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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 9, 1967; Vol LXIX, No 2
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: THE AGONY OF GETTING ANYWHERE: "You can't get there from here," the old gag had it -- and so it often seems throughout urban America today. Automobiles clog expressways, and in the air passengers jet across half a continent in two hours and then spend half as much time traversing the few short miles to their hotels. Railroad trains still poke along at nineteenth-century speeds. Associate Editor John Mitchell and Wash. ington science specialist Henry Hubbard know about the agony of getting anywhere from firsthand experience. To reach the News- week building in midtown New York, Mitchell drives from his Staten Island home to the ferry, crosses the harbor, then rides the subway and finally walks. Hubbard used to go the route of the dashing commuter from his Long Island home. Now he lives in McLean, Va., where without direct public transportation to Washington, D.C., he is forced to drive to Newsweek's Pennsylvania Avenue bureau. From Hubbard's files and the reports of Newsweek bureaus, Mitchell wrote the story on U.S. transit -- and the possible ways out. (Newsweek cover drawing by James Flora.)

PUBLIC ENEMY NO. 1: Communist China's vast political upheaval reached a climacteric with the public denunciation and confession of President Liu Shao-chi. The story of this stunning development, and a chronology of the more important events in China's fourteen-month-old Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution.

REPORT FROM POLAND: Once a beacon of progress for all of Eastern Europe, Wladyslaw Gomulka's Poland is lagging behind the other Communist countries in its innovations, economic and political. After a holiday-season visit, Newsweek's Bruce van Voorst reports on Poland's troubles -- new tension between church and state, disaffection among intellectuals, consumer unrest and a failure of nerve at the ruling level.

THOSE SWISS BANKERS: They're called "the gnomes of Zurich," and the way they operate their banks would -- in the words of one -- put them "all in jail" in any other country. David EgIi, Newsweek's man in Geneva, and Alan Tillier of the Paris bureau spent weeks sniffing out the story, which was written by Associate Editor Shepherd Campbell.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Bombs in Hanoi -- fallout in washington.
LBJ behind the cactus curtain.
Louis Harris on the Johnson image.
The Kennedy book: temporary cease-fire.
Is there an anti-missile gap?.
Wallace Groves's Bahama gambling empire.
Alabama: who's in charge here?.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM: Heroes in action; Saigon's murky political waters.
INTERNATIONAL:
Who's on top in china's Great Proletarian cultural Revolution?.
Reviving Russian social graces.
India: Sikhmanship.
Rome's Piper club: avoiding the ruins.
Indonesia's test of strength goes on.
Poland: bogged down.
Britain's leaky prisons.
LIFE AND LEISURE: Nick the Greek dies but the legend lives; Girdles for male thinmanship.
TV-RADIO:
George Carlin's message: spoofing the medium.
The BBC takes aim at the pirate stations.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: The agony of getting anywhere in the urban transportation snarl (the cover).
MEDICINE: Liquor vs. the liver: eating is no hep; New guidelines for DMSO.
EDUCATION: Educators gather for the rites of winter.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
SST: Winners of the great race.
Wanted in 67: a Goldilocks economy.
Shopping: the spirit of christmas past.
Wall Street: on the brighter side.
How the "gnomes of Zurich" operate the Swiss banks (Spotlight on Business).
Eddie Barclay, France's pop-music king.
SPORTS: Making it official on the football field; The Aussies keep the Davis Cup.
PRESS: Dateline Hanoi: Salisbury of the Times reports on U.S. raid damage.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Emmet John Hughes -- The Recurrent Questions.
Kenneth Crawford -- The Holiday Spirit.
Milton Friedman -- Current Monetary Policy.
Raymond Moley -- Coordinating the GOP.

THE ARTS:
MOVIES: The top ten films of 1966.
BOOKS:
Judging the Bonzen at Nuremberg.
Magic and taboo among the primitive.
"Rakossy": keeping the castle.
Sybil Leek -- bell book and TV.
MUSIC: Bobino, last of the Paris music halls.
THEATER:
Neil Simon writes for fun and profit.
"Displaced Person": fragmented O'Connor.
An evening with Flanders and Swann.


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