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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: NOVEMBER 26, 1984; Vol. 124, No. 22
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 U.S. in Space. What's up and What's ahead. Rescuing a Satellite. Cover: Photograph from NASA.

COVER: A SPECTACULAR SALVAGE MISSION ON THE HIGH FRONTIER: The shuttle Discovery brings home a pair of stray satellites and shows that NASA still has the right stuff. If Reagan gets his way, the U.S. is headed for a new era in space-Star Wars, orbiting stations, maybe even a moon colony. Commercial exploitation beckons, but the foreign competition is stiff. Critics question where the U.S. program is going-and why. See SPACE.

NATION: REAGAN SIZES UP HIS WIN AS A MANDATE FOR CONTINUITY: As the President and his aides set about the task of writing a script for his second act in Washington, both the dramatis personae and the story line seem to have a familiar ring. The debate sharpens over how-and whether-to reform the federal income tax. Five Republican contenders stage a dogfight for the key job of Senate majority leader.

WORLD: THE HEARTBREAK OF FAMINE BRINGS FLOODS OF RELIEF TO ETHIOPIA: In a country paralyzed by years of drought, tens of thousands of withered Ethiopians stream into refugee camps, sheltering in burrows and laying their dead to rest. As these electrifying images begin to appear, Westerners respond with record amounts of aid. But 6 million people are on the brink of starvation in what relief workers warn could be "the worst human disaster in recent history.".

ECONOMY & BUSINESS: A letter on American capitalism by Catholic bishops creates a furor. Safety lapses ground the largest U.S. commuter airline.

MEDICINE: Baby Fae dies after her battle to retain a transplanted baboon's heart. A research prize is canceled because of Nazi associations.

PRESS: The libel suit of Israel's Ariel Sharon against Time Inc. begins in New York City. General Westmoreland takes the stand.

RELIGION: The Church of England takes a historic vote favoring women priests. A Lutheran activist goes to jail. Bishop Tutu's new post.

SPORT: In a coming-out party at the Garden, the heart of the Olympic boxing team, Breland, Holyfield & Co., gently turns pro.

MUSIC: Frankie Goes to Hollywood, a hot rock import from Britain, mixes dance music with political messages, glitzy fashion and low camp.

CINEMA: Supergirl and The Terminator offer a pair of up-to-date fantasy figures. De Niro and Streep fall in love.

ESSAY: At the sound of the beep. . . hang up. That is how at least some people deal with those infernal telephone-answering machines.


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