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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 10, 1969; Vol LXXIV, 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

COVER: KATHERINE HEPBURN Returns to Broadway. "Kate and Coco".

TOP OF THE WEEK:
KATE AND COCO: The lives of two magnificent women meet in the forthcoming Broadway musical "Coco," the most expensive show of all time and the most eagerly awaited since "My Fair Lady." The careers of France's Gabrielle (Coco) Chanel, the brilliant fashion designer, and America's Katharine Hepburn, the winner of three Academy Awards, have displayed parallel fireworks; both women are fiercely independent, supremely individual, proud, strong--and feminine. Both have maintained their talent and energy--at 86 Coco is still the "eternal" designer, at 60 Hepburn is still the glamorous star. To tell their stories, General Editor Hubert SaaI drew on his interviews with Hepburn and those of Paris bureau chief Edward Behr with Chanel, as well as reporting by Abigail Kuflik and Elizabeth Bochnak. (Newsweek cover photo by Bob Willoughby from Lee Gross.).

THE COURT: INTEGRATE NOW, LITIGATE LATER: The Supreme Court's first decision under Chief Justice Warren Burger proved last week to be bold and historic--and a sharp setback to the President who appointed him. Public-school segregation, the Court ruled, must cease "at once." From reports by Washington correspondent Robert Shogan, General Editor Kenneth Auchincloss analyzes the sweeping decision and the prospects of prompt enforcement by the Nixon Administration. Associate Editor Richard Boeth tells how the order may affect school life in Yazoo City, Miss., where Atlanta correspondent Stephan Lesher was on-scene to report reactions both white and black.

LATIN AMERICA 'THE NIXON DOCTRINE: For months, the nations of Latin America had been waiting uneasi- ly for the Nixon Administration to declare its intentions toward them. Last week, the President announced a new U.S. policy placing more of the responsibility for progress and development on the Latin Americans themselves. In a companion story (page 52), Latin American correspondent Peter G. Kramer appraises the causes bf friction between the U.S. and its neighbors to the south.

THE GREAT U.S. FRANCHISING BOOM: When the stock of Kentucky Fried Chicken hit the market in March of 1966, it touched off one of the decade's daffiest booms--the great franchise explosion. Now, celebrities are lending their names to a bewildering, proliferating variety of franchises for products and services. From files by Assistant Editor Constance W. Carroll in New York, Newsweek bureaus and his own reporting, General Editor Rich Thomas writes the story of the boom-- and its problems of saturation, competition, corner-cutting and fraud.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The Burger court rules on school integration.
The reaction in Yazoo City, Miss.
President Nixon on the move.
Secretary Laird cuts back.
LBJ and the Austin land affair.
The CIA's man at State.
Chappaquiddick: a private inquest.
Chicago: william Kunstler for the defense.
The longest hijacking.
INTERNATIONAL:
Mideast: Al Fatah calls the tune.
Israeli elections: move to the right.
Kenyatta's crackdown in Kenya.
Mr. Nixon's Latin American message; and an appraisal of U.S.-Latin relations.
Harold Wilson--doing better, but not well enough.
France: the defeat of Couve de Murvilfe.
West Germany enters the Brandt era.
Franco dumps the Falangists.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM: Baby.sitting with the ARVN.
THE CITIES: Smog control: cities vs. the auto; The preventive-detention debate.
EDUCATION: Militancy at Vassar; A bill of rights for high-school pupils.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Five more Nobel laureates; Soviet progress in power from fusion.
SPORTS: Basketball's red-hot Knicks; Football: air war in the South.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The GE strike and the inflation spiral.
The economy: where's the slowdown?.
Paramount's studios for sale.
Wall Street: the bail-out syndrome.
The great U.S. franchising game (Spotlight on Business).
New life for old products.
Troubles at Pan Am.
RELiGION: The Pope and the restless bishops.
THE MEDIA: Knight buys The Philadelphia Inquirer; Commercials--the best of pop television.
LIFE AND LEISURE: The love-potion peddlers.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Kenneth Crawford--Vogues in Vice.
Milton Friedman--The Ivory Tower.
Stewart Alsop--Mr. Nixon's Horrible Shadow.

THE ARTS:
THEATER:
Kate Hepburn and Coco Chanel (the cover).
MOVIES: "Sign of the Virgin": comic brilliance.
A harrowing Vietnam documentary.
BOOKS:
Philip Stern's "The Oppenheimer Case".
David Elliott's "Listen to the Silence".
A Salvador Dali edition of the adventures of Alice.
ART:
Corot's marvelous "monkeys".
The best show of the worst.
MUSIC: Lillian Roxon's encyclopedia of rock.


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