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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 20, 1969; Vol LXXXIV, 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: M DAY: WHICH WAY OUT OF VIETNAM?:
All across the nation this week, legions of concerned citizens will
launch a new war on the war. The organizers of the Vietnam moratorium hope the day will bring peaceful and thoughtful reflection on
America's dilemma. M Day's critics fear that it will weaken the nation's resolve for "peace with honor." From files by Newsweek's
domestic bureaus, General Editor Robert Littell describes the preparations for M Day and weighs its possible consequences. To News-
week's editors, moratorium
week seemed an appropriate
time to examine the options
available to President Nixon
as he seeks to end the war.
The article, written by Associate Editor Raymond Carroll
and edited by General Editor
Edward Klein, draws on
Newsweek's bureaus in
Washington, Saigon and Paris and on expert opinion both
in and outside the government. And to determine the
present mood in Hanoi, upon
which so much depends, correspondent Joel Blocker interviewed
French photographer Marc Riboud, who returned last week from a
visit to North Vietnam. Six pages of color photos by Riboud accompany that story. The cover picture was taken by Robert J.
Ellison, a young Empire News-Black Star photographer who was
killed last year while covering the battle of khe Sanh for Newsweek.
THE BATTLE OVER JUDGE HAYNSWORTH:
President Nixon faces a bruising Senate floor battle over his
nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. to the Supreme Court --
and the bipartisan opposition seemed for the moment winning.
But the Administration was fighting hard. Senior Editor Dwight
Martin writes the story from reports by Newsweek chief Congressional correspondent Sam Shaffer, White House correspondent
Henry Hubbard and Washington correspondent Robert Shogan.
BLACK IS... FOR CREDIT:
When classes started this fall, many U.S. colleges had black-
studies courses -- of sorts -- in their catalogues. There seem to be as
many definitions of black studies as there are black-studies pro-
grams, academics still debate the proper place of such studies and
administrators still have trouble finding "acceptable" faculty mem-
bers. But after a survey of black-studies programs around the U.S.,
Education editor Peter Janssen concludes that black studies now are
an established part of the U.S. academic program.
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
SPECIAL REPORT:
vietnam -- which way out? (the cover).
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The battle over Judge Haynsworth.
Mr. Nixon plucks out some thorns.
The ex-Provost Marshal General under fire.
Activist violence in chicago.
Toward an inquest on Chappaquiddick.
Atlanta voters cross the color line.
Racial roulette in Las Vegas.
INTERNATIONAL:
The Kremlin: cooling it.
Greece: an exile's escape.
Czechoslovakia: closing the exits.
Libya after the coup.
Israel's mosque-fire trial.
Plots and purges in the Middle East.
Brazil's generals pick a President.
THE CITIES:
A touch of anarchy in Montreal.
Rockefeller's "finest" railroad.
THE MEDIA:
How the military controls news for Gl's.
Public television's "The Advocates".
Two new sports magazines hit the stands.
MEDICINE:
A surgical "umbrella" that saves lives.
Hepatitis conquers a football team.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE;
Joblessness: when bad news is good.
Securities: a sure thing through insurance.
Disney without Walt.
Wall Street: floor or ceiling?.
The rising wave of consumerism (Spotlight
on Business).; Volkswagen's "all-new" model.
The British Petroleum.Sohio antitrust flap.
EDUCATION:
Boom in black studies.
SPORTS:
The brighter look in baseball.
The Dallas Cowboys' sensation from Yale.
A fighting finale by Pancho Gonzales.
RELIGION:
Episcopalians and aid to blacks.
Bishops seek a voice at the Vatican.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
The orbiting Russians -- a giant leap?.
Keeping nature in balance.
LIFE AND LEISURE;
The Hollywood hopefuls.
The trouble with French drivers.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Milton Friedman -- unemployment Figures.
Stewart Alsop -- The Three Nixons.
THE ARTS:
ART:
The Met's contemporary super-show.
BOOKS:
John Kenneth Galbraith's "Journal".
Peter Taylor's collected stories.
Alan Moorehead's "Darwin and the Beagle".
Antonia Fraser's "Mary Queen of Scots".
THEATER:
Thomas Murphy's "A Whistle in the Dark".
John Osborne's "A Patriot for Me".
MUSIC:
The American Symphony in its eighth season.
The Beatles and their web of business, and business problems. Quotes from Ringo Starr.
______
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