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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: DECEMBER 27, 1982; Vol. 120, No. 26
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: The New Missionary. Preaching the Gospel in New Guinea. IMAGES '82.Cover: Photograph of Protestant Missionary Leon Dillinger in New Guinea by Roland Neveu--Gamma/Liaison.

COVER: In new ways and in distant places, Protestant and Roman Catholic missionaries are spreading the Gospel, but old questions are still being asked about the impact of their preaching. See RELIGION.

NATION: Congress stumbles through a lameduck session. Passing the buck on Social Security. A TIME poll shows Reagan making headway on defense. Teamsters' Williams is guilty. III Nixon urges "hardheaded detente." IMAGES '82: A city in ruins, a sprawl of bod-ies--not pretty pictures but memorable ones. A 20-page gallery also presents 1982's brighter moments, from a royal birth to a lovable visitor. A farewell to 14 noted figures.

WORLD: Hints of a Soviet offer to limit nukes. Poland's Jaruzelski delivers the bad news. Did the KGB order the Pope's shooting? ESSAY: Casablanca, released 40 years ago, endures as unsurpassed romance and corn, and as a wistful American myth of higher duties.

LAW: : Poverty lawyers, born of the Great Society, face hard times because of trimmed budgets and the Reagan Administration.

CINEMA: The rush of Christmas comedies offers very mixed blessings but some sparkling stars: Burt and Goldie, Pryor and Peter Sellers.

ECONOMY & BUSINESS; The TIME Board of Economists expects the elusive recovery to begin in early 1983. Brazil at the brink. A year of contrasts.

SEXES: Wanda brings Ralph up to date on the approved new terminology for adultery, orgies, wife swapping and one-night stands.

EDUCATION: Deficiencies in math and science teaching add up to low-tech high school graduates in an increasingly high-tech society.

MEDICINE: Scientists create a su-permouse by implanting a rat gene. Evidence that the AIDS epidemic may have spread to children.

LIVING: Americans spend most of their spare time with TV, but don't pay it much heed, says a poll. One low leisure priority: sex.
SPORT: College football's winningest coach, Bear Bryant of Alabama, clicks off his projector and shuts his playbook.

BOOKS: Is the nuclear threat credible if it can never be used? George F. Kennan investigates the paradox; Robert Scheer caricatures it.



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