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TITLE: NEWSWEEK
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: JULY 29, 1985; Vol. CVI, No. 5
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: ZERO HOUR: Forty years of the Atomic Age. A Watch stopped by the Hiroshima blast. Cover: Photo by Tom Ives.

TOP OF THE WEEK [Major Top Stories]:
THE ATOMIC AGE: On an August morning in 1945, time stopped for Hiroshima at 8:16--the moment at which the first atomic bomb reduced a city to rubble and made all humankind an endangered species. A 20,000-word Special Report looks at the first 40 years of the nuclear age through the stories of six people who lived it. Three are Americans who helped build and drop the bomb; the daughter of one of them is working now for its abolition. Two are Japanese women who saw it fall and survived. One lives in America; the other, Misao Nagoya (right), stayed in Hiroshima, the city where, in a flash of cosmic light, man fell hostage to the atom. Page 28.

THE PRESIDENT'S CANCER: A smiling and buoyant First Patient returned to the White House, but aftershocks remained from the news that Ronald Reagan's polyp had been cancerous. Would the president be able to serve out his term with undiminished vigor? Was this a frightening but mercifully brief crisis--or a turning point for Reagan and the country? Had the president received the best possible care? Page 12.

FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE: Two recent scandals have shaken confidence in the fine-art auction houses and sparked calls for greater regulation. In one case, David Bathurst (left), former president of Christie's in New York, lied when he announced millon-dollar sales in 1981 of two impressionist paintings that never sold. Last week, Bathurst resigned. Page 59.

[FULL NEWSWEEK LISTINGS]:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
"The president has cancer".
The myth and the man.
The Don and Nancy show.
The president's case: should doctors have acted sooner?.
Military medicine: mixed verdict.
Did the media go too far?.
Cancer: when to see your doctor.
The budget grudge match.
The return of Jayne Byrne.
Was it really WarGames?.
INTERNATIONAL:
South Africa: a state of emergency.
An interview with Bishop Tutu.
Marcos: a hint of scandal Soviet Union: a comeback for Ogarkov?.
Women: a "U.N. battlefield".
SPECIAL REPORT : LIVING WITH THE BOMB.
(THE COVER) ZERO HOUR FORTY YEARS ON.
BUSINESS:
Live Aid's shy tycoon.
Volcker revs the economic engine.
Fidel stirs another pot.
BOOKS:
"The Amateurs," by David Halberstam.
Heard a good book lately?.
"A Perfect Peace," by Amos Oz.
ART: Auction houses: for a few dollars more.
MOVIES:
"Mad Max Beyond Thunder- dome": to the max.
"Explorers": spaced out.
JUSTICE: Edwin Meese III weighs in on abortion.
SPORTS: Mary Decker Slaney vs. Zola Budd: no contest.
THE COLUMNISTS:
My Turn: Geraldine Marken.
Robert J. Samuelson.
Meg Greenfield Is on vacation.


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