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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 3, 1966; Vol. LXVIII, No. 14
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 Troubled U. N. Secretary General U. Thant.
TOP OF THE WEEK:
THE UNITED NATIONS AT 21: They came from the four corners of the earth to celebrate the 21st birthday of the United Nations--
delegations ranging from the tiny Maldive Islands to the arid steppes of Mongolia. But with the fall of the gavel, gloom fell too--a
heavy sense of pessimism in the face of the seemingly intractable dilemmas confronting the General Assembly and the world. To
catch the mood and news of the session a Newsweek reportorial task force consisting of U.N. bureau chief U Thant Raymond Carroll,
Washington correspondent George Packard and reporter Valerie Gerry prowled the corridors of the great glass house on Turtle Bay last
week. From their files, Associate Editor Kenneth Auchincloss wrote the cover story on the U.N., as it copes with the threatened
resignation of Secretary-General U Thant. In the lead story in National Affairs (page 19), Senior Editor Dwight Martin examines the
greatest of the problems overhanging the U.N.--the difficulties of achieving a diplomatic settlement in Vietnam. (Newsweek cover
photo by Vytas Valaitis.).
A STARTLING NEW BUILDING FOR AMERICAN ART: Not since Frank Lloyd Wright's spectacular Guggenheim Museum has New York seen
as controversial a structure as Marcel Breuer's revolutionary new building for the Whitney Museum of American Art. The Whitney, the
only major museum dedicated solely to American art, has had a checkered career since its rebel beginnings. But Breuer's upside-down
pyramid promises to start a new era for the Whitney and for museum architecture. Writer David L. Shirey and reporter Ann Ray Martin
look at an American institution and its proud new home. With four pages of color photographs.
SEE MARY, SEE MARY RUN: As tough as she is lovely, adwoman MARY WELLS once bluntly told a complaining client, "Look, if you're going
to talk silly, we might as well call this meeting off right now." Yet Mrs. Wells' blond-headed blend of sweetness and fight seems just
what Madison Avenue ordered: the agency she founded less than six months ago has billings that already top $28 million--the most
sensational start in ad industry memory--and she now modestly aims to become the greatest ad innovator of her age. From reports
gathered by Assistant Editor Anne Hetfield and his own interviews with Mrs. Wells, Associate Editor Shepherd Campbell wrote this
week's Business Spotlight on what makes Mary run.
NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The u.s. appeals to the N. on Vietnam,
and Marcos appeals to Moscow.
Katzenbach to State as No. 2.
Senator Kennedy of West Virginia.
The Percy murder--American nightmare.
New Hampshire's lottery--and others.
The fall of Adam Clayton Powell.
INTERNATIONAL:
The u.N.: long-standing troubles--and now u Thant's threat to retire (the cover).
Couve on the move for de Gaulle.
Erhard in trouble--and in the u.s.
Red China--alone at last.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM:
In action with the First Division;
The Navy's inland war;
Laos politics--crisis in a hot spot.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
An eye on the earth's resources.
Suitable suits for astronauts--plus two.
pages of color pictures from Gemini II.
PRESS:
The Kennedy books: family censorship?.
TV-RADIO:
How news cameramen survive in a mob.
RELIGION:
Leary and Boyd--LSD and SRO.
SPORTS:
"Vulture" Regan and his Dodgers.
EDUCATION:
From ghetto to suburb by school bus.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
LBJ's baling-wire approach to inflation.
Wall Street: the chart pattern brightens.
Madison Avenue: See Mary Run (Spotlight
on Business).
The second invasion of Germany.
Louis Wolfson at bay.
MEDICINE:
Diagnosis by computer.
LIFE AND LEISURE:
Classroom crisis: miniskirt and maxihair.
The Builder of Forest Lawn.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Kenneth Crawford--Middle-Way Rally.
Emmet John Hughes--A Mayor for the Times.
Henry C. Wallich--The Wrong Tax Increase.
THE ARTS:
MUSIC:
A New York home for the Joffrey Ballet.
THEATER:
Albee's "A Delicate Balance": skin deep.
ART:
The new Whitney Museum of American Art.
opens; with four pages of color photos.
MOVIES:
"The Bible": John Huston's Gospel.
New York's fourth film festival.
BOOKS:
A club battles for the wilderness.
"Done in by Dwarfs": diverting grotesque.
Perelman's latest compendium of madness.
"Winds of Change": Memoirs by Macmillan.
______
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