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ISSUE DATE: OCTOBER 28, 1985; VOLUME CVI, NO. 18

IN THIS ISSUE:-
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COVER: GUESS WHO's COMING to DINNER. Princess Diana. Cover: Photo by Jayne Fincher.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
BEYOND THE FAIRY TALE: Four years after the royal wedding that transfixed the world-and on the eve of their first joint visit to the United States-there is talk that the fairytale marriage of the Prince and Princess of Wales has turned into a soap opera. Amid rumors of stormy rows and sullen sulks, it has suddenly become fashionable to wonder "how happy" the royal couple really are. The gossip, which invariably casts Diana (left) as the heavy whose capricious moods have supposedly alienated an increasingly eccentric and subdued Prince Charles, is both inevitable and unseemly. What's more, most of it is probably untrue.

REFORMING THE PENTAGON: Some of the Pentagon's staunchest allies havejoined those who say America's military is in an appalling mess. A chief culprit is interservice rivalry, which, critics say, makes for redundant weapons and strategies-such as the Navy's call for more carrier battle groups (right). A consensus for reform is building.

CARS OF THE FUTURE: A new generation of speedy, sleek and smart autos is on the way, as Detroit turns to sophisticated electronics (like the computerized map system at left), high-performance engines and exotic materials to spark a renaissance in automotive technology and design.

THE ABBAS MANHUNT: Fleeing from Rome to Belgrade to Aden to Baghdad, Muhammad Abbas stayed one step ahead of an American manhunt last week. But U.S. officials vowed to catch the man whom they call the mastermind of the Achille Lauro hijacking.

CHARITY ROCK: Gone are the days of rock-and-roll rebellion. Charity has now become chic, as musicians line up behind the latest worthy cause-from the plight of farmers in the United States to the evils of apartheid in South Africa, in the new "Sun City" recording (right).

NEWSWEEK FULL LISTINGS:
NEWSMAKERS:
Guess who's coming to dinner (the cover).
Washington's royal welcome.
Treasures from England's great country homes.

NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Manhunt for a terrorist.
Winners and losers: the fallout from the Achille Lauro.
How to fix the Pentagon.
Tax reform: is it dead or alive?.
Philadelphia: inquest on an inferno.
The Mormon mystery.
Nixon: the comeback kid.
Nebraska: the governor's terms of endearment.

INTERNATIONAL:
New violence in South Africa.
A message to Marcos.
China: playing the summit game.
As Moscow sees it.
The U.N.'s midlife crisis.

BUSINESS:
A green giant is on the move.
Coke: flat in Hollywood.
A Classic win.
Chrysler takes a U-turn.
CBS's takeover battles.
One-stop influence shops.

SPORTS: The show-me series.
HEALTH: The great plaque-off.
JUSTICE: Intent of the framers; New AIDS risk: a term in jail.
EDUCATION: Campus sex: new fears.

TECHNOLOGY: Cars of the future.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Gerald W. Bracey.
Jane Bryant Quinn.
George F. Will.

DANCE: Nijinska stages a comeback.
BOOKS:
"House," by Tracy Kidder.
Two about John De Lorean.
MOVIES: Wonderlands of autumn.
TELEVISION: And now, The Big Tease.
MUSIC: Brother, can you spare a song? "I ain't gonna play Sun City".
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