance to be part of the system they criteized Soberfaced. » newly enfranchised citizen 100K the regisation oath at 8 PAsbUFER rally which saw more than 4000 young people sworn anto the rails sna few hours Draped with camer instead of beads. an invasion speathead of students made fora Europe-tound plane at Kennedy Airpot Some capitals setup tent cities for them “There was more mud than musicat the C bration of Life rack festival near MoCre, La But lots ofthe kids managed to enjoy it, turning themselves into human mudpies ATTICA A prison rebellion ends in blood [je nation’s prisons becamea vi- ‘lent new focal point of unrest and insurrection. At Attica, N.Y, 1200 rebellious inmates (left) took over part ofa state penitentiary, then defed their keepers forfour tense cr days while truce negotia- cred and failed, Farlyon a 000 guards and police stormed the yard. The ravaged capofahostage guard, heldby state ofthe tragiceost rs and IT hostages, ‘of them killed by the bul- lets of the would-be rescuers, Attica spawned outbreaks at a number of other prisons, Italo set off spate of public investigations and cont uted to realization that bot tl ons and the cour system that feeds them must be drastically reformed. NOSTALGIA Acouple of comebacks ee oreo eee mes _ Ashop full of flowers. CO era enone eae nees La Kenle Tema ao old Bietastetete theca at eacrorn settle for less. It$ a matter of taste. Ver FIM p conte] iat aor-Mel Mist aug} — . Ay AS, THE BIG FIGHT A promoter’s dream that all came true THE MYLAI CASE Rusty Calley, convicted of murder Lt, Wilia Cal stand m 2 Vietnamese civilians in the 1968 yi prcar that Followed the eventually to reach the President hime! DEMONSTRATIONS An exercise in disruption and despair THE JESUS CRAZE Kids get religion and the cash registers jingle On his last hunt, Major Hocum smoked a cigarette stamped with his family crest. Now everybody will be smoking cigarettes stamped with their own family crest ..almost everybody. s im ® Camel Filters. They're not for everybody. (But then, they don't try to be.) ‘2m "eng iin pr cen FE Reo ALT, THE PRESIDENCY All set for the fourth act There is more excitement under the Middle American exterior of Richard Nivon than ever before in his life, It & controlled, of course: Dut as evidence that itis there, witness the last few days: a dash from Washington to the Azores, back home, then Florida, Washington, on to New York, home agsin, off to Bermuda and at lastto the White House for Chests, But only fora faw dase ‘Niton is preparing for the fourth act of tis ‘iculoaslysripted to produce dramaticchang- ¢ in our rational ies n the word But he is also savoring the closing senes of the third act. The Bright gtr in his eye and the exsy smile show his satisfaction with his iird yearn office, The futere can come apart, and Presidents know that better than almost anybody. Stil, the record ofthe thiré year is down in black and white, and he considers it ood, From the vagueness eFthefirsttwo years fame ceriain rection in freien policy. out of the evonomie chaos a plan of action and ‘omaitment. Aman who too afien seemed i served by subordinates has fashioned a com potent teas of principals and asserted clear keadership at last elves ikea modern Spartan, moving rs lssly from ofie to ofice within the presen vial complex, Herefunes to ake drink of any ‘hingstronger than asp of wine at offal din ners during the week. Hei always concerned about what he calls “1 quality of dignity,” a ‘ays wanting to be “cool, calm and sober should the al ef ris come in the night. He ‘wearsglasses now and then when he reads, but never in public He pals a pipe for afew in les sometimes when the fre is going and he ‘wants to tlk bythe hearthside. Wher he fst ame to power, there was a towel spread over he oitomen for his fst, but that has distp peared and he now puts his presidential Size Is right on the fabrs as ihe owned it. His Junches stil fast only ten minutes but he doesr't use eatsup on the cottage cheese eny longer, and such singular comesibles as okza and ell peppess have found their Way’ to those nogatime breaks. He has quits Let me make one thing perfectly cea. “More adamantly than ever, the Presdentre fuses to handle decisions othersean make, s0 that his mind will not be “cluttered with tn 1.” He will not begin the day with the Waa ington Pos or the New York Times because they snake him madi; anger, he believes, eloeds his vision, His reading naw inchides Herman Woul’s new novel The Winds of War, story ‘of World War I, sill a favorite Nixon sub- ject He works in an antseptie cocoon of his ‘ows devsing—clean room, clean desk, no news tickers or TV sets. He has a profound fear of drowning inthe daily flood of events, emetion, advice and eritzism Heremainssomething ofan enigma tomany ‘Americans and has been criticized for his finds support in a quote from one of his he- roc, Charles de Gaulle: “There can be no power without mystery. There mustalways be 2 Something’ which others cannot altogether fathom, which puzales them, stir them, and the Azores for his December meeting with French President Georges Pomp dou, Nixon stayed up threugh the second night glued to the radio, listening tothe Wathingion Redskins-Los Angels Rams football pame At 4:30 he jingled assistant Robert Haldeman outofdeepsleepwithaglee- fal The Redikins won.” A few hours late. walking out into the courtyard behind the ety hall of Angra, the tiny, white washed village clinging to # elif above the ocean, he an- houneed to newsinen that progress ad been made in solving the international monetary problem. it was as ithe did that sort of thing every day. Then he smiled, wared and walked away, leevng it For his axes to reveal that he had agreed to devalue the dol In Florida, e listened io a dstraught wom- an who came to his ate pleading for help be- ‘cause her husband had been captured a! sea by Cubans. Tee deyslaterhestoodin that fa- ‘mous old hall of the Smithsonian beneath the briginal Wright Brother airplane aed tol the BY HUGH SIDEY World thatthe ten major industial nations Which had just met there had reached agree ment oa realigning their eurencies, as a di rect result of his devaluation decision. With hin in that coom were the tiny Sprit of Si, Louis which Charles Lindbergh flew across the Ailanticsndthe Apo 1 capsulewhich took [Neil Ammstrong to the moon. They helped re- appeal o Americs to rekindle the spirit of "76 the spirit which hed conquered theair, the At lantie and space. "The President's bow acon for Uk pi year fainpestive Bosies te bold overeat foreign polity and economics, America in volvement in the war in Vietnam isin i firal phase. ‘The Supreme Court has taker for the Nixon stamp. The momentum of Ni fr'sreletion drive is building. The promise in all these things, however, is even greater than their mathematial sum, and how they mature wll affect far mare than the fortunes (of Richard Nixor In any eat, hie control icrucaly limited He hasnot yet captured the heart and minds ofthe people the rouree of al real power to form. While Vietnam is ending, is ot yet cued. Whiletheeconomy istartedofTia fresh dltections, itis not yet robust. Wale there is much lp Service to the spr of “7 itis net yet planted slong Main Street. While Nixon is hraded for Peking and Moscow, the "gene. ation of peace” whick he pursves remains Clouded by India-Pakistan, the Middle East and a host of other tangled confi. The Pres Hat les ball bose igh bbs ed geae Tarning thisinto hard reality nthe fourth will bea tral thet dwarfs every challenge Richard Nit has fared ss fae Ata milk producers'conventonin Chicago in Bopienber, Newen deme kompted the appliuse of delezates ind ether gusts CHINA A welcome on the Great Wall— and another in the United Nations munist Chit takeplacein F liminary. But ‘ontainment, am American Prex- and the fascin Jent prepared for a tp to Peking, and a Communist de (n a commune near Canton (below), the rich rice lids of south Chine show the bright green of early spring as farmers ppuinsakinaly cultivate their diked and NRooded fills. At right, the Shanghai post ‘offic tower rises out of the smogay reach c+ of the ld International Settlement. His jorned with the usual portrait and a slo- n reading “Long Life to Chaman ao.” Niton will vist Shanghai as well Peking and the ancient city of Hangshow. > \ YOU CALLTHATA STATION WAGON? Wo call its Kemmbaske ki Vos Roranbacl Wagon. ‘And it's going over very big, thank you Yousee awhole lot of peoplewho'd never ever buy a station wagon are buying our Kammback. And loving it Loving its sporty cerodynamic styling. Loving its peppy overhead com aluminum engine. Loving its bucket seats, front disc brakes, the carpeting throughout, the power ventilation sys- tem, all those things. But loving most of all how a Kamm- back handles. How tightly it hugs the road, how nice and flat :t takes the turns, how em- meen phatically it steers and stops. What we're saying is, the Vega Kammback is a whole Jot of fun to drive. nd drive, And drive. People are buying it for what they can get out of it, not what they can get into it. Although we offer no apologies there. With the back seat down there's over 