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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:
May 16, 1966; Vol. LXVII, No. 20
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:
ALABAMA'S NEW ERA: THE NEGRO VOTES: Outgoing Gov. George Wallace was in Rainbow City, Ala., speaking on behalf of the candidate he had chosen to succeed him--his wife Lurleen. He spotted Newsweek Atlanta bureau chief Joseph B. Cumming Jr. in the crowd and said: "I see Mr. Cumming here with Newsweek. Now he's a fine young man. But they want to make fun of us some more. He's a nice young man, but those editors in New York, they just hate to tell the truth about us." For this week's cover story on the Alabama primary--the first in which Negroes voted in force--one of those editors from New York went on the campaign trail with correspondents Cumming, Marshall Frady and Gerald C. Lubenow. Then, General Editor Peter Goldman returned to write the four-part story, which--along with a special analysis by political observer Louis Harris--covers a turning point in the state's history. (Newsweek Cover Photo by Vernon Merritt Ill--Black Star.).
BUSINESS: STOP, START, DOWN, UP: It was a wild week of business news: a production cutback at General Motors; Wall Street's steepest one-day decline since the Kennedy assassination; the disclosure that the four major U.S. auto manufacturers have called back 8.7 million cars since 1960 to check for defects. And hovering over the economy were still the threatening clouds of inflation. As experts look to their key statistics to gauge and guide the economy, Washington correspondent Murray Seeger and Associate Editor Shepherd Campbell join in a Spotlight on Business (page 81) to report on the government's vast range of economic indicators and how they are put together.
PRESCHOOL BOOM: The competition is so tough that only one of every sixteen applicants will be accepted for the fall semester. Harvard? Vassar? Swarthmore? Not at all: the New York school that faces this problem is one of the thousands of U.S. preschools offering finger painting, free play and reading hours for some 3 million children between the ages of 3 and 5. Assistant Editor Lee Smith describes the pressures and rewards of the preschool years.
INDONESIA: THE ROAD BACK: To take a comprehensive look at what has happened in Indonesia in the wake of last fall's bloody coup and countercoup, Newsweek recently sent two of its Asian-based correspondents to the country's capital of Djakarta. From the files of Bernard Krisher and James McC. Truitt, Tokyo bureau chief, Associate Editor Robert Littell wrote this week's story on a land struggling to regain its balance.
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Alabama primary: a historic election with
the Negroes voting and the Wallaces win
ning (the cover).
Primary results in other states.
The spendthrift Congress.
Dog snatchers in action.
Kennedy U.
INTERNATIONAL:
Indonesia: after the storm, "The Generation
of 66' rides high.
Where is Mao?.
Adenauer in Israel.
Guilty verdicts in the moors murders.
Spanish students claim their rights.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM:
Ground fighting on the Cambodian border;
Premier Ky's political poker playing.
THE AMERICAS:
Brazil's women on the march.
EDUCATION:
Selective Services new draft test.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
Plans for a spacewalk around the world;
A spring clip saves a $750 million plane.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
GM brakes--and stocks skid.
Wall Street: flip.flops and omens.
The nuts and bolts of auto safety.
The indicators that gauge and guide the
U.S. economy (Spotlight on Business).
European travelers discover America.
PRESS:
A third Pulitzer for APs Saigon bureau.
MEDICINE:
Birth control and population;
The common cold vs. cancer?.
SPORTS:
A son of Native Dancer wins the derby
Indians on the warpath.
TV-RADIO:
Now Sunday is when the news breaks.
RELIGION:
Protestant union: a beginning in Dallas.
SPECIAL REPORT:
Preschool boom: its pressures and rewards.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Henry C. Wallich--Housewife and Farmer.
Raymond Moley--The Ordeal of Djilas.
THE ARTS:
THEATER:
Gielgud's clumsy revival of "Ivanov".
A Frank Loesser festival in New York.
ART:
"Primary Structures": new forms in art.
MOVIES:
"Arabesque": through a glass brilliantly.
"Les Bonnes Femmes": patchwork.
MUSIC:
Douglas Moore's "Carry Nation".
The Knef, queen of German torch singers.
BOOKS:
Germany's Group 47: a nation's conscience.
"Despair": Nabokov as the last European.
"A Very Easy Death": a dying relived.
______
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