Bloodier Than a Mafia Don, Red Terrorist Renato Curcio Wants Italy on Its Knees
Pg. 32
For 45 Years the Rockettes Have Been a Kick for Tourists—Now Radio City Is Going Dark
Pg. 36
Kissinger Exercises a Veto on His Portrait, and Artist Gardner Cox Pockets His Pride
Pg. 38
Byron Janis Plays to a Full House on His 50th Birthday—and Everybody's a Card
Pg. 40
They're Trying to Tell Her She's Too Young, but 12-Year-Old Brooke Shields Isn't Listening
Pg. 42
There's No Irony This Time: Author Lois Gould and Husband Bob Are Such Good Friends
Pg. 47
Flavio Was Dying When This Photo Ran 17 Years Ago; Thanks to It, He's Fine Now
Pg. 68
H-E-E-R-E's Jim Bakker, the Johnny Carson of Evangelism (Though He Weeps Like Jack Paar)
Pg. 71
Fred Manfred Put 'Siouxland" on the Map, but He Sure Upsets Some of His Godly Neighbors
Pg. 78
The Year's Kinkiest Roles Give Comic Billy Crystal a Career Pregnant with Promise
Pg. 87
Secretary of Labor Ray Marshall Was the Cabinet's Invisible Man and Then the Miners Walked Out
Pg. 95
Sociologist Harry Edwards Thinks Sports Are Too Important to Be Left to the Athletes
Pg. 104
At Elaine's, the Pasta Can Be Limp, the Tab Stiff, but the Clientele Is Three-Star
Pg. 110
No Longer Confident That 'Nothing Is Going to Happen to Me," a Rescue Pilot Takes Off Anyway
Pg. 114
B.O. Clicks, Image Nix: Scandals Rock Hollywood in Its Best Year Ever, and Jack Valenti Is the Man in the Middle
Pg. 117
Lowell George's Little Feat Have Always Done Their Stuff, but Only Now Are They a Shoo-In
Pg. 127
Mathew Prichard Has Been Caught in a Mousetrap for 25 Years—and Loves It
Pg. 131
Washington Fetes Arthur Burns—Now Neither Fed nor Dead and Not About to Be Emeritus
Pg. 138
Billy Cunningham Has Changed the Philadelphia Egos Back into the 76ers—and An NBA Team to Beat
Pg. 142