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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: JUNE 28, 1982; Vol. 119, No. 26
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: The spoils of WAR: Carving up Lebanoin. Surrender at Stanley. U. S. Frustrations. COVER: Photograph by Aral--Sina/Black Star.

SPECIAL SECTION: In the wake of Israel's blitzkrieg against the P.L.O., the U.S. works to establish a new, unified government in beleaguered Lebanon, hoping it wifi advance the cause of peace throughout the war- torn area.

FALKLANDS: White flags fly over Port Stanley as the British task force triumphs. Argentina's President is ousted, and the country's remaining leaders refuse to turn their surrender into permanent peace. See SPECIAL SECTION.

NATION: Talk of a new Reagan fades after he denounces the Soviets at the U.N. What next for the antinuclear-arms movement? Reagan's stock rises inaTIMEpoll. A spy stumbles in from the cold. More problems for Donovan.

ECONOMY & BUSINESS: Consumer spending shows signs of picking up. New federal antitrust rules. Gulf's bid for Cities Service.

SHOW BUSINESS: In a bad month for tourists, Miami's ambitious Festival of the Arts has some artistic successes but lacks one thing: audiences.

BOOKS: Norman Mailer's new book combines adrenaline and flapdoodle. John Cheever, elegiac storyteller of suburban life, dies at 70.

MEDICINE: A new study charges international drug firms with abuses in Third World nations. Proper diet may reduce cancer risk.

LAW: The court says children of ifiegal aliens are entitled to free public schooling, and rules on M.D.s' fees and mental patients.

DESIGN: A $1 million pavilion for tourists visiting the White House will preserve security as well as architectural tradition.

ESSAY: In summer, we dream about the sell' we might have been. We are haunted sometimes by these hypothetical antiselves.

EDUCATION: The class of '82, the largest in U.S. history, plunges into a troubled economy with pragmatism and a survivalist mentality.

DANCE: The New York City Ballet's rousing centennial Stravinsky festival shows off the company's proud heritage.

ART: At the Metropolitan, the glory that was 17th century France is changing the way historians view some of painting's gods.

THEATER: Tommy Tune, a tall dude from another planet, wins a Tony for "Nine"and is Broadway's hottest director of musicals.


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