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TITLE: NEWSWEEK
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: April 4, 1966; Vol LXVII, No 14
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:
From fourteen world capitals, from dusty hamlets in India and townships in the rural U.S. South, came the reports that went into some of this week's major stories:
For the cover story on India's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi (page 36), correspondent William J. Cook flew from Saigon to join New Delhi-based R. Ramanujam. While they probed the Indian political scene there and in the countryside for the story written by Associate Editor John Barnes, Paris correspon- dent Edward Behr flew to Calcutta for a firsthand report on the subcontinent's second city. (Cover photo by Max Scheler -- Black Star.)

In Washington, the U.S. Supreme Court handed down new and puzzling opinions on the vexatious subject of what is and what is not por- nography, and set off a reaction, both critical and approving, that could have far-reaching ef- fects on the so-called sexual revolution in the U.S. General Editor Peter Goldman's examination Peter Goldman of the problem (page 19) is based on exhaustive reports from almost every major U.S. city, from lawyers, publishers, sociologists and psychiatrists.

Then there is the phenomenon of the new sound -- some would call it noise or worse -- from Dixie. It's called the "NASHVILLE SOUND," and is composed of equal parts country music and cash-register bells. Atlanta bureau chief Joseph Cumming joined Chicago bureau chief Hal Bruno to spend ten days among the hillbilly musicmongers for the story by Associate Editor Hubert SaaI that begins on page 96. Sound of music: Bruno and Cumming with hillbilly singers.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Battle fatigue along the Potomac.
The Supreme Court rules on smut; and ex.
cerpts from the divided decisions.
Flying saucers? Gas again.
Lynda Bird's suave Hollywood boy friend.
Politics:the latest ins and outs.
New England's durable town meetings.
INTERNATIONAL:
Indira Gandhi visits Washington; and a spe.
cial report with color photos on India.
and its problems (the cover).
The Communist Congress: Peking declines.
What should U.S. China policy be?.
Under Suharto, new paths for Indonesia.
German foreign policy takes a new tack.
THE AMERICAS:
A hollow Frontist victory in Colombia.
Good-by to the Cuban cha-cha-cha.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM:
U.S. ground strength begins to pay off.
How fellow fliers rescue downed airmen.
EDUCATION: Dollars for dropouts. Getting an inside view of government.
RELIGION: A step toward Catholic-Anglican reunion.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
Gemini 8's astronauts report; and a two page color portfolio on their flight.
PRESS: Now, the New York World Journal Tribune.
MEDICINE: The hazards of too much noise.
SPORTS: Warming up with Stanky and Durocher.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Private eyes and public hearings.
Wall Street: how sound a hedge?.
Selling pre-packaged success to the self.
improvers (Spotlight on Business.
Head hunting for electrical engineers.
TV-RADIO:
The "good-chap sexuality" of "Avengers".
NET takes the consumer's viewpoint.

THE ARTS:
THEATER: "Chalk Circle": bare justice to Brecht.
ART: Kinetic art on the move.
MUSIC: That golden Nashville Sound.
MOVIES:
"The Silencers": the man from MUCK.
"Harper": more messy than tough.
Beauty and history in "Shakespeare Wallah".
"Dear John": a dance of love.
BOOKS:
Last Battle": Berlin in a kaleidoscope.
What went wrong in Vietnam?.
Return of the Gothic novel.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Emmet John Hughes -- Humphrey: The Man With One Arrow.
Kenneth Crawford -- Be Kind to China.
Henry C. Wallich -- Depreciation for Savers.
Raymond Moley -- Innocent Bystander.


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