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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:
April 17, 1978; Volume XCI, No. 16
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
TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER: FUROR OVER THE NEUTRON BOMB. After a week of confusion, Jimmy Carter decided to postpone production of the controversial neutron bomb. His
decision-- as well as his perplexing way of arriving at it--vexed his European allies, members of Congress and his
own staff. And the furor produced the most severe criticism to date of the President's foreign-policy leadership.
(Cover photo, showing Soviet tanks on maneuvers, from Sovfoto.).
CARTER VERSUS THE FARMER: Caught in a profit squeeze, many farmers are fighting mad at Jimmy Carter. He says
he will veto the farm bill that is now before Congress because it is too inflationary. And his own proposals are not
good enough for the farmers.
COUNTRY GIRLS: Dolly Parton and Linda Ronstadt may still be the 'queens of country music, but coming on strong
are four other attractive singers who are stretching the boundaries of the genre and winning new converts.
Emmylou Harris, Crystal Gayle, Mary Kay Place (right) and Katy Moffatt all have different styles and varied
backgrounds, but musically their hearts and souls are country - pure.
THE UPROOTED: Three years after the fall of Saigon, refugees still pour out of Indochina, most of them on foot,
some in the leaky craft of the "boat people" (right). Few Asian nations are willing to give the refugees homes,
consigning them instead to bleak transit camps--or to the open sea. Last week, rising concern over the plight of
the refugees prompted President Carter to direct that 2,000 of them be allowed to enter the U.S. each month.
SAUL STEINBERG: New York's Whitney Museum is celebrating Saul Steinberg in a retrospective of the famous New
Yorker cartoonist's crisp - lined drawings and paintings. Both beguiling and profound, the show honors one of the
most original talents in modern art--an outsider and satirist, writes Art editor Mark Stevens, whose target is the
contemporary masquerade.
BOOT BOOM: One Texas bootmaker claims he never forgets a pair of feet--but he may soon. Business is booming
for cowboy cobblers as trickle-down chic translates into sales at up to $1,000 a pair. How about some boots made
from anteater skins?.
NEWSWEEK LISTING:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Furor over President Carter's decision on the
neutron bomb (the cover).
All about the N-bomb.
A view from Western Europe.
When Dr. Peter Bourne talks, Carter listens.
Jimmy Carter versus the farmers.
Tongsun Park: the clouds are lifting.
Case of the phony psychiatrist.
A woman who has "visions" of the dead.
INTERNATIONAL:
Secretary Vance's long-shot mission to Rhodesia.
A talk with British Foreign Secretary Owen.
A Princess under fire.
The Philippines: Marcos steamrollers his foes.
The plight of Indochina's refugees.
French arms for Peking?.
LIFE/STYLE:
Cleaning up the Grand Canyon.
BUSINESS:
Inflation: does Carter have the answer?.
Crime on the waterfront.
A boom in cowboy boots.
Europe invades the U.S. jetliner market.
Russia's global tycoons.
IDEAS:
The Hiss case, cont'd.
SCIENCE:
Amorphous semiconductors: promising world;
Ozone sickness on high-altitude flights.
MEDICINE:
The fight over treating Chad Green;
A skin test for breast cancer.
JUSTICE:
Houston's police-brutality case;
A High Court warning on judicial interference.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Margaret Halsey;
Paul A. Samuelson;
Pete Axthelm;
George F. Will.
THE ARTS:
MUSIC:
Four country girls.
MOVIES:
"September 30, 1955": art and life intertwined.
"Word Is Out": the gay way.
"Summer Paradise": a marvel of rapport.
BOOKS:
Sissela Bok's "Lying: Moral Choice in Public
and Private Life".
"A History of Rhodesia," by Robert Blake.
"The Legacy of Mark Rothko," by Lee Seldes.
John Irving's "The World According to Garp".
ART: A Saul Steinberg retrospective in New York.
______
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