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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: MARCH 11, 1985; Vol. CV, No. 10
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 deal with SOUTH AFRICA. Aparetheid and U. S. Policy. The Law and Bernard Goetz. Cover: Photo by Reuter.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
MORE CONTRA CONTROVERSIES: Meeting with Secretary of State George Shultz in Uruguay, Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega (left) repeated a new peace offer: to expel 100 Cuban advisers from Nicaragua and to stop importing Soviet weapons if Washington cut off aid to the contras. But Reagan administration officials were skeptical. They stepped up their campaign to persuade Congress to refund the secret war. And Reagan himself praised the contras as the "moral equal of our Founding Fathers.".

TESTING THE LIMITS OF SELF-DEFENSE: Newly disclosed evidence has reignited the controversy over Bernhard Hugo Goetz, New York's subway gunman--and last week, the mounting furor seemed to be leading toward a new grand-jury investigation and perhaps to Goetz's indictment. Two months after it all began, the Goetz case is still polarizing New York politics, and it raises troubling questions about a citizen's right of self-defense.

HOW TO DEAL WITH SOUTH AFRICA: For the past four years President Reagan has relied on a policy of "constructive engagement" to coax South Africa into better behavior. The Crossroads riots near Cape Town and a wave of treason arrests ordered by Pretoria suggest that his policy has failed. Now, street demonstrators, executives and legislators are searching for more effective ways to promote peaceful change in the world's most racist system of government.

DARK-HORSE PAINTER: For years, George Stubbs was pigeonholed as the chronicler of thoroughbred horses and their blueblooded owners. Now, in a major show at Yale, he emerges as a peer of Constable and Turner.

RASSLIN' REDUX: Welcome to the wrestling renaissance. The arenas are jammed, the TV ratings high and celebrities are lining up to get in on the act. A national marketing strategy helped make it happen.

FULL NEWSWEEK LISTINGS: NATIONAL AFFAIRS:.
Nicaragua: more contra controversies.
A victim of the Sandinistas.
Arms control: a game plan for Geneva.
The budget: showdown.
Mexico: bordering on a crisis.
A Louisiana indictment.
Assault on the Mafia.
Of city character?.
INTERNATIONAL:.
How to deal with South Africa.
the cover.
Two views of the future.
Fighting the love laws.
A dream world.
The moral dilemma.
An interview with.
Egyptian President Mubarak.
Will Zia keep his election promise?.
Poland: a colonel with a camera.
Off balance--but on cue.
Ireland: learning the facts of life.
The IRA's mortar murders.
JUSTICE:.
The law and Bernhard Goetz.
Testing the limits of self-defense.
BUSINESS:.
The dollar: rogue bull in the markets.
A watchful eye on CBS.
Pan Am is grounded amid a labor storm.
Fedders quits the SEC.
Wilting roses of Texas.
A kinky new Calvinism.
Look, Ma, no hands.
MOVIES:.
The beauty and the beasts.
L.A. after dark.
The Return of the Soldier": missing links.
MEDICINE: A contraceptive implant.
BOOKS:.
Illiterate America," by Jonathan Kozol.
The Old Forest and Other Stories," by Peter Taylor.
The Memoirs of John Addington Symonds," edited by Phyllis Grosskurth.
EDUCATION:.
The classroom Vietnam War.
A textbook case of interpretation.
ARCHITECTURE: The decorative touch.
ENTERTAINMENT: Rock music goes Hollywood.
ART: Dark-horse painter.
SPORTS: Rasslin' redux.

OTHER DEPARTMENTS.
Letters.
Dispatches.
Periscope.
Newsmakers.
Transition.
THE COLUMNISTS.
My Turn: Irving K. Kaler.
Robert J. Samuelson.
Meg Greenfield.


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