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TITLE: NEWSWEEK
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: March 27 1967; Vol LXIX, No 13, 3/27/67
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: MISSLES vs MISSLES: Sprint anti-ballistic missle.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
MISSILES VS. MISSILES: THE $30 BILLION DECISION: The issue that divides Defense Secretary McNamara and his Joint Chiefs of Staff goes directly to the heart of security and sanity in the nuclear age: would an anti-ballistic missile system enhance U.S. security by shielding cities and military installations from attack, or would deployment of Nike X upset the precarious balance of terror between the U.S. and Russia --and thus touch off another upward spiral in the arms race? To explore the complex, arcane, but critical world of nuclear strategy, Hubbard Washington science specialist Henry Hubbard interviewed Defense officials and Nike X program managers. From his re- port and from files by correspondents in Moscow and London, Science editor John Mitchell explains the current debate and the choices open to the U.S. and Russia. (Cover photo by U.S. Army.).

SURVEYING THE IMPACT OF THE TAX CREDIT: Will restoring the 7 per cent tax credit incentive for industry make a significant impact on the gloomy economic picture this year? The answer: yes, according to a survey made for Newsweek by the National Industrial Conference Board. Its results, and the capital spending they foreshadow, are reported by General Editor Lawrence Martz.

FALSTAFF AS ORSON WELLES: Great actor, revolutionary director, magician, epicure, citizen of all worlds, an Immortal in Europe, an enigma in the U.S., Orson Welles at 51 remains, says Movies editor Joseph Morgenstern, "a prodigiously gifted showman who also happens to be a remarkable artist." As Welles's new movie, "Falstaff," opens, Morgenstern analyzes his career, and Raymond Sokolov talks with Welles in Paris.

MORE MAGAZINES' SUMMARY:
NEWS: Ellsworth Bunker in Saigon by WALTER LIPPMANN; Mr. JOHNSON Goes to Guam; How the Generals view the war now; Thomas J. Dodd; The President's program; Martryed, baby by Kenneth Crawford; A Matter of missles and megadeaths -- COVER STORY on Missles; THE War in VIETNAM; The Thinnest Margin; INTERNATIONAL NEWS; The Search for Svetlana Stalin; NEWSMAKERS; MEDICINE: Dr. Bruno Bettleheim (article & photo); BUSINESS: A new incentive to spend; tax credits; Wall Street by Clem Morgello; Advertising; Prudent Tax Policy by Paul Samuelson; SPORTS: Bubba Smith; RELIGION; TV- RADIO: Fred Friendly (article & photo); PRESS: JUDITH CRIST (article & photo); MOVIES: FALSTAFF as ORSON WELLES -- Plays the title role in his latest film -- long 4 page article and profile and interview of the movie maker with photos!
BOOKS: Herbert Gold (photo); Louis Auchincloss (photo); MUSIC: The Maestro's Century -- ARTURO TOSCANINI -- Centenial of his birth celebration, article with photo; THEATER; EDUCATION; McGeorge Bundy; MORE NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Mr. Johnson goes to Guam--with a new vietnam team.
The military view from Saigon.
What Senator Dodd did--and was it wrong?.
Blueprint for the Nixon bandwagon.
LBJ's legislative program.
Thickening the 'plot" in New Orleans.
The U.S-Soviet consular treaty passes.
Meredith pulls out. Powell stays put.
SCIENCE AND SPACE : Missiles vs. missiles--a $30 billion decision facing the u.s. (the cover).
THE WAR IN VIETNAM: uncovering the U.S. bases in Thailand; The viet cong turns to mortars; Welcoming vc defectors with Open Arms.
INTERNATIONAL:
President de Gaulle's thinnest margin.
The U.S. Army bids adieu to France.
The search for Stalin's daughter.
Aden under siege--from within.
Indira Gandhi's crown of thorns.
Rio de Janeiro's menacing mountains.
Nigeria on the verge of civil war.
MEDICINE: Help for the child who has no "I".
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
Restored tax incentives promise higher capital spending (Spotlight on Business).
Wall Street: the next target for the Dow.
Making a killing on Schenley.
Fowler's international monetary formula.
Stealing from the San Francisco Mint.
Who'll get the new Pacific air routes?.
LIFE AND LEISURE: The button craze pops out all over; Plight of the motorcyclists.
SPORTS: Picking pro football's draft players; Referee Charley Eckman calls a halt.
RELIGION: Bible Belt fundamentalism under fire.
TV-RADIO: Fred Friendly strikes back at Lucy.
PRESS: Judith Crist. 24-hour movie critic.
EDUCATION: New policies for the Ford Foundation; Promotion time for the Teachers Carps; Spying an the campus.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Walter Lippmann--Ellsworth Bunker in Saigon.
Kenneth Crawford--Martyred. Baby.
Paul A. Samuelson--Prudent Tax Policy.

THE ARTS:
MOVIES: Falstaff as Orson Welles.
BOOKS:
A biography of Disraeli, eminent Victorian.
Louis Auchincloss's "Tales of Manhattan".
MUSIC:
Maestro Toscanini's centennial.
Levy, O'Neill and "Electra".
THEATER:
Martin Balsam shines in four one-acts.
"That Summer": a threadbare "Phedre".


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