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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: APRIL 28, 1980; Vol. XCV, No. 17
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: DETROIT hits the skids. And the Recession is on.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
ANOTHER CHOICE?: After weeks of agonizing, John B. Anderson, the plain-spoken maverick Republican congressman from Illinois, has all but irrevocably decided to run for President as a third-force inde-pendent--a step that could alter the course of a dispirited election year.

DETROIT ON THE SKIDS: eta!, all-out disaster." That was one worker's re-nse to word that Ford will close its largest assem-plant--and the industry's growing woes helped to r a recession. Detroit's disasters mean trouble for ens of industries, and presage a critical shaken for the world's automakers in the '80s.

BIRTH OF A NATION: th a ceremonial assist from Britain's Prince arles (below), independent Zimbabwe rose from ashes of colonial Rhodesia. It was a promising i t, but many perils faced the new nation.

A HUMAN CIRCUS: Television's newest hits, "Real People" and "That's Incredible!" showcase ordinary folks with bizarre habits, like skydiving in a straitjacket. It's a growing trend, and it has the rather seamy and exploitive air of a carnival freak show.

FLIGHT TO FREEDOM: The exodus from Cuba finally began last week after more than 10,000 people had jammed into the Peruvian Embassy in Havana, desperately seeking freedom overseas. Embarrassed by the spectacle, Fidel Castro temporarily put a stop to the airlift and whipped up a huge demonstration in support of his hard-pressed regime.

INDEX of ARTICLES in this issue:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Carter and Iran: peaceable solutions were running out.
Who "lost" Iran?.
John Anderson verges on going it alone.
piro Agnew's supposed death threat.
Jimmy Carter, nonmillionaire 3ehind Nancy Reagan's smile [he squeeze on the cities.
Closing in on the FALN.
ERNATIONAL:
Cuba: "Libertad! Libertad!"--for some.
The birth of Zimbabwe.
Siberia: Sergeant Doe takes charge.
Mideast: Begin has it his way.
again Russia's caviar scam France: the computer killers.
BUSINESS:
Detroit hits the skids (the cover).
The shape of cars to come Labor: the UMW's Machiavelli .
Tomorrow's rules for world business.
Mattel's $10 million gamble.
IDEAS: Jean-Paul Sartre, 1905-1980.
TELEVISION: Cavalcade of freaks.
JUSTICE: Taking the Fourth.
DANCE: Tap-dancing is back.
BOOKS:
"Thy Neighbor's Wife," by Gay Talese.
"Orwell: The Transformation," by Peter Stansky and William Abrahams.
"The Forbidden Experiment," by Roger Shattuck.
SCIENCE: Scientific criminology.
ART: Vito Acconci's art of shocking.
MOVIES: The worst films ever made.
THEATER: Now playing: Harvard vs. Yale.

OTHER DEPARTMENTS.
Letters.
Update.
Periscope.
Newsmakers.
Transition.
THE COLUMNISTS:.
My Turn: Paul D. Zimmerman.
Paul A. Samuelson.
Jane Bryant Quinn.
Pete Axthelm.
George F. Will.


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