An Ohio Outcast, with Nothing to Lose but His Life, Risks It in Zaire with the Foreign Legion
Pg. 26
In a Stadium Once Filled Not with Denim but Nazi Drab, Bob Dylan Makes His Judgment at Nuremberg: He Plays It
Pg. 30
Hsing-Hsing and Ling-Ling Can't Get It Together, but Have Hopes for the Same Time Next Year
Pg. 32
Toni Giancana Shamed Her Late Father the Don; Now It's Her Turn
Pg. 34
The Gospel According to Will Campbell: Trendiness Is Not Next to Godliness
Pg. 39
The Team of Scortia & Robinson May Not Be Familiar, but You Recall the Goose Bumps They Gave You
Pg. 45
She Paid Her Dues in Jazz and Prison, but the Feds Want to Send Flora Purim Back to Brazil
Pg. 49
Navajo Educator Don McCabe Frets That He'll Be Cut Off at the Cross-Cultural Pass
Pg. 57
Mr. Dobelle Went to Washington; Mrs. Dobelle Went Too; Then She Took His Job, Diplomatically
Pg. 66
Actor-Writer Burt Young Has An Ex-Pug's Mug, but He Can Knock Out Scripts in Three Weeks
Pg. 71
The Boss of Blue Cross Says Health Care Needn't Always Cost An Arm and a Leg
Pg. 77
Joe Namath May Have Found a New Calling in Acting—Just So Long as They Don't Make Him Genuflect
Pg. 84
Want to Put New Fiber in Fido? Try Marks & Hansen's Doggonedest Health Food Line
Pg. 93
That World Champion in the Cockpit, Captain Cook, Is a Grandma Named Betty
Pg. 94
Jorge Ortiz Has His Kidnapped Daughter but Is Heartsick About Her Trauma and His Lost Art
Pg. 96
Susan Newman Is Making It, in Spite, She Says, of Being Paul's Daughter
Pg. 98
A Mother's Anguish Kept Alive a Son's Memory—and Her Lonely Search for His Hit-and-Run Killer
Pg. 109
The Feather in the Duke's Cap Is That He Commands Europe's Last Private Army
Pg. 115