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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:
September 27, 1965; Vol. LXVI, No. 13
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: PREMIER KY: Who Rules Vietnam?
TOP OF THE WEEK:
PREMIER KY AND HIS GOVERNMENT: "I shall be a hero or a tyrant," said South Vietnamese Premier Nguyen Cao Ky in a candid interview with Saigon bureau chief William Tuohy. Faced with religious strife and widespread corruption, he had better be a miracle worker as well. An ace pilot and dashing ladies' man, Ky was accorded almost no chance in a land where the average life of a government was less than 70 days. But that was a hundred days ago, and already Ky can point to some genuine accomplishments. What's more, as a high Washington official told Newsweek's Lioyd Norman, "Ky is learning. He is asking for advice and he respects that advice when he gets it." Besides Tuohy and Norman, correspondents Merton D. Perry, Francois Sully and Everett G. Martin contributed to Associate Editor Edward Klein's appraisal of Ky. (Newsweek cover photo by Francois Sully.).
THE SCOOP THAT WASN'T PRINTED: It started with a bet. In a casual dinner conversation ten years ago, a Washington lawyer mentioned to Pentagon correspondent Lloyd H. Norman that he had heard the hottest development in the Navy was something code-named "Project Caesar." "Somehow," he told Norman, "it's connected with some enormously long cables that had to be carried in one piece in about twenty refrigerated box Cars." Norman was intrigued and, by the end of dinner, he had struck up a bet that he could track down "Project Caesar." Working with the one clue, Norman traced a trail that led Norman all over the country from shipper to manufacturer to point of destination to the Bureau of Ships and finally to the office of an extremely irate admiral, Robert B. Carney, who was then the Chief of Naval Operations. By the time that Carney called him in, Norman had uncovered most of the salient details about Project Caesar, the Navy's long-range submarine surveillance system. Carney swore Norman to secrecy, and for ten years he sat on the story, only to see it break last week in a trade publication. Norman's report on Project Caesar appears on page 28.
OF HAIR AND HEMS: "God put hair on the head and there should be hair on the head," said one angry parent whose son had to be shorn before entering school in Kenosha, Wis., last week. In Baltimore, 16-year-old Christopher Cywinski was more resigned to his fate (photo). In other schools the new shortskirt style was barred. In fact, according to Newsweek's bureaus, the annual battle between educators and students over dress and decorum had never waxed hotter. Assistant Editor Paul D. Zimmerman reports.
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Red China heads the agenda in the President's busy week.
Beams on target and aiming at Lindsay.
A hit in Chicago--the death of a hood.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM: The dashing Premier Ky--and the government he heads (the cover).
INTERNATIONAL:
India-Pakistan--the Red Chinese threat, the fighting at the front.
Murder on the Avenue Rapp.
In Norway. the end of Labor's reign.
THE AMERICAS: Garcia-Godoy on the middle of the road.
RELIGION: Paul's surprises as Vatican Il reconvenes.
EDUCATION: Two Southern school systems and how they integrated; No room far longhairs as school boards wield the clippers.
MEDICINE: warning to pill-taking athletes.
PRESS: Strike in New York. Rushing Ike into print. The President's family and the press--who pays what and how?.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
On Wall Street. volume and prices soar-- where are the bears of yesterday?.
In Britain. Labor releases "the plan".
Down to the bottom of the sea--the boom in small subs (Spotlight on Business).
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Gemini 5--the question of Questar clouds the peaceful mission; For breathing in space, is neon the answer?.
Tv-RADIO: The networks go three for 33.
SPORTS: A great year for Maya, a tough one for Mantle.
LIFE AND LEISURE: Gimcrackery and genius on display at the International Inventors show.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Walter Lippmann--The Power Politics of Asia.
Henry Hazlitt--The Effort of Every Man.
Raymond Moley--Profits From Subsidies.
THE ARTS:
MUSIC: Dr. Jazz at the piano. (Denny Zeitlin)
MOVIES:
The New York Film Festival.
Patty Duke--miracle worker in cleats.
THEATER: "Stone waiting to be shaped"--Lincoln Center's revolutionary new theater.
ART: Mexico's great Jose Clemente Orozco.
BOOKS:
The formidable "Victorian Lady Travellers".
Mourning becomes this "Electra".
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