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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:
SEPTEMBER 8, 1980; Volume XCVI, No. 10
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 PRODUCTIVITY CRISIS: Can AMERICAN renew its Economic Promise? Special Report.
Cover: Construction by H. Aoki. Photo by Mark Kozlowski.
TOP OF THE WEEK: [Major Stories]
SPECIAL REPORT: AMERICA'S PRODUCTIVITY CRISIS: In the history of the wealth of nations, there has never
been anything quite like America. Its industrial engine has fueled unparalleled wealth, with each new
generation secure in the knowledge that its children would do even better. But the vision of perennial
prosperity has suddenly blurred, and the locked plant gates and layoffs of recession 1980 advertise a
deeper message: slumping productivity poses a clear and present danger to the nation's economic well-
being. As Jimmy Carter begins to press his program for industrial renewal, a fifteen-page NEWSWEEK
special report examines the productivity crisis-its causes, ramifications and consequences if the trend goes
on. Accompanying stories look at Japan's highly productive economy, spot the efficiency winners at home
and highlight troubled industries and intriguing possibilities.
RUSSIA'S NEW SATELLITE: Under the rule of the Vietnamese, CAMBODIA is turning into a Soviet satellite.
But most Cambodians seem to believe Hanoi's overlordship is preferable to the Pol Pot regime, which has
left behind gruesome reminders (right) of its butchery. Page 41.
FEARLESS FORECAST: In this fall's scramble for the NFL championship, old pros like Houston's Ken Stabler
(below) are playing a new role. NEWSWEEK'S Pete Axthelm analyzes the key changes and the likelihood of
someone toppling the awesome Steelers. Page 72.
THE POLISH RESISTANCE: POLAND's rebellious workers won an unprecedented concession: the right to strike.
But that was not enough. In Gdansk, strike leader Lech Walesa (left) held out for trade unions completely
independent of the Polish Communist Party, a democratic innovation that could lead to creeping
liberalization elsewhere in the Soviet Bloc. As negotiations continued, Polish leader Edward Gierek brought
reformers into his government. But the strikes spread to the crucial Silesian coal mines. And the Soviet
Union warned that it would not allow the strikes-or the reforms-to get out of hand. Page 30.
Full NEWSWEEK LISTING:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The debate over the debates.
League of Women Voters: caught in the cross fire.
The Abscam trial.
New York's Senate race.
Talmadge wins; Gravel loses.
The Nevada hotel bomb blast.
Coal and steel: problems in profile.
Studies and odd findings.
Quality circles-an idea that.
has come full circle.
Lessons from Japan, Inc.
Some American winners.
Two experts cross swords.
INTERNATIONAL:
The crisis in Poland.
Cambodia: the Soviets' new satellite.
Pol Pot's executioner.
Mideast: Arafat's tougher line.
Should the U.S. help the left?.
SPECIAL REPORT: An economic dream in peril (the cover). The productivity crisis.
JUSTICE: Governor Reagan and California's courts.
TELEVISION: NBC's "Shogun": Silverman's rising sun?.
THEATER: "42nd Street": the last hit of Gower Champion.
SPORTS: Can the Steelers be stopped? Andrea Jaeger: tennis's newest teen star.
IDEAS: A debate over why women are depressed.
SCIENCE: Mount St. Helens: living with a volcano.
MUSIC:
Barry Tuckwell: king of the horn.
Rocker Carroll's mean streets.
BOOKS:
"Walter Lippmann and the American Century," by Ronald Steel.
"Fanny," by Erica Jong.
"The House on Prague Street," by Hana Demetz.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Bernard Sloan.
Meg Greenfleld.
______
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