50 cubic feet of usable loadspace in a Kammback. With the seat up, itcan handle four adults. No wonder the Kammback caught on Even the competition has been taking a close look. So chances are another little wagon will be coming along one of these days. Another little wagon. VEGA Not a station wagon, really. And not a Kammback, certainly. Chevrolet. Building abetter way to see the USA. Highway satoty begins at hone. Buckie up before you leave, THE VIETNAM WAR Time to furl flags and head for home arly in April, President Nixon stated that the “American involvement in this war is coming oan end.” The news was hardly electrifying afterall, US. troop cutbacks had then been going, ‘on for 22 months. The real significance of Nixon's re- ‘mark lay in the fact that the U.S, combat role—on the grourd at least—as becoming a thing ofthe past From 2 June 1969 peak of $43,400 men, by the end of 1971 our total oreesin Vietnam fell to fewer than (5 000, Further withdrawals are scheduled. But vhile troop strenathdiminishes, U.S. participationin tho In ddochina sir war continues, American aircraft roucine- ly bomb the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos and Cam- bodia, ly raids against targets in North Vietnam and provide close cover and support for South Vietrarm- ese combat forces. Whether this will end, and vhen all the remaining U.S. troops will come home, de- pends, aesording te President Nixon, on the progress ‘of peace talks in Paris and on the fate of an estimated 382 American prisoners held in North Vietnam. The talks ae stalemate, and Hanoi has shown no willing ness o talk about prisoners, much less release them. Ina scene becoming esscommon, U.S. tl09ps scramble or safety duringa North Vietnamese attack on Khestnh in May. a 1968 US ma- rinss had endured «77-day siege inthis moun taiatop base near the DMZ and later ban ddoned it In Februsry ofthis year it became & jumping-off point for theSouth Vietnamese in ‘sion of Laos. Toeay Khesanh is unoccupied In a ceremony at Chula, the Americal Dw sion offically stands down as its colors are furled and cased (above). The division had a ‘controversial reputation: rine Medal of Hon- for winners, 3400 casualties and considerable hefoism inthe pacification of Vietcong strong- holds in the merth, but it was an. Americal | unit that committed the massare a Mya Theie tours completed, Gls board a chartered jeliner (tight) forthe long trip home from Vietnam. They are part of the 2. million Americans who hive served there sine 1965, a oy os 4 From Marlboro to America’s low tar cigarette smokers- anew cigarette that’s lighter in taste, low in tar. Marlboro Mar! = SS se —_i— BCs Marlboro LIGHTS . Marlboro Lights, for those smokers who prefer the lighter taste of a low tar and nicotine cigarette, Made with the same famous quality as full- flavored Marlboro Red, America’s fastest-growing brand. hited material THE SPORTS WORLD Miss Goolagong and other unexpected delights Tennis ginsd two new feminine stars. Evonne Goolagong, the daughter of a sheep-shearer who Sings (@ herself during matches, won at Wimbledon (lel). A pe Florida teenager, Chrisie Evert (Gelow), thriled the galleries by reaching the Semifinals her Hirst appearance athistorio Forest Hil fowd-pleasers, your might‘call them surprise heroes who arrived on the sports scene without much fanfaee and instantly caught cur imagination, Rol licking and irreverent, goer Lee Trevino vviseeracked his way 0 three mgjor titles in four-week span, surrounded by a gallery of fers who proudly called themselves "Lee's Fleas.” Cafionero Il came running ‘out of nowhere (Yexezuela, actually) to lake the Kentucky“Detby—paying $59 —and the Preakness--S1280—before ge! Ling beat in the Belmont, Nobody would have thought that a 19-year-old part-ab- crigine feom the Australian outhack would win the fabled Wimbledon. But we were de lighted when Evonne Goolagong did, and 16-year-old Chrissie Evers two-handed tnackhand at Forest Hills had a fetebing i slightly loony charm t00. Meanwhile, base bull was plodding into another lethargic semmer when an incredible young left hander named Vida Blue began winning every game he pitched. By season's end | he had become the bigeest box-office draw } in the game and an authentic superstar, Purchased for only 81,20, trsined by a black trainer, Cahonero It Seemed like « poo! cowin aniong. Ameria’s icing lite. But he ‘won two out oF thethree top races, NORTHERN IRELAND The deepening agony of a conflict where almost no one is a bystander WOMEN A flock of first ladies— and maybe Ms. President PERSONALITIES As Bess weighs in Frank says so long PERSEPOLIS The 2,500th hirthday of Iran In operator training, you can sometimes learn a lot by talking to yourself. Hearing yourself ona tape recorder can be a surprise. Thats why a tape recorder is often the easiest way for a new girl to improve the voice quality we stress most [oo CA Diction is still important, but with today’s improved illo Mola UE STAATSSoLA MR) \-1f-COEOM-UCo oo COM Lao oi stand without the old “nyen,’ “fy-uv” overpronunciation you may remember. LSM la al ecok-U ke) I OMI LUCMO meee Ls O16 SEAL] friendly a new operator tries to be, her voice can some- times play tricks and make her sound just the opposite. Ifshe talks too fast, you think she's impatient and anx- lous to be done with you. Maybe she’s just nervous. If she talks too softly, you might think shes unsure of her job. If she talks in a monotone, you think she’s not inter- ested in you and your call. 1S 10) OTe RS ACMA = LAS CAO ALCOR And whether she has a soft Alabama drawl or a crisp “Down Mainer” accent, working with a tape recorder or other teaching aids helps her natural courtesy come through. The American Telephone & Telegraph Company and your local Bell Company believe that an operator's elie Roe OMe eM URN UAL EIA R A Nel a SoR LON aU} The year that one liberation movement turned militant Homosexuals in revolt was the most shocking and, to many Americans, the most surpris: ing liberation movement yet. Under the slogan “Out of the closets and into the streets,” thousands of homosex- uals, male and female, were proudly con- what they had long hidden, They were, moreover, moving into direct con- Frontation with conventional sociewy. Theie battle was far from won, But in 1971 mile itant homosexuals showed timates range from ‘wo million to 20 million, Nor is there any sure knowledge of why someone is sexu- ally attracted 10 a person of the stme sex sce page 72). The late Dr. Alfred Kinsey, following large-scale investigations, main- tained that most people have elements of both heterosexual and homosexual in their makeup, But those who have banded + ether in the “gay liberation” movement argue that homosexuality i a perfectly de fined way of life. They resent what they con- sider to be savage discrimination against theman the basis of preference which they did not choose and which they cannot —and do not want to—change. And white most will admit that straight” soci titudes have caused them unhappiness, they respond to the charge that all homesexuals are gull-ridden and miserable withthe de- fiant rally ery “Gay is Good!” ‘The average man in thestreet may not be ready to temper his hosility toward homo- sexuals, but large gaps are appearing in the ppatiems of diseriminalion, Never before hhave homosexuals been so visible. Every large city and many college campuses have hhomoseaual orgaaizations. Rarely men- Lote inprin’ betore, today homosexuality is the subject of books, articles and fms. Women homosexvals oF lesbians, have ale ways been less discriminated against than ‘mea, Lately they have discovered an extra cachet: in the women’ liberation move- ‘meat, they gain special standing because of their independence from men, even forex. Still, what the homosexuals want most —equality before the law-—has been slow in arriving. Homosexuals are frequently ar- rested for such “victimless” crimes as pub- lis solicitation and loitering. Forty-five sates still have so-called “*sodomy laws" fon their hooks, which proseibe all homo= sexual aets, Though rarely enforced, these laws jestfy harassment agains! homosex uals inemployment and housing Theactivists realize that mostiawmakers ate still reluctant to back repeal of the sex laws. But they are prepared for a long bat- te, Nothing has ever been quite the same since angry homosexuals fought New York police in the streets outside a Greenwich Village bar called the Stonewall Inn back in June 1969. “The homosexual proved then he could shove back,” says veteran ‘movement keader Franklin Kameny, “and, bulieve me, until we get what we want wwe are going to keep on shoving back.” Photographs by GREY VILLET Text by MICHAEL DURHAM A direct assault on laws and customs n 2 S £ n * 2 = = e ao 2 oa = =o = = 2 & 5S £ a 3 a ad a | Credit { f q ule, 4201 08H A gallery of men and women open 10 to the homosexual, iwerty of ine jon His campaign poster igh, which mde Haht of hi momo sexual by showing hi in high-ee shoes, be ‘ame campos elector’ item. Aber hielee- fon, Baker met with other student lenders fave) to explain how be hoped fo improve housing forall students nd tannounce