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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:
OCTOBER 8, 1979, Volume XCIV, No. 15
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: The Pope's Historic Visit. Cover: Photo by Gianfranco Gorgoni--
Contact.
TOP OF THE WEEK:
THE POPE'S HISTORIC VISIT: He comes as the Pope of Promise. A man of manifest charm and energy, John Paul II last week visited Ireland, evoking the kind of tumultuous welcome that is expected during his historic, six-city tour of the United States. For American Roman Catholics, whose church is sorely in need of fresh leadership and inspiration, the visit of Karol Wojtyla provides a unique opportunity to celebrate their faith. The 59-year-old Pontiff defies simple categorization: he is poet, philosopher, musician and a joyful priest to his people, trying to carry God's message everywhere.
BRAVO DOMINGO: "Singing is like bullfighting," says PLACIDO DOMINGO, and last week the great Spanish-born tenor took on one of the bravest bulls in opera--the fearsome title role in Verdi's "Otello." At the opening of the Metropolitan Opera--and before a national television audience-Domingo scored a magnificent kill.
DOUBLEHEADER: In "An Unmarried Woman," JILL CLAYBURGH emerged as one of the most likable actresses in American movies. Now she enlarges her image in two widely contrasting roles--a seductive op ra diva in Bernardo Bertolucci's extravagant "Luna" and a girl next door in Alan J. Pakula's romantic comedy, "Starting Over.".
TOM AND JANE: They have been called the "Mork and Mindy of the American left." But as husband-and-wife activists Tom Hayden and Jane Fonda began their latest political odyssey last week, their sense of a popular mood could not be faulted. In five Northeastern states, large crowds turned out to hear them campaign for "economic democracy" and against big corporations and U.S. use of nuclear energy.
CARTER AND CUBA: Secretary of State Cyrus Vance got no satisfaction last week when he braced the Russians about the alleged presence of Soviet combat troops in Cuba. The "status quo" remained unacceptable to the U.S., and Carter weighed his options in a series of tense meetings with the National Security Council and with a newly appointed advisory panel of foreign--policy "wise men.'' The President planned to reveal what he would do next in a speech early this week. The reaction from Moscow could be crucial to the future of detente--and to Carter's own prospects for re-election.
CONTENTS/INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Carter takes on the Russians.
Campaign '80: Jimmy hits back.
The Chappaquiddick issue.
Ford holds the road.
"King Kevin" White of Boston.
Protest: the Tom and Jane show.
Labor: the Sheeran case.
Grass-roots energy conservation.
SPECIAL REPORT:
The Pope's historic visit
(the cover);
The U.S. church: "Bring us
together".
INTERNATIONAL:
Raising Panama's flag over
the canal.
The Mexican-American summit.
Jesse Jackson and the Palestinians.
Hussein goes the Arab way.
Jacobo Timerman--free at last.
Third World airwaves static
Can Russia stop its runaways?.
JUSTICE:
The Burger Court at ten.
BUSINESS:
A Carter-labor "accord".
George Meany steps down;
An electric car in GM's future?;
IBM's record borrowing;
Soviet "art for trade's sake".
NEWS MEDIA:
Teddy Kennedy and the press.
LIFE/STYLE:
People who are hooked on work.
SCIENCE:
Urban forestry.
EDUCATION:
An Education Department is born;
A high grade for Head Start.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Max Lerner;
Pete Axthelm;
Jane Bryant Quinn;
Meg Greenfield.
MUSIC:
Placido Domingo at the Met.
MOVIES:
Jill Clayburgh in "Luna" and
"Starting Over," and a talk
with the star.
BOOKS:
The letters of D. H. Lawrence;
Mary McCarthy's "Cannibals
and Missionanes;
"Arabia," by Jonathan Raban;
"Second Wind," by Bill Russell
and Taylor Branch.
TELEVISION:
ABC's record Olympics deal;
Does incest belong on TV?.
THEATER:
"Evita": soft focus on a
tough cookie.
"Losing Time": battle of the sexes.
______
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