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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: November 14, 1977; Volume XC, No. 20
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: BROTHER BILLY: While brother Jimmy plugs away in the White House, Billy Carter is having himself one swell time: guzzling six-packs, hustling products (including his new Billy beer) and making piles of money. To size up Billy, Pete Axthelm hung out with him. A companion piece profiles sisters Ruth and Gloria. (Cover photo by Susan T. McElhinney--Newsweek.).

TOP OF THE WEEK:
LIZA'S ACT: She slaps hand on hip, tips fedora over eye, struts leggily across the stage and acts every inch the star that she is. It's too bad that no one thought to give LIZA MINNELLI a show to go with the demonic cheerfulness and energy she brings to "The Act." In a way, it doesn't matter; Liza is a force unto herself. But her tour de force, unfortunately, does not make a successful musical.

THE SOVIETS AT 60: On the Soviet Union's 60th anniversary, President Leonid Brezhnev was host last week to 6,000 delegates in Moscow's Palace of Congresses. Newsweek's Fred Coleman reports on Brezhnev's nuclear-test-ban proposals and examines the quality of Soviet life. A symposium of scholars weighs Brezhnev's record and Coleman visits Leningrad -- where the Bolsheviks stormed the Winter Palace (below) in 1917 -- to gauge the people's temper after six decades of Communist rule.

THE SHAH'S PLAIN TALK: Iran will soon be better armed than any West European power. Why? The Shah, who visits Washington next week, tells Newsweek's Arnaud de Borchgrave he can't count on the U.S. and adds: "If we don't assume the security of this region, who will do it?".

SKATEBOARD FEVER: The "carvers" and "boinkers" are ready to roll, showing off their "flip-kicks" and "endovers" and even venturing a "one-wheel peripheral commitment." Skateboarding is now a $400 million industry--and it's fast spreading abroad.

TERRORISM: For businessmen around the world, kidnapping and assassination are becoming daily risks. In response, executives are learning a new way of life, with bodyguards, armored limousines and lower profiles. Allan J. Mayer reports that total security is no fun.

INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Carters decision to stay home.
Richard Helms cops a plea.
Brother Billy Carter (the cover).
And the First Sisters.
The Congressional caucus phenomenon.
New-style Klansman David Duke.
Battered wives hit back.
Honolulu's freewheeling mayor.
NEWS MEDIA: Sexual ethics and the journalist.
INTERNATIONAL:
The U.S.S.R. at 60.
A slice of life in Leningrad.
ix Kremlin experts look ahead..
The U.N's South African arms embargo.
Quebec takes its separatist campaign to Paris.
Indira Gandhi's comeback campaign.
The U.S. quits the ILO.
A talk with the Shah of Iran.
JUSTICE: A critic looks at the Supreme Court.
SCIENCE: The oldest and newest form of life.
BUSINESS:
Businessmen and terrorism.
How to stay out of trouble.
An economic right turn for Israel.
Milton Friedman on Israel's "dash to freedom".
Why does coffee still cost so much?.
Skateboarding's $400 million fever..
Secretary Blumenthal's message from OPEC.
LIFE/STYLE: Women on the run.
IDEAS: Thinking soft on energy development.
TELEVISION: Herb Schlosser's turnaround of NBC.
MEDICINE: Fighting hypertension, the "silent killer"; Medical-supply salesmen as amateur surgeons; The liquid-protein diet under fire.
ThE COLUMNISTS: My Turn: Suzanne Britt Jordan; George F. Will.

ThE ARTS:
ART: Stylish realist David Hockney.
MOVIES:
"Heroes": a ripoff of history.
"First Love": sunshine from William Katt.
"Which Way Is Up?": flaunting Richard Pryor.
ThEATER: "The Act": nothing but Liza Minnelli.
BOOKS:
Three perspectives on dance.
"Dispatches," by Michael Herr.
Stephen Jay Gould's "Ever Since Darwin".
MUSIC:
A new "Rigoletto" at the Met.
The death of Guy Lombardo.


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