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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 15, 1965; Vol. LXVI, No. 20
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: JOHN LINDSAY WINS NEW YORK. New look for the G. O. P.?

TOP OF THE WEEK:
CITY AND COUNTRY: LINDSAY'S TRIUMPH: Last spring, when Newsweek put Republican Congressman John Vliet Lindsay on its cover, he was almost a political unknown-- nationally and even to most voters in his own New York City. But his uphill campaign for New York's mayoralty--the off.year election's most publicized race--caught the attention of the country. His victory last week, and his feat of holding normally Republican votes even as he cracked minorities given up for lost after the Goldwater debacle, marked the emergence of a bright new GOP face in an urban setting traditionally dominated by the Democrats.

Basic to Lindsay's victory were the 122 storefront headquarters from which neighborhood volunteers canvassed the voters. Canvassing the canvassers over the past months was Newsweek's Frances Virgin. The originator of the storefronts and Lindsay's one-man-band campaign manager, Robert Price, is profiled by Associate Editor Jacquin Sanders. Other Newsweek staffers covered day-to-day campaign developments in New York. Across the country, correspondents reported on 1965's other top races and interviewed political leaders of both parties on the implications of Lindsay's triumph. Among those who sat for Newsweek: Barry Goldwater, who talked with Los Angeles bureau chief Karl Fleming about his political past and future (page 41). From all these reports, Associate Editor Edward Kosner wrote this week's election story (page 31). (Newsweek cover photo by Vytas Valaitis.).

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
New GOP hope--N.Y. Mayor-elect Lindsay (the cover) and a look at the man who ran the campaign. Other races Goldwater at home--"No remorse', no grudges".
LBJ on the ranch--big-city problems.
Britain's Meg and Tony on the road.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM: Allies who fight with the Vietnamese; A living, walking bomb.
INTERNATIONAL: De Gaulle's decision: another term. A Paris- Moscow axis in the making?. Afro-Asian conference: death of a myth. Holland's fight against the sea. The explosive problems beneath Israel's affluence.
THE AMERICAS: The other side of Acapulco.
SPORTS: Pro football's rookie runners; Land-jets attack sound barrier.
RELIGION: Clerical criticism of U.S. Asian policy.
EDUCATION: Operation Catch-Up in Prince Edward.
MEDICINE: Fatherhood by proxy; A promising anti-alcoholism drug.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Sexual deviation--chemical or social?.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE: The aluminum-price flap; Advertising--not for gentlemen ; Wall Street: the spell of splitting; Pleasure flying--the sky's the limit (Spotlight on Business); Japan's weapon against railway red ink.
PRESS: The unmasking of Daniel Burros; A press lord who is King.
TV-RADIO: Prime films and prime times; That disorganized man, Alan King.
LIFE AND LEISURE: Meeting and mating in the city; Meet me in the new St. Louis.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Emmet John Hughes--The Coming Seven Years' War.
Kenneth Crawford--Buckleyism Forever?.
Henry C. Wallich--National Goals.

THE ARTS:
ART:
Andre Masson, artist of many styles.
Redistributing Hitler's masterpieces.
MUSIC:
"Miss Julie"--perilous operatic voyage.
The very best Martha Graham.
THEATER: "Xmas in Las Vegas"--boxcars.
MOVIES: Fellini's Juliet--a happy medium in wondrous color.
BOOKS:
GBS--a titan in a very small box.
Malcolm X--an icon of armed revolt.


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