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Publicado por The World Press Company, New York, 1967
Librería: Henry Hollander, Bookseller, Los Angeles, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Softbound. Condición: Very Good. Quarto, stapled paper covers, 64 pp., b/w photos and political cartoons.
Publicado por Editorial And Executive Offices: Newsweek Building, New York, 1960
Librería: Confetti Antiques & Books, Spanish Fork, UT, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación
Magazine. Condición: Very Good. Magazine is in good condition considering age. Cover has some wear and aging, and an old address sticker: "Mrs. D H Goddard, Salt Lake City, UT" No other noticed markings. ; The Cover: Newsweek had expected to devote this week's cover to the boom in compact cars (see page 81). But as all eyes turned to Algeria, the editors rushed out this photo portrait (by Lionel Durand) of the man whose prestige now rests on saving the Fifth Republic--Gen. Charles de Gaulle (see page 23).The Democratic Albatross: Why Truman is embarrassing his party leaders. Washington Trends. Page 21. France's de Gaulle: The Final Crisis?: The giant figure imposes his will on events in Algiers--and gives the command only he could give. An on-scene report from the barricades by Newsweek's Angus Deming. Why Frenchman is shooting down Frenchman, how France's newest torment began, and the background on the five-year-old war. The huge stakes and desperate question for the U.S. and the West. Newsweek's Lionel Durand interviews a French soldier, an Algerian settler, a Moslem worker. Pages 23-28.Tapping K's Top Secrets: No Longer a Job for Mata Hari: How the U.S. now finds out about what goes on behind the Iron Curtain. Pages 36-38.Money Markets and the Stock Market: Why the easing in interest rates? Business Trends, page 71. Is a new selling spurt due now? Page 73.Our Compact Cars--The Score to Date: Spotlight on Business tells how they're doing, what they may do to the auto market, draws a profile of who's buying them. Pages 81-83.Will the Waters Take Egypt's Ancient Beauties?: That's the threat posed by Aswan's new dam--and it may cost $100 million to protect the treasures of the ages. Page 98. ; Vol. 55; 8.5" x 11"; 108 pages.
Publicado por Editorial And Executive Offices: Newsweek Building, New York, 1959
Librería: Confetti Antiques & Books, Spanish Fork, UT, Estados Unidos de America
Revista / Publicación
Magazine. Condición: Very Good. Magazine is in good condition considering age, and has little wear and no noticed markings. Old address sticker on front cover: "Mrs D H Goddard, Salt Like City, UT" ; The Cover: Obviously an actor of such versatility as Art Charney cannot justly be represented by a single portrait, and he should properly be studied from more than one angle. Thus two facets and two viewpoints on the cover. Photo by Jack Zwillinger. For a look at another side of Carney - the inside - see page 59.The Old Soldier Cracks Down: Ike becomes his own Defense Secretary, tough and testy, and the mutinous grumbling dies. Our tight new military budget. Page 26. Is This Nazi Secret Agent Telling the Truth?: George Dasch, one of the eight saboteurs who landed in Long Island and Florida, makes a fantastic claim in a new book. Page 29.Divided Europe--The Six, the Seven, and the U.S.: A special report on rival trade blocs that threaten to split Europe. It could be deadly serious for the U.S. Page 48.Up From the Sewer With Artful Art Carney: He's part of what's right with TV these days, and TV-Radio Editor Bill Ewald tells why. Art the comic genius, Art the dramatic actor--and Art the man as friends and neighbors know him. Page 59.When a Downturn Means Prosperity: That's the paradox of current economic trends, as steel production mounts again. Why economists think good times have been extended well into 1960. Page 75. And why some fear recession in 1961. Business Trends, page 73.Businessmen in Politics--Should They Be Active, and If So, How?: There's sure to be a dust-up over this in 1960. Spotlight on Business wieghs the pros and cons. The pros seem to have it--on condition. Page 84 ; Vol. 54; 8.5" x 11"; 112 pages.
Publicado por Newsweek
Librería: Wonder Book, Frederick, MD, Estados Unidos de America
Condición: Fair. New York: Newsweek, 1960. Vol. 56 (Oct. 3- Dec. 26, 1960). 4to. Varied pagination. Illus. Good book. Ex-library. (current events, opinion, culture, entertainment) Inquire if you need further information. NOT AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT OUTSIDE OF THE UNITED STATES.