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NEWSWEEK September 13, 1976 SIZING UP CARTER - GREAT SHAPE!
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NEWSWEEK September 13, 1976 SIZING UP CARTER - GREAT SHAPE!

Auction ID: 14848307
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NEWSWEEK September 13, 1976 SIZING UP CARTER - GREAT SHAPE!

Condition: Used
Bidding is closed. No more bids are accepted for this item
Ended: Feb. 14, 2012 11:18:02
Starting Bid $2.99 [ Convert ]

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Location: 98115, Washington, United States
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19NORGE78 (2) My Store
Registered since Feb. 19, 2011
in United States
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Item Description
COVER: SIZING UP (Jimmy) CARTER. Special Report.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
SIZING UP THE CANDIDATES:
In this issue, Newsweek presents the first of two comprehensive special reports on the Democratic and Republican candidates for President. This supplement to the magazine's regular campaign coverage begins with a 22-page close-up of Jimmy Carter--his roots, his record and his design for the Presidency. It will be followed in several weeks by a comparable appraisal of President Ford's two years in the White House and his goals for a full term in the Oval Office.

The Carter report attempts to fill in what many Americans perceive as blanks in their understanding of him. Carter has come to within a smile of the White House with a briefer record in public life than any major party candidate since Wendell Willkie in 1940. He remains a stranger to millions of voters. While his autobiography 'Why Not the Best?" is available, there is no full- scale, closely reported account of Carter from his beginnings through his nomination to his concept of the Presidency. Yet the recent history of the White House suggests that detailed scrutiny of a candidate's character as well as his policies has become indispensable to the conscientious voter.

A dozen reporters worked on the Carter project over a period of two months. Eleanor Cliff, who has been covering Carter's campaign all year, played a central role in profiling his personality and his Presidential quest. Joseph B. Cumming Jr., Vein E.

Smith and Andrew Jaffe reconstructed his life in Plains--an assignment that led to sources, black and white, who had never been tapped before. More fresh contacts were made by Tony Fuller, picking up the story with Carter's Navy years, and Elaine Shannon, who examined his controversial life in Georgia politics. Other contributions were made by Barbara Burke in New York and Stephan Lesher and other members of the Washington bureau.

With their files and a shelf of Carteriana (including a history of his home county and a collection of his gubernatorial speeches), Senior Editor Peter Goldman wrote this special report. Staff photographer Susan T. McElhinney snapped a family album of the Carters in Plains, and Louise Eichelberger supervised the search for other pictures. Associate Art Director Peter Blank designed the pages. (Newsweek cover photo by Bill Ray.).

NEWS HIGHLIGHTS: The national and international news of the day, INCLUDING: The Burton Island Icebreaker. To The Summit -- or the Brink? Mideast War of Nerves. Notting Hill Calypso Festival. PLUS MORE National and International news, and OTHER ITEMS OF NOTE:
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Jeffrey C. Davis.
Pete Axthelm.
Meg Greenfleid.
SCIENCE: Harold McCluskey is overexposed at the Hanford Plutonium Finishing Plant. Har Gobind Khorana and the Gene Machine.
BUSINESS: How Workers are Stacking up. Bloomindale's heads South. Rolling Back prices on Steel.
NEWS MEDIA: Reorienting the Wall Street Journal.
BOOKS:
Now Playing at Canterbury, by Vance Bourjaily.
The Curse: A cultural history of Menstruation, by Delaney, Lupton and Toth.
LIFE/STYLE: Climbing Family Trees.
ENTERTAINMENT: Private Screening Rooms.
MOVIES: ERB-MAN. Hero movie stars Clint Eastwood, Burt Reynolds and Charles Bronson.
RELIGION: Defiant Bishop Marcel Lefebvre.

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