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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: AUGUST 19, 1985 Vol. 126 No. 7
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: PLAY BALL. And Nobody Plays It Like PETE ROSE. Cincinnati's Wondrous Rose. Cover: Photograph by Neil Leifer.

COVER: After baseball stops briefly, Pete Rose resumes his race to 4,192 The owners balk, the players walk, then Peter Ueberroth gets the save. This summer the most single-minded ballplayer since Ty Cobb is reaching back into time to play against the Georgia Peach and try to go him one hit better. Rose is but one of the many delights that contrasted brightly last week with the gray talk of arbitration and TV revenues. See SPORT.

NATION: Bumbling but effective is the verdict on the Navy spy ring While Arthur Walker is convicted in Norfolk, Va., an alleged accomplice faces new federal charges in San Francisco. - A boatload of Americans is mysteriously hijacked in Nicaragua. Former foes remember Hiroshima. Military planners experiment with Buck Rogers--type weapons for the future. - Orators talk shop and shop talk in Washington.

WORLD: As the convulsions worsen,, South Africa's leaders hint at change Foreign Minister Botha discusses reforms with U.S. officials, while at home blacks turn their fury against the Indian population. Bishop Tutu defies a ban on mass funerals and, in an exclusive interview, discusses his hopes and fears. - A terrorist car bomb kills two Americans in West Germany. The French connection in a case of international sabotage. - A test of wills in Pakistan.

Economy & Business Spurned by CBS, Ted Turner will buy MGM/UA and become the Soviets' TV partner. - Icahn duels Lorenzo for control of TWA.

Music Two opera premieres in Santa Fe demonstrate that eclecticism has become a virtue, even a style, in itself.

Press Quiche eaters, skip this magazine: Soldier of Fortune, now ten years old, still wants only the macho. - Why the aggrieved sue for libel.

Photography In Texas, a retrospective of Photojournalist Carl Mydans' work transforms images of war and suffering into a supple narrative art.

Medicine Reagan is treated for skin cancer, an ailment that afflicts 500,000 Americans a year. - A debate over age and weight.

Cinema Three caustic movies revive the spirit of British films. - Real Genius: the smart one for summer. - Year of the Dragon: the pits.

Science After a rocky start, Challenger returns from space in triumph. - Two scientists at Los Alamos search for trapped old air.

Essay After 40 years, the question still gnaws: Was it necessary to drop the Bomb? What is unsettling is that the decision made sense.

Letters.
People.
Books.
Milestones.


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