Table of Contents
Table of ContentsThe Queen Stands Trial Greed and corned beef at the Helmsleys' palaceAmerican Notes ROBOTS Meet Manny, One Tough G.I. Why Israel Needs a Gentle Intifadeh VictoryAmerican Notes UTAH Very Heavy Lifting American Notes ILLINOIS Two Times, Too Much Rejoice, Royal WatchersDry PrinceGrapevine Kosher RosterAmerican Notes TRENDS An Ounce of Prevention Mr. WizardGrapevine Grapevine Hot FreebiesO'ER THE LAND OF THE FREE World Notes GREECE For Better Or Worse World Notes HONG KONG Singapore, Here We Come FRANCE Vive la Revolution! A splashy bicentennial erupts in fireworks, parades -- and politics Quayle's Qualities Bismarck's Deadly Career World Notes CUBA No Clemency For a Hero SOUTH AFRICA An Unlikely Tea for Two By meeting with Botha, Mandela gives his blessing to direct talks between his supporters and the governmentTIME magazine contents page Vol. 134 No. 4 JULY 24, 1989 NICARAGUA Decade of Despair The Sandinistas promised a better life but delivered hard timesISRAEL Why Is This