tent to bar firms with anthomnoseual Polis from recreltingon campus. [nS bes, Methodist mine ier tohis oommate, James McConnel, They intend totes the validity of stmesex mara tas alter own right run, in the Sepreme’C HISTORIAN Donn Teal earned at htt homesex ih the moverpeat Beause they read my book.” movement OUTCAST MINISTER Gene Lepet was deczed “uacepttle for be publ anounced be at hemo Dill home, hth has opened to ou, iene MT how caved orm cae LESBIAN ACTIVISTS ple, Harbam Love, sanding and Siiney Ab hot, seated eft peak ata wey hineheon imoctng of the Yonkers, NX. Lions Club ampign led Sappho Wara Ron Won tn Iewil ke published next sping. The were Fnvited to speak in Youkers by the Lions Club haplia, who hid heat them eatin the $year ta rdigioe mesing. Homorextal lea fs are frequenty ashed to address calles, Broups bet rarely ge COLUMNIST Jil Johnston publicly anncunced er iesbian- York weekly Vilage Voice She has sie be- tion. Her iteray and fe sles re ree-whee- she jumped topes into swimming pod. verry coneucts sever wings each week, Here imvites Andre to exchange rings while asking mam as thy weed spouse?” Per ews with theater seats to asso tenis his Sunday sermons. He payment for the $50.00 church lected aingleSunday morning. re nous for hi fst shumping ser Fundamentalist since stating his clerical ress and regularly serves teaches at an MCC seminary for us, nat even God”—convine should sia his own church, The astound: ing growth of MCC—it now includes 20 churches, scattered from Hawaii to Florida —is partly due to the charismatic person: ality ofits leader but also tothe failure of conventional churches to minister to the needs of homosexsal bi ry wiling to “marry” homosexual couples, though the ceremonies are nottex- ognized as legal by existing laws in any state. His Sunday sermons, favored by the Bible Beit, ate laced with a wit that easily dlemiolishes the traditional biblical view of hhomosenuality as evil. ("Did Jesus ever say,” Perry frequently asks, "Come unto Me all ye heterosexuals. . 2°") Perry is himself considerably more militant thaa his largely middle-class parishioners, who rep- resent practically every majar denomina- tion, He fasts regularly to publicize homo- sexual grievances, was arrested lest spring At a protest march, and once led a sitin thal foreed arestaurantto renoveits "Fag- ‘ots keep out” signs, When conservative hhomosewuals express thei fears that these activities might damage the church, Peery replies: “Thea God is going to te embar- rassed. Me called me ( do His work.” leads 109-mile march on thestate Californias archaic sex laws hal of the gructng si-dey veh Is homosexuality normal or not? ally 8 a normal, healthy, even desi- able form of sexual outlet, Yet there is endless dispute among doctors whether thie point of view is sound. Seience has long r= ‘lized, of cours, that whatever natural laws govern sex cannot be stated simply, 25 mor- Alsts wouldlike wo believe. In thes book Pur turns of Sexual Behavior, Cella S. Ford ard Frank A. Heach call homosexuality "a base capacity" of manmalsand cite examples ofit amongprimates, rodents, ad even porpoiss Homorexual behavior is commonplace in ‘Primitive societies. The Keraki tbe of New Guinea, forexample, makes it part of boy's initiation into manhoed. Asfar back as 1911, French author André Gide argued that “un cxstomary” was a beter adjective for homo- sexuality than “unnatural.” The famous r= port published by Dr. Alfred Kinsey in 1948 Sidi’ even rogard it os uneustomary. Citing ‘atstss showing that 37% ofall adult males ‘nad atleast one homosexual encounter fead- ing to orgasm, Kinsey propesed éropring the “homesexual-heterosetual label infor of scale running from 2e0 (exclusively hetero- sexual to six (exclusively Homosexual). Still, Dr. Charles Soearides, a New York psychoanalyst, argues that homosexual runs counter to “two and a half billon years of| ‘mammalian heritage.” The late Dr. Fdmurd Berper, who believed that homosexuality was a disesse, once listed six personality traits ‘hich, he esd, re commas to all homoses- uals: “masochistic provocation,” “defensive alice," “fippaney covering depression ard suit,” “hypernercissism,” “refusal to. ac- Jnowladge acccpled standards in nonsexual ratte” and “general unreiabiliy.” The a:- tists call such labels superficial and wrong. ‘Aier all, they figure, no sane society is goieg to liberate a minority that exhibits Such neu- roticcharacteristiss Instead, society willeither continue to oppress them or ry to cue then, ‘nd “ure” has an ominous ring to homo- ‘sexuals who insist they prefer being that way, Many psychotkerapists do not subscribe 10 the sickness theory. Recently increasing num bers ofthem have come to consider homosex- ualtyes what Dr.Graham Bline forme chiet ‘of psychiatry at Harvard, calls “normal di ference," suchas ef-handedness.To such doc- tors, the homosecual san be a bappy, fune- tioning individual, capable of holing a goed Jeb, avoiding trouble withthe law and main- {sininga stable relationship with another maa, 111956 Dr. Bvelyn Hooker, a West Coss psj= chologist who headed the National Instituie Keen the iteration movement po T: rilitnts mast present homosen- of Mental Health’ tsk force on hemosex= ality, submitted psychiatric test reslts on 30 ‘narmal,vertmalehomesexusls” anda.com- parable group of heterosexuals to experts. ‘They could find*no difference of degree ofad- justment between the two.” Since this is what the militant belive too, de ted made her a fl hero tothe liberation movemen ‘Speculation on what causes homosexuality leads intoa seientitie morass. Most scientists agres that homosexuality or heterosexuality is ‘learned, acquired behavior, bat there agzee- ren stops. Dr. lrvng Beeber, a prestigious contributor tothe “sickness theory," traces its origin diretly wo the Family, He ites “Tally, destructive chil-reaing practices,” spcifial- ly “an inappropriately cles relationship" be- tticen son and mother ane a etildhood rela- tionship withthe father marked by “fear and hhostlity.” Other specialists beieve the exor- mous differences ameng homosexuals indicate 8 sider range of multiple causes. Dr. Hooker, ‘who has teated homosexuals from “happy, normal fami,” believes that “ihe emaseu lation of the boy by the mother and the lack ofamale mode!with whom toicentifyisacon- tributing cause fora sizable numberof peo- ie, but nor the only cause.” Dr. Blaine be- ives that ertsin traditional explantions for homosexuality contradict each other. Forex- ample the "strong, domineering mother hh opposte, “the sf, seductive mother, both considered contributing factors Iehowgh the layman voully equatee male homosexuality with feminisity, tciencehas never been able te link the ‘condition to an excess of female bor- et, Recent studi, boweves, indicate tat homosexuals hive a lower level of the male sex hormone testosterone than beteroscual ing a Los Angeles endocrinol- ely Mentified the sexual orieata- tion ofa mixed group of subjects by analyzing thetstostronebrestdown nthe urine, Ang last month researchers from the Masters and Johnson clinic in St. Louis published the re- sults of a study whieh found that young ho~ ‘mosexual men generally ave les tesiosterone in their blood. The researchers were unable to say whether the diffrent hormone levels were Acatse oran effect of homosexuality Homosexual militants consider the search for causes of thei behavior ierlevant. Taey feel treatened by Dr. Bieber’s contention that childron who ar likey to become homosensal an usualy be identied between theages of 7 land 0. Even more menacig to themis a Pav- lovin technique called “arersien therapy." In it, « homosexual patient is “punished.” wsa- ally by electric stock, wher shown an erotic picture of amale and “rewarded” by the ab sence of paia when viewing. picture ofan at- tractive Woman. In gauging & Homosexuals potential for chasge, Dr. Lawrence J. Hatter- €, author of Changing Hontosexulity iv the Mole, takes into consideration 240 factors ‘These include thepatiet’s az, reigious back- ground and persenality, but the two most im- portant are a genuine desire to change and Some previcus heterosexual experience. Even those doctors who doubt it posible 1 wipe cut all homotexval desire concede the post bility of nudging a patient afew notches aloe the Kinsey scale toward heterosexuality. Dr Hooker's task force report stated that some 40% of *“predominanty homosesual patients having some heterosexual orientation... cin bcome predominantly heterosexual ‘The homosexuals’ view of their own con- ‘ation bears little oF no resemblance 19 med- ical ard psychiatric thinking on the subject. Homosexuals believe thatthe "sek" charac: terse associated with them—promscuity, silt, s-contempt and parcularly eflemint- cy—are the by-produats of growing up in an ‘oppresively antibomesexusl socety. Homo- sexual often report passing through sn out. rageotsly effeminate stage, because, a5 one said, “Twas always tayght thats how homo. sexuals were supposed to behave: Many experts believe, however, that make ing society the whipping boy forall the prob- lems of homoseruals simply not jostied. “Theis problems