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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 14, 1980; Vol. XCV, No. 15
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8½" 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: Top Fiddle: Violinist ITZHAK PERLMAN. Cover: Photo by Bill Ray.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
FIDDLER AT THE TOP: A concert violinist, according to Jascha Heifetz, needs "the nerves of a bullfighter. . . and the concentration of a Buddhist monk." Itzhak Perlman has both, plus something more--a passion for performing that has put the young Israeli-American virtuoso in the forefront of a new generation of brilliant soloists and made him the most exciting violinist since the great Heifetz himself. Severely handicapped after a childhood bout with polio, Penman is nonetheless as exuberant offstage as on--possessed, reports General Editor Annalyn Swan, by the antic spirit of a born ham.

MORE MUDDLE IN TEHERAN: "This time it is going to happen," said Iranian President Abolhassan Bani Sadr (right). His government would take charge of the U.S. hostages, and on the dawn of Wisconsin's primary, Jimmy Carter replied that he would treat Iran with restraint. But again Bani Sadr failed to deliver, leaving both leaders with credibility gaps.

LATIN DOMINOES: It began as the funeral of an archbishop--and ended in a bedlam of bombings, gunfire and 31 deaths on a plaza in El Salvador. The prospect of another Central American civil war alarmed Washington deeply, for the entire region has become vital to the United States.

CHINA'S OPEN DOOR: Last week NEWSWEEK became the first American magazine to open a news bureau in Peking. Bureau chief Melinda Liu (left) found that, despite the government's crackdown on liberalization, China's door is still open to Western culture--and consumer goods.

NEW YORK COPES: They walked. They roller-skated. They car-pooled. As they usually do in a crisis, most New Yorkers responded to last week's bus and subway strike with festive determination. But the strike is taking its toll on the city, and the mood could quickly sour.

INDEX of ARTICLES in this issue:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
More muddle in Teheran.
Carter: a worried winner Reagan's blue-collar vote .
Brown calls it quits .
The outlook in Pennsylvania.
A blow against political patronage.
A key victory for Bert Lance .
The Boston "volcano" .
New York's transit strike.
INTERNATIONAL:
Central America in turmoil.
Anwar Sadat, master of survival.
China: the door stays open.
U.S.S.R.: the Starman bust.
A "CIA confession" in Kabul.
NEWS MEDIA:
An exposé that went too far?.
Hank Greenspun vs. the IRS.
SCIENCE:The deepest "dive".
SPORTS: Jesse Owens, 1913-1980.
MUSIC:
Top fiddler Itzhak Perlman (the cover).
Golden age of violins.
LIFE/STYLE: Fall fashions: back to style.
BUSINESS:
Heading for a classic bust?.
The fallout of the silver panic .
The Chrysler cliff-hanger .
Insurance: a U.S. "Lloyd's"? .
Aaaah, soft bathtubs.
MOVIES: Melvyn Douglas at 79.
BOOKS:
"The Plan of St. Gall," by Walter Horn and Ernest Born .
Thomas Berger's "Neighbors" .
Ann Cornelisen's "Strangers and Pilgrims".
EDUCATION: Teaching young refugees to cope.
THEATER:
"Children of a Lesser God": the radiance of Phyllis Frelich.
I Ought to Be in Pictures": the bathos of Neil Simon.
JUSTICE: Baylor bars bares.
ART: Marsden Hartley, American modernist.
MEDICINE: New clues to emphysema.

OTHER DEPARTMENTS.
Letters.
Update.
Periscope.
Newsmakers.
Transition.
THE COLUMNISTS.
My Turn: Midge Decter.
Pete Axthelm.
Jane Bryant Quinn.
Milton Friedman.
George F. Will.


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