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ISSUE DATE: May 1, 1967; Vol LXIX, No 18, 5/1/67

IN THIS ISSUE:-
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TOP OF THE WEEK:
STALIN'S DAUGHTER CHOOSES THE U.S.: Suddenly she came in out of the cold -- the child of Russia's bloodiest epoch of modern times -- and sought refuge in the land her father had tried implacably to undo. "Hello there, everybody, I am very happy to be here," beamed Svetlana Stalin last week as she arrived at New York's Kennedy airport. Why did Svetlana flee? And what did her new allegiance mean in a ticklish era of U.S.-Soviet detente? From sources tapped by Moscow correspondent Robert J. Korengold, Washington bureau chief Mel Elfin and Soviet affairs specialist Leon Volkov, Senior Editor Dwight Martin wrote the strange saga of Joseph Stalin's runaway daughter. (Newsweek cover photo by Paul Slade.)

EXPO 67: FAIREST OF ALL:
With a burst of 1,200 skyrockets above MONTREAL, Canada's $1 billion Expo 67 opens this week with advance billing as "the greatest international exhibition in the history of the world." It well may be, according to Life and Leisure editor Harry F. Waters, who, accompanied by editorial assistant Lynn Povich, spent a week on the site before writing Newsweek's story. Expo's record 62 participating nations are showing off their most stunning architectural, cultural, educational and scientific faces -- all in a new, bright pop style. In addition to his report, a colorful view of the fair is provided by a four-page portfolio of photographs by Fred J. Maroon.

THE GREEK ARMY'S PRE-ELECTION COUP:
When the Greek Army suddenly struck down its constitutional government in Athens last week, it swiftly imposed one of the most successful information blackouts in recent West European history. International telephone and telegraph service was cut off, borders sealed, airports closed, and a few journalists who tried to violate these restrictions were summarily thrown into jail. But 24 hours before the coup, Newsweek Paris bureau correspondent Alan Tillier arrived in Athens to cover the scene being set for next month's crucial elections. And luck had brought the London bureau's Kevin Buckley to Greece on vacation. Amid the chaos, the two somehow managed to join forces. Tillier wrote the political story of the upheaval; Buckley described the turmoil on the streets of Athens as the army made its move. As soon as the airports reopened, Buckley flew both their files to Rome and there cabled them to New York, where Associate Editor Robert Littell wrote the story. Buckley now plans to return to Greece -- and his vacation.

OFF-OFF-BROADWAY:
Where are the new American playwrights, actors and directors coming from? From that "unpredictable, ambitious, adventurous" ferment known as off- off-Broadway, writes Associate Editor Mel Gussow who, with reporter Cynthia Moss, spent weeks in the lofts, churches, storefronts and coffeehouses -- theaters, that is -- of New York's avant-garde for his story.

NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Again, escalation in vietnam -- by both sides.
Romney chalks up some gains.
Svetlana comes to the U.S. (the cover).
Georgia's Governor Maddox plays host to.
Negro prisoners.
Riders snag the investment cred E bill.
Open-housing riots in Louisville.
Tornadoes scourge the Midwest.
Adam Powell's pulpit plagiarism.
INTERNATIONAL:
Konrad Adenauer, 1876-1967.
Ulbricht's "no" to German unity.
The army seizes control in Greece.
John Bull and Jim Crow.
The nuclear treaty: what hope?.
Another jail term for Mihajlo Mihajlov.
Ghana: an amateur coup fizzles.
What "villain" Liu Shao-chi did.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM: Bombs in Haiphong, and a mini-barrier; The fat cats of Lam Phat.
EDUCATION: Changes in Ivy League admission rules.
TV-RADIO: Joey Bishop's rocky debut; Rosko Le Deejay.
LIFE AND LEISURE: A preview of Expo 67.
RELIGION: The papal commission's birth-control report; More Episcopalian power at the top?.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Surveyor Ill takes a scoop of the moon; North American Aviation and Apollo.
PRESS: Lecturing the nation's editors; Exposing an expose expert; The view from underground.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Spring -- and the voice of the treasurer.
The Big Board's choice.
Wall Street: prices outpace profits.
How industry loses $4 billion to spies and.
thieves (Spotlight on Business).
Cavemen in Kansas City.
MEDICINE: Saving lives with frozen blood; Chemical warfare against obesity.
SPORTS: John Kelley's marathon marathon; Mamma mia! Benvenuti beats Griffith.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Emmet John Hughes -- A Curse of Confusion.
Kenneth Crawford -- They Vote Against.
Paul A. Samuelson -- Keeping the Score.
Raymond Moley -- Mr. O'Brien's Leviathan.

THE ARTS:
MUSIC: Mrs. Buswell's son, the violinist.
The Royal Ballet in New York.
MOVIES: "Johnny Gigs Out": Watts tells its story; "She and He": isle of the dead.
THEATER: Off-off-Broadway is in.
ART: A Metropolitan show fit for a king.
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