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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 14, 1969; Vol. LXXIV, 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:
PRINCE CHARLES: POMP AND CIRCUMSPECTION: In a ceremony that owed more to the Middle Ages than to the moon age, Charles Windsor was invested last week as the 21st Prince of Wales. And because the monarchy has become a focus of resentment among some Welshmen--and other Britons--ancient pomp was cautiously blended with modern public relations. At Caernarvon Castle, the site of the investiture, London bureau chief Robert J. Korengold and correspondents John Barnes and Frank Melville covered the sprawling pageant, while Marvin Kupfer interviewed British youths for a companion story. From their files, and from reports by researcher Valerie Gerry, Associate Editor Russell Watson wrote the cover story. It is accompanied by four pages of color photos, which were flown across the Atlantic by bureau secretary Marianna Tait. (Cover photo by Daily Telegraph Magazine.).
THE NEW CRISIS IN LEADERSHIP: Moving into its sixth month in office, Richard Nixon's Administration appeared last week to be sinking deep into a crisis of leadership. He barely got his income-tax surcharge through the House in a badly mismanaged floor fight. He infuriated moderate Republicans as well as Democrats with his first ventures in civil-rights policy. making. And his relations with Congress deteriorated to so disastrous a pass that one middle-of-the-road GOP senator mourned, "Our President is living in total isolation from the world around him." The report on the new crisis was compiled from files by chief Congressional correspondent Samuel Shaffer and correspondents John Lindsay, Robert Shogan and Samuel Yette.
THE NEW-CITY BLUES: To avoid the pitfalls of urban sprawl, the U.S. may have to build 110 wholly new cities in the next 31 years--something that Europeans have been doing, with varying success, since the turn of the century. One problem: how to create a new city with a character of its own? From reports by correspondents in Europe, and by Washington reporter Nancy Ball, who looked at life in the new city of Columbia, Md., General Editor Harry F. Waters wrote the story.
NEW GIRLS IN TOWN: A talented troupe of female troubadours, all making their own music and telling their own stories, is lending the rock scene the personal touch it needed. To report on the girls and their songs, Music editor Hubert Saal drew on interviews by Mm S. Yee and Nick Proffitt in Los Angeles and Abigail Kuflik and Trish Reilly in New York, and his own familiarity with the music.
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The leadership crisis and the widening
White House-Congress gap.
Close squeak for the tax surcharge.
Civil rights and the Nixon debt to Dixie.
St. Louis: return of the 'Phantom Rapist".
A Republican governor for Virginia?.
INTERNATIONAL:
Charles, Prince of Wales (the cover).
China: preparing for the worst.
Impatient Arabs, intransigent Israelis.
Nigeria tightens the noose on Biafra.
The assassination of Tom Mboya.
Latin America: end of the Rocky road.
Haile Selassie: dreams and realities.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM:
How significant is the lull?;
The Reds take a key town in Laos.
THE CITIES:
Blueprinting the new cities--and what it's
like to live in one;
Boston: something nice for summer.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
MlRv and the balance of terror;
The threatening starfish invasion.
RELIGION:
God and the White House;
To tax churches--or not?.
MEDICINE:
The high cost of health;
Sunburn and skin cancer: a new defense?;
The Pill" for males?.
SPORTS:
Bill Veeck, showman of Suffolk Downs;
Jim Ryun's last mile;
Angling for muskies.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The man who blocks mergers;
A controversial ruling on public housing;
The racetrack land rush;
Wall Street: a garland of losses;
Marcel Bich, king of the ballpoints;
Backfire against anti-smog engines;
Cigars: a boon from Havana.
PRESS:
Is nothing pornographic?;
James Stevenson, angry New Yorker.
EDUCATION:
Yale's unplanned troubles;
Refresher course for campus cops.
TV-RADIO:
Paul Henning, slick hillbilly;
TV stakes out a tough ghetto turf.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Kenneth Crawford--Republicans at Work.
Paul A. Samuelson--Lessons of the 1960s.
Stewart Alsop--Br'er Rabbit Wallace.
THE ARTS:
MUSIC:
The girls on the rock scene. Including photos of LAURA NYRO, JONI MITCHELL, LOTTI GOLDEN, MELANIE SAFKA!>BR>
MOVIES:
"The Wild Bunch": latest word on violence.
"The Boys of Paul Street": kids at war.
BOOKS:
Robert Shaplen's "Time Out of Hand".
Dan Greenburg's "Philly".
Fred Guiles's Marilyn Monroe biography.
Isaac Babel's "You Must Know Everything".
ART:
Inflatable sculpture.
A "museum without walls" in Minneapolis.
______
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