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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 7, 1966; Vol. LXVIII, No. 19
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
TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER: LBJ IN VIETNAM: The logistic problems in transporting a U.S. President into the Vietnam battle zone last week had their less momentous counter- parts in the job of getting the photos of the event back home in time for publications. But by midnight last Thursday, photographer Fred Ward's record of President Johnson's journey to Manila and Cam Ranh Bay was in New York where Newsweek's editors chose the cover and inside color pictures (pages 25 and 26). Among them: an unusual view taken from inside-looking-out of the President's "bubbletop" car. Traveling with the President as always was White House correspondent Charles Roberts. From his files, and those of Newsweek's Pacific staffers on the scene, Associate Editor Edward Klein assessed the Manila conference (page 27) and Senior Editor Dwight Martin wrote the hour-by-hour account of the President's Vietnam visit (page 24). (Newsweek cover photo by Fred Ward--Black Star.).
THE ELECTION OUTLOOK: The bands blared, the candidates orated, the pollsters pondered the straws in the wind--and another nationwide political campaign rounded into the homestretch. The real message of politics '66? The depth of the white backlash? The fortunes of the beleaguered Republican Party? The likely influence of the war in Vietnam in the polling booth? There were portents aplenty--but the off-year election story was an exercise in the politics of uncertainty. To put it into perspective--and to hazard forecasts on the outcome-- Newsweek tapped correspondents in all 50 states and sampled the soundings of the pollsters and the sentiments of the pols. From these reports, General Editor Edward Kosner analyzed the campaign in the large and in key races around the country.
THUNDER OUT OF CHINA: The fireball that flashed over Lop Nor last week signaled a new era of insecurity for Southeast Asia--and perhaps for the world. China had mated a nuclear warhead to a missile and claimed that it had hit the target area. From reports by Newsweek correspondents in Washington, London and Hong Kong, Assistant Editor Jonathan Piel pieces together the story of the new Chinese advance, and of the quietspoken former USAF colonel who helped make it possible.
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
THE PRESIDENT'S TOUR:
LBJ visits U.S. fighting men in Vietnam:
with two pages of tour photos in color.
The Manila meeting and after: togetherness.
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
How the '66 elections shape up.
Political spots on the airwaves.
Test of panther power in Alabama.
UFO's: true believers.
The Sam Sheppard Reprise.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM:
North Vietnam's "belt hugging" infantry.
INTERNATIONAL:
Chancellor Erhard at the brink.
British spy George Blake escapes.
Reform the Mother of Parliaments?.
The U.N. and Southwest Africa.
Decline of the nonaligned.
RELIGION:
Bishop Pike--a case of heresy?;
Freeing God from Christian dogma.
PRESS:
George Plimpton, poet among the pros.
MEDICINE:
Killer cadmium and hypertension;
No help for the heart from drugs?.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
China enters the nuclear-missile race;
Tackling the pollution problem.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The housewives' price boycott spreads.
Taxes: California's 100 percenter.
Wall Street: funds up in a down market.
Hard-core joblessness: the unemployment of Negroes rises (Spotlight on Business).
Banking: how to live with tight money.
SPORTS:
Harvard: football factory.
EDUCATION:
Not enough Head Start?;
Do-it-yourself at San Francisco State;
Downgrading the college grades system.
TV-RADIO:
The games that TV plays.
LIFE AND LEISURE:
Suburbia behind stockades;
The St. Louis teen-ager blues.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Kenneth Crawford--The Youth Myth.
Milton Friedman--The Bank Depositor.
Raymond Moley--A Vote of Confidence.
ART:
Oskar Kokoschka, the wild one.
Rembrandt and his age; with a two-page portfolio in color.
THEATER: Saul Bellow on Broadway.
MUSIC:
Self-portrait by Virgil Thomson.
The versatile voice of Cathy Berberian.
MOVIES:
"The Professionals": thinking gunmen.
"10:30 P.M. Summer": stormy mistakes.
BOOKS:
A collection of "grand eccentrics".
The other America of the permanently poor.
______
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