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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: MAY 28, 1979; Vol. 113, 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: "MEDICAL COSTS. Seeking the cure."
Cover: Photographed by Dirck Halstead.

COVER: Nearly $1 out of every $11 spent in the U.S. now goes for medical expenses, creating a hot political issue.

As 1980 nears, pols like Carter and Kennedy are looking for ways to deal with it. See MEDIcINE.

WORLD: The U.S. and Britain face a dilemma over Zimbabwe- Rhodesia. The rising costs of Egypt- Israeli peace treaty. A TIME correspondent reports on mysterious North Korea. France's racing scandal.

POLITICS OF GAS: With Californians lining up for fuel, Jerry Brown calls on Jimmy Carter, and both play politics with gas. The President flashes confusing signals on energy, but one thing is certain: fuel is scarce. See NATION.

NATION: House gives conservationists big victory in Alaska. D.C. officials disclose their assets. A curious mission to Colombia.

SPORT: Spectacular Bid wins the Preakness,, second event of the Triple Crown, as he comes home in style to Pimlico in Maryland.

ECONOMY & BUSINESS: TIME's economists see some slowdown in inflation brought on by a mild recession to begin soon. Carter vs. the corporations.

SHOW BUSINESS: His kiddie-show humor is not for everyone, but Andy Kaufman, the lovable Latka of TV's hit comedy Taxi, has a following.

EDUCATION: Studies show that TV makes kids learn less and act more aggressively, but the tube can also be used as an educational aid.

THEATER: Getting Out, an intense new drama about a woman excon's struggle to go straight, is one of the best of off-Broadway.

LAW: The high court gives a green light to sex-discrimination suits. Melancholia is one defense in the Dan White murder case.

CINEMA: Joseph Strick's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is a pale imitation of Joyce's masterpiece. A limp Last Embrace.

PRESS: Henry Kissinger revisits China, but allows only one journalist to accompany him: Syndicated Columnist Joseph Kraft.

BOOKS: Marshall Frady's Billy Graham proffles a country-boy Candide. Pat Jordan's Chase the Game tracks city-bred novas.

SCIENCE: After 17 years under- ground, some joyous little bugs are finally emerging, to the amazement of suburbanites and scientists.


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