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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: JULY 5, 1982; Vol. 120, No. 1
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: Foreign Policy Chakeup: Out goes Alexander Haig; In Comes George Shultz. Photograph by Curt Gunther.

COVER: Frustrated by clashes with White House aides and by the course of U.S. foreign policy, Secretary of State Haig abruptly resigns. George Shultz, a respected team player in his fourth Cabinet post, replaces him.

WORLD: Israeli forces increase attacks on Syrian and P.L.O. strongholds in West Beirut, and civilian casualty lists grow. Argentina struggles to form a new and stable government. It's a boy for the Prince and Princess of Wales.

HINCKLEY: After hours of torturous deliberations, a jury finds the man who tried to kill President Reagan not guilty by reason of insanity, causing a furor over psychiatric defenses. The troubling question: Is the system guilty? See NATION.

NATION: The White House helps Donovan's old firm recruit private eyes to dig up dirt on Senate investigators. P. The nation's mayors say the Administration is sending a hostile signal: drop dead. The ERA is defeated, but supporters vow to keep up the fight. Celebrating the bicentennial of the majestic bald eagle.

ECONOMY & BUSINESS: Congress fails in a final stab at reducing deficits, as inflation spurts ahead and interest rates rise. The FBI catches a band of computer snoops in Operation Japanscam. After the fighting in Lebanon and the Falklands, winners and losers alike will be faced with the high cost of conflict.

LAW: In a case involving the Nixon Administration, the Supreme Court rules Presidents immune from civil damage suits.

CINEMA: With computer-zapped effects and a plot set inside a video game, Disney's TRON opens a new era in movie technique.

SPORT: In Spain, soccer's Superbowl--the World Cup--offers the usual tumult and color, but its upsets say adios to tradition.

ENVIRONMENT: A vast cloud of debris from a volcanic blast in Mexico may cause a cooler summer, as California awaits its own eruption.

MEDICINE: Good news for amateur speakers and professional performers: a tuba-playing doctor says stage fright can be treated.

RELIGION: The first new translation of the Jewish Bible, or Old Testament, since 1917 offers Holy Writ in plain, updated English.

VIDEO: Loud and clear, the FCC opens a new market by okaying direct broadcasts from satellites to home-based dish antennas.


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