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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 18, 1977; Vol. LXXXIX, No. 16
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" 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: HOW TO SAVE ENERGY. Special Report.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
ENERGY: Jimmy Carter's long-heralded energy policy goes to Congress next week, and its bottom line is tough: use less, pay more. But Carter is determined to convince the nation that there is a "new reality," and the stress will be on saving power that is now waste(l. With Jeff B. Copeland leading the reportorial task force, Allan 1. Mayer wrote the cover story on how energy can be saved--and at what price (page 70). David Pauly compiled tips for savers and profiled Davis, Calif., a community with a power-thrifty life-style. And columnist George F. Will ponders the implications. (Newsweek cover design by George Huerta.).

IN THE FIELD: Last week Newsweek reporters traveled to three out- of-the-way places to cover the news. From Zaire, Senior Editor Arnaud de Borchgrave provi(les an exclusive interview with President Mobutu Sese Seko (page 49). Mobutu complains bitterly about a lack of U.S. support in the expanding war in Shaba Province. He also reveals that Egypt has promised to send a battalion of troops to Zaire. Correspondent Elaine Sciolino flew to Havana with two South Dakota basketball teams which played the Cuban tiational squad (page 45). Fidel's brother, Raol, greeted the visitors -- and although they lost, the trip seemed to be a step towar(l resumption of IJ.S.-Cuban ties. Correspondent HolgerJensen was in a group of reporters who visited the new U.S. base on the Indian Ocean atoll of Diego Garcia. Jensen reports that dlespite President Carter's proposal to "demilitarize" the area, work on the base--which the Navy will use for resupply and reconnaissance--is proceeding at an accelerated pace (page 56).

BRITISH ART: The richest collection of British art outside Great Britain goes on display this week in New Haven--in a splendid building designed for Yale by the late architect Louis Kahn. The pictures combine the grace of a Lawrence (below) with the romantic energy of a Turner or Blake. And the building mixes corners of repose with flashes of architectural risk-taking, from commercial shops on the street level to interior "windows" and the use of natural light.

SAYING IT WITH FLOWERS: With the romantic look sweeping the fashion world, an unlikely accessory is making a comeback: artificial flowers decorating hair, necklaces, earrings, waists and even ankles. Yves Saint Laurent set off the boom in blooms last fall, and now manufacturers can't make them fast enough: a collection of poppies, magnolias and daisies from 20-year-old molds sold out in two hours, at $65 each. And for fall, would you believe velvet and tweed roses?.

NEWSWEEK LISTING:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Carter's curb-the-plutonium nuclear policy.
Walter Mondale, Assistant President.
Espionage: the Lee-Boyce affair.
Chicago: Choosing the man to succeed Daley.
Louisiana's election-fraud battle.
Going dry in San Francisco.
INTERNATIONAL:
Israel: Rabin's fall.
A look at Shimon Peres.
Carter tries some private diplomacy.
Living with the Eurocommunists.
Cuba: Our Men in Havana.
Zaire: an interview with Mobutu.
Terrorists kill a German prosecutor.
Andy Young does it again.
Diego Garcia, U.S. Indian Ocean outpost.
EDUCATION: Kingrnan Brewster's legacy at Yale.
MEDICINE: The ban on tris; New weapons against cancer.
SPECIAL REPORT: How to save energy (the cover); The most power-thrifty town of all; Conservation tips from the pros.
BUSINESS: Unhappy labor, suspicious businessmen--and Jimmy Carter in the middle.
RELIGION: How Jews see Jesus.
LIFE/STYLE: Fashion's boom in blooms.
IDEAS: Psychohistory on trial.
JUSTICE: Litigating air-crash disasters.
THE COLUMNISTS: My Turn: Gerald Nachman. Pete Axthelm. George F. Will.

THE ARTS:
MOVIES:
"3 Women": Robert Altman's desert song of beauty from sorrow.
"Demon Seed" and "Audrey Rose": two horrors.
ART: Louis Kahn's stately Yale Center for British Art.
BOOKS:
Hugh Trevor-Ropers "Hermit of Peking".
"Talking to Myself," by Studs Terkel.
"Going Blind," by Jonathan Penner.
"The Age of Uncertainty,' by John Kenneth Galbraith.


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