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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: June 28, 1965; Vol. LXV, No. 26
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: THE WORRIES OF WALL STREET: "On a day like Monday," said a Miami broker's wife, "you have a big smile and a drink ready when your husband comes home." Beyond doubt, smiles and drinks help; but after four weeks of plummeting stock prices and an inconclusive rally, the nation's investors are wondering whether they will need somewhat stronger medicine. What caused the slide, and what does it mean? Where does the market go from here? As Newsweek reporters sampled tape watchers' sentiment across the nation, Senior Editor Clem Morgello talked with the market's analysts, its big-money investors and the technicians who chart its gyrations. There was the optimist who urged investors to buy: "The clamming is always best at low tide." There was the pessimist who warned that this will be remembered as the beginning of a long bear market. And there was the frankly bewildered expert who threw up his hands: "This Wall Street is a screwy business, that's all." In the cover story on page 63, Morgeilo pieces the puzzle into a clear picture of the hopes, fears and present condition of Wall Street. (Cover photo by Dennis Halliman--FPG.).

'ANALYSIS AND JUDICIOUS PROBING': The new US, troop buildup in South Vietnam, announced last week by Defense Secretary McNamara, was old news to Newsweek readers. Four weeks ago they read Pentagon correspondent Lloyd Norman's report that the Administration had quietly allocated about 20,000 more combat troops to Vietnamese duty "to bring the total there by July to some 71,000." Last week McNamara verified Norman's exclusive figures --planned midsummer U.S. troop totals of 71,000 (page 19). Norman, 51, explained that his accurate forecast came neither from leaked information nor from personal pre-science--but from a "fortuitous discovery of some fragments of information plus some analysis and judicious probing." In other words, Norman (right) was covering his Pentagon beat in precisely the sharp-eyed, knowledgeable and exhaus- tive way that in nineteen years on the assignment has earned him a reputation as one of the nation's top military reporters.

EVERYONE'S TUNED IN--TO RADIO: With 228 million radios in the U.S. today--about 1.2 for every man, woman and child in the nation--the broadcasting business is livelier, and louder, than ever. Tuning in on the Big Sound is Radio- TV editor Peter Benchley (right), who owns three television sets and four radios, including the one in his car. The 25-year-old Benchley can also boast familial connections with the radio-TV field; his father, the novelist Nathaniel Benchley, wrote a Newsweek cover story on a Jimmy Durante TV show in the mid '40s, and his grandfather, the late humorist Robert Benchley, participated in one of the first experimental television shows in the U.S. during the '30s--a transmission from the Empire State Building.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Troop buildup--from Fort Riley, Kans., to South vietnam, the men ask: "How bad will it be?".
Culture at the White House brings out the Muses and the Furies.
Martin Luther King's summer school in the South.
INTERNATIONAL:
A predawn coup in Algeria ousts Ben Bells as a "diabolical dictator".
Vietnam--big raid, meager results.
The class of '65 at Moscow's Lumumba u.
THE AMERICAS:
Where's Che? Is the top Cuban alive, dead or just fired?.
A 2,600-mile Latin American highway.
Santo Domingo: The Bloodiest Day.
PRESS: Lisa Hobbs--an American reporter gets through the Bamboo Curtain.
SPORTS: The 1965 Harvard crew--fastest ever?; (And a look at another great Crimson eight, page 14).
LIFE AND LEISURE: Blueprinting the future--the architects meet; The game is softball and Broadway fields 39 teams.
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Big day for the Air Force--Titan Ill-C's first test flight; Year of the Great Thirst.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
The Worries of Wall Street--what next? (the cover).
Merchandising in Tokyo--rocks arid rotten eggs.
Color comes to TV commercials.
RELIGION: Martin Buber--'Presence of Greatness'.
MEDICINE: National war against four diseases of children; A healthy pig's liver helps an ailing human one.
EDUCATION: Groton changes headmasters.
TV-RADIO: What's happening, baby, is radio.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Emmet John Hughes--The Hollow Dialogue.
Kenneth Crawford--Escalated Welfare.
Henry C. WaIIich--Right to Work.
Raymond Moley--Capacity to Govern.

THE ARTS:
ART: Descendants of the Boss Spirits--the culture of Australia's aborigines.
MUSIC: New York's first folk festival.
MOVIES:
"The Group's" lucky young Vassar vestals.
The horse, Italian style.
BOOKS:
Marc Connel!y's gift of charm.
Report on a Red Chinese village.
Pow! Fifteen months of Tom Wolfe.


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