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TITLE: TIME magazine
[The news-magazine of the century, with all the news, features, and vintage ADS! See FULL contents below!]
ISSUE DATE: APRIL 27, 1981; Vol. 117, No. 17
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: Right On! Winging into a New Era. COVER: Photograph by Neil Leifer.

COVER: Out of the blue, it comes, to land soft-lyon the California desert. But Columbia's apparently effortless triumph lifts American pride and opens a new era in the exploitation of space: for science, commerce and defense. See SPACE.

NATION: Reagan is healing, but a few ills befall his economic program. b. The dangers of billboard diplomacy. Ili Weinberger is now "Cap the Shovel." Il The ex-hostages are doing fine, thank you. o. Police vs. feds in Atlanta.

WORLD: Giscard runs scared in a close French election campaign. The Brixton riots provoke soul searching in Britain. Poland gets the promise of a farmers' union. Quebec reelects a folksy champion of separatism.

AMERICAN SCENE: Howard Hughes' huge wooden flying boat, the Spruce Goose, may not be made of spruce, but it seems ready to fly.

ART: At the Whitney Museum, Chuck Close's huge, realist paintings of faces help redefine the limits of portraiture.

ECONOMY & BUSINESS: America's vital infrastructure is crumbling. A new oil mini-glut. Seagram has $3 billion to spend.

LAW: Three actions raise old Watergate ghosts again: a presidential pardon, a perjury indictment and a novel taxpayers' Suit.

PRESS: The Washington Post returns a Pulitzer Prize after learning that its account of an eight-year-old drug addict was a fraud.

SPORT: Edmonton's Wayne Gretzky is rewriting the N.H.L. record books. Joe Louis, the famed Brown Bomber, dies at 66.

CINEMA: Independent film makers are turning their backs on Hollywood and their lights and cameras on Pittsburgh and Baltimore.

BOOKS: Lisa Althers Original Sins is original and sinfully funny; Leonard Michaels' The Men s Club is well-wrought irony.

BEHAVIOR: The grim collapse of a cult is heard in newly released tapes of the Rev. Jim Jones and the last days of Jonestown, Guyana.

ESSAY: Ronald Reagan can be counted lucky. But what is luck? God in a scatter-brained mood or just the coldly random? SHOW BUSINESS: Sophisticated Ladies is a foot-stomping tribute to the music of Duke Ellington, and the highest stepper is Gregory Hines.


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