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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 31, 1977; Vol XC, Nol 18
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 STORY: THE NEW WAR ON TERRORISM: Amid the flash and roar of "numb" grenades, West German commandos last
week rescued 86 hostages from a hijacked Lufthansa jet at Mogadishu, Somalia. The raid -- a powerful example of the
West's new war on terrorism -- produced a burst of elation. But the joy quickly soured at news that three West German
radicals whose release the hijackers had demanded were dead in a Stuttgart prison -- apparently, officials reported, in
a suicide pact -- and that industrialist Hanns Martin Schleyer had been murdered by his terrorist abductors. With reports
from Paul Martin in Bonn and James Pringte in Mogadishu, Newsweek details the raid and its gory aftermath. A
separate story and chart profile the commandos and the terrorist groups. And columnist George F. Will (page 112)
examines the spiritual and political impulse to terrorism among the youth of Western Europe's privileged middle class.
(Newsweek cover illustration by Mort Kunstler.)
DRACULA LIVES! The bat wings flapping at the window, the eye teeth plunged into the neck, the stake driven through the
heart -- Count Dracula has preyed on man's fears and fancies for centuries. This Halloween the immortal Transylvanian
returns, in a sensuous Broadway production with sets by sinister artist Edward Gorey.
BIGFOOT: A howling, manlike beast has been scaring folks in South Dakota half to death. Is it a shaggy bear, a nightmare --
or a fresh sighting of the legendary Bigfoot?
REGGIE! Three home runs in a single World Series game tied Babe Ruth's record -- and, said REGGIE JACKSON, made him feel
"like a real superstar." But he's felt that way for a long time, which is one reason for the tensions that have scarred the
Yankees. Reggie told Pete Axthelm that his three homers show he has now grown up -- but Axthelm says that's to be
seen.
BRAVE NEW SKYSCRAPER: There's a brash new face on the New York skyline, the resplendent Citicorp Center whose top is
sliced diagonally like a pennywhistle and whose bottom is hollowed out to form an arcade for shops, restaurants and a
church.
INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Carter's fence-mending trek.
Bob Strauss, new "Cabinet Whip".
A fresh start on urban housing.
The Korea lobby: the Patriarch's blessing.
A political fuss over cultural appointments.
Prince Charles's American tour.
A trial for "Son of Sam".
Hunting Bigfoot in South Dakota.
Amy Carter's pumpkin party.
SPORTS:
Enigmatic superstar Reggie Jackson.
INTERNATIONAL:
The new war on terrorism (the cover).
The counter-terrorist commandos.
Terrorist groups around the world.
How good are airport security measures?.
South Africa's crackdown.
The radicalizing of black editor Percy Qoboza.
Another military coup in Thailand.
A talk with Prince Saud on war and oil.
BUSINESS:
Nuclear power -- a boom gone bust.
Bert Lance's active new life.
Concorde comes to New York City.
Remodeling the Federal income-tax forms.
Evangelical publisher Revell's secular hits.
Home videotape recorders: roll 'em!.
TELEVISION:
Shake- up at lagging CBS.
NEWS MEDIA:
Daniel Schorr's "Clearing the Air".
SCIENCE:
Cancer worries about bacon and hair dyes.
EDUCATION:
Boston College's ax-murder scare;
Ohio's school-finance squeeze.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Nguyen Cong Hoan.
Paul A. Samuelson.
George F. Will.
THE ARTS:
ENTERTAINMENT:
Dracula lives!.
Gothics by Edward Gorey.
ARCHITECTURE:
Citicorp's brave new skyscraper.
MOVIES:
"The Man Who Loved Women": tame Truffaut.
"A Piece of the Action": a Poitier-Cosby hit.
MUSIC:
Alberta Hunter's smash comeback at 82.
Levon Helm's good ole rock.
BOOKS:
The diaries of Evelyn Waugh.
Priscilla Johnson McMillan's "Marina and Lee".
"The Trail of the Fox," by David Irving.
"Josephine," by Josephine Baker and Jo Bouillon.
______
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