existall right,” says psycho= terapst Dr. Clarence Tripp, “bucas much n- se asoutsie their own hesds.” A whole seg- ‘nent ofthe liberation movement argues that homosexual” main goal should be riddicg themselves of guit and selisdsin. Wary of psychiatry, they instead enter group-encoun- {er of conscousness-rasing sessions that cen lead to brutal confesions of self-contempt. ‘Through such sou-searchieg, they serk new formulae for ving where, ¢ one of thom pit it, “the only important thing in our lives is bing say and proud of i." ‘Whether liberationss choose introspection, ailitacy orviolence ab acourse of action, the ‘sic stumbling Block to acceptance remains the seine: heterosexual antigay to homoser- tlt. Will hs ever change? Dr Hatterer has oserved that society's tolerance of homosex- unity sincreasirg but he doubts tha we wil fever accept it sa desirabie “alternate lif style" Nonetheless he and virtually all other pivehiatrists advocate repealing the laws that Violate this minoritys civil eights ‘On the qeestion of “normality,” mach naains to be learred. In oprosing all inquiry, ‘themitantsexposefeas of what sience might find out about them, Dr. Hookers taskforce (08 homosexuality makes the sensible recon ‘mendation thatthe National Intute of Men 11 Health fond 2 center for the study of el! semual behavior. "I ie eatenta” 447s the port, “thatastudy of homosexuality beplaced ‘thin the context of the stidy of the ange of sexuality, nommal and deviant.” New Yealre. New Excitement. Let LIFE put you ‘frontrow-center'in 1972 forust about iad Looking back atthe previous year's events is always fascirating. But looting shead to a fresh year... and being in the middie o all the current excitement as it actually takes placo...s somathing else again. And the middle of all the action is precisely where LIFE's famed photog- raphy and reporting can put you in 1972... close to whatever in the world is going on, you fee asif you're there. {And there's alot thet will be going on this year, too...he growing oxcitomont of a presidential election ..cram@tic IL. a copy! world evenis...breathtaking spectacles such as the 1972 Olympics. .crtical now davaleaments alfecting every- thing from the worth of your delar, tothe quality of the ‘environment in which youve Whatever and wherever the action is this year, you can guarantee yourself abig piece of itor just about T4¢a Copy by mailing the altachod card. This will bing you 27 ‘exciting LIFE issues for only $3.87...andwe'lleven bil you later. So mall the card today. 1972 promises to be year wall worth Keeping up with...but i's going fost! A year-long bombardment of headlines leaves its marks on a family in the news of shandansportinga hot cupfule black ‘ole from the table to my mouth, did to feller when the arnourcer on New York radi station WOXR told my wife and me ‘one morning this fal that a bombing had killed two people in Belfast while we slept. Nor did her delicate battering ofa piece of light brown toast indicate any retetion to the second item in broadcast, which reported the deaths of at last {000 people—snd perhaps tice thet many—in a tidal ware in India Suffused as my family is everyday ofthe yous, in hourly dispatches such as these, pehaps its not remarkable that we (el sean affected pete sonally, and that the news that realy bits, thet leaves it teeth marks upon us for months tends to.came from much closer to home. A party this year nea our home on Loag Island, for example ‘We arrived tofind,in ths crisp suburban split Jevel, our hosts, a man in the department store business and his schoolteasher wife, and two oth- cergusstsaready seated around cofee tabs ticl> ly laden with cackess, cheese snd pa. Drinks were poured aed more guests arrived. L talked with a robust doctor whese trimmed beard er hanced hisraddy resemblance to Hemingway. hha just Regan to recover from a ear alack whieh he sid had oseutred not long after an un usual hunting tp. He and two companions, a businessman and a lawyer, had split up (9 take separate stations in some woods on farm whe they hoped to bag dee. After walking far back ‘theough the Wet, thawing snow of the Forest and finding no sign of deer, the doctor returaed { the ear, Upon reaching the highway, he excour- {ered the businessman, who told him that + stranger armed witha rife had ordered him to leavethe woods Together they satin the car, wor ering where the third member of ther party, the layer, was. Suddenly, he appecred, marching at ‘gunpoint before the same stranger the business ‘man had met. Jumpiag rom theea, the two mea deminded to kaow what was going on. The maa refused to say. There was an angry struggle and the stranger's gun was wrested away from him. Shaking loose, the sranger then pulled a piscl From Beneath his jacket To the bunters, he seemed terifyngly deranged Knowing thet the doctor had « hidden gun too, one ofthe hunters frantically urged im to save them all from this madman. The doctor ‘Weighed the situation, reluctant to make thersky 71 by JOHN NEARY play. Finally he decided he had no choice, realy |AS quickly ashe could, he drew his own pistol The sranger handed over nis gan wthout fring shot, but then revesled he was a police office, that they were standing upon his land and that. whether they noticed to not the land was post fd. A Tong and ugly lawsuit began, between ¢ land-owniag cap ané a dactor who had 10 wit againsta felony charge of lose his medical Keense and livelihood, It ended in some miserable com promise whieh included the doctors pleadin fully to wespassing, surrendering his piso le censeand suffering a heart attack. Aer I hid send (0 this sory, the part moved to the dinner table and the man beside me, aoungsh photographer rhoseseburban ch tntele provided him with rol after rll of wed dings bar niczvahs nd sinilar milestones in need of chronicling, contesed his own eager yearning to have a pistol license, No partcult reason: he just wanted one, he si ‘The mai scconsthe table from ss,» profemor 6 psychology and a private practitioner of thera Dy, tid ha own deep longing was lo got away from all this horror. He ovined a folling kayak and be truly wanted io take it vith fim to Ven: ice. He had, he sid, recently seen two men, one farmed with'a chain and the other with a club, fight on @ Manhattan sidewalk. As a crowd looked on, the man with the chin beat his op- ponent into neonsciousnss. The professor ran toa pay phone, he sai, to call the police but had heen barglrized and would not work, The police did arrivebefore long, butthe attacker hac Nalked avy and no ane know who he was ‘Stores like these at partss like thisand stores ike those on thar breakfast newsbroadcast which haa so ltl effect upon us are net, rely, all that unustal ths year. Wey ist, Ind myself wor: dering, thatthe news of such events evokesso it ie response unles there iss personaleonneston Why are they accepted so readily a just another day's harvest of not-anlikely mshaps and tra: dies? Are we growing some sort of moral cal ses? Moreand more often it does strike me that, ‘suchas my wifennd I-wanito ne corelvesss to dividuals who ate concerned and invelved in our ‘ommunity and to gone extent a our nation, we are undergoing a gradual and utterly unvilled nnetanorpboss in body chemist, a sher invol untary self-defense aginst the glare of bad news, Foreign Cut Shoal The Werl We learn to tolerate the bizarre and intolerable So inenseisit, so incessant, thatoftes wescem rear the pont of being overwhelmed, close to be- ‘coming unable to focus. The human eye, when it ‘ssubjected to prolonged and intese stain, can occasionally declare & halt, protecting itsel’ by fending its Foeuting muscles into what an oph- thalmologst described for me as an "'ascommo- dative spasm.” When that happens, no matter how urgent enced to seat close range.the mus- cies thar contro the eye lensrefuse to focus enti they have had tine to rest. Ina similarly pro {ective way, Tam beginaing to suspect, we are ex periencing thickening ofthe heats membrane Againstthe demand of the news on our reservoirs ‘ofempathy, concern, compassion and outrage. 