The rise and fall of the space age1964
by Edwin Diamond
Edwin Diamond, an irreverent veteran reporter who became the science editor of Newsweek in 1957 and then took over as the magazine’s general editor, covered the space program virtually from its beginning. The result was a book that came out in 1964 that lambasted the notion of racing the U.S.S.R. to the Moon. In the process, Diamond ridiculed the very idea of a race and asserted, correctly, as it would turn out, that there was less to the Soviet space program than appearances indicated. He acerbically likened the race to the potlatch ceremony conducted by the Kwakiutl Indians of North America, in which the chiefs of clans tried to glorify themselves and humiliate their opponents by tossing their most valuable possessions into a fire. Diamond used potlatch as a metaphor for what he...