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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: MAY 5, 1980; Vol. XCXV, No. 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

COVER: FIASCO IN IRAN. Special Report. Cover: Photo by John Ficara.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
THE FIASCO IN IRAN: Americans woke up to a cold splash of reality last Friday. On their TV sets, a tight-lipped Jimmy Carter was explaining that a daring raid to rescue the 53 hostages in Teheran had failed. A series of technical snafus forced the President to abort the mission before commandos got off the ground from a desert staging point 300 miles from Teheran. In the confusion, one of their RH-53D Sea Stallion helicopters (shown in training, above) collided with a C-130 transport killing eight Americans. The rest fled to safety, leaving the bodies of their comrades behind--and the fate of the hostages more uncertain than ever. In a fourteen-page SPECIAL REPORT, NEWSWEEK details the fiasco in Iran--and its impact on Carter's Presidency. A special NEWSWEEK Poll by The Gallup Organization registers the nation's rally-round-the-flag unity. Separate stories analyze the rescue attempt and why it failed, describe the commandos and the hostage families' reaction--and that of worried allies. Correspondent Tony Clifton assesses Iran's new wave of turmoil and its effect on America's continuing struggle to free the hostages.

CUBA'S 'BOAT PEOPLE': Thousands of seasick but happy Cubans took an armada of slow boats to Florida last week. Some had been part of the 10,000 people seeking asylum in the Peruvian Embassy in Havana, but the rest fled to freedom when Castro decided to export his three-week-old refugee problem to Washington. After first denouncing the sea-lift as illegal, the U.S. began processing the new arrivals in Key West.

THE THIRD MAN: Unsuccessful as a Republican Presidential-primary candidate, Illinois's John B. Anderson followed his politics of principle out of the GOP--and into an independent campaign for the Presidency. His move prompted a recalculation of the odds in Campaign '80: a NEWSWEEK Poll suggests he would draw many more votes from Carter than from Reagan--and it shows that Anderson starts the race with about one in five voters on his side.

JAMBALAYA OF JAZZ: From Gatemouth Brown (left) to backwoods Cajun fiddlers and gospel groups, the annual New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival offers the most swinging rite of spring.

SPECIAL REPORTS:
Fiasco in Iran (the cover).
The rescue plan--and how it failed.
Who the commandos were The families wait and worry After the raid: nervous and angry allies.
The War Powers Act.
Iran's growing turmoil.
NATIONAL AFFAIRS.
John Anderson, the Third Man His obstacle course.
Kennedy soldiers on.
California: Jarvis has another proposition.
A congressman faces censure Chicago: Jane Byrne in trouble again.
INTERNATIONAL.
The "boat people" of Cuba South Yemen's bloodless coup.
Nicaragua: the junta turns left Liberia: Sergeant Doe's death squad.
Cambodia: the horrors of war through children's eyes.
BUSINESS.
Gauging the depth of the slump Aftershocks of the silver panic Chrysler's countdown Polaroid's Edwin H. Land.
passes the gavel.
Earth Day--and a fiery disaster.
BOOKS.
Richard Sennett's "Authority" "Falling in Place," by Ann Beattie.
The way we look, two views: "About Looking," by John Berger; "Thirty Seconds," by Michael J. Arlen.
"The Dragon's Village," by Yuan-tsung Chen.
SCIENCE: Columbia, the space shuttle that won't fly.
SPORTS: The Kentucky Derby's "maybe" horse.
JUSTICE: A right to vote--but not to win.
MEDICINE: TB: a lingering and deadly threat; Is intensive care too intensive?.
MUSIC: New Orleans: all that jazz.
LIFE/STYLE:
A cross-country hike to Washington.
Coping with life after a death.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: David T. Kearns.
Milton Friedman.
Pete Axthelm.
Meg Greenfield.


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