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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 22, 1965; Vol. LXV, No. 8
CONDITION:
Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)
IN THIS ISSUE:
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TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER: VIETNAM: THE WAR ENTERS A NEW PHASE: As the months dragged on, the fighting in Vietnam seemed far away to most
Americans, and, with coups and counter-coups, the war even had its comic-opera aspects. Yet, in one explosive week, the war
seemed close at hand indeed, and two audacious Viet Cong raids on U.S. military bases brought a quick response when the U.S.
chose to escalate the war by bombing and strafing strategic positions in North Vietnam. To show the face of this frustrating and
dangerous war, this week's cover subject is Staff Sgt. Fred Wallake, on patrol with the Vietnamese Ranger battalion he advises.
A four-page section in full color beginning on page 32A brings home the large and growing U.S. commitment on land and on the
sea--and the human price of that commitment. On page 19 is the story of how President Johnson spent the crisis week and set
the new U.S. policy. Following is a country-wide sampling of editorial reaction. For the events being played out in Vietnam
itself, page 32. The result: A full account of the most perilous East-West confrontation since the Cuban missile crisis of 1962.
(Picture credits: Newsweek cover photo by James Pickerell--Black Star; page 32A, Anthony Howarth--courtesy London Weekend
Telegraph; page 32B, Newsweek photo by James Pickerell--Black Star; page 32C, top left, Newsweek photo by Francois Sully;
others, Newsweek photos by James Pickerell--Black Star; page 32D, Newsweek photo by Harry Groom.)
THE RED CHINESE IN AFRICA: Stoking the fires of racism, cadres of Red Chinese are seeking to export revolution to the new
nations of Africa. Newsweek's Peter R. Webb and Arnaud de Borchgrave report on the successes--and failures--of the Chinese
Communists.
THE WORLD OF DRUG ADDICTION: "Old 'Ben' - . . he's my dehydrated diploma." "Ben" stands for benzedrine, one of the way
stations on the road to "H"--heroin. In the U.S., dope is a big and ugly business, and now the problem is spreading far beyond the
slums. Associate Editor Jacquin Sanders and reporter Pat Reilly spent weeks talking to doctors and do- gooders, narcotics agents
and the addicts themselves. Their report describes the monumental problem of wasted human lives and the current efforts to
find a solution.
NEWSWEEK LISTNGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Washington in a week of crisis, and a culling
of editorial reaction to the new developments in Vietnam.
Was the archery champ less than a straight
arrow? A case of double identity.
INTERNATIONAL:
Vietnam (the cover), and the war in color.
Mao Tse.tung--a rare interview.
Stoking the fires of racism--the Red Chinese
invasion of Africa.
TIlE AMERICAS:
A lusty boomtown in Venezuela;
In Honduras, pre-election charges of rigging.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
Watering the U.S. West--an $80 billion
scheme.
PRESS:
"Proudfeet" and poor souls--management
men in the newsroom;
Bill Mauldin back at the front.
RELIGION:
The Administration's education bill raises
issues of church and state.
TV-RADIO:
At CBS, Paley, programing, and profits.
EDUCATION:
Michigan State's Student Education Corps;
attacks the problem of slum schools.
SPORTS:
Clear the track, over the high jump and putting the shot, the girls steal the show.
MEDICINE:
To cut the toll, coronary care centers;
The spreading world of drug addiction.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The steelworkers' election.
The balance of payments--LBJ counts on
moral suasion" for now.
Own your own business--the boom in franchising (Spotlight on Business).
LIFE AND LEISURE:
For narcissists and necrophiles, oh, you
beautiful doll.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Emmet John Hughes on The Peril of Ambush in Vietnam.
Kenneth Crawford on Le Penseur.
Henry C. Wallich on Economic Report.
Raymond Moley on Federal School Aid--I.
THE ARTS:
ART:
A hymn to the gods--the ancient art of India.
A William Baziotes memorial exhibition.
THEATER:
A search for new playwrights at off-Broadway's Cherry Lane.
Two productions of Chekhov by the Moscow.
Art Theater.
MOVIES:
"The Greatest Story" never told.
Baker and books--the trIals of "Sylvia".
BOOKS:
"Bibbsy Dibbs' in a plain brown wrapper.
Eugene Burdick's "Nina's Book"--poor girl, poor reader.
______
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