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NEWSWEEK
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ISSUE DATE:
May 22, 1978; Volume XCI, No. 21
IN THIS ISSUE:-
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TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER: ITALY'S AGONY: Aldo Moro's long ordeal ended last week when the terrorists of the Red Brigades murdered the former Italian Prime
Minister. But for Italy, the agony lingered as Moro's embittered family buried him in a pointedly private ceremony (above). Other
articles discuss the causes of Italy's unrest, the international links between terrorists, and American vulnerability to political
violence. (Cover photo by Jacques Pavlovsky -- Sygma.).
ELECTION FEVER: The 1978 off-year elections are heating up. The Democrats are strong in numbers but troubled in spirits, the GOP
is fighting to survive and feisty voters at the grass roots are wrangling over lively local initiatives, referendums and even recalls.
MUSEUM GEM: At a time when Americans are flocking to art museums as never before, the NATIONAL GALLERY in Washington, D.C., is
opening the most spectacular new museum in years. Designed by I.M. Pei, the building's soaring, theatrical space makes looking at
art not a chore but an adventure.
ROYAL SPLIT: It was a somber week for Britain's PRINCESS MARGARET (right), who left a London hospital the day after a palace
spokesman announced that she and her husband, Lord Snowdon, were getting a divorce--with the consent of her sister, Queen
Elizabeth Il--after eighteen years of marriage. The disclosure created little fuss, and even seemed to raise public sympathy for a
woman who renounced her first love, Peter Townsend, 23 years ago-- because he was divorced.
SKINBACK: Under pressure to take a tough stand against inflation, Jimmy Carter last week scaled down his plans for an income-tax
cut--just seventeen days after he insisted that he wouldn't.
FUROR AT CCNY: Shortly after he wrote a magazine article, Theodore L. Gross lost his deanship at the City College of New York. His
offense: an attack on open admissions.
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Mideast plane sates: the heat is on.
Elections '78: worries on both sides.
Key races to watch.
The rising tide of recalls and referendums.
G. William Miller and the missing Textron memo.
Carter and the angry lawyers.
Busting the Mexican-U.S. heroin pipeline.
"Son of Sam": a torch, too.
Congressman Flood's accusing rabbi.
INTERNATIONAL:
Italy's agony (the cover).
Can Italy survive?.
The terrorist international.
Is the U.S. next?.
Iran: the Shah cracks down.
tsjaal'. doubts at 30 .
Princess Margaret's divorce.
BUSINESS:
Carter's pullback on an income-tax cut.
All about the torrent of automobile recalls.
A new deal on first-class airline fares.
Wall Street's stock pickers.--.back in vogue.
Modernizing the TVA.
The boom in farmland purchases by foreigners.
LIFE/STYLE:
Rum friends;
The Hacky Sack fad.
MEDICINE:
Case of the allergic burger eater;
A new treatment for hypertension.
JUSTICE:
Choosing a court: Federal or state?;
A troubled son sues his parents.
NEWS MEDIA:
Gannett buys Combined Communications.
EDUCATION:
A scholar laments--and loses his job.
THE COLUMNISTS: My Turn: Joan McGarry Conway. Jane Bryant Quinn. Milton Friedman. Meg Greenfield.
THE ARTS:
ART:
The National Gallery's jewel of a new museum.
How l.M. Pei's triangles solved a problem.
THEATER:
"Ain't Misbehavin' " stylish salute to Fats Waller.
MOVIES:
"The Greek Tycoon": rhymes with slime.
"The End": from black comedy to cold feet.
"FM": fatuity embodied.
"Cat and Mouse": beguiling Claude Lelouch.
BOOKS:
"Stories," by Doris Lessing.
"The Death of Woman Wang," by Jonathan D. Spence.
Liz Smith's "The Mother Book".
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