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ISSUE DATE: February 10 1964; Vol LXIII, No 6

IN THIS ISSUE:-
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TOP OF THE WEEK:
THE COVER: DE GAULLE'S FRANCE: A return to Greatness. Stalin and Khrushchev, Roosevelt and Johnson, Churchill and Eisenhower -- French President Charles de Gaulle has known them all, argued with them, and continued to pursue his own course -- a lone, stern figure who cherishes the greatness of France. Just how far he has restored France's glory and the nature of the problems he has posed for its allies is the subject of this week's report from NEWSWEEK'S Chief European correspondent Arnaud de Borchgrave and Whitman Bassow of the Paris bureau. Associate Editor Joel Blocker wrote the story.

WASHINGTON AND SAIGON: A neat and quiet coup in Saigon has rather unsettling echoes in Washington, where confusing statements about the progress of the war in Vietnam reassure no one. As young Maj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh topples the military junta that toppled the Diem regime (page 33), some observers wonder if this may be Vietnam's last chance to turn the tide against the Viet Cong. Serious decisions are ahead for the United States.

YEAR OF THE TflANSPLANT: Working on surgery's most dramatic frontier, doctors have transplanted several of the body's major organs from one human to another, and, in some cases, from animal to humans. MEDICINE editor Matt Clark reports on the hopes -- and the problems -- which are raised by such operations.

WALL STREET ON EDGE: The big-name, blue-chip stocks continue forging upward on the New York Stock Exchange, but the rest of the market fails to follow their lead. SPOTLIGHT ON BUSINESS report was written by General Editor Lawrence S. Martz who dissects the anxiety of market professionals and public alike.

THE SWEET AND THE SINISTER: Marking the centenmal year of his birth, a rich exhibition of the works of Toulouse-Lautrec opens in New York. NEWSWEEK'S ART editor Jack Krohl writes of the life and work of the dwarfed aristocrat who recorded the sordid brilliance of a decadent era.

WITH DICKENLIZ IN TORONTO: Richard Burton, convoyed by Elizabeth Taylor, steamed into Toronto last week to begin rehearsals as the Prince of Denmark. NEWSWEEK'S Melvyn Cussow followed the action, from Bard to bar.

OTHER ITEMS OF NOTE: NEWS: Foreign Policy LBJ's test; The War in Vietnam; The Beckwith Trial; Margaret Chase Smith; International; FRANCE: A return to greatness; Foreign News; NEWSMAKERS; MEDICINE; RELIGION; SPORTS; Insbruck's ins and outs; BUSINESS: The stock market: Nervously buillish; Estimates VS reality by Henry Hazlitt; SCIENCE; ART: Toulouse Lautrec Show; TV & RADIO: New shows old cancellations; MUSIC: The Prodigal Returns: Leonard Bernstein's third symphony; THEATER: Richard Burton in Toronto (article & interview & 4 photos, 1 page); Barbara Loden (Article, interview & photo with baby, 1 page); EDUCATION; MOVIES: Producer Marty Ransohoff; LIFE & LEISURE: Russel V. Lee says Monogamy is a "bizarre and unnatural state"; BOOKS: Anna Langfus; Nathalie Sarraunte; MORE
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