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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:
August 15, 1966; Vol. LXVIII, No. 7
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: WHITE HOUSE WEDDING.
TOP OF THE WEEK:
THE WEDDING: When newlyweds Patrick and Luci Nugent walked smiling down the church steps Saturday, three photographers started clicking for Newsweek--and set off a race against time that produced a color cover closer to the actual event than any in the magazine's 33- year history. Couriers sped the film roll by roll to Kodak's Washington processing lab, where a Newsweek cover task force picked two transparencies at 5:30 p.m., sent one by chartered jet to the main printing plant at Dayton, Ohio, another to a Washington printer for use on Eastern Seaboard issues. At the same time, Newsweek's Norma Milligan (chosen by the White House as press pool reporter at the altar) and four other staffers filed reports for Associate Editor Jacquin Sanders' story of the White House wedding. (Newsweek cover photo by Dennis Brack--Black Star.).
MADMAN IN THE TOWER: A former altar boy and Eagle Scout named Charles Joseph Whitman went berserk last week and for 97 minutes held the University of Texas campus in a reign of terror. In a noontime rampage, he killed fifteen and wounded 31; he had already slain his wife and mother. As first reports clattered in, Newsweek's Houston bureau chief Philip Carter and reporter L. Erick Kanter headed for Austin. From Atlanta, reporter Andrew Jaffe flew to Lake Worth, Fla., to interview Whitman's father and family. From these files, Associate Editor John Barnes wrote the story.
DEVIL'S ADVOCATE: Of all the critiques of the Warren commission report on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, few have been as impressively documented as one published this week by lawyer-author Mark Lane, who cast himself in the role of devil's advocate from the outset. Lane's new book, "Rush to Judgment," seems at first to shake almost every major conclusion of the Warren commission. But a full examination of Lane's critique also suggests that he himself has worked the same tricks of perspective that he imputes to the commission, and Newsweek's interviews with commission experts bear this out. Associate Editor Kenneth Auchincloss wrote the analysis of the latest dissent from a judgment that will still fascinate scholars 100 years from now.
LBJ IN THE MIDDLE: For that prideful master of the consensus, Lyndon Johnson, it was a double blow. First, 35,400 striking airline mechanics rejected the rich wage settlement he had endorsed and defiantly demanded more. Then, the major steelmakers jumped prices on flat-rolled steel by $2 to $3 a ton. The two developments left LBJ's wage-price guidelines in disarray and marked a major setback in the Administration's fight against inflation. The Presidents' plight--and its implications for the nation's economc future--is examined in Spot- light on Business, written by Associate Editor Richard Thomas.
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Pat Nugent takes a bride (the cover).
LBJ's troubles at the office.
Massacre in Austin.
violent response to Negro nonviolence.
The Kennedy assassination.
WAR IN VIETNAM:
Asian initiative for peace.
Repose: a floating hospital.
A Navy captain hits shoal waters.
INTERNATIONAL:
Britain gulps but takes its medicine.
The unpredictable Mr. Brown.
Arnaud de Borchgrave explores the possibilities of a 'New Deal" for Europe.
The sun sets on the Colonial Office.
The Israeli-Syrian feud grows grimmer.
Yugoslavia: an interview with gadfly author Mihajlo Mihajlov.
Nigeria: on the razor's edge.
THE AMERICAS:
Terror in Argentine universities.
PRESS: Jean Raffaelli--AFP's man in Hanoi; The Paris Herald gets a co-owner.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Steel prices up; planes still down (Spotlight on Business).
How to fly: scheme and lie.
Mitch Leigh's music to sell by.
Bridging the government-industry gap.
New ways for U.S. shipyards.
The Vietnam war means profits for Japan.
RELIGION:
Part-time priests for rural America.
LIFE AND LEISURE: vogue's Veruschka. the now model; Fashions: flying fur and breastplates.
TV-RADIO: Educational TV: battle of the satellites.
SPORTS: Pro football: the long green season.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: How the behavioral scientists are helping to build the Great Society.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Kenneth Crawford--Prisoners of War.
Henry Hazlitt--How We Create Strikes.
Raymond Moley--The Uses of Power.
THE ARTS:
MUSIC: Sir Malcolm's Prom birthday party.
MOVIES:
The fallen angels of AIP.
"Mademoiselle": the fires of sex.
ART:
A brilliant new edition of Audubon.
Romes gallery girls.
BOOKS:
"The Time of the Hero": a nightmare of boyhood.
The ignoble savage of "Indian Summer".
Leslie Fiedler's three outcasts.
Colonel Wennerstrdm: fallen 'Eagle'.
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