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TITLE: NEWSWEEK magazine
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS! -- See FULL contents below!]
ISSUE DATE: November 28, 1977; Vol XC, No 22
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
[Use 'Control F' to search this page. MORE MAGAZINES' exclusive detailed content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date. ] This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

COVER: ANWAR SADAT IN ISRAEL: One minute ahead of schedule, a Boeing 707 bearing the legend Arab Republic of Egypt touched down on a runway-- and history was made. In an extraordinary Mideast pilgrimage, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat traveled to Israel last week to advance the quest for peace (page 36). Chief foreign correspondent Arnaud de Borchgrave--with correspondents Tony Clifton, Milan J. Kubic, Paul Martin and William E. Schmidt--covered Sadat's historic visit for the cover story written by Richard Steele. Senior Editor Don Holt flew from New York to Jerusalem to coordinate Newsweek's special color photographic coverage. Companion pieces profile the two singular men--Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister MENAHEM BEGIN--who made the trip possible, assess Sadat's domestic troubles and weigh the violent Arab reaction to his overture to Israel. In his column, George F. Will discusses Sadat's act of "political, physical and moral courage.". (Cover photo by Diego Goldberg--Sygma.).

TOP OF THE WEEK:
HUMAN FLIES: Edwin Drummond is a quiet, mild-mannered San Franciscan, but about once a week he has an urge that literally drives him up the wall. Drunimond is a "builderer," one of an increasing number of people whose hobby is scaling high rises, overpasses, and other urban Everests. Violating safety regulations and common sense, builderers disdain pitons and grappling hooks, preferring to make their ascents only with hands and feet. Why do they do it? It's one way, explains Edwin Drummond, "of going up instead of going along."

SHALL WE DANCE?: The latest of this year's "women's films" is one of the best, an emotional and sophisticated story of two ballet dancers, one of whom chooses a family, the other a career. Anne Bancroft and Shirley MacLaine star in "The Turning Point," but the spotlight is stolen by the extraordinary Mikhail Baryshnikov (dancing, at right, with Leslie Browne) in his first movie.

WRITING A WOMEN'S AGENDA: Nearly 2,000 delegates from around the country crowded into Houston last week for the first federally funded conference on the status of American women. They passed a "national plan of action" urging new laws, programs and policies to aid women. Correspondents Lea Donosky, Lucy Howard, Elaine Sciolino and Hal Bruno covered the meeting and the protests by anti-feminist dissidents. A companion piece assesses progress of the women's movement to date.

INDEX:
SPECIAL REPORT:
Sadat in Israel (the cover).
The Arabs' reaction: bombs and rhetoric.
Sadat and Begin: men of destiny.
Egypt's problems.
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The first National Women's Conference.
Women's gains--and how far they have to go.
A "guilty" verdict in Birmingham's bombing.
Fighting over the Shah.
The protected-informers scandal.
Psst! Viet secrets? A new book on the CIA.
INTERNATIONAL:
Kicking the Russians out of Somalia.
Cuba's African connections.
South Africa: Steven Biko's last days.
Britain: the SS revisited.
Helmut Schmidt talks on terrorism.
TELEVISION: Anyone can host "Saturday Night Live".
LIFE/STYLE: Climbing the walls--and everything else.
SCIENCE: Spying out cosmic secrets with a U-2.
BUSINESS:
Stagflation: Carter's new option play.
Lufthansa's super-security defenses.
Auto sales: tailgaters Chrysler and AMC.
Kennecott plunges into the take-over rush.
RELIGION: Books the Bible left out; Evangelical Christians for Israel.
NEWS MEDIA: The Cronkite summit?; The Washington Star loses its editor; Eric Sevareid retires.
ThE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Dewitt C. Armstrong.
Pete Axtheim.
Milton Friedman.
George F. Will.

ThE ARTS:
THEATER: "Golda": theatrical canapes.
MOVIES:
"The Turning Point": satisfying soap.
"Semi-Tough": an incomplete pass.
MUSIC: The San Francisco Opera's growing pains.
BOOKS:
"With Nixon," by Raymond Price.
W. Jackson Bate's life of Samuel Johnson.
Two biographies of Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks.
PHOTOGRAPHY: Andre Jammes's "First Century" exhibition.


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