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TITLE: NEWSWEEK
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: April 16, 1979, Volume XCIII, No. 16
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER: THE ENERGY TANGLE: JIMMY CARTER'S NEW PLAN: Jimmy Carter prescribed harsh medicine for the energy crisis that plagues the U.S. today--"Use less oil and pay more for it." His message played out against a backdrop of bad news: the sluggish flow of oil from revolutionary Iran, an upward bump in OPEC prices and the suddenly shadowed future of nuclear power after the accident at Three Mile Island--where Carter made a personal inspection (above). But there were doubts about the effectiveness of Carter's plan to deregulate domestic oil and impose a windfall-profits tax, its chances on Capitol Hill and its impact on the President's prospects for re-election. In a fourteen-page report, NEWSWEEK explores these questions, examines the charge that oil-company profits are already too high, and updates the story of the accident at Three Mile Island and its implications for the nuclear-power industry. (NEWSWEEK cover illustration by Andy Lackow.).

APRIL DREAMS: Pete Rose (above) is a Phillie, Rod Carew is an Angel, and almost every team offers new players and new hopes as the baseball season gets under way. Some opening-day illusions were as fleeting as Ron Guidry's perfect-game quest, but others seemed built to last. Pete Axthelm tries once again to predict which spring dreams will last until fall.

FINE FIGURES: One of the most vocal champions of representational art is R. B. KITAJ, an American painter who lives in London and is widely celebrated in Europe. In a new exhibition at the Marlborough Gallery in New York City, his ambitious work bristles with political, literary and psychological themes and pays homage to such masters as Goya, Degas and Cezanne.

DHUTTO HANGS: World leaders had urged that his life be spared, but last week former Pakistani Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, 51, was hanged in the dead of night at the Rawalpindi jail. Until his overthrow by the nation's armed forces in 1977, the brilliant but arrogant Bhutto had been PAKISTAN's most effective politician. With a national election scheduled for later this year, his unpopular execution on a charge of conspiring to murder a political opponent was likely to cause more trouble for Pakistan's new Islamic republic.

NEWSWEEK LISTING:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The energy tangle (the cover).
What oil decontrol will mean.
Are oil profits too high?.
Cooling it at Three Mile Island.
Beyond "The China Syndrome".
The NRC under fire.
Nuclear power in trouble.
Campaign '80: countdown in Iowa.
Jane Byrne and the growing ranks of women mayors.
The terrifying flight of a 727.
Keeping the electric chair waiting.
JUSTICE: Tougher laws for young criminals; New legislation to protect privacy.
INTERNATIONAL:
Pakistan: the ghost of Bhutto.
The Mideast: why Begin smiled.
The Shah's Bahamian paradise.
Idi Amin: now you see him....
The IRA's lethal new look.
An Islamic revolt in Afghanistan.
MEDICINE: Disciplining errant doctors; An alert against sleeping pills.
MUSIC: Maurizio Pollini's brilliant piano dialogues. [NICE, full page story on a great pianist, with small photo of Pollini at the Keyboard!]
BUSINESS:
Goodbye to wage-price guidelines?.
A dangerous boom.
Planes: no Airbus sweep for Boeing.
Polaroid's instant dud.
ART: Representational painter R. B. Kitaj.
TELEVISION: "Friendly Fire": the Vietnam war in prime time.
LIFE/STYLE: The new urban archeology; Helping people fall out of love.
MOVIES:
Rising star John Savage.
Three lovable new B movies.
BOOKS:
Ruth Hill and her best-selling first novel, "Hanta Yo".
Herbert R. Lottman's life of Camus.
"Quarantine," by Nicholas Hasluck.
Barbara Pym's "The Sweet Dove Died".
NEWS MEDIA: Covering Three Mile Island; Ford's memoirs: The Nation gets ahead of Time.
THEATER: James Mason as the "Faith Healer".
SPORTS: Play ball!.
EDUCATION: Professors on strike at BU; Teaching children at home.
THE COLUMNISTS: My Turn: Philip CaldweIl. Milton Friedman. George F. Will.


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