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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: October 17, 1966; Vol. LXVIII, No. 16
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

TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER: TITO'S YUGOSLAVIA: IS IT COMMUNISM? It was a week of bustling diplomatic activity, as Lyndon Johnson prepared for his trip to Asia (page 27). Before leaving, he took careful note of outstanding European problems, particularly those between the U.S. and Eastern Europe. No country there is more pivotal than Tito's Yugoslavia, now living through a quiet revolution that is already bringing it ever closer to the West.

To chart the transformation in this most atypical of Communist societies, Eastern European correspondent F. Yorick Blumenfeld, a frequent visitor to Yugoslavia, spent more than a month talking to its citizens, and Washington correspondent Leon Volkov added the depth of the diplomatic view. Assistant Editor Fay Willey consulted Yugoslav experts around New York, and Associate Editor Robert Littell--who himself traveled through the Balkans this summer--. wrote the cover story. (Newsweek cover photo by Karsh, Ottawa.)

TRAFFIC JAM IN ORBIT: When Assistant Editor Jonathan PieI and Science researcher Andrea Hadley started work on their story and six-column guide to satellites currently in orbit, they found that the information they needed simply did not exist in any one place. The reason: many of the 274 intact satellites now in orbit are on military missions. But by tapping such official sources as NASA, the Air Force and the U.N--and with a big assist from the aerospace firm of Thompson Ramo WooId-ridge and IBM--researcher Hadley was able to put together the most comprehensive satellite Baedeker ever published.

DEATH OF A MARINE: From the blood-soaked jungle just south of Vietnam's Demilitarized Zone, Senior Editor Arnaud de Borchgrave two weeks ago wrote a stirring account of the battle for Hill 400 (Newsweek, Oct. 10). Spotlighted in that report was the cool heroism of Capt. J.J. Carroll, 29, of Miami, Fla. When asked what drove his troops onward, Carroll (photo), who was later nominated for the Navy Cross, replied: "There are a lot of marines on this hill . - - and a man likes to get to the top - .. Once they got to the top, just felt good." To honor him, his men renamed Hill 400 Ridge." Last week, as the fighting continued, Carroll was when a Marine shell fell short. Cabled de Borchgrave: was one of the finest soldiers and men that I've ever met."

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
LBJ maneuvers for peace and politics and shuffles some top diplomats.
White backlash--and a Georgia profile in courage, a mix-up issue in Massachusetts.
Jack Ruby wins a new trial.
Poet and politician Katie Louchheim.
Who's who before the Supreme Court.
Deaf justice in an adoption case.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM: Growing U.S. power takes its toll; North vietnam's deadly air defense.
INTERNATIONAL:
LBJ moves to thaw relations with Russia.
British Labor tags along with Wilson.
President Tito's Yugoslavia: is it Communism? (the cover); with four profiles of Yugoslavs of the "new class".
Drama in two acts in Black Africa.
An interview with Prime Minister Vorster.
Mao's influential man in Macao.
The Subandrio trial: whose coup?.
SPORTS: The series: Orioles vs. Dodgers; Choosing the surfing champions.
EDUCATION: In defense of English--two new guides; "Superstars" on campus.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: The growing man-made clutter in space.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
1967: how it looks from here.
Battle of the hidden mortgage clause.
Wall Street: what the funds are doing.
The quickening hunt for the earth's hidden.
riches (Spotlight on Business).
Renaissance at Renault.
TV-RADIO: The Linke between Andy and Jim.
MEDICINE : A case of too much fertility; The "total" mechanical heart.
PRESS: Fair trials and the free press; Show biz on the Books beat.
LIFE AND LEISURE: Door belles--welcome and otherwise.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Emmet John Hughes--The Return of Rockefeller.
Kenneth Crawford--Ax-Handle Trauma.
Milton Friedman--Inflationary Recession.
Raymond Moley--For a Better Congress.

THE ARTS:
THEATER:
"The Investigation": only the facts.
"The Loves of Cass McGuire": Kandy Korn.
"The Killing of Sister George": odd couple.
MOVIES:
'Seconds": dream without a man.
Sylvie as "The Shameless Old Lady".
MUSIC: Houston opens a magnificent new hail for the performing arts.
BOOKS:
Buckley's witty "Unmaking of a Mayor".
"Lyndon Johnson: The Exercise of Power".
Anita Loos's "A Girl Like I": fun's fun.
Rebecca West's "The Birds Fall Down".


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