Table of Contents
Table of ContentsA Question of Responsibility Joel Steinberg is guilty, but are others also at fault?TIME magazine contents page Vol. 133 No. 7 FEBRUARY 13, 1989 American Notes POPULATION Headed Downward American Notes GUN CONTROL Strict Liability The Lure of the Classroom Many professionals turn to teaching in midcareerDIPLOMACY Comrades Once More Long bitter rivals, Beijing and Moscow plan the first Sino-Soviet summit in 30 yearsHelp on the Way An AIDS drug is approved American Notes CONGRESS Dangerous Liaison American Notes MUSIC A Secret Song Prime-Time Power Switch Dancing the Night Away Playing a Windy City Serenade American Notes EXPORTS A Deadly Solvent Campus Bigotry Opera Blooms in Brooklyn A bold new venture begins at a house older than the MetPositively Inclined ISRAEL Shamir Molds a Peace Plan But he offers no real concessions to Palestinians Baseball Picks a Pioneer League leader Bill White becomes the game's ranking blackSOVIET UNION Inside The KGB A rare glimpse into the workings of the Soviet secret police Pachyderms' Progress Hyperactive Youngsters World Notes SOVIET UNION Bringing Home The Borscht Diana Makes a Splash More Reason for Hope Than Fear Though the U.S. loses a diplomatic edge as the Soviets and Chinese grow closer, Washington still has much to gain from the new detenteSeniors at the Wheel WEST GERMANY Blitzkrieg by the Ultra-Right Protest votes give xenophobic extremists a strong showingOverriding Concern THE SILVER FOX PARAGUAY The Extinction of a Dinosaur A surprise coup topples Stroessner after a 34-year ruleBRITAIN Hard Cases, Strong Cure Lawyers and doctors face of sweeping new reformsIsraeli View World Notes NICARAGUA Tightening Their Belts World Notes SOUTH AFRICA Heading for The Exit COVER STORY Playing for the Edge Whether stalking turkeys or talking turkey, Jim Baker says, ''the trick is in getting them where you want them, on your terms''World Notes THE PHILIPPINES A Plea to Go Home Towering Troubles Bush's pick for the Pentagon faces questions about his conduct''I Want to Be the President's Man''Pinellas Park, Florida. Freeze-Dried Memories A service for pet owners means never having to say goodbyeBig Steel Is Red Hot Again So why do mills want barriers against foreign competition?TIME magazine masthead Vol. 133 No. 7 FEBRUARY 13, 1989 Tiptoe Through the Tensions Bush and Takeshita try to start out on the right footKing for a Day In a Small Room With a View Hygiene and high-tech make Japan's loos the spiffiest everBuck PassingAn Explosive ReceptionPocketful of Stars Michael Ovitz and his cadre of agents are Hollywood's new power brokersGrapevine Business Notes LITIGATION Closing a Color Gap Workouts for the Eyes Therapies to improve visual performance get mixed reviewsGrapevine Business Notes DEFENSE CONTRACTORS A Whiff Of War Business Notes ADVERTISING CHARACTERS Annoyed with The Noid The Best And Worst Of Warhol A show traces the banality that inspired and undid himThe Presidency ''I'm Staying Right Here''Business Notes BANKRUPTCY Flat Tire For Yugo A Near Tragedy Of Errors Alumni of the Cuban missile crisis review their lessons Master Of His Universe TOM WOLFE, a journalist and novelist with a keen eye for society's foibles, looks back at a decade of greed and foresees a cooling of the national lust for money and licenseEven the Eskimos Froze A record cold wave moves from Alaska to the MidwestThe Games Congress Plays Lawmakers scheme to raise their pay while pretending otherwisePoliticians, Voters and VoltageDan Quayle's Diplomatic Debut In his first foray abroad, he avoids mistakes -- and CommunistsComing: A Historic Experiment Biologists get set for gene transplants into humansGrapevine Business Notes CORPORATE RAIDERS Icahn's $340 Million Payoff
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Feb. 13, 19891989-02-131989-02-13
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