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TITLE: TIME
[The news-magazine of the century, with all the news, features, and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: FEBRUARY 23, 1981; Vol. 117, No.8
CONDITION: Standard magazine size, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: AMERICAN RENEWAL, Special Project. Cover: Illustration by Robert Giusti.

AMERICAN RENEWAL: The need to revive a nation unique in its resources goes beyond economics and politics. The task encompasses moral and spiritual values, and will require disciplined effort as well as that rare virtue, patience.

DOMESTIC POLICY: Americans have both a faith in their political system and a fear that it is not working. Improving that scheme calls for serious scrutiny and some alterations, but not radical surgery on the Constitution.

FOREIGN POLICY: At a time when the world appears to be enemy territory, the U.S. needs a strong military, realism in appraising Soviet strengths and weaknesses, and policies based on self-interest and a can-do faith.

THE CITIZEN'S ROLE: As the U.S. becomes a more intimately national community. Americans need new concepts of government and morals, as well as a renewed sense of responsibility for themselves and for their community.

NATION: Anticipating angry howls from the public, Reagan prepares to announce deep cuts in the federal budget. In some states, the bills are coming due for tax-cut fever. A day in the life of the new President. Haig takes command. Sinatra takes the stand. Another tragic hotel fire in Las Vegas.

WORLD: Poland gets a general as Premier. P. El Salvador officials ignore murder clues. In West Germany, Schmidt's luck sours.

ECONOMY & BUSINESS: TIME'S Board of Economists sees perils ahead for Reagan-omics. MCI fights AT&T. Boomin investment seminars.

LAW: The Chief Justice blasts crime's "reign of terror" in U.S. cities and calls for some tough, costly new deterrents.

MEDICINE: A series of mysterious nighttime deaths among male refugees from Laos baffles doctors and worries newcomers to the U.S.

SHOW BUSINESS: After gambling big on a $23 million movie and his own studio, Hollywood's Francis Ford Coppola is in a bind--again.

ART: Van Gogh, Gauguin and a key modernist style called cloison-ism make for a ravishing exhibition in Toronto.

PRESS: Questions are raised about a curious correction in the New York Times. Reader's Digest accused of campaign violations.

LIVING: Manhattan's Barbizon Hotel, long a bastion of female virtue, goes coed. Reagan prompts the (jelly) beaning of America.

RELIGION: Amid rising concern about how some churches handle money, Evangelist Herbert Armstrong wins a legal battle.


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