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TITLE: NEWSWEEK
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: May 5, 1986, Volume CVII, No. 18
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: CAN YOU PASS THE JOB TEST? From life to Genetic Screening. Cover: Photo by Edward Gallucci.

TOP OF THE WEEK:
CAN YOU PASS THE JOB TEST? In corporations across the United States, a frenzy of testing is under way as employers monitor everything from workers' honesty to drug abuse and personality traits. Companies say it produces a more productive work force and protects the public. But can testing be carried out without unwarranted encroachment on employees' rights?.

DEAVER DEALS: Hot lobbyist Michael Deaver, who left the White House to exploit his connections and get rich, was under fire from two congressional committees and two agencies, and there were calls for a special prosecutor. A man who had lived by appearances, Deaver seemed trapped in the semblance of wrongdoing.

SPLISH, SPLASH: Step into the bathrooms of the rich and famous, a world of designer tubs and toilets. Lavish bathstyles are trickling down, as the unwashed are cleaning up their act, too--and spending plenty to do it. NEW WORK FOR THE SHUTTLE? The April 18 destruction of a Titan rocket may have cost the United States a vital photo-reconnaissance satellite. If the sole spy satellite now in orbit fails, pressure may mount for an early--and potentially risky--reactivation of the shuttle program.

TERROR TALKS: Amid a rising tide of violence, Ronald Reagan left for the economic summit in Tokyo, determined to give the allies a piece of his mind about "this menace, this plague" of terrorism (page 21). In Europe, meanwhile, the Common Market began to crack down on Libyan diplomats iplomats and students as investigators tried to unravel the secrets of Muammar Kaddafi's terror network.

FULL INDEX:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
Deaver's deals.
Biden: ethics and 1988.
Reagan at the summit.
Seeing America first.
A balanced budget in the dock.
Again, it's run, Jesse, run.
Illinois: a political Hamlet.
Conquering the Empire.
INTERNATIONAL:
Through the maze: New tools raise questions about worker privacy.
Brothers in arms.
Kaddafi: plotting again?.
Where Libya is vulnerable.
Austria's dark secret.
Waldheim and the war.
Aquino and the rebels.
Tough times for Suharto.
Stinging an arms sale to Iran.
An affair to remember.

BUSINESS:
Can you pass the job test?.
Rating yourself.
The legacy of Boone Pickens.
An Exxon buyout.
Toy soldiers go high-tech.
Imelda, this card's for you.
Wall Street's bright light.
Robert J. Samuelson.
SOCIETY:
Space: An early shuttle call?.
Technology: Photos from the sky.
Environment: Cities at risk.
Medicine: Contraceptive fears 68 Ideas: Back from the Stone Age?.

THE ARTS:
Drama: Jack's journey.
Music: The guitar in all its glory.
Books: Three British novels.
Entertainment: In the fast lane.
Theater Big names, little plays.
Movies: Razzle + dazzle = frazzle.
Richard Pryor, this is your life?.
LIFESTYLE:
Trends: More than a bath.
Health: Braces and a free bike.
Television: The art of bitchiness.
Chicago gets windier.


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