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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:
July 31, 1967; Vol. LXX, No. 5
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
TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER STORY: HONG KONG--The Running Siege: Rich, beautiful, poor, ugly--bustling with energetic Chinese and correct Britons--Hong Kong is a city with a cleft soul. In the last three months it has seen pitched battles beween British and colonial police and homegrown Maoist insurrectionists. Recently, Associate Editor Edward Klein visited Hong Kong to see how the crown colony was faring. He had the expert guidance of correspondent Sydney Liu, a scholar and a sinologist by birth, training and inclination. Back in New York, Klein wrote the story from his own notes, from research by Assistant Editor Fay Willey, and on-scene reports by Liu, correspondent Maynard Parker and bureau chief Edward Behr. (Cover photo by Bob and Ira Spring, F.P.G.).
RACIAL CRISIS: DESPERATE SHOUT, DEAF EAR: The fires this time were smoldering in Newark and blazing anew in Minneapolis, Cairo, Erie and Plainfield, N.J. But if the latest wave of rioting to sweep the nation's ghettos registered as a desperate shout for answers, the 90th Congress in Washington was clearly turning a deaf ear. The House's only answer was to approve overwhelmingly a bill making it a Federal crime to cross state lines to start a riot. Then, it laughed down a modest $40 million measure aimed at controlling one of the slum's most visible afflictions--the rat. From reports by Newsweek correspondents around the nation, General Editor Peter Goldman assesses the racial crisis and its challenge to a troubled society.
FROM SALT TO SWEET: With the opening of the nation's largest desalination plant, Key West, FIa., becomes the first U.S. city to draw its water from the sea. But as Vice President Humphrey said after sipping some of the plant's first output, "there are much bigger things to come" in supplying urgently needed fresh water-- notably the huge nuclear-powered installation soon to rise in California. From Joseph Cumming's on-scene report, and files from Newsweek's Washington and Los Angeles bureaus, Associate Editor Jack lams writes the story.
FOUND AT LAST: THE LEGENDARY LOST ATLANTIS: Scientific techniques have helped archeologists find the fabled lost Atlantis. Newsweek's report on what may be the find of the decade is backgrounded by a survey of the somewhat chaotic current state of archeology and ,includes two pages of color photographs.
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Race riots: You can't run away.
A black-power summit in Newark.
Moscow tries to delay Svetlana's book.
Simon McHugh makes it big in Washington.
Republicans in the running for Veep.
Mississippi: Ross Barnett runs again.
The racketeers muscle in on Westchester.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM:
Thinning out the Presidential candidates;
The coastal picket line's big catch.
INTERNATIONAL:
Hong Kong under the gun (the cover).
The British Empire: sunset east of Suez.
Rumania: Communism's odd man out.
U.N.: another bitter Arab defeat.
Algeria: a messiah without followers?.
Tshombe faces a one-way trip to the Congo.
Nigeria: the bloodbath deepens.
Hard-won land reform in Chile.
EDUCATION:
Fun Campus, U.S.A.;
A bill of rights for college students.
MEDICINE:
A medical reason why Johnny can't read.
SPORTS:
Uptrend in boxer Joe Frazier's stock;
Tennis moneymaker Layer.
PRES:
Four-letter frankness in print.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
Striking new discoveries in archeology.
TV-RADIO:
Games pretty people play;
A new boost for pay-TV.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Going up--the U.S. deficit, wages, taxes
The Queens--ships of learning?.
A new lift for German aviation.
Wall Street: the rally from afar.
Making fresh water from salty on a paying
basis (Spotlight on Business).
RELIGION:
Israel's thorny problem of the holy sites;
Jesuit seminaries turn toward the cities.
LIFE AND LEISURE:
Valentino's hot Italian fashions;
Angling in suburban trout preserves.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Kenneth Crawford--The Morbid Season.
Henry C. WaIIich--Antistrike Legislation.
THE ARTS:
MOVIES:
'Up the Down Staircase": evading the
issues.
BOOKS :
Vladimir Nabokov, virtuoso.
The edible world of 'Hunger".
Indira Gandhi, daughter of India.
ART:
Alfred Barr, tastemaker.
MUSIC:
Procol Harum hits the jackpot.
The musical legacy of John Coltrane.
THEATER:
El Teatro, a workers' theater on tour.
______
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