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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:
January 18, 1965; Vol LXV, No 3
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:
COVER: "VIETNAM: ANY WAY OUT?"
It is a perplexing war, a war that seemingly cannot be won, but
a war which also must not be lost. The riddles posed by the
deadly and delicate struggle in Vietnam are endless. One American official in
Saigon says "It is like sand between your fingers You cannot put your hand on anything." But as this
frustrating war continues, it is crucial that the American public understand the stakes
and the alternatives, so that there be no bitter disillusion should
something unexpected happen. To this end, NEWSWEEK explores
some lesser-known aspects of the Vietnam situation in a larger-
than-usual cover story. From Saigon, newly arrived bureau chief
William Tuohy joins Francois Sully and Hong Kong bureau chief
Robert K. McCabe to report the scene. Other reporters in Washing-
ton, New York, Paris, and elsewhere take the pulse of public opin-
ion and record the views of men who have a special competence to
speak about Vietnam. What emerges is no pat answer but a sober
appraisal of the problems and a wide range of possible solutions.
(NEWSWEEK cover photo by James Pickerell -- Black Star. )
WASHINGTON: THE QUICKENING PACE:
As harried staffers rush to put finishing touches on the flashiest Inaugural ever, the President speeds his legislative program. The pace
quickens in Congress, too, with a leadership fight in each party.
DIGGING OUT AT DOUGLAS : "We've really dug ourselves out of the hole," says Donald Douglas
Sr., the aviation pioneer who founded the company which bears his
name. In SPOTLIGHT ON BUSINESS, NEWSWEEK'S James D. Bishop and
La vrence S. Martz describe the turnabout in Douglas's fortunes,
giving special attention to the DC-9, the new short-range jet which
is sparking a hot competitive battle.
T.S. ELIOT, 1888-1965:
At the age of 76, the greatest poet of his time dies in London.
OTHER ITEMS OF Interest:
Columns: BUSINESS TIDES, Henry Hazlitt. Raymond Moley. WASHINGTON, Kenneth Crawford. WALTER LIPPMANN.
Medicine: U. S. Smoking since the The Report from the Surgeon General. Music: Stan Kenton and his Neophonic Orchestra. Books, MORE
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