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TITLE: NEWSWEEK
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: October 10, 1977; Volume XC, No. 15
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8½" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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TOP OF THE WEEK:
NEW HEROINES: For the first time in years, women are the subject of a batch of new movies. These heroines include a murder victim (Diane Keaton in "Looking for Mr. Goodbar"), middle-aged ballerinas (Shirley MacLaine and Anne Bancroft in "The Turning Point") and, most prominently, Jane Fonda and Vanessa Redgrave in an adaptation of Lillian Hellman's "Julia." Senior Editor Jack Kroll analyzes this major shift in movies and profiles the actress on whom most depends-- Jane Fonda.

(Cover photo by Eva Sereny--Sygma.).

ABUSED KIDS: They have bruises, fractures, burns and frightened eyes; some of them are dead. Half a million cases of child abuse were reported last year, and that's only half the real toll.

SPUTNIK + 20: Twenty years ago this week, the Soviets stunned the world by launching Sputnik. The U.S., fearful that Russia was surging ahead in all areas of science and technology, poured billions into new programs. How do the two countries stack up at Sputnik plus 20? In a seven-page Special Report, Newsweek's Moscow bureau chief Fred Coleman and a team of correspondents present their findings.

FREDDIE: Freddie Laker's Skytrain was a flying party on its first trip from London to New York. But passengers who had lined up for days to get tickets found empty seats on the plane--and more on later trips. Can Skytrain and Freddie survive?.

HUNTING PERKS: Jimmy Carter has postponed sending his tax-reform package to Congress, but he remains determined to crack down on executive "perks"--starting with the "$50 Martini lunch." But Congress may find it's no easy matter to distinguish the boondoggles from the real boons to business.

BIKO'S BURIAL: Despite efforts by police to keep them away, 15,000 South Africans gathered to bury Steven Biko, the black nationalist who died mysteriously in jail. The sight of Biko's battered body touched off rioting-- which may foreshadow a turn to urban terrorism.

CONTENTS/INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The Great Energy Debate.
How the Hill views Carter.
What ever happened to Fritz Mondale?.
The CIA: will Richard Helms be indicted?.
The arrest of a Birmingham, Ala., bomber.
New York: diamonds and death.
INTERNATIONAL:
Diplomacy: hope on SALT and the Mideast.
Panama's Torrijos visits Israel.
A plane hijacking k Bangladesh.
Human rights: Carter backs off.
South Africa: the Biko funeral.
SPECIAL REPORT: Twenty years after Sputnik: the U.S. is ahead. How they stack up: a look at Soviet science, medicine and education.
RELIGION: Roman Catholics can they win back the young?.
JUSTICE: The "Kojak trial" on TV; The blind jurors.
SPORTS: and still champion, Muhammad Ali.
BUSINESS: The economy: fighting a global lull; Aviation: flying with Freddie; Moving slowly toward tax reform Hunting perks; What to do about abandoned housing.
MEDICINE: Battered children.
THE COLUMNISTS: My Turn: Bud Photopulos; Paul A. Samuelson; Meg Greenfleld.

THE ARTS:
PHOTOGRAPHY: Bill Owens's working class.
MOVIES: Hollywood's new heroines (the cover).
BOOKS:
Travels with John le Carré.
Random House's disappointing encyclopedia.
"We Have Eaten the Forest," by Georges Condominas.
Harvey Cox's "Turning East".
MUSIC: The New York City Opera's new season.


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