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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: November 21, 1977; Vol XC, No 21
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 UFO's are coming! Hollywood's "Close Encounters". THE UFO'S ARE COMING!: In the wake of "Star Wars," Hollywood is releasing another science-fiction extravaganza, "Close Encounters of the Third Kind," a spectacular $19 million film that deals with one of the oldest movie fantasies of all -- the arrival on Earth of alien beings from outer space. Senior Editor Jack Kroll analyzes the luminous appeal of this much awaited film and profiles its two leading creators -- 29-year-old director Steven Spielberg and special-effects wizard Douglas Trumbull. An accompanying article discusses the current state of the highly speculative science -- or art -- of UFOlogy.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
MOTHER IBM: Perhaps no other American company bestows as many benefits on its employees as IBM, the world's largest computer maker. But IBM expects a lot in return: high on-the-job performance and, some aver, off-the-job conformity. The womb- to-tomb corporate way of life is explored by Allan J. Mayer and Michael Ruby.

A NEW GAME PLAN: Jimmy Carter went public with another televised talk on energy last week, but his Administration was already turning to the key domestic issue of 1978: the nation's economic health. To stimulate the economy, Carter will almost surely propose tax cuts, but first he must decide wheth- er to reappoint Arthur F. Burns as Federal Reserve chairman.

CARTER'S ENVOYS: When he ran for President, Jimmy Carter promised to improve the caliber of America's ambassadors -- and for the most part he has made good on that pledge. Newsweek assesses Carter's choices and proffles five of the new envoys, including Kingman Brewster (left), formerly president of Yale and now the ambassador to Britain.

EMERGENCY! Emergency medicine is fast becoming a specialty in itself -- and with good reason. Accidents are the leading killer of people under 38. In bleaker days, many Americans lost their lives because of slow or inept treatment. But now, thanks to a growing network of Emergency Medical Services (EMS) systems, the death rate is going down.

INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
A changed economic game plan.
New faces of Election '77.
The princely wiles of Senator Long.
Changing the rules on Catholic second marriages.
The CIA's cold wave of pink slips.
Another dam disaster.
INTERNATIONAL:
Israel vs. Lebanon: "An eye for a tooth".
"Why did they do this" to Azziye?.
Germany's anti-terrorist "finger squads".
Hard times in British clubland.
South Africa's black roundup.
Jimmy Carter's new ambassadors.
BUSINESS:
Drawing the line on imports from Japan.
The dock-strike pinch.
Sears, Roebuck's new chairman.
The Amex gets a bullish new boss.
Paychecks: the U.S. slips to sixth place.
Mother IBM: the corporate way of life.
MEDICINE: Saving lives with emergency medical services.
SPORTS: Grambling State's deadeye passing star.
RELIGION: Polygamy today.
SCIENCE:
Nuclear fusion: big potential, big problems.
A puzzling new member of the solar system.
EbUCATION: Cage-rattling California regent Gregory Bateson.
TELEVISION: The rating game.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Douglas Davis.
Paul A. Samuelson.
Meg Greenfield.

THE ARTS:
MOVIES: COVER STORY: "Close Encounters" with UFO's (the cover).
J. Allen Hynek, Galileo of UFOlogy.
A close encounter with director Spielberg.
Special-effects wizard Douglas Trumbull.
MUSIC: Jazzman Dexter Gordon comes home.
BOOKS:
"Delmore Schwartz: The Life of an American Poet," by James Atlas.
Jerzy Kosinski's "Blind Date".
Two volumes on Oscar Hammerstein II.
"Cannibals and Kings," by Marvin Harris.


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