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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:
November 18, 1968; Vol LXXII, No 21
CONDITION:
Standard sized magazine, Approx 8½" 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: Can RICHARD NIXON Unite the nation?
TOP OF THE WEEK:
NIXON'S TASK: Can President-elect Richard Nixon unite the nation? That was the top- priority challenge of his White House-in-waiting in Key Biscayne, Fla., where Nixon and his intimates toasted in the new regime and fell to work putting together the new Ad- ministration. First to call on the 37th President was Hubert Humphrey, who stopped off in Florida to offer Nixon his hand. But the election left some unfinished business. For one thing, the three-way race set off fresh pressure to reform the electoral-college system. And in the aftermath of their narrow defeat, the Democrats were already looking for their champion for 1972 -- with speculation centering on Senators Edward Kennedy and Edmund Muskie. For this week's twelve-page election followup, General Editor Peter Goldman analyzes Nixon's cloudy mandate; General Editor Edward Kosner -- working from on-scene reports by correspondent Karl Fleming -- chronicles the first days of the Nixon era, and General Editor Lawrence S. Martz previews Nixon's tough problems with the U.S. economy (page 91). (Newsweek cover photo by Fred Ward -- Black Star.)
WAITING FOR THIEU: Peace talks in Paris were stalled last week, and one of the main reasons was the failure in communications between the United States and South Vietnam. After a series of interviews with U.S. and South Vietnamese officials, Newsweek's Saigon bureau chief Joel Blocker filed an exclusive blow-by-blow account of how the misunderstanding between Washington and South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu came about. Blocker, accompanied by Senior Editor Robert Christopher, who is in Vietnam for a firsthand look, then flew to the northern provinces, where they reported that the enemy apparently was cooling it militarily in the Demilitarized Zone. Covering the Saigon political scene were correspondents François Sully and Kevin Buckley. The diplomatic aspects were reported by Henry Trewhitt in Washington and Paris bureau chief Edward Behr. From their files, General Editor Angus Deming wrote the story.
WEEKEND HUSTLERS: Cheating is a way of life for millions of weekend sportsmen. Whether it's golf, sailing or hunting, they ingeniously employ a cunning edge. Aided by bureau files, Sports editor Pete Axthelm writes this week about these amateur -- and unblushing -- hustlers.
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Caii Nixon unite the nation? (the cover).
The White House-in-waiting.
Men around Nixon.
The electoral nightmare that almost was.
Postmortem on the campaign.
Hubert Humphrey at ease.
The end for George Wallace?.
The Democrats: a new time of testing.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM:
Marking time.
How the u.s-saigon split developed.
INTERNATIONAL:
World reaction to the Nixon victory.
czechoslovakia's pro-Moscow group.
Battle of Berlin, student style.
Greece: cracks in the façade.
The Mideast: precarious balance.
De Gaulle sends arms aid to Biafra.
china: the end of the cultural revolution.
SPORTS:
chicago's bullish Bears.
Graham Hill wins the grandest Prix.
MEDICINE:
Soviet heart transplants.
Early warning for serum hepatitis.
RELIGION:
A manual for ministering to draftees.
The Lutherans' pastor to pastors.
EDUCATION:
Uc's freewheeling Santa cruz campus.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE;
Nixon's tough economic hurdles.
The Textron-united Fruit merger.
Swingers at Singer.
Bill zeckendorf's aquatic new visions.
Wall Street: the election pays a dividend.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
Keeping tabs on fleeting phenomena.
How they found the Scorpion.
PRESS:
The night the computers failed.
New York magazine: back from the brink.
TV-RADIO:
Midseason shake-up.
Peeking through the Bamboo Curtain.
LIFE AND LEISURE:
The name of the game is cheating.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Walter Lippmann -- Nixon Wins.
Kenneth Crawford -- Middle-Class Revolt.
Milton Friedman -- Decentralizing Schools.
Stewart Alsop -- The Tin Woodman in the White House.
THE ARTS:
ART:
Celebrating the baroque era.
Privately collected medieval art.
MOVIES:
"Beyond the Law": line-up dramatics.
"The Lion in Winter": talk, talk.
BOOKS:
J. P. Donleavy's "Beastly Beatitudes".
The letters of Rupert Brooke.
Yorick Blumenfeld on Eastern Europe.
An anthology of Evergreen's first decade.
THEATER: Lee J. Cobb as Lear: problems for all.
______
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