1 se thisprocess ofinduration aking placein each ‘of the five of us—Joan, our three sons, Magri= ‘ee, Ben and Chris, and myself. And I wonder if itis not happening to more than jast ox Family, ‘ad indeed, if it has rot been hsppering for a Jong time, a steady accretion of tleranse forthe bizarre and intolerable. Painfully, we krow this induration isnot right ‘As a family, we fel we should try to do seme- thing, and ve do try. We give money io places, peopiewe think we ean help:to the Savethe Chil- then Federation, to a particelarly attractive neo pte politcal hero. We try to hulp fiends and Felatives when they arein trble, We hand over ‘money for whiskey to bums who tall wewhy they vant it. We get involied in causes. But in my pocket meme book where Lsometimes note How things fel, Lfoundihis, written at some bleak mo- ‘ment thi Year: “Like a man in agast-bottomed ‘eat, wth no idea of the depths below, with only ‘occasional glimpses ofthe eratures, with no eon- trol, really, over avoiding the rocky shore:” 1 dn’t remember what prompted that, bu woul ‘besucprised to heer tha | am the enly American fn 1971 who had the Feeling that tho elm just hasn't been answering. ‘Somehow, just as we have Feared to breathe smog without choking, we have also lenned to live with these nagging sensitions and without sich panic, We have learned to try our best to Keep ourlitte glasr-bottomed boat tidy and ship- shape. oignoreitsfragilityardto enjoy thecruise And theview, We Fave karned to ignorethe Hen fy Pennies and ther tiling of nonjoy because ‘We must to survive emetionsly 0: hiidren seem o sese and practice this ncuvely. Our oldest, Magruder, is more involed in the ceal things around him than in the abstract events he merely bears and fees and reads about in the news. AU2, Magra de: finds that his trumpet, sear nodes andthe motorcycle ke and a friend built out of an old Dike Frame sad a lawn-mower engine occupy him far mors than thowe cauzes of peacs, ccclogy and civil rights whose symbols adorn his room and bis clothes. Hi younger brother, Ben, 9, spends most of his time reading about World War I. He explains why such longago bloodshed and not Vietnam fascinateshim:"*They haveso many ma chine guas ard bombs now that they can wipe ‘ou! thossands of people, but in World War la bomb might kil only tenpeopt. It woulda’t burn upall the Rouses and the people and the grass and everything” To Ben, the only recognizable people involved in Vietnam are helpless vctins, fod he ses none or few of the gallant herocs he ‘eat find so readily in 1917, Watching a bit of day's war on TY, Ben say aflerward: “AIT can think ofis that guy his rice field that wants the war to stop.” He cid plow through some of the newspager coverage ofthe Calley tral and I re- cal idly his Blunt question when I tried to 2x- plain the proceedings were intended to establish theguiltfor amasscre, But woulda't we have to tire country sand fo be imprisoned if that were tlebrother, Chris, who s8, fees outspokenly that ‘bike oF # Wee oF rope fe move important than What grown-ups think of the news. "Why don’t they,” he asked one evening alter we had seen & fest minutes of unemployment in Detrit, “ust forget machines and go back 1 using horses and miles ard stones to build with? It wouldn't make {ny pollation and t would make alot of work.” lessness of war, after a news show contrasting life in combat: “They all gt drafted—and some got Killed atd some played Frisbee ‘As the boys and Joan and I watch the news and as we tak it over aitervard, Lam sruck by the sense these three young Americans have of that shadowy margin in which we lve, between ‘what the country Frofeses to be and what it ac- tually is Listening to Senator Muskie pronounce the country not yet ready fora back Vieepe iden, Hen, the 9year-ol5, sa, “That's erock, Tedoesn' matter what kind of Vico President you hhave,aslongas he's a good ene. But I think itis Alot of people that don't like bck ‘ul behind my sons’ youth,aningenvousness, anda certain yen for wisecracking les something ‘els, too: their assumption that thenews just ba- sically doesnt really mater, that, as Ben put it fone eveting, roneoftreallyaffectsus very much. His big brother immediately corrected him, “I lets the whole United States," Magruder sid, “ey it afects ut, but it doesn't aect ourselves very mich, Its not like Ihave to 20 out and do something. It doesn’t alleet me as if somebody xan up and punched mein the mouth, Scarred in my memory are all {00 many years that didaffec me jst asf someboty had run up and puched me inthe mouth. Perhaps it is be ‘aise of thos years-—those I2-month-long con caienations which marched in regularly through the "60s, andthe sear tisue they have left—that itseems now that t would have taken more tan, the drycerebalstartlements of 1971 to movemy Family much, Fundamental weavings did take place this year inthe basement rock of ur coun Fee aoe ee ee aay ai Se with the Fabulous SAUNA BELT™ TRIA-JEANS The Amazing Space-Age Slenderizer that is so sensationally effective GUARANTEED TO REDUCE YOUR WAIST, TUMMY, HIPS AND THIGHS ATOTAL OF FROM6TO 9 INCHES IN JUST 3 DAYS OR YOUR MONEY REFUNDED Here is how it works: “actualy lost 7 excess imhes ding my vey fs session wit this Inretibleslendeizer andthe inches cam ff jest here I needed to Ise them. | went through the arora ‘agin on each of the following 2 days andthe inches car- ‘ind to roll aft—and al without the need for dite, Dror the 3 day perod, lst a total of & inches from my waist—goine from 29, inches down tb 25 ches, 2 inches fom my tummy, 2% nehes frm my bie going fe 39 inches dovn to 3 inches, Krcccccccccccccccccscscccce® el Hy ar honest, all-beer flavor. Fuller flavor. Fuller flavor makes = Black Label the world’s leading P CUE ec Reo fuller flavor Only 54 areas left in the entire United States. After these are awarded, there will be no other areas available doin Jerry Lewis inthe most profitable segmentof the entertainmentindustry. There wrt 158 seas. fist Now moethan 100 have ese scl essthan ato yar eva But we expect i Bacau theres ba money to br made with ley Lewis Cinanas Ae, now we akg you oi eat athe sea ae soldout What te ety Leis Camas? They ae ly avomatd miak theares Wit sauing capacnes Yom 200 10 380. They lurwios. ash an easly aeessible An, canbe completly ‘pete by any pape Praia, ‘Sin the Jey Lewis Cinema program wes launched it 1968. 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COLLECT (212) 782 6622 Fore TC ot nur sl expenses fe travel 00m and meas forthe entre weekend fo people, PLUS you wil be ur ust fo the Dine Sow Opening igh January, strig Jer es: Meer Lewis in psn ashe elevates hs 0th Anivasay in Show agenent Fr complete details and re: Network Cinema Corp. — NatontHeodauatans-505 Pc revo, Now Yo, 02/22) 7252 + Wee Co Stn ico-700Arruodl ho Sm LA. Cot 9087/24) 277208, DON'T BE SURPRISED IF THE ONE YOU LIKE BEST TURNS OUT TO BE THE ONE THAT'S 97% CAFFEIN-FREE. FREEZE-DI Decaffeinated Coffe. tty and the world. The restructuring of the Su preme Court, the mercurial visitations of world leaders, the appearance ofthe Red Chinese atthe ‘Roosevelt Hotell signal deep changes that wll rurie on for years But in 1971 ve have spent roweekends drain close round the screen wi ing for more awuness fo unvold, #8 we dk tat [Novemter in 1963. The lock radio dig not jar sto tears onany morning in 1971, as it dd that rmerning in June of 1968 with the news from a Hotel kitchen in Les Angeles. In all of 1971 our fanily was no galvanized ta take part ineny pad Tie demonstrations of ideological fealty, as we were one impaled to ist Revurrtction City in Washington, and to march for peace down sain sttct ofthe ttle Long Island town where we live. The only lif-hanger that might have Droughitus ou thisyear was Amchitka, nd even then we were prepared all along tolearn that the ruelear blast Would go off as scheduled. Those ceatier years had imbued us witha feeng that ‘events were beyond our sonra, and perhaps be- yond our understanding. Too many fixes werein, toc mary les were being told—hadn't the Pen tagon papers authenticated da, atleast? I ft, maybe things have passed beyond anyore’s con trol andundestanding ‘God knows we have a basis human hanger to know what's goingon ard to understand it The fossil print record of the recent past days and werk lies embeded in sedimentary srs over bburdening nearly every horizontal surface in our house, Our profusion of books, papers, magi zinesand pamphlets would have beggared the pe- Fogel shelves of the lieary inthe small Mary- land tovn where 1 grew up. The radios around ‘our house pul in balfshourly dispatches, wheth- fer ne want them oF not. Despite this near overdose of information, 1 sufer the acute feting that I stil don't really know enougk: about Nixonomics, about Red (China, the enerey srsis,abowt drops, about the ‘war. I simply have not been able te take alin “The more read, the more to become aid the mi ably toast its course. Love nave pute inthis year retracted into Jour familyness,trying—without mach con- scous thougnt about it really, it seems to ‘mein rerospect—to establish some sanctuary of calm, some haven of reason, We ae, of course, hhaving about as much sucess at it as we would in trying to withdraw from the atmospnee we breathe. Nonztheless, I do have the feling we are not alone in this country in making the ef for. There seemed to bea shortage of monolith: ie political movements in 1971; perlaps fra lick fof followers, olticane se dealingin mieroscop fe elds. There is a similar invard-zurning qual= ityabou our nation’s newborn icolationsm, and bout oar reborn fascination with cowtoys and. Ingians, and with the country’s seemingly hylic neater past: the summer of 2, the 'S0s, mythic love stories in Harvard Yare, the softening of popular musi. 