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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:
December 1, 1969; Vol. LXXIV, No. 22
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: "WHY HAYNSWORTH LOST."
TOP OF THE WEEK:
WHY HAYNSWORTH LOST:
When chief Congressional correspondent
Samuel Shaffer, a veteran of 25 years in Newsweek's Washington's bureau, returned from a month in Europe on Oct. 6, he assumed -- like
just about every other Senate watcher -- that
Judge Clement F. Haynsworth would win Senate
confirmation to the Supreme Court by a small
but secure margin. Next morning, Shaffer began
his own head count -- plus soundings of civil rights leaders and labor chiefs. Before the day
was out he went to Indiana's Democratic Sen. Shaffer
Birch Bayh, the leader of the fight against Haynsworth, and said: "I'm convinced you have it won. Do you intend to win
it?" When Bayh said yes, Shaffer promptly filed the first of a series
of unshakable predictions that Haynsworth would be rejected. From
Shaffer's files, and interviews with Administration figures by Robert
Shogan and Henry Hubbard, General Editor Kenneth Auchincloss
wrote the story of the South Carolinian who became the first Supreme Court nominee in 39 years to be voted down by the U.S. Senate. (Cover photo by Michael D. Sullivan -- Black Star.)
EXPLORING THE MOON:
APOLLO 12's irrepressible astronauts were homeward bound late
last week, the hold of their spacecraft laden with treasures from the
moon's surface. The story of man's second venture to the moon was
covered from Houston by Washington correspondent Evert Clark and
reporters Kent Biffle and Don Scott. From their reports, Science
editor George Alexander wrote the story.
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
why Judge Haynsworth lost (the cover).
Who'll be the President's second choice?.
Agnew vs. the media -- round two.
Why Ambassador Lodge is leaving Paris.
Walter Lippmann on Vietnam.
Joseph P. Kennedy, 1888-1969.
Congress approves a draft lottery.
War protesters -- back to t grass roots.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM :
Death at Song My: a U.S. atrocity?.
The "dink" complex.
INTERNATIONAL:
Japan regains Okinawa -- with U.S. bases.
Israel halts "environmental punishment".
Joe Sisco, State's Mideast negotiator.
SALT -- a hopeful beginning.
Books the USIA doesn't like.
General Huang. Peking's moderate militarist.
Kenya: twelve strokes of the cane.
THE CITIES:
VISTA girls at work.
Cashing in on integrated neighborhoods.
THE MEDIA:
How a network news show is put together.
The controversial massacre photos.
RELIGION:
A bill of rights for Roman Catholics.
EDUCATION:
The youthful new college trustees.
LIFE AND LEISURE:
The unsung father of the flush toilet.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
Apollo 12: exploring the moon.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The Administration's goal: no inflation but
no recession.
Mr. Nixon comes out for limited free trade.
The A&P tries the discount way.
Hungary's freer economy.
Wall Street looks for a clear sign.
Computers: the rise of Memorex.
Dow drops out of the napalm business.
Autos run into softer sales.
The Christmas season -- earlier and earlier.
SPORTS:
Michigan and USC for the Rose Bowl;
Racial troubles at BYU.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Kenneth Crawford -- Government vs. Press.
Milton Friedman -- How to Free TV.
Stewart Alsop -- The Price of Fun .
THE ARTS:
THEATER:
The Polish Laboratory Theatre's truly radical repertory.
"Stomp": free-form reality.
Leroi Jones's "Slave Ship".
Richard Schechner's "Makbeth".
MOVIES:
"Terry Whitmore": a deserter's story.
"La Femme lnfidele": husbandly homicide.
"The Brain": permanent wrinkles.
BOOKS:
The boom in books about films.
Robert Coover's "Pricksongs & Descants".
John Ehrman's biography of William Pitt.
George Dennison's "The Lives of Children".
MUSIC:
Digging for rock at the Fillmore East.
A John Lennon song for the peace movement.
______
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