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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: JULY 30, 1979; Volume XCIV, No. 5
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: "JIMMY CARTER's JUGGLING ACT". Cover: Photo of hands by Ormond Gigli, of Jordan by M. Nathons-Gamma-Liaison, of Harris by Don Carl Steffen-Photoresearchers, of Schlesinger by J. Laffont-Sygma, of Califano and Miller by Terry Arthur and of Blumenthal by Bruce Hoertel.

CARTER'S CABINET PURGE: Three days down from his meditations at Camp David, Jimmy Carter embarked last week on a purge as bloody as any in recent Presidential history. He demanded the resignations of all Cabinet officers and accepted five: Joseph Califano of HEW, Michael Blumenthal of Treasury, Attorney General Griffin Bell, Energy Secretary James Schlesinger and Transportation chief Brock Adams. In came a new crew from other government posts and up went top aide Hamilton Jordan to White House chief of staff. NEWSWEEK'S cover report probes the sudden shifts, examines the ins, outs and overs and includes a talk with Jordan. A NEwswEEK! Gallup poll shows that even after Carter's energy speech and pledges to reform his Presidency, only 32 per cent of the public approves his performance. Page 22.

THE LAST SOMOZA: Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza Debayle gave up last week and fled to Miami Beach as Sandinista guerrillas (right) took over Managua. Nicaraguans cheered his successors, who formed a moderate provisional government. But some feared that Marxists were waiting in the wings-and that Nicaragua's revolution could spread through Central America. Page 44.

THE NOBLEST MILE: SEBASTIAN COE is one of track and field's least likely heroes. At 5 feet 9oe inches and 129 pounds, he is dwarfed by more typical track stars like New Zealander John Walker. But last week, in Oslo, Norway, Coe broke Walker's four-year-old record for the mile. He will soon resume training back in England, in preparation for next year's Moscow Olympics. Page 83.

HELP FOR BOAT PEOPLE: In Geneva, 65 nations met to try to help Asia's desperate "boat people." The United States promised to pick up refugees at sea (right), and many other na- tions offered new help. But most of the 370,000 refugees in transit camps faced long waits for new homes. Page 51.

THE NEW BRIDGES: They're meant to be looked at as well as used. They curve, twist and glisten in the sun. Their long spans hang magically from needle-thin cables, appearing to defy gravity. Thanks to engineering and design advances, the new, lighter-than-air look in bridges is here. Page 80.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Carter's Cabinet purge (the cover).
The President speaks Out.
The Gallup verdict.
Some winners and losers.
The new deputy President.
An interview with Hamilton Jordan.
Assassinations: a tenuous verdict of conspiracy.
Mexico: crackdown on the people smugglers.
INTERNATIONAL:
Nicaragua: life without Somoza The new junta.
India: Desai quits.
Iraq splits with Moscow.
African students protest Chinese racism.
The U.N. and the boat people.
Britain: a Fleet Street spoof.
BUSINESS:
Energy: can Carter's plan work?.
The auto wage talks begin.
The econometrics boom.
Whaling: hunting down a pirate.

LIFE/STYLE: The gay resorts.
THEATER:
"Spell #7": it doesn't bind.
"Say Goodnight, Gracie": funny.
MEDICINE: Tinnitus, the torment in the ear.
BOOKS:
"Tears of Glory," by Michael Pearson.
Katharine S. White's "Onward and Upward in the Garden".
"Mother's Helper," by Maureen Freely.
MUSIC: Tom Robinson's rock 'n' wrath.
TELEVISION:
TV turns to print.
CBS looks at "Blacks in America".
EDUCATION: A new row over testing.
ARCHITECTURE: The elegant new bridges.
SPORTS: A new jnile record.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: J. William Fulbright.
Milton Friedman.
Meg Greenfield.


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