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Put beck the natural goodness your diet may be king; put back the zip in your Ht, Muscles | make a man Call mz Roto= 4 wams Rooter Soe = a . ‘away go down The Bean Atte ft sgn of daage trouble, al yur |) aan Reeders any ein your tien, {| lat, best or boom Lene em “heres ely one Rote, Youll nd tol in te plone bk. | vs Sie We took a road that 00. bat things are net at all the same as inthe "0s. Few of us wore then rally tyingto achieve thie quite, fow of us were aware of the st ‘ent alternatives, or the awesome possibile, Forme the pulling-back occured ina year of self-imposed but wrenching change: ater adoz- fn years of working 1s a reporter for paper and then for this magazine, 1 began freelane- tng, My wife, Joan, fished geting her master’s Gegree in education and promply decided to trade teaching, our last vestige of real security, for free-lance photography’ ‘The tremblings of the national economy have rot staken us as badly as we had feared they right. But jumping the cceporate ship has in troduced us directly to some of the nastier whims cf asceety which unmistakably prefers its mem- tere all neatly nrmbered. The fact that the in troduction was voluntary hss dore little vo make itmore pleasant for us than thas bees for thove nillios of unemployed who experienced ic this ear by economic accident, Someof those omy Scoulerments ofevena deck-class crise atoard {corporation vessel seem unobtainable 19 an tuattached individual—an anomaly inthis land that sill profess to believe it chershes indi- vidual enterprise. Like many other Ameria, for example, we are fading the fll medical and life insurance coverage that isso cheaply ava able to corporate employees, ard so necesary if one happens to be mortal, is simply not for sile at any price to any private citizen, mach less one with the nooe taste or bid judament to have actually got sick. What is available is thin sand stop. Rising prices and the diminishing dollar, which rang through the news week after wesk, would have affected us regardless of where I work, of urse Somehow they seem to have & keener Sing now. And while oan gets kigded sbout hav Ing gone to college, in par, on the Betty Crock+ "Search forthe American Horiemaker of To ‘morrow scholarship, the fact i that 1971 has demanded she use every marketing and house Ioeping trick she learned on a college couple's Inudget and honed against a young newspaper re- porte’ salary. ‘The recent awareneses f the environmental and nutritional factors involved in running & haute, however, have Kft Joan's marketing hab its viually unckanged. Buying bread without preservatives, epurning pesticides (geting mail ‘order praying mantisesinstesd), passing up bored cereals for grains atufing vitamin C into us by the jarful, holding out against all but emergency wwe eredit cards (two, to be exact) and the Ine stallment buying of nothing except mortgage money, boycoting gasoline companies that spill ‘il, using laundry soap instead of detergent, tea towels rather than paper, buying the largest cans and boils io hare fever tothrow away, heard ing paper and aluminum for recycling—these are all economies and preventive measures that Joan, Is practiced for years, She was their champion, before the news cid us of Nader'sexpandingeru- sade for consumerism, of how Linus Pavling led us inward caused # run on the pharmacies, before Bess Myerson begun advocating honesty behind the counter, befor the ist fip-top was popped. is summer we camped across the United Sates, down through the South to Hot mn, up into New Mexico and back. We bought a huge van with windows, which seemed to embody all those qualities we were seking in ‘dependence, spartan simplicity, backeroad, chips own dependability, a 2uhcentury Conestoga uality. The only failing in our scheme turned ‘Out f0 be the absense of much frontier to roll i through. And mere'y leaving the Bos-Wash c ridor does not absent one from megalepolitan congestion and gine, we learned, as we drov through a man-made mist of gritty haze atthe Louisians-Tesas bard. Houston, capped in its cown lidlss Astrodome of swellering. smog, teend to levaiee than New York. Vou oan get cheated in New Mexico as readily asin the East ‘acationingdlid seem io lndsate wus, though, that we ere headed in the right direction: i wvard, Allthose vastintematioal upheavals, bt ter religious battles, ugly undercurrents of intl erarce might be raging Somewhere but heard of in New Mexico, read about inthis ancient, rock spare land, they seemed ephemeral, nsigniicat. For uasally a1 my mod, nog egnicanes lay inthefaem next door io my schoolteacher ss- ters howe in a Chicano wile, in loughing black horse who diiovered he shaced ou chi dren's Tove of oranges, and in famiy oF beavers wwe met. Watching a TV crew camouflage an an cient Indian ruin, ve comforted ourselves with the thought thatthe ruin would doubtess sur vive the series. We returned home to Sind fences sprosting in ur neighborhood as word of the first black res- ‘Gents poreded ther octal moving. in, Some weeks later, when the boys returned from Hal- Toweening, we took the precaution of seuchiag Unrcugh their sacks of Booty and throwing out anything homemade. And we felt strangely un ‘indicated when at that very moment the radio toldus of pareats in nearby towns who had found such tricks as razor blaes, pills and stples in thee children's treats. We had no resonable = swer for Ben's question of why anyone would want to doa thing Hike that ‘We may have come to folate numb, thar fore, and certainly unable to upbrad Magruder for what at fiat soxne to be cyniciam ‘nen bo asks, as we tak about an ol spill from a barge pone ade, “What etn jou do about ie thats going to make any difference? You write letters to your congressman and you write to these or anzations an all they do is end you back bro- chures....” He mimicked a petroleum commer cial abou’ a child walkinga besch and said stera- ly that the compary ought to be spending its money initeadan saleguardingitc equipment“ they Keep on doing this they are going to wreck the worl” This was, I rsalized, the practical di rectness of a child who cant svi in the wa Finest qually cigareties.. coupons, to9, The valuable extra on Belair Filter Kings and Fiter Longs, For your free Gift Catalog, write: Box 12, Louisvile, Ky. 40201 Worldly themes strike too close to the heart ters of the Sound afew Blocks from his house bcanse they are polluted A litle afraid of what bis answer might be, asked him if he beleved that anybody could change theworld, Did he, for example, think that Someday he might? “You can change the world” he said, “but youcan'teha iceably by yourself" That was the voce, I realized, aot of eynisism but of hope, and implicit in his words was the fintes hit of anetherécection,avay from ths inward ness we had attempted with so ltl succes Even in that stemst, even when we wer centratng our hardest on private events that, med t0 reverberate only though our werld of family and friends and acquaintances, th vents were refeting—and were reflected ‘the “real” news we saw and hearé and re We could discem, mirored flatly, elements of our own happesings. Distant though they may and 2 the stesses and voids of urban imperson ality, conguessional excursions ito the labyrinths of medical insurance and e theun sions of individual rights is a crowded so siety were not merely integuing abstractions to ment. They Ulster axjgde'p Mirrors Fee" of RE a were instead themes of ou life, steiking teibiy Hose to the heat ‘A neightoris out of work for months in this r= «cession ang we watch him vork on his hous and sear the tension in his voice ard are unable to belp. A trend, s man of great merry lalent, but feted by more than hs share of urban stresses, stepped drunkenly, bewilderedlyand God will: ing, only tentatvely-through the two-way mit- ror of magness. We watch another being mut deredvith obscee slowness by esncer The mind. less random savagery ofa mugge's bade tovched the shirteent of tll anther friends he stood helpless inthe elevator of hs crowded apartment building one recent weekday at 6 pm, the blade ought off this ime by the S4in his pocket. One nisfortunate acquaintance of outs sch minisiator, was arrested, anded ja Acatened with Bellevue wien be had th ity to complain to a train conductor about a crowded car. He was acquitted, Dut snow un Willing to sue for fear the incident if publeized nigh affet his job—and worse, it might ‘Weweretouced by brighter, warmer moments in thenewsin 1971, ofcourse, Our family was de Fshted tha a litle own named Lookinglss i stalled parking meter, oxe solitary meter just rosivethe folks atasteot the ping’ penay inthe slot. We were also heartened fo lean that a Detroit hotel had strck a Blow for normalcy by chopping prices on the pay to les froma quarter toa dim. Ang when theday’s top story was theretirementof Astoiate Supee Court Justice Hugo Black, our kids—who once lived arourd the corner from bis house in Ale exandria, Va.