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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 24, 1978; Volume XCI, 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: WOODY.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER: THE REAL WOODY: WOODY ALLEN didn't know that his "Annie Hall" had swept the Oscars until he read the next day's newspaper. He is, he says, "anhedonic unable to enjoy himself. Woody's next film, he tells Senior Editor Jack Kroll, won't have a single laugh--"at least," declares the movies' funniest neurotic, "no intentional ones." (Newsweek cover photo by Harold Krieger.) Photo Caption: Woody wIth KrolI In Allen's penthouse.

THE HOTTEST FIGHTER: The F-15 EAGLE is the world's hottest jet fighter, and its deployment to Europe in the past year has given NATO a critical edge in air combat. Newsweek's Paul Martin got a firsthand look at the American plane during a wild hour of mock dogfighting over West Germany.

SHOULDERS: Behind all the fuss and feathers generated by the fall ready- to-wear collections in Paris, there was some genuine news about fashion. The layered "big look" is gone: the new silhouette features broad, padded shoulders with slim skirts or tapered pants, along with lots and lots of leather.

CANAL SHOWDOWN: The battle over the Panama Canal treaties comes to a final Senate vote this week. Even if the second treaty passes, Panama may turn it down because of the DeConcini reservation, which permits U.S. intervention in Panama. A companion piece profiles Sen. Dennis DeConcini of Arizona, who stirred up the furor.

DWIGHT MARTIN, 1921.1978: Senior Editor Dwight Martin, a Newsweek staff member since 1960, died of a stroke last week at 56. He was a journalist from the age of 17 and a complete professional: a foreign correspondent who covered three continents with distinction and panache, a writer of style and sardonic wit and an editor whose touch improved every major section of the magazine. His gift for friendship, his educated sense of history, his wide-ranging curiosity and his teacher's skills helped make Newsweek what it is.

INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Showdown on the Panama Canal treaty.
Senator DeConcina--Dennis the Menace?.
Will the Administration get its act together?.
Bob Strauss, Carters Mr. Fixit.
The FBI: heat at the top.
Energy: one year later.
Getting set for Sun Day.
Bert Lance on the attack.
INTERNATIONAL:
Tensions between Vance and Brzezinsld.
The Sovfet diuiomat Who Woflt 90 home.
Mideast: Lebanon pays the price of stalemate.
The duster-bomb furor.
A ride in the F-iS--the world's hottest jet fighter.
ltaly: the death "sentence" for Moro.
The Philippines: Marcos stops the music.
UFEISTYLE: Fashion: shoulders are big.
MEDICINE: Betty Ford and the prisoners of pills.
BUSINESS: Wall Street's buying panic.
Carter's modest anti-inflation proposal.
The CETA job-program scandal.
Take-over follies.
The boom--and the risk--in collectibles.
TELVISION: America 2Night': high comedy or low taste?; Covenrig all the news that's gory.
EDUCATION: The closed-school blues. NEWS MEDIA: Feisty Mother Jones.
ThE COLUMNISTS: My Turn: Tom Bethell; Milton Friedman.

ThE ARTS:
MOVIES:
All about Woody Allen (the cover).
PHOTOGRAPHY: Clarence John Laughlin's surrealistic images.
BOOKS:
Two critiques of the press.
Ward Just's "A Family Trust".
Perdido," by Jill Robinson.
Elspeth Huxley's "Scott of the Antarctic".
ART : The Boston Museum of Fine Arts' exhibit of the art of Pompeii.
THEATER:
A windy "Julius Caesar," a stunning "Hamlet.
Diversions and Delights": Oscar Wilde revised.


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