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ISSUE DATE:
December 13, 1965; Vol LXVI, No 24
IN THIS ISSUE:-
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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 STORY: De GAULLE: Once and Future King. ELECTION DAY IN FRANCE: As it has for the past seven years, the lofty figure of CHARLES DE GAULLE towered over France last week as his countrymen went to the polls to elect a President. The general has achieved much for France in his first term in office, but he has also antagonized his erstwhile allies. The conflict between de Gaulle and his allies is analyzed by chief European correspondent Arnaud de Borchgrave (page 47) while from Washington, diplomatic correspondent Edward Weintal reports on the Administration's hardening line toward the general. The French election campaign was covered by Paris bureau chief Joel Blocker, who also describes the workings of de Gaulle's "invisible government." From their files, Associate Editor Angus Deming wrote the main story. The cover picture by French cartoonist TIM -- a slight variation on one he designed for the Paris weekly L'Express (right) -- is a free interpretation of a famed painting by the late Georges Rouault. It shows de Gaulle as "The Old King."
REPORT ON WATTS: When the bloody Los Angeles riots erupted suddenly last summer, Newsweek's Los Angeles bureau, headed by Karl Fleming, filed 100,000 words from the blazing battlefield. Now, Fleming and staffers Philip Hager and David Moberg report on the McCone commission's postmortem and revisit the riot zone. From their dispatches, Associate Editors Peter Goldman and Edward Kosner update the Watts story.
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
For Vietnam, more men, rising costs, thornier questions.
Watts: the McCone report and a visit to
"Charcoal Alley".
Congress: junkets with a difference.
Alabama's stunning verdicts: "Guilty!".
THE WAR IN VIETNAM:
Murder at the Metropole.
Returnees -- what changed their minds?.
INTERNATIONAL:
French elections: "King" de Gaulle, his
court and critics, and an analysis of his
policies and impact (the cover).
Harold Wilson's African dilemma.
On-scene with Sukarno.
THE AMERICAS:
The OAS: saved by diplomacy.
Ecuador: one man out.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
Double Gemini -- 7/6.
Nike-X: superdefense, but is it worth it?.
EDUCATION:
The new grammar.
SPORTS:
Kathy Whitworth hits the long green.
Lew Alcindor, UCLA's fresh frosh, rises to
the occasion.
LIFE AND LEISURE:
Is the US. bathroom a washout?.
Fashion's gold-and-silver rush.
PRESS:
Judge vs. editor -- a blow against trial by
headline.
Rare tribute for a Southern lady editor.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The Fed's surprise: tighter money to nip
inflation (Spotlight on Business).
Wall Street: a break for the bears.
ITT loves ABC.
RELIGION:
The way of Jewish philanthropy -- open-handedness openly arrived at.
MEDICINE:
New offensives against overpopulation.
SPECIAL MEDICINE REPORT:
Saving lives on the battlefront.
THE ARTS:
ART:
Life meets art in the paintings of Alex Katz.
THEATER:
"Inadmissible Evidence" -- John Osborne's
new play.
MUSIC:
A melancholy Dane and the Royal Ballet.
MOVIES:
Buzz Berkeley, King of Camp.
The five golden minutes of "Dr. Goldfoot".
"That Darn Cat": skillful trivia.
BOOKS;
Behind the legend: Jack London's letters.
A war novel from the grunt school.
OTHER DEPARTMENTS:
Letters;
Periscope;
Newsmakers;
Transition;
Business Trends.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Emmet John Hughes -- The High Cost of
Fantasy.
Kenneth Crawford -- Kurtain for the Klan.
Henry C. Wallich -- The Exploding Poor.
Raymond Moley -- The Way to Resume.
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