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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 27, 1980; VOLUME XCVI, NO. 17
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: Is America Strong Enough? SPECIAL REPORT.
Cover: Photos by Herman Kokojan-Black Star, Wally McNamee-NEWSWEEK, U.S. Navy.
TOP OF THE WEEK:
A NEW CRITIC: NEWSWEEK is delighted to announce that John Ashbery, the art critic and Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, has joined the magazine to review painting and sculpture. His first review covers the British painter Rodrigo Moynihan. Ashbery will be alternating every six months with Mark Stevens, who will return next spring.
HOW STRONG IS AMERICA?: Seldom in time of peace has the United States been so troubled by talk of war and more than at any time since the missile-gap scare of the late 1950s, concern is growing that America's military ca- pability is inadequate. The Army Chief of Staff speaks of his "hollow Army," undermanned and underfunded. The Air Force warns that its planes lack spare parts. Navy officers complain that they might have to fight a three-ocean war with a "one-and-a-half-ocean Navy." Is it really that bad? With reporting and analysis by Pentagon correspondent David C. Martin and a NEWSWEEK task force, an eleven-page SPECIAL REPORT examines U.S. military prowess and problems, compares them with Soviet power and explores solutions for the worst short falls. The report also profiles the 101st Airborne Division. And a NEWSWEEK Poll turns up some striking data on the defense issue.
FACE TO FACE: One evening, they traded jokes at a white-tie dinner in New York. The next day, Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan agreed at last to meet again for real: in a no-kidding, face-to-face debate with John Anderson out of contention-and the Presidency on the line.
MARY, MARY: Sexism, soap suds, corporate intrigue: the story had "everything" and newspapers across the country scrambled to give Gail Sheehy's five-part pop-psychology saga of MARY CUNNINGHAM (right) the full headline treatment. Fortune magazine offered its own sobersided cover takeout on Bendix and its fastest-rising executive.
FULL NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The Carter-Reagan debate.
Strategy for the face-off.
The stealth candidates.
Battle of the TV ads.
Surrogate campaigners.
The fears of Black America.
SPECIAL REPORT:
Is America strong enough? (the cover).
Analyzing the defense problems.
Sizing up the Soviets' might.
The "Screaming Eagles": how ready?.
INTERNATIONAL:
Iran says no deal.
Moscow's friend in need.
Britain: Callaghan quits.
A gift horse from Castro.
Israel: new troubles for Begin.
An Argentine activist wins the Nobel Peace Prize.
BUSINESS:
The recovery-or Catch-22?.
Genentech fever.
Westinghouse buys Teleprompter.
A Nobel for an econometrician.
The comeback of REIT's.
Update on the organization man.
NEWS MEDIA: The Mary Cunningham story.
JUSTICE: A new hunt for old Nazis.
SCIENCE:
Hormones for profit.
Five new Nobel laureates.
SPORTS: The World Series.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Victor R. Fuchs.
Milton Friedman.
George F. Will.
TELEVISION:
Backyard satellite stations
New magazines for TV viewers
THEATER: Back to "Brigadoon," with love.
BOOKS:
"Naming Names," by Victor S. Navasky.
William Golding's "Rites of Passage".
"Floater," by Calvin Trillin.
"The Letters of Evelyn Waugh".
ARCHITECTURE: Selling houses as art.
MUSIC: A harvest of pop records.
ART: Rodrigo Moynihan's New York show.
______
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