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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 26, 1965; VOL. LXVI, No. 4
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: MARINER TO MARS. ADLAI STEVENSON: 1900-1965.
TOP OF THE WEEK:
ADLAI STEVENSON once said that Americans "shoulder the heaviest
burdens of greatness, for in the last analysis the epic struggle
for our civilization, for government by consent of the governed, will
be determined by what Americans are capable of."
DURING A WEEK when America lost forever Stevenson's eloquence
and counsel, the nation was being asked once again to prove its
mettle. There is little doubt now that the U.S. is slowly assuming
the main burden of a large-scale Asian land war. That was the mes-
sage of the McNamara-Lodge mission to Saigon (page 19) and in
the plans for a military buildup detailed by
Newsweek's Pentagon correspondent Lloyd
H. Norman (page 20).
THE ROAD AHEAD will be just that much
more difficult because the United States
had lost one of its most skillful advocates
in the court of world opinion. When Ambassador Stevenson died last week in London (the picture, right, was taken within
five minutes of his collapse), messages of
regret poured in from friend and foe alike.
In his career as a most impolitic politician,
Stevenson perceived--and expressed--the Stevenson
moral ambiguities of political life. This
quality may have denied him election to the Presidency, but it won
him the devotion of many, and the grudging admiration of many
more. An appreciation of this extraordinary man (page 24).
IN A WEEK OF WAR AND DEATH, there was a lilt of exaltation in the
news that Mariner 4 was sending back a series of pictures of
Mars 134 million miles away. Mariner's 228-day journey is a splen-
did technological achievement and the information already sent back
is so great that it will take months to analyze. Besides including the
first three photographs of Mars, this week's cover story on page 54,
written by Science and Space editor Henry W. Hubbard, chronicles
this space experiment and marshals the reasons for believing that
there may be life on Mars. At the Jet Propulsion Lab, pictures from Mars. (Newsweek cover photo by Todd Walker.)
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Preparing the nation for a stepped-up war
--Administration pronouncements, the
McNamara and Lodge mission to Saigon,
the blueprint for a buildup in united
States armed forces.
Did JFK want LBJ? The various accounts.
Adlai Stevenson dies.
Divorce Mexican style--is it legal?.
INTERNATIONAL:
The professor and the general--and the
fate of the common Market.
Vietnam--the week's fighting, and one
American who came to stay.
At cannes. oil and troubled waters.
THE AMERICAS:
Canada asks, after 'a dialogue between;
two friends," who needs enemies?.
TV-RADIO:
CBS airs the rating game.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
Mariner's voyage and the first three pictures of Mars (the cover).
SPORTS:
Life at the top--the Minnesota Twins;
The man with the golden arm--the Jets'
Joe Namath.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Road safety--the collision between Congress and car executives.
California's great potato-chip war.
Houses on the highway--the boom in mobile homes (Spotlight on Business).
MEDICINE:
The IUCD--the answer to birth control?;
Heart surgery, a new technique.
PRESS:
Small town, big paper--the Berkshire Eagle;
Northern students' Southern Courier.
RELIGION:
A new headquarters for the World Council
of Churches.
LIFE AND LEISURE:
At home and office, playing it cool;
Singing along with the banjo beat.
EDUCATION:
The man who gave money away--the Ford
Foundation's Henry Heald retires;
St. Alban's summer seminars.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Emmet John Hughes--How Not to Make
Presidents.
Kenneth Crawford--Bobby-watching.
Henry C. Wallich--Presidential Prophecies.
Raymond Moley--What a Party Can't Do.
In Saigon, Lodge and McNamara with Thieu and Ky.
THE ARTS:
MUSIC:
Life on the road with Italy's traveling
jukebox, the Cantagiro.
ART:
The American art of the '20s.
MOVIES:
Liz and Dick lay an egg.
Baker's "Harlow"--a combination junior
miss and den mother.
BOOKS:
Breathing new life into PEN.
A fine, sly fable from Russia.
______
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