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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: June 14, 1976; Vol. LXXXVII, No. 24
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

TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER STORY: The Washington Scandals and critic Hubert Saal found it boring. But an alumnus of the company, Peter Martins, left his new role as clean-up hitter for George Balanchine to dance "La Sylphide" for auld lang syne (page 99). The bawdy tale of Congressman Wayne L. Hays and his tattletale ex-mistress exploded into a major scandal--and raised fresh questions about other abuses on the Hill, from posh perquisites to conflict of interest and outright dishonesty. To cover the story, Washington bureau chief Mel Elfin directed a team of ten reporters: James Bishop Jr., Jeff B. Copeland, James Doyle, Lucy Howard, Henry W. Hubbard, Stephan Lesher, John J. Lindsay, Anthony Marro, Henry McGee and Elaine Shannon. The lead story assesses the gathering storm over the Hays- Ray misalliance (page 18), and a major piece surveys the other questionable aspects of Congressional life. A third story deals with the real lives of women on Capitol Hill. (Newsweek cover illustration by Robert V. Engle.).

SUN MYUNG MOON: A self-proclaimed prophet from Korea aims to create a world "family" to serve God. But Sun Myung Moon hasn't been getting a good press, and he has a disquieting, authoritarian power over his dedicated young "Moonies.". Richard Z. Chesnoff, Executive Editor of Newsweek's International Edition, had a rare interview with Moon, and Kenneth L. Woodward assessed the movement and its theology (page 60).

THE ROYAL DANISH BALLET arrived in New York with nude scenes in a new ballet, and critic Hubert Saal found it biring. But an alumni of the company, Peter Martins, left his new role as a clean-up hitter for George Balanchine to dance "La Sylphide" for Auld Lang Syne. (Page 99).

TIME was, the whole idea would have been unthinkable. But the esprit de corporation was gone, and editorial staffers were on strike at Time, Fortune, Sports Illustrated, People and Money (page 83).

GEORGE F. WILL's column is out of its usual back-page place this week. On a visit to Israel, Will found that Israeli policy was forged in the Holocaust--and in the Internationnl section, he tells how a nation ringed by foes acts on a grim premise: that no calamity is unthinkable (page 40).

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The Washington scandals (the cover).
Elizabeth Ray's play-for-pay novel.
Questions of Congressional ethics.
The women of Washington.
Campaign '76: the end game.
Ford's shifting strategy on busing.
Miami's Cuban death list.
INTERNATIONAL:
A Syrian peace in Lebanon?.
An Israeli de Gaulle?.
The Suez Canal comes back .
Italy: second thoughts on Communism.
South Africa's comic-book caped crusader.
Ghana: diplomacy and fact.
Plans for a Kissinger-Vorster meeting.
EDUCATION: New York's City University in crisis; How much school-bus safety?.
LIFE/STYLE: New look in fireworks.
RELIGION: Life with Sun Myung Moon; An interview with Moon.
BUSINESS:
Britain's beleaguered pound: 'We must not panic".
Gold: back to basics?.
A bumpy road for American Motors.
TV's advertising squeeze.
The airlines' first-class shuffle.
The trustbusters' new theory.
The AFL-CIO zeroes in on J.P. Stevens.
NEWS MEDIA: The Time Inc. strike; A reporter is bombed.
ENTERTAINMENT: Sweet-sour serenader Tom Waits.
MEDICINE: Hearing and learning disabilities; Malpractice: a doctor fights back-- and wins.
THE COLUMNISTS: My Turn: Douglas Davis. George F. Will. Pete Axthelm. Milton Friedman.

THE ARTS:
MOVIES:
"The Man Who Fell to Earth": corruption vs. goodness.
"Won Ton Ton": almost worth seeing.
Three new imports.
BOOKS:
Three heart patients tell their stories.
William Trevor's Angels at the Ritz".
"The Autobiography of My Mother," by Rosellen Brown.
THEATER:
Two new plays about women, one flawed, one overwhelming.
DANCE:
Danish cheesecake.
The re-education of Peter Martins.


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