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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:
September 13, 1965; Vol. LXVI, No. 11
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: THE WAR ON POVERTY. Sargent Shriver at Camp Kilmer.
TOP OF THE WEEK:
THE WAR ON POVERTY: In the wake of Watts, the war becomes more pressing than ever, and chief warrior Sargent Shriver is stepping up the pace in the government's battle to aid the poor and bring hope to the hopeless. How is the war going and what kind of chief is Shriver? One former Eisenhower Cabinet member has nothing but the highest praise. Yet, says one of Shriver's own staff, "this place is an administrative shambles." Other attacks have come from the right ("a blueprint for revolution") and from the poor ("it's exactly the same as it was"). To sort out the conflicting testimony, all Newsweek domestic bureaus reported what is being done in their areas while Associate Editor Wade Greene talked with Shriver, his staff, and to others in the thick of the fight in New York. Greene's story describes the weapons being used and their successes and failures. On page 25, Associate Editor Jacquin Sanders writes of the day-to-day life in Job Corps camps. And on page 30, Associate Editor Peter Goldman portrays a man who has spent the last quarter century mobilizing the city poor to help themselves--and tells why he is firmly opposed to the Shriver program. (Newsweek cover photo by Vytas Valaitis.)
THE MYSTERE MAN: A builder of planes who himself refuses to fly, a publisher who seems nearly inarticulate, a politician who makes no speeches, the mysterious Marcel Dassault is the richest man in France. Edward Behr of Newsweek's Paris bureau tells how it was that Dassault amassed his fortune.
THE NEW LOOK OF MR. LEVITT'S TOWNS: When Associate Editor Gerald J. Barry and Assistant Editor Anne Hetfield sat down with William Levitt (left) in his Willingboro (for- merly Levittown No. 3), N.J., office, the master builder was in a nostalgic mood. Only days later he would be moving to stunning new headquarters at Lake Success, N.Y., and the process of packing mementos had begun. But the mass-production genius did not look back for long. The plans he unfolded to Barry and Hetfield for this week's Spotlight on Business were more grandiose than ever. At the Willingboro office, Levitt, Hetfield and Barry.
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The steel negotiations--LBJ applies the pressure.
The new PG--in the Fancy image.
How goes the poverty war? (the cover).
THE WAR IN VIETNAM:
The latest U.S. peace offensive falls on deaf ears.
The building of Cam Ranh Bay.
The prisoners and their treatment.
INTERNATIONAL:
Pakistan and India at the brink of war.
In Switzerland, the glacier's toll.
The Greek crisis gives the Reds a lease on life.
Caught in a Singapore Sling--red faces at the U.S. State Department.
THE AMERICAS:
A man of the middle takes over the reins
in Santo Domingo;
Chile's Frei comes a cropper on copper.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Both astronaut and aquanaut--Scott Carpenter's mission to the ocean depths;
Catching a bundle of nothing--the search for neutrinos.
SPORTS: Out but not down, the mighty Casey leaves New York; The Minnesota Vikings' scrambling
quarterback.
RELIGION: Death comes to Dr. Albert Schweitzer at 90 in Africa.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
R5 for Eastern railroads? The boldest merger plan yet.
Frail, fierce and rich is "Monsieur Force de Frappe".
The new look of Mr. Levitt's towns (Spotlight on Business).
PRESS: Taking the Times to task; Congressional Quarterly at twenty.
MEDICINE: Marrying surgery and psychiatry--a new approach.
EDUCATION: On the campus--the activists map a new season of protest.
TV.RADIO: In sports, the players take the mike.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Walter Lippmann--The Vietnamese War Today.
Henry Hazlitt--Rule by Guideline.
Raymond Moley--The House of Law.
THE ARTS:
ART:
In London, two sisters' magnificent gift.
Art on the Riviera.
MOVIES:
Liz and Dick at "Hamp".
The Dave Clark Five's "Wild Weekend".
BOOKS:
A sententious and silly search for "Miss Macintosh. My Darling".
Pass time for the national pastime? Bill Veeck's latest indictment.
______
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