—obsersed that be had been "a judge who didn’t look lik Lhink he right have liked that the corner fot sot of the news this year If i sometimes felt, a we watched the news "ators, thatthe experince af being bystanders at Watching a movie, perhaps that is not really sure prising tall. Although there isan iron inkage be- ‘ween publ ales and ou private happetings, ‘ur apprehension ofthe snlaityi ure Similarity may by, just as i tated in every fl coincidental But I don't really Fel that iis ony For the valve of news as a dvertisssment that we come back in for mare, despitethat numb feel- ‘sour undeniable sense that wehave I seems, in fact, that we've been right around ANNOUNCING AN EXTRAORDINARY OPPORTUNITY FOR AMERICAN ARTISTS e $500,000 Bicentennial Medal Design Competition Sponsored by The Franklin Mint IN RECOGNITION OF THE FORTH. COMING 200TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE UNITED STATES, The Franklin. Mint — America’s foremost private. mint—will produce a unique series of commemorative ‘medals honoring the contributions of each of the fifty states to the heritage of our nation The designstor these medals wil be selected in_an open competition that begins on Janu: ary 2, 1972 and closes March 31, 1972, There will he a total af 200 cath awarde— four in each of the 30 states af the nation 5,000 First prize in each state «2.2.5 Second pri in each state ‘Third przein each state Fourth prize in each sate ‘Total of prizes in each state “Total of prises forall $0 sates Inthes 50 simultaneous state competitions each artist will be competing only against bother artiste rom his own state Each entry must relate w the bicentennial theme by reflecting the historic contributions ff an individual state to the heritage of the Al designs must be original. and must not hhave been previously published or used, ELIGIBILITY The contests open to both amateur and professional artists of all ages. Contestanis do not have to be experienced in designing med als (Designs are w be submitted in the form of black-and-white drawings: The Franklin Mint wil be responsible for executing the winning designs in medalic form.) Contestants must be residents or former residents ofthe state in which they compete No one may compete in more than one state Presentor former employees of The Franklin, Mint, the staffs of participating bicentennial ‘commissions, the judges, and their immediate families will not be eligible to enter this competition JUDGING ‘A national advisory pane! of distinguished artists historians and art experts will aversee the competition, The fina selections will be made by 2 sepa rate judging panel for each state, compesed of ‘istinguished citizens of that state The dec: sions of the judges will be fina Designs will be judged on the bash of artistic merit, originality and relevance tothe theme, HOW TO ENTER eniry form, not earier than January 2.1972 fd pot fater than March 31, 1972, To obtain an official entry form and the complete set of rules and instructions, just send your name and addressto: Bicentennial Medal Design Competition Box 1976, Franklin Center, Pe. 19663 Send-off for a pair of fantasies The Kennedys emerge for an opening We went to great extremes to bring you agreat motor oil. 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PHILIP MORRIS MULTIFILTER en MUITIFILTER FullKentucky flavorina low-tar cigarette | ¢ Betty Grissom brought two suits (Sept. 17) for negligence inthe fre that feavsed the death of her hhustand Gus. The courts Ihave yet to rl, but Mes GGrisiom has hed satsfac astronauts reversed 2 pr for decision and. ofered Follow-up on a few faces) sos: that you may recognize ach year many thowsands of Faces appear inthe news, us ally at some point of ersis or humor or significance in their lives—or in ours. Some are famous and of lasting interest while for others fame has turned out to be exceedingly tran- sient, On these pages we offera second look ata few of the faces that appeared in Lure during the past year on the dates indicated in parentheses, What has happened to them since their stories were published is reported in the captions Will Wilson, the asisant US. at ‘orneyneneral who was linked with convicted Texas swindler Fratk WhenprotackleRosie Grieefnished thatnee- Sharp (Sept. 24) resigned Oct. 15. Maurice Elias life was saved at 12 month Alepoint tennis racket cover (May 28), he Wilken did so, be wrate President by bone marrow transplant fiom his older ‘quickly stared iv on a pillow sip desorated Nios, to spare him the “embar- tar Tami wh holes hum above (May 28, with ducks. Between sessions with needle and rassment vhich your administr- Now a healthy 22 months old, eis, accond- yarn, Roti has also starred in 4 TV movie ion should ot be taxed with ing to the family doctor, “Just tremendous ro Pacchioni postponed their longawated ned- ding so. that she could ret in the Miss Universe contest (July 23). Hi ly, she ida’ wi, Shortly ater, the couple proceed 1 single wom ed 0 the alta, honey moored for a month i Europe, then sted down he outskirts of Milan Shotin the head fabove) ashe was about tw open thesscord anrusllalian- Amee ‘ean Unity Day rally in New York (Juy “Teamster bors Harry Davidof warmed pho: tographer Art Shay, “I ean have yoo killed, ss Shay senpped this picts toilustrate Lee's investigation of airport corruption and thet (Feb, 12) Shay is ie, bet in November Da- idol was indieted on 25 counss of extortion for 4), Jo: Colombois making painful but steady recovery six months later at the Newen Lau, 1, who lost the use of his leas Brooklyn home of his son, Aathory. When & mortar exploded near him, received treatmentin the US. and was sent beck tohis amaly in ural Vietram (Jan. 9). They were tunable totake care of himand Lau isnow st tied happily in a children's home in Saigon Sharon Poole of Haverhill, Mass. mn bull games last summer before league of Feil: got together and disqualed hor 12 gil (July 23). Come spring league, bur she plans to lead a contin ent of younge? gis to the (ryous. Randy Brook's diary of his eross- ‘soamiry iteiking trip with Laue rie Thrvelsen was published inthe ‘ssueoF Aug. 27. Thesongs hesom= posed asd sang from California. New York have been collected in hisfirstalbum, One More Hi-Way, which will be relessed in Janaary Rockentrepreneur Bill Grehamstaged 1 dramatic departure from the New Yorkmusi scene (May I4)by shutting dowrihis Bllore Ext halland desta ing his disgust with is bosterous po thange ofenue,notofcarers. Hecon- Yinues to put on shows in San Fran cisco's Winterland, which he leases Germaine Greer stormed the hallsof fame in recor tie the U.S. tp promote her book, The Female Eunuch (May), she starred in a TY documentary fs a talk show how ard a6 hhand'-down winner in a public debate with Norman Mailer Detective Eddie Egan, a 16-year veteran ofthe New York Cty Police Deparimen! known to hisfriends a Popeye, broke into thenewnshen The French Comectonsa $d made thout one of his exploits (Dee. 10). A isk, was few weeks later te was inthe ews again just Capitin Dominick Ghedsi spent 12 roms as guid supervisor in Now York City’s Tombs prison (Oct 1). At the end 6 tying year, Ghee2t was transferred, at his own fequest, Co a neighboring facility, the Manhattan ‘Court Detention Pess, a holding pris fn for those wailing. arraignment, Where be had worked previously seven hours befor elect, te yas found guilty of departtental charges and bounced from the force. All gan has to fall back on now is Hollywood, is retirement was to take Wa been sic months now sine for mer Pentagon analyst Danie Els- berg willed the beans contsinedin the Fentagon papers July 2). In that ime Be has: (1) been indi under the Espionage Act and for ‘goverment property hell with teil scheduled for late 1972; @) picked up several awarcs from peace groups, (@) made an exten- sive etre tour; ane (4) become 4 fullscale hero of the movement “Themeninthedrug program atthe Palo Alto VA Hospital have bd remarkable success. Chad Hart hooked on heroin after a pos Vietnam hospital sta, ison meh done andworking to stata cour ty drag program basen hishome town, Sasta Margarita, Calif Legal proceedings have been brousht against ‘him in30 stats, but quick money evangeis entrepreneur and philanthropist Glenn Tur- rec (May 2) is stil iding high with his gan “dare to be great!” His oxpancion Plans for his cosmetics and recording Industries continue unchesked, Nothing can stop me now, I'm t00 strong,” he says Roland Mitchell, &. pro: spective Ph.D. chemistat Utah State, sent out 200 {pd applcatons and got ‘nak ling ful of rej tions (Nov. 5). Three ea pbyment fers artived, then evaporited. Roland plans to teach a the u- versity. through March, Berkeley zoology pres: sor Richard Eakin (July 23) 0 efectiveysnagaee theattenton ofhis under: graduates with impersom ations of famous scientist ‘tha’s William Harvey above) that inquiries bout his technique have come in from all Over, As 1 result the Uriversty California made a fim of him doing hie unlikely stuf at the Backboard Copyrighted material Four years ago Bill Carol got & new New York Legal Aid Sextet lan hear, thanks tothe surgical skl of Dr. yer Martin Erdmann, an outspo- Ted Dietrich (giving ima cheekupbe- Ken rticorthejudicasyiemand low) Unlike most af the other tans: judges (March 12), faces disbar- plant patients described in-an extact ment on charges involving diste- from Thomas Thompson's Hearts (Sept. spect forthe beneh. The case kas 17), Cartol is alive and well. Diet Faised a furor and initiated a heat- rich call his condition “spectacular.” ted debate onthe rights of nwyers Sex kitten Ann-Margret, who appeared in Gamal Kromiedge last sunmer and on Lirt's cover Aus, 6 just ended 14-week