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ISSUE DATE: July 27 1964; VOL. LXIV, NO. 4

IN THIS ISSUE:-
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TOP OF THE WEEK:
THE COVER PAGE:
From the opening gavel to the moment when thousands of balloons cascaded down on BARRY GOLDWATER as he arrived for his acceptance speech, it was a convention filled with color. To bring NEWSWEEK readers a sense of the excitement and drama which gripped San Francisco, this issue contains four pages of color photographs (pages 23 to 26), a first in NEWSWEEK convention coverage. Also, a team of 30 editors, writers, and reporters pool their talents to describe the week's historic events: the ticket of Goldwater and Miller ... the new breed of Goldwater Republicans who won the victory ... the 1964 mood and voice of Republicanism ... and the campaign ahead. (NEWSWEEK cover photo by Vytas Valaitis.)

MODERN MONARCH: Among the 32 African leaders who are meeting in Cairo this week, none is more highly respected than Ethiopia's Emperor Haile Selassie I. Today, Selassie pursues two dreams, African unity and a modern, twentieth-century Ethiopia. NEWSWEEK'S Africa correspondent Peter R. Webb reports the progress he is making.

CUBA TODAY: To better relations with the U.S., Fidel Castro invited a group of newsmen to take a firsthand look at Cuba. NEWSWEEK sent Associate Editor John Gerassi.

BAN THE BOOM?: Morning in Oklahoma City begins with a boom, the first of eight to shatter nerves and plaster every day. It's all part of a Federal Aviation Agency project to test the noise level the supersonic transport will create if it goes into service.

A $2 BILLION PORTFOLIO PAGE: Institutional investors today own one-fifth of all the stock listed on the Big Board. Senior Editor Clem Morgello interviews the small band of experts at the biggest mutual fund of all, Massachusetts Investors Trust, and describes how they manage their funds.

CHARLES THE GREAT: After a brief run in 1947, Chaplin's masterful film "Monsieur Verdoux" disappeared from the American screen. It was killed by audience apathy, unfavorable publicity, and jingoistic pressure. Now it is back, and MOVIES editor David Slavitt celebrates the return.

OTHER ITEMS OF NOTE:
MOVIES: CHARLIE CHAPLIN.
TV-RADIO. Covering the Convention.
BOOKS. He died for art: ISAAC BABEL.
MUSIC. The new NANCY WILSON. 1 page article, photo.
BUSINESS AND FINANCE. The North Sea Oil Rush.
Spotlight: MIT Fund: A lot of people are getting pollen.
BUSINESS TIDES, The Issue of Statism by Henry Hazlitt.
PERSPECTIVE, Raymond Moley.
INTERNATIONAL. Goldwater: The world reacts.
WASHINGTON, Kenneth Crawford.
LIFE AND LEISURE. Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert, 1 page article, photo.
EMMET JOHN HUGHES on Goldwaterism.
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