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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:
May 24, 1965; Vol. LXV, No. 21
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
TOP OF THE WEEK:
COVER: "AMERICANS IN ACTION" --
U. S. Advisor Capt. Charles B. Huggins is tall,
tough, and, after ten years in the
Army, all professional soldier. For
several days recently, Saigon bureau chief William Tuohy lived
with Huggins and the crack South
Vietnamese reconnaissance company that he advises. Tuohy went
along on a highly successful foray
deep in Viet Cong-controlled territory and watched the close and
effective cooperation between Huggins and the Vietnamese commanding officer. Back at base
headquarters, Huggins discussed
his role, why he volunteered for it,
and the way the fighting is going.
Huggins recalled the leave-taking from his wife and their two children
in the United States last August. "Before I left, I asked her," he
said, "if she understood why I was going. She said that she did,
but she doubted that the neighbors would."
Huggins and his fellow advisers, many of whom were interviewed
by Hong Kong bureau chief Robert K. McCabe and correspondent
Merton Perry, are the cream of the U.S. officer corps. With the approach of the monsoon months that will hamper air operations, the
job of keeping the Viet Cong at bay will increasingly fall to them
and the Vietnamese units they guide. Associate Editor Edward Klein
wrote this week's cover story--Americans in Action. (Newsweek cover
photo by James Pickerell--Black Star.)
THE NEW AMERICAN LEFT:
Their numbers are actually small, but, writes Associate Editor
Edward Kosner, "more and more young people--often brilliant, if not
sophisticated--are being attracted to the new radicals' crusade of
the alienated." With the aid of the Washington Bureau's Joseph M.
Russin, Kosner describes the ferment on the new American left.
CONTENTS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The Dominican Republic--with hopes for a
quick settlement fading, what are the
alternatives now?.
Ferment on the left--the new American
radicalism.
INTERNATIONAL:
U.S. advisers in Vietnam (the cover).
The Swiss, the French, and es escargots.
Rehabilitation of Uncle Joe.
THE AMERICAS:
Colombia and the Communist threat.
EDUCATION:
Who was to blame for Berkeley? An investigating committee's report.
RELIGION:
The clergy and the Pentagon--McNamara
puts out the welcome mat;
Must a Reform rabbi believe in God?.
MEDICINE:
Psychiatrists, dreamers, and telepathy.
TV-RADIO:
Filming the stuff of history--documentary
producer George Vicas.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Longest peacetime boom--can the pace
be kept up?.
A look at the new luxury liners (Spotlight
on Business).
World's Fair woes.
PRESS:
Dateline Santo Domingo.
SPORTS:
California's flying teen-agers;
Bret Hanover--money in the bank.
SCIENCE AND SPACE:
Lunik 5 hits the moon--hard;
The TFX--ahead of schedule, but still
under fire.
LIFE AND LEISURE:
Beer, boards, and broken bones--the
skateboard cult.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Walter Lippmann--The All-Purpose Myth.
Kenneth Crawford--Bobby and Teddy.
Henry Hazlitt--Steel as Scapegoat.
Raymond Moley--Two Great Florentines.
THE ARTS:
THEATER:
The show is the menace, and Liza Minnelli can't save it.
ART:
Dr. Alfred Frankfurter, 1906-1965.
The Japanese avant garde.
MUSIC:
Neal and Nelson at the keyboard.
MOVIES:
The life of a "Hollywood Great"--a guided
tour of Jack Warner's ego.
BOOKS:
"Wanderers" and the Winsor formula.
James Michener, the Old Testament man.
______
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