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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: October 25, 1965; Vol. LXVI, No. 17
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

COVER: "THE FIRST YEAR OF LIFE".

TOP OF THE WEEK:
THE FIRST YEAR OF LIFE: With polio, diphtheria, scarlet fever and most of the other scourges of childhood now well under control, medical talent and funds are shifting emphasis to the area of "perinatal" research, covering the period from conception through the nine months of pregnancy to early infancy. Some prenatal work may lead to the control of such disorders as miscarriage and premature birth; other work may lead to control of life itself. For their report on this expanding field, Medicine editor Matt Clark and Medicine reporter Diane Zimmerman interviewed scores of in- vestigators and doctors at a dozen institutions, including Johns Hopkins, Harvard, Columbia and the U.S. National Institutes of Health. (Newsweek cover photo by Charles Harbutt -- Magnum.)

THROUGH THE ROOF ON WALL STREET: Practically everybody expected it, and sure enough, the Dow Jones average of industrial stock prices broke through to a new record of 942.65 last week. But what happens next -- more gains, or a quick turnabout? In his Wall Street column, Senior Editor Clem Morgello reports that most brokers expect the rise to continue, with the con- servatives predicting a top of 970 on the Dow and the optimists holding out for 1,000. But the current wave of speculation in volatile glamour stocks, Morgello warns, is "the one big problem in the months ahead."

THE NAME OF THE GAME IS THE NAME: With major companies changing their names at a rate of twenty a year and 50 new products flooding the market every day, U.S. business has an increasingly exasperating problem: how to find an attractive label that somebody else isn't using. In Spotlight on Business, Associate Editor Shepherd Campbell tells where the names come from.

OUR MAN IN AFRICA: Because something is always happening there and because of the enormous distances involved, Africa is known among foreign correspondents as a "suitcase beat." Last week, for instance, Newsweek's Nairobi bureau chief Peter R. Webb finished a three-week assignment on South Africa (page 44), then flew to Rhodesia in time to file an on-scene report of the crisis looming there (page 43). For British-born Webb, fire-horse assignments are nothing new. As a United Press reporter before join- ing Newsweek, he covered the Korean War, fighting on Cyprus and the Suez invasion, among other European and Middle East assign- ments. Since then, he has also manned a typewriter with distinction in the magazine's New York headquarters. He has logged thousands of miles over desert and jungle in Africa, and a year ago was one of the first to enter Stanleyville after the massacre of white hostages by Congolese rebels.

NEWSWEEK LISTINGS:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Indian summer on the Potomac -- a little pain, a lot of progress.
The Veep does his roadwork.
For the GOP, a grand old party.
Anti-Negro prejudices softening -- a Louis Harris Poll.
THE WAR IN VIETNAM: The U.S. position grows stronger.
INTERNATIONAL:
Rhodesia: hesitation on the brink.
A prosperous South Africa -- white-ruled and for a long time to come.
Indonesia: who's on top and for how long?.
Britain's first Ombudsman.
THE AMERICAS: Violence greets Peron's dove in Buenos Aires.
SPORTS: The Sandy Koufax series; The battle of unbeaten teams -- Texas vs. Arkansas.
RELIGION: Mr. Conscience of the Southern Baptists.
MEDICINE: The first year -- from conception to a mother's arms (the cover).
SCIENCE AND SPACE: Cosmology according to Hoyle.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE:
US. economy gets a check-up and a clean bill of health.
Wall Street: record week -- and more to come.
What's in a name? The secret ingredient.
PRESS: The Indianapolis Times -- 1888-1965.
EDUCATION: Days of protest -- over U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
LIFE AND LEISURE:
First-rate dress design -- inexpensive and American.
Artificial boom in busts.
THE COLUMNISTS:
Walter Lippmann -- The Indestructibility of the U.N.
Kenneth Crawford -- Victory in Vietnam?.
Henry Hazlitt -- A World Money Plan.
Raymond Moley -- Inefficient Colleges.

THE ARTS:
MUSIC: Discontent in Balanchine's ballet.
THEATER:
It's all Alan King in 'The Impossible Years".
Aznavour's first Broadway show -- a marvelous experience.
ART:
Segal's plaster portraits of real people.
Stockholm's 180-yard mural.
MOVIES:
"The Hill -- the parts are greater than the whole.
Student filmmakers.
BOOKS:
Ike on Ike: memoirs of an honest man.
Albert Camus: the self-portrait of a master craftsman.


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