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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: August 18 1980; Vol. XCVI, No. 7
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8½" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: The Democrats: Can they get it together? Cover: Illustration by Bill Nelson.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
IRAN: TURNABOUT: Iran exploded over its own "hostage" crisis after 192 young Iranian protesters were arrested in Washington. Charging that the youths had been tortured, Parliament put off a debate on the U.S. hostages. The Iranians were freed, but angry Americans (right) staged demonstrations of their own.

THE END OF THE DEMOCRATIC ERA? In a mood of resignation, the Democratic Party assembled in New York to confront its next-to-inescapable duty: the renomination of a highly unpopular President. Beyond the hurdles of 1980, the party is groping for a new identity. The New Deal coalition has crumbled, the old liberal verities have been challenged, and the party has nothing to replace them. A NEWSWEEK Poll suggests many Democrats feel estranged from their party on the issues. The cover-story package also spotlights the party's future leaders.

THE U.S. JAILS: Americans have learned how ugly their prisons are, but few people realize that U.S. jails are worse. Jails mix together the innocent and convicted, young and old, middle-class and poor --in overcrowded conditions that are mostly dirty, dangerous, unhealthy and stupefyingly dull.

SCULPTURE FOR EVERYONE: From ghettos to financial districts, in shopping centers and city halls, modern sculpture is sprouting like dandelions. Some of it is silly, some is antiseptically abstract, and much of it is just junk. But the best is aimed at bringing fresh life to urban wastelands and brightening the look of America's public places.

K CAR KICKOFF: Banners and ballyhoo marked the debut of Chrysler Corp.'s K cars last week as the first models rolled off the assembly line. The ailing company has staked its life on their success. But whether the big gamble pays off depends on the response of con-sumers--and the health of the U.S. economy.

[FULL NEWSWEEK LISTINGS]:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The not so happy warriors End of the Democratic era? (the cover).
The party's new faces .
Ed Koch, New York's Mr. Straight Talk .
Jimmy's report on Billy Reagan and the blacks .
Hurricane Allen, superstorm.
INTERNATIONAL:.
Iran's own "hostage" crisis.
A new view of nuclear war Poland: Gierek's mounting troubles.
France: marauders on the Côte d'Azur.
Mideast: Sadat and Begin wage a duel of words.
Zimbabwe: a murder suspect in the Cabinet.
How Latin America sees Reagan.
China: now, de-Maoization .
Tibet's great leap backward.
SCIENCE: Dig and pay.
MEDICINE: The DMSO controversy; Guarding against heart flutters; A viral epidemic.
BUSINESS:.
The interest-rate dilemma.
Uncle Sam vs. Hollywood.
A changing cast at Occidental Petroleum.
Chrysler's K-car gamble .
Drought: farmers are down, but not out.
The crude thieves .
A future for futures? .
JUSTICE: The scandalous U.S. jails.
NEWS MEDIA: Billygate or Mediagate?.
BOOKS:.
Arnold Lobel's "Fables" .
Michael H. Brown on toxic chemicals.
"The Thirties," by Edmund Wilson.
MOVIES: "Xanadu": 90 long minutes.
Peter Sellers's last film.
Big Boat epics for summer.
A wondrous update for "Close 70 Encounters".
ART: Sculpture in the streets.
TELEVISION: The fading fall season.

OTHER DEPARTMENTS.
Letters.
Update.
Periscope.
Transition.
Newsmakers.
THE COLUMNISTS.
My Turn: Deairich Hunter.
Milton Friedman.
George F. Will.


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