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TITLE: TIME
[The news-magazine of the century, with all the news, features, and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: DECEMBER 12, 1983; Vol. 122, No. 25
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: ACCUSING the PRESS. What are its sins? Inset: YVES SAINT LAURENT. The King of Fashion. Cover: Illustration by Guy Billout.

COVER: The controversy over excluding the press from Grenada revealed a growing public hostility toward journalists. The media are increasingly perceived as being arrogant, biased and apt to abuse their power. See PRESS.

NATION: Frustrated in its peace efforts, the U.S. moves closer to Israel. The President's men come down hard on Feldstein. Mondale draws away from the pack. Can the space weapons race be slowed in time? LIVING: Yves Saint Laurent is the most influential fashion designer in the world. Marking his 26th year at the top of a tough business, the Metropolitan Museum of Art has a dazzling retrospective of his witty, glamorous clothes.

WORLD: The U.S. faces trouble on two fronts in El Salvador: leftist guerrillas make gains, while right-wing death squads step up the killing. Andropov sends letters to West European leaders, but some of his own allies begin to worry about missiles. A one-party election in Jamaica. New opportunities for women in Japan.

SPACE: Despite some cranky astronauts, balky experiments and overeager scientists, the Spacelab gets off to a successful start.

BOOKS: An oversize shelf of season's readings offers luxurious and reasonable new volumes celebrating nature, religion, history and art.

ECONOMY & BUSINESS: Upstart airlines are stinging the big carriers. The bull market swells shareholder ranks. The Cabbage Patch Christmas.

MUSIC: Major new works reassert sacred themes: an opera on St. Francis by Olivier Messiaen and a requiem by Krzysz-tofPenderecki.

EDUCATION: Black colleges' money problems are getting worse; at Fisk University, rising debts have led to the president's resignation.

CINEMA: The Dresser lets Albert Finney and Tom Courtenay play Lear and the Fool in a backstage drama, and they do it to the hilt.

LAW: Three convicted rapists in South Carolina face a judge's harsh sentence--long prison terms or castration. 108 Theater A Broadway revival of The Glass Menagerie has solid virtues but lacks Tennessee Williams' poetic buoyancy.

MEDICINE: Diabetics are learning a new method of tight control of their blood sugar that may help avoid the disease's often fatal effects.


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