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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 5, 1966; Vol. LXVIII, No. 10
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: HOW MUCH INFLATION?

TOP OF THE WEEK:
HOW MUCH INFLATION? Inflation--that vast and bewildering gale that sweeps values before it--has been blowing through the U.S. economy for nearly a year. But only lately has it begun to be felt keenly by most American families and thus become a potentially explosive public issue. To assess the new price spiral and its effects, Newsweek correspondents interviewed men in the street and in executive suites. And to determine causes and possible cures, they talked with leading economists. From their reports, this week's Spotlight on Business details the roots, the impact and the suggested remedies for the new inflation. And on page 72, Henry C. Wallich applies the lessons of the past to a perceptive insight into today's problem. (Newsweek cover drawing by Bill Mauldin.).

SEE HOW THEY RUN--RFK VS. LBJ: The younger man has been jockeying for position for months, even years, and he clearly sees himself as a likely choice to assume the place his slain brother held--the Presidency of the U.S. The older man, already President in his own right by virtue of an overwhelming electoral victory, has no intention of yielding to his young rival's power drive--unless, perhaps, the political pressures become so great that not even he can resist them. Robert F. Kennedy, it is increasingly apparent, is locked in a power struggle with Lyndon B. Johnson for eventual control of the Democratic Party.

LITTLE BRODIER IS WATCHING: Teen-aged "Red Guards," evidently acting under orders from Mao Tse-tung's heir apparent Lin Piao, went off on a remarkable puritanical rampage through Peking last week in the name of "proletarian virtue." To bring the confusion into perspective, Newsweek tapped sources around the world--including former friends of Lin himself--for a close-up look at China's new crown prince, written by Associate Editor Kenneth Auchincloss, and an analysis of the "Teenage Rebellion" in Peking, by Associate Editor Robert K. McCabe.

A TALK WITH INDONESIA'S NEW RULER: Since he became his country's effective boss ten months ago, hard-driving General Suharto has had to devote almost all his waking hours to putting Indonesia's house back Suharto and Newsweek's Krisher in order--and keeping President Sukarno in line. Journalists who tried to see Suharto were told his calendar was full. Finally, last week, Suharto held his first fullfledged interview with a foreign journalist. The interview--and the story of what Indonesia's government hopes to accomplish--went to Newsweek's Bernard Krisher.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Robert F. Kennedy vs. Lyndon B. Johnson.
How old warhorse Nixon looks today.
Mayors on the firing line.
The draft--Operation Salvage?.
Martin Luther King scores in Chicago.
America's first mcvie star dies.
CLEAN--California's smut haters.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM:
Saigon's nasty suburban warfare.
The ghastly errors of war.
American women without men.
ICC--policeman without power.
INTERNATIONAL:
In Peking, Little Brother is watching.
Lin Piao: How to succeed by really trying.
Revolt of the West German generals.
De Gaulle around the world.
Indonesia's storm over Sukarno, and a talk with General Suharto.
THE AMERICAS: Argentina's student revolt goes on; Canada's striking 30 percenters.
MEDICINE: Texas wages air war on encephalitis.
PRESS: Divorce Chattanooga style; The free press and the fair trial.
RELIGION: Notre Dame examines Catholic schools.
SPORTS: Water babies conquer the Nebraska waves; Australia sets sail for America's Cup.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
How much inflation? (the cover).
Stocks: the Johnson bear market?.
Song of safety in auto advertising.
China's rice-bowl blues.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Lunar Orbiter snaps earth's portrait; Are UFO's really great balls of fire?.
TV-RADIO: Satellite static; Bell changes its tune.
EDUCATION: Detroit's sick schools.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Emmet John Hughes--The National Temper.
Kenneth Crawford--The Next President.
Henry C. Wallich--Can We Stop Inflation Without a Recession.
Raymond Moley--A Tenuous Franchise.

THE ARTS:
MUSIC:
Lovin' Spoonful: tickling the U.S. taste.
Testing the high-strung musician.
THEATER: Preview of the Broadway season.
ART: For sculptor Lipchitz, man always wins.
MOVIES:
Mailer's "American Dream" without Mailer.
"Salto": clash of symbols.
BOOKS:
Arnold Bennett, "Writer by Trade" .
"Hog Butcher": deadly checkers.
"Call the Keeper": barrel of freaks.
Agnon's tales of two cities.


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