It would be hard to find a nicer, complete, issue of this  23 November 1963 number of The New Yorker. A very good copy, just available to the news stands and homes dated the day after the Friday assassination of John F. Kennedy.  

Thick, heavy number is 248 pages and loaded with advertisements of all kinds. 

Cover art by Ilonka Karasz

Some entertainment and literary highlights of these memorable New York days where you can find at this date: 
 
Elizabeth Ashley and the youthful Robert Redford performing at the Biltmore in Barefoot in the Park; Diahann Carroll's show at the Americana; Brendon Gill's review of the new Ken Kesey adapted play at the Cort Theatre, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest starring Kirk Douglas as McMurphy, Ed Ames as the stoic Indian (he will soon enough portray a more lively one in the Daniel Boone TV Show) and Joan Tetzel as the demonic nurse; a fine new poem by poetry editor Howard Moss, On the Library Steps; a shorter but lively cinema review of The Wheeler Dealers, starring James Garner and Lee Remick;  numerous other essays, reports, sports reviews and notices, etc., including a longer "Talk of the Town" feature undertaken by New Yorker leg man "Stanley" who has flown down to Miami Beach to cover a sunny visit by NY Governor Nelson Rockefeller.  

I'd send this one along via USPS Priority Mail.