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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:
February 1, 1965; Vol. LXV, No. 5
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:The Inauguration. WINSTON CHURCHILL, 1874-1965.
TOP OF THE WEEK:
Winston Churchill, 1874-1965:
"In war: resolution. In defeat: defiance. In victory: magnanimity.
In peace: goodwill."
In a lifetime of leadership, Winston Churchill experienced the
rigors of war, the bitter taste of defeat both military and political,
the heady heights of crowning victory -- and last week as the world
mourned, a final, painless passage to an ultimate peace.
There is a sense in which the restless, but hopeful, peace the
world now enjoys is owed to Churchill's ferocity of purpose. At the
darkest moment in the history of Western civilization, it seemed that
the only thing which stood in the way of Fascist victory was Winston
Churchill. And the allied world took courage from the rolling cadences of his defiant rhetoric, the V-for-Victory sign which became
his trademark, his bulldog stance, and the ever-present cigar.
Churchill first appeared on the cover of Newsweek Nov. 2, 1935,
as he warned of the rising threat posed by Nazi Germany, and ten
more times until he retired as Prime Minister in 1955. In good meas-
ure, he dominated the history of the intervening years, years of peril
and danger, years that demanded a man of Churchillian courage.
(Newsweek photo by Terence Le Goubin -- Black Star.)
THE INAUGURATION:
"Do you, Lyndon Baines Johnson, solemnly swear...
In the midst of three days of light-hearted celebration, this was
the moment that had brought thousands to Washington last week --
and this was the moment that Lyndon Johnson had so single-mindedly
sought. The full story and four pages of color photographs.
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
A relaxed, informal Inauguration -- and then
the President's illness.
At a unity meeting in chicago, the GOP licks
its wounds.
LBJ brings in his budget under $100 billion,
not counting the extras.
INTERNATIONAL:
A stunning defeat for Wilson and Labor.
Erhard and de Gaulle -- healing the breach.
The Red summit in Warsaw.
Premier Huong vs. the Buddhists.
Anti-Americanism in the Philippines.
WINSTON CHURCHILL'S "Splendid life" (cover story, many photos).
THE AMERICAS:
Peru's domestic peace corps
How are things in Guatemala?.
PRESS:
Tom Wolfe and his magic typewriter;
A new integrated comic strip.
EDUCATION:
cribbing at the Air Force Academy;
How the PTA will fight the right wing;
A new president for Sarah Lawrence.
LIFE AND LEISURE:
Art at the crossroads; the latest wrinkle in
billboards.
Instant Masons and 80-year-old skiers; the
mess in charter flights.
MEDICINE:
What is a stroke?;
Why fat people stay fat.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
An A-OK flight by Gemini.
Weather watcher Tiros 9 goes into orbit.
TV-RADIO:
"Hall of Fame" director George Schaefer.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Flirting with 900; the "white chip" market.
The boom in community antenna TV (Spotlight on Business).
Moses vs. the bankers.
RELIGION:
Protestant Episcopal spokesman;
A cleric defines obscenity.
SPORTS:
Bobby Hull -- going like 60;
Ski-jumping champs and "weekend warriors".
THE COLUMNISTS:
Kenneth Crawford on Hope and Reality.
Henry Hazlitt on No Gold at All'.
Raymond Moley on Johnson and Roosevelt.
THE ARTS:
MUSIC:
The art of George Brassens.
A hot Callas records a cool "carmen".
ART:
Who did what to whom? Sculptors in court.
THEATER:
The Group Theater Workshop takes kids off.
the street and puts them on stage.
Winning the battle of "War and Peace".
MOVIES:
William Castle and his horrible horrors.
BOOKS:
A magnificent novel by William Humphrey.
Neither Catherine nor Russian, but, in a
sense, great.
______
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