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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: October 13, 1969; Vol LXXXIV, No 15
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER STORY: Mr. Nixon in Trouble: "The next President," Richard Nixon said during one of his more thoughtful campaign speeches, "must take an activist view of his office." By that standard, Mr. Nixon's conduct of the Presidency leaves a good deal to be desired, in the view of a rising chorus of critics. Beset by troubles on all sides -- over his conduct of the war in Vietnam, his nomination of Judge Clement Haynsworth to the Supreme Court, his civilrights posture -- the President's ability to Dwight Martin lead the nation has come increasingly into question -- by Republicans as well as Democrats. From Washington, Newsweek White House correspondent Henry Hubbard provides an overview of the President's lack of "the cement of moral imperatives," while correspondents John Lindsay and Robert Shogan report on the Haynsworth affair and the simmering dispute within the Justice Department over the Administration's school-desegregation policies. From their files, Senior Editor Dwight Martin wrote this week's cover story on the growing crisis of confidence in Washington. Martin brings solid credentials and long experience to the assignment. Born and bred in Washington, he has served as a foreign correspondent in Asia, Europe and Latin America. As a New York-based writer and editor since 1962, he has contributed cover stories and major pieces on all phases of American domestic politics and on such of its leading practitioners as Dwight D. Eisenhower, Barry Goldwater, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon and the Kennedys. (Newsweek cover photo by Wally McNamee.).

CHINA: A TROUBLED ANNIVERSARY: In the vast expanse of Peking's Tien An Men Square last week, Communist China celebrated its twentieth anniversary. The occasion brought Mao Tse-tung into public view for the first time in months, but otherwise the ceremony was a strangely perfunctory affair, reflecting China's mountainous domestic and diplomatic problems. In three stories written from files by Hong Kong bureau chief Everett Martin, correspondents Sydney Liu, Paul Brinkley-Rogers and Mary Conway, and Assistant Editor Fay Willey, Associate Editor Russell Watson describes life in Communist China today and the difficulties that have sprung from Mao's "permanent revolution." In another article, General Editor Angus Deming discusses the Nationalist Chinese regime on Taiwan, where amid burgeoning prosperity Mao's old rival, Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, has at last toned down his emphasis on reconquering the mainland.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
President Nixon in trouble (the cover).
Mobilizing for the Vietnam moratorium.
A Bay State GOP stronghold falls.
The Army graft scandal..
Protest: Father Groppi's "holy act".
THE WAR IN VIETNAM: The Green Berets go free.
INTERNATIONAL:
Germany: Willy Brandt on the threshold.
A new Prime Minister for Sweden.
communist china's twentieth anniversary.
Mao's people and his grand design.
Taiwan: the fading dream.
Ulster: the agony of reform.
Sudan's forgotten guerrilla war.
THE CITIES: How clint Mitchell helps cool the Capital; Cutback in the model-cities program.
SPORTS: Baseball's pennant fight; The roaring Gold Cup hydroplane racers.
EDUCATION: The war protest divides the campuses; Restructuring the English department.
MEDICINE: Combating the common headache; Oxygen therapy for senility.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The mark flows free -- and easy.
An end to the airline price war?.
"Coca-Cola imperialism" in Japan.
Where are the battered go-go funds going.
now? (Spotlight on Business).
Wall Street: how to pick a fund.
Chemical warfare on the toothpaste front.
What the oilmen have found in Alaska.
Boston's adman-poet.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: The Amchitka nuclear test blast.
THE MEDIA:
Instant-replay systems for home TV.
Keeping an eye on Jackie.
TV's underground hours LIFE AND LEISURE:
Models in the age of nudity.
The great bracelet fad.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Stewart AEsop -- The President on Vietnam.
Henry C. Wallich -- The Tax Bill.

THE ARTS:
MOVIES:
"Butch Cassidy": unfinished symbols.
"Oh! What a Lovely War": blurred view.
"The Royal Hunt of the Sun": ghost-ridden.
BOOKS:
Joe McGinniss on the Nixon TV campaign.
Dean Acheson's "Present at the Creation".
"Corky's Brother," by Jay Neugeboren.
"An Indian Manifesto," by Vine Deloria Jr.
THEATER: San Francisco's ACT in New York.
MUSIC:
The Juilliard School's new home.
La Lupe, "queen of Latin soul".


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