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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 14, 1965; Vol. LXV, No. 24
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 FLIGHT OF GEMINI 4: Eyes glued to television sets, millions waited tensely to hear from astronaut Edward White as he climbed out of his capsule high over the Pacific Ocean. Then came the verdict: 'This is funl" said White, and men everywhere shared his boyish glee. To cover the flight, the Washington bureau's Henry T. Simmons, who has been on hand for every U.S. manned orbital flight, went first to Cape Kennedy and then to Houston's Manned Spacecraft Center to team up with Science and Space editor Henry W. Hubbard and Houston bureau chief Tom Nicholson. One of those interviewed by Simmons was mission director Christopher C. Kraft Jr. (photo). Late in the week, Hubbard returned to New York and, as Gemini 4 still circled the earth, wrote his story of the mission--how it went, what was learned and what is ahead for America's space program. In addition, Associate Editor Arthur Higbee wrote the portrait of "Space City, U.S.A." (NASA cover photo by Bill Taub, color photos page 30A by NASA and page 308, Newsweek photo by John Zimmerman.).

GIACOMETTI: IN SEARCH OF THE SOUL: For 40 years, Alberto Giacometti, considered by many the greatest living sculptor, has worked in the same monastic studio in Paris, obsessively trying to trap the flame of life in plaster and bronze. Reporter Liz Peer, Herbert Matter's color photographs, and Art editor John Gerassis analysis portray this contemporary "saint" of art.

THE AMAZING BOOM--WILL IT LAST? Everywhere that Newsweek reporters went across the country, the theme was the same: "I'm making more money; I'm spending more money.' Never had times been so good for so many, and the sales of big-ticket luxury items such as boats and color TV sets were nothing short of phenomenal. The boom was in its 51st month, and seemingly it would go on forever. But would it? One worried expert, William McChesney Martin, head of the Federal Reserve Board, detected disturbing parallels between today's prosperity and the 1920s. Though Martin's voice is nearly alone, it prompts a debate on the Administration's fiscal policies which could have far-reaching effects on the nation's economy. Senior Editor Clem Morgello reviews that debate and gives a compre. Morgello hensive analysis of the economy now.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
The flight of Gemini 4 (the Cover).
civil rights--an eloquent plea by LBJ.
Graduation day for vivian Malone .
The choice was an echo--a Roosevelt wins in Miami Beach.
INTERNATIONAL:
In vietnam, the darkest week of the war After Mao, who?.
U.S. arms abroad--the allies cry "foul".
In Poland, a rubber-stamp election hides widespread discontent.
THE AMERICAS: A way out of the Dominican mess? The U.S. considers a third plan of action.
TV-RADIO: Men and money--how the networks covered the flight of Gemini 4. The apes and the idiot box.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE: A review of the U.S. economy (Spotlight on Business). A big change in small change?. The coming steel negetiations--wiIl Abel raise Cain?.
RELIGION: A call for racial reconciliation by the Southern Baptists.
SPORTS: The 5.5s in the Bay of Naples; Around and around at lndy--Scotsman; Clark makes it look easy.
PRESS: Back to work in Baltimore.
MEDICINE: No cure for emphysema, but some new techniques will help.
EDUCATION: At Columbia, the debate on student activism; Why campus marriages fail.
LIFE AND LEISURE: Light up and look out--the great psychological-testing craze. At home at the range--chef Michael Field.
THE COLUMNISTS: Emmet John Hughes--Diplomacy on Collision Course.
Kenneth Crawford--The Big Game.
Henry C. WaIIich--Then and Now.
Raymond Moley--Back to Bossism.

THE ARTS:
ART: Life has more value than art," says sculptor Giacometti in his never-ending search for the soul.
MUSIC:
No, but I heard the album.
Sounds both cool and hot, as the Kremlin calls off its cold war on jazz.
MOVIES:
Class will tell--and it does in director Losey's "Eva'.
"Genghis Khan"--instant epic.
BOOKS:
Teddy, FDR and the rest of the clan -- "American Aristocrats".
A brawling city and the man with a hand in the till--Boss Tweed's New York".


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