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NEWSWEEK Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS -- Exclusive MORE MAGAZINES detailed content description, below! ISSUE DATE: March 14, 1966; Vol. LXVII, No. 11 IN THIS ISSUE:- [Detailed contents description written EXCLUSIVELY for this listing by MORE MAGAZINES! Use 'Control F' to search this page.] * This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 COVER: FOUNDATIONS. The American Way of Giving. TOP OF THE WEEK: FOUNDATIONS: THE CUTTING EDGE?: As a freshman at Harvard, Education editor Joseph M. Russin received some memorable lessons in government from Dean McGeorge Bundy. For his report on U.S. foundations, Russin called on Bundy, now president of the Ford Foundation, and interviewed Carnegie's Alan Pifer, among others. To round out the story, reporters Phyllis Malamud and Mariana Gosnell talked to scores of philanthropoids and grant seekers (Newsweek cover drawing by Blake Hampton). STORY OF A CANCER VICTIM: Like every top-flight medical writer, Medicine editor Matt Clark carries an onerous responsibility each time he reports on a new surgical or therapeutic advance. To oversell the story as a cure would raise false hopes; to hold back the facts might deprive some desperate victim of possible help. The brief story Clark wrote in the Nov. 1, 1965 issue of this magazine discharged his responsibility in a model way. Clark reported on a still experimental surgical treatment for malignant melanoma (a deadly form of cancer) developed by Dr. Sig- mond Nadler of Roswell Park Memorial Institute in Buffalo, N.Y. In the procedure two patients exchange diseased tissue to stimulate antibodies that would, in turn, reject the foreign tissue. If the reaction occurs, after a week or ten days, the new antibodies are returned to the tissue donor by transfusion. In theory, at least, they will attack the cancer. In Tucson, Ariz., 28-year-old Robert F. Allen read the story; a former football star and the father of three, Allen suffered from osteogenic sarcoma, a rare form of bone cancer. He had lost one leg and had only months to live. He asked Nadler to help him, and the surgeon agreed. Another osteogenic sarcoma victim, with matching blood type, Harry T. Griffith, 63, of Flourtown, Pa., came forward. Last Friday Nadler and another surgeon performed the transplants. Would it save their lives? 'I wouldn't even begin to answer that question," Nadler said. "It's an experimental procedure." VIETNAM: THEN AND NOW: Twelve years after Dienbienphu, Senior Editor Arnaud de Borchgrave compares the two phases of the Vietnam war. As a long. time resident of Europe, de Borchgrave also had other reflections. "Perhaps the most discouraging part of the trip was the return to Europe," he wrote. "Europeans still think and act as if Asia belongs to another planet. They also seem to have forgotten that it was not South Vietnam that tried to conquer North Vietnam.". NEWSWEEK LISTINGS: NATIONAL AFFAIRS: The debate that won't go away: LBJ and McNamara hit back on vietnam; despite a setback, the doves keep criticizing. Rusk wins tighter reins on foreign affairs. Mayor Lindsay gets that tired feeling. A new court standard for sanity. Killing for kicks in Tucson. THE WAR IN VIETNAM: Vietnam revisited: an on-scene assessment of the U.S. position and prospects. Escalating the air war another notch. INTERNATIONAL: Britain: the make-or-break year. Anti-Semitism in Austria. The transformation of East Germany. Able Nathan's peace flight to Egypt. Thunder on the right in South Africa. The new order in Ghana. Australia: a boy, a shark and five heroes. THE AMERICAS: Mexico's war of the opium poppies. PRESS: Playing down the Candy carnival; Dropping the home address. TV-RADIO: Television on a record?; A breach in Nielsen security. SCIENCE AND SPACE: Two astronauts die an earthly death; Russia's Venus probe. BUSINESS AND FINANCE: Detroit's shape of things to come in '67 (Spotlight on Business). Boom in bombs. Wall Street: where's the bottom?. Prices and capital spending head higher. Europe's deadly hoof-and-mouth epidemic.. EDUCATION: Foundations: the American way of private giving for public purposes (the cover): with a Close-up of a Ford-backed legal-aid project in action. SPORTS: Peggy Fleming puts it on ice. Destination unknown for Cassius Clay. LIFE AND LEISURE: FASGROLIA: the language of acronyms. The Mod look for men. THE COLUMNISTS: Walter Lippmann--War in Asia. Kenneth Crawford--Humphrey's Chicken. Henry Hazlitt--An Election Proposal. Raymond Moley--Pragmatic Republican. THE ARTS: THEATER: "Where's Daddy?" Who cares?. "Lion in Winter": fun on the surface. MOVIES: "The Oscar": it won't win one. A Russian "Hamlet" without poetry. ART: Hollywood's tower of protest. Montecatini's do-it-yourself museum. BOOKS: Valeriy Tarsis talks. Another view of Vietnam. "Too Far to Walk": pop Faust. "The Custer Wolf": I love Lobo. * NOTE: OUR 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. 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)
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