nightclub run in Las Ve- is. She sillhas two barning ambitions to make ‘4 Walt Disney marie an to str with John Wayme TN Dr. John Silber was cho- sen president of Boston University” afte: a long seutch lured), Hiscstcs Feared the schoo! would Having te Uv poe vac festkcee sea by Chae hast to Ser at ence ee ee (Soy ar toledo set faculty changes, coiducted his own Itmonth sudy of the Spetey moth at peece™ in Tainan high rate, eth of four studens at Kent State Aue rion asmall New York winained a leh Ble: 7, sl hopes for acon sgnmt the Ohio. qumuteaamal New Yor anger some Piste) Neiceslcuardtlehintan tanewmsctor iat Whee Naber ‘ oe SSmillonty Myon G Pre theguaranas EM AN 10 re phe as Mee odo, Soles yrange teers awn a Geman er eee oe ieee ee oie Sster_Comelia, known as "Sister Fuzz" (March 12), the unlikelest cop in Pontoon Beach, Hi, has been the victim of sidouwipings, theeats and ‘midnight phone call, apparent- fy onmeuied wil ber tet Peter Davies, the insarance salesman who Copyrighted material Back-fence comedienne Joan Rivers an, 8) dacovered « new way to beak up audiene She and husband Edgar Resenberg have collaborated with “Lester ‘Coledny on = comedy. At year's end she was deep in preparation for the plays Broadway opening Hugh Tuttle, tenth generation farmer onthe family land in New Hampshire (Sept 17), is setting into theslack of winter. few chores, some plowing for the neighbors and a bit of agri cultural speechmaking mark the time asherest upforspring. Theyear past was one of the most profitable ever. Married very privately (March 19), Canada's Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau proudly showed off his new wife, Margacet, during a trip to Mos- cow (une 4) but then opted for more privacy One of the couples secrets has been the details surounding the imminent birth of their fist child, anadvent eagerly awaited by Trudeau fans. 45,000 price tag on a bottle of 1846 CChiteau Lafe enraged vintors and eons alike but scarcely rufled the buyer, Laurence Bender une 18) ‘The unopened botile rests ina bank vant, butthefoxy Bender snagped an other one ofthe same vintage in Pais in November for $218, and drank it all up. Ie did not, he sad, tate ba, All the big money was o Lt. Gen John R. Chasson to become Ma- Fine Corps commandant (July 16) But in. November the job went instead to Nixon protégé Le Gen, Robert Everton Cushman Jr, Corporate executive Lud Voller fos his Se0,000-- year job and tcok two front to get another (March 19). He is work- ing happy in his new ob but has had to coursel The four Hund daughters, who married en masse (Oct 22), did not stray far fom ‘each other or home. They all ‘xebrazed Thanksgiving and ‘Coristras with their parents, ard mide a grovp appear” ance with theirnev husbands ff a TV game show. Joanie (second from right) was the big winaer. As forgrandchil- there are “none in sight. Cristina Ford, with ballet teacher, was The uncertainties of Plumber Frank Devito issome in a leotard (June). Later she September are finaly | won a milion dollars in Soemcnemmlesranenmss | eoeeciier the New Jersey lottery | Naw dened Ietny — Seraolos page 5,3) Sieve ng. e-preion (Aus 20otnveroned Teoouapit ih cis Oras ‘Fe Shean Gop, Wena bush clined ie tes of | and his average is ‘ood: of ight shows, Sit are stil alive, and ‘ore of is babies, in the Fanily, is No. found a tine slot in hich to get marred wife quit her futory job tnd altheugh son Franke gota new motoreyle, he Kept his paper route tember, the tows of Gunnison, Colo, vas siicken (Oct 4) the months since, the townspeople have learsed to eal With their git ut havent forgo tenitscause. When state and insurance ofcials complete a review of the ac «ident, Gurnisor citizens will press fo Stronger bus safety laws. Mesnhie, the surviving am members wen! on to win the valley championship. What can you say about 4 U-yearold eu Jerauthor whocopsout? Erich Segal Fane innumerable interviews in which he main tained, to ltl offect. that his true vo: cation was classical scholarship, Recently he caught on, quit talking, returned from Elwood and Carolyn Jorgensen France (where he was photographed with hadto give up hei arm ast spring ® friend named Francoise Wagener st (une 25}and ook for work. They Kevin Dye was fst in the Wyoming wilderness and summer). Settled now in Cambridge, have held a variety of jots and are evaded searchers for Il days (Aug. §). He has Mass, he is writing articles read by, ‘now living in Rapic City, S. Dak, ‘made a swift recovery and the hyperactivity that comparatively sfeakieg, almost nobody. with money in the bank and probably lay behind his wandering his lesened an uncertain but hopeful future erica Matra | ‘We've finally gone back ving as normal people says Nick DeMartino, winser (vith is wife, Sean) of she fight for Buby Lenore (June II), Having fod New York: avoid a court ruling ordering ‘hem 6 surrender the adopted aby to he: natural mother, the Dedfartinos seted neat Miaon and were upheld bs a Florica court. Nek, who gaye up his aw practise, works for realestate firmand i studs~ ing forthe Florida bar exans. [A your hatn't ade mans’ changes ia the eas) life fof Daven Clack, one of The tormented careers of rebel priests Pili and Daniel Berrigan (May 21) con- tiaue behind bars. Heroes ofthe antiwar movement, they were both jlled lst year fer court hatter and attempts to ohude imprisonment, Now Phil fces tral next ‘month on charges of somapiracy i ab eque plot to kidnap presdental aide Henry Kissinger. Dan, whose health is poor, was denied parol last uly, He has Just een granted anotier hearing, 10 be hd in January, but if denied again he will remain in. Danbury, Conn. federal ison! at least until next November. ‘The tase of wealth enjoyed by Howard Fields when the Welle Fargo bank misiakenly credited his assount wth $528,471 (June 4 changed his lifestyle. Fields had to ve ‘he money back (he Kep! the S1,6O0interest), but hedeciced to sell his waterbed business in favor ofa mare free-wheel- Ing mode of existence. Now he dabbles in real exate an ses financial advice from an offdaty Wells Fargo ofc Princese Ame celebreted: Yor Veteran Mike all, who could not id 2istbirthdayin Augustby look: Particularly stunting oe ‘work after his return from Vietnam (Apil 16), has made his peace with “Aspen’s new-style ski [Norman Parkinson's camera ‘Midland, Mich, Mike has settle dow bun” (March 5), Sum: So far Charler Manson has been (Aug. 20). An expert on sich to. ajob with Dow Chemical, wind a meriime brought her the given eight separate deat sentenc- al duties opening orphn- new bride. He is remodeling his par- Ulbcoveryof tout fahing, es for hi part in the murders of agen, Anne alo prides herslf ents’ basement and says He does but now that winter has Sharon Tate and others (April 16). fr her horsemanship and fas _ think toomuchabout the war anymore, Tetumed Dawnis back on Automatic appeals could ake been mentioned as a prospec: theslopesoncemors, She years, sohe may have tine to write te Olympic contender, This is aso faking 4 corre- his own story while siting in San reseived some unkind words spondence course inEng- _Queatin’s death raw. Two books from British equestrian Har lish literature from the have been written about his vey Smith in November, when, University of Colorado, ily"and the murders they commit ted. Manson has yot t0 tell all the decreed that Anne i. to. ‘where near Olympic standa Copyrighted material For 1972 make a New Year's resolution someone else will help you keep. ‘The resolution? To spruce up your home. And the someone else who'll help you keep that promise is at your, nearest Sherwin-Williams store. How'd you like for spring to come a little early this year? We've got famous Sherwin-Williams paints in bright, flower-garden tones to lighten up the gloomiest room in your house. Like Super Keme Tone® latex wall paint Te goes on easily. You can clean up the brush or roller (and your hands aswell) with, plain soap and water. And it dries to a beautiful finish that’s actually serubbable Just come pick your favorite color from our bouquet. The winter evening project. Instant antiques. In four or five winter evenings, you can spruce up your most character-le room with a beautiful, low- cost piece of furniture Maybe it's an old rocking chair you've had for a few years. Or perhaps a ready.to-finish chestof-drawers you can pick up fo lite more chan a song In any case, Sherwin-Williams has sing ee ete Sherwin-Williams. w) charm. The cost is modest enough to move More than a paint store. Imagination, paint, and a little help from your friends at Sherwin-Williams. fem-Nar is to make your home look like a million dollars. But for a good deal less. For we have the paint. And the wallpaper, And the decorating ideas. And the “How-To” booklets And a genuine interest in helping you make your home look its best. look in the Yellow Pages for the name of your nearest Sherwin-Williams store. We resolve to help you keep your resolution So help us 2D ZN < mi LM HEY, THATS NOT SO FUNNY! ROAR! ROAR | LOW-TAR“AND NICOTINE _) TASTE IT, AND IT SINGS OF TASTE ? ] ALPHONSO! ‘SOUNDS TOO WILD!

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