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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 11, 1983; Vol. 121, No. 15
CONDITION:
Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)
IN THIS ISSUE:
[Use 'Control F' to search this page. MORE MAGAZINES' exclusive detailed content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date.] This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
COVER: Fighting Cocaine's Grip. Millions of users. Billions of Dollars. Inset: Arms Talks: Moving away from zero-zero. Cover: Photograph by Matthew Klein.
COVER: Cocaine, once an indulgence of the rich, is now a democratic epidemic. Despite a crackdown, record amounts are being smuggled into the U.S. But its destructive power is becoming better known. See NATION.
WORLD: A crucial meeting between King Hussein and Yasser Arafat. o. The French react furiously to Mitterrand's new travel curbs. War of words over Nicaragua. The Greens splash into West Germany's Bundestag.
ARMS CONTROL: Reagan offers the Soviets a flexible approach to negotiations over nuclear missiles in Europe. It is a shift from his zero option, but it gives no firm numbers and little hope of a quick agreement. See NATION.
NATION: The Chicago mayoral race goes down to the mire. EPA raps Dow. ii. Three policemen are convicted in New Orleans case.
SHOW BUSINESS: By throwing darts at everyone from Queen Elizabeth to Elizabeth Taylor, JOAN RIVERS has become America's funniest woman.
MEDICINE: A virulent form of herpes attacks mares and foals at the Austrian breeding farm of the famed Lipi77net dancing horses.
SPORT: A solitary Master, Tom Watson, begins the new golf season with no more Open worries, nothing to play for but history.
SCIENCE: What have anchovies to do with this year's puzzling weather? Surprisingly, scientists think there is a link.
BOOKS: Heartburn makes Nora Ephron an amusing, readable two-time loser. Henry Adams' letters are a publishing event.
LAW: Every patient has the right to refuse treatment, but a growing debate surrounds the right of the terminally ill to die.
THEATER: In Louisville, several plays of promise and one of more than that. Neil Simon's love letter to his past. A peak of fate.
ECONOMY & BUSINESS: Four years after Three Mile Island, the nuclear industry is in disarray. Beep! Call your wife! A tax shelter yields gold.
ESSAY: Campus hecklers are forcing speakers off the stage. The idea of free speech must be revived--and even idealized again.
PRESS: ABC's Sam Donaldson leads the charge on the White House beat, and he has become a TV innovation: the reporter as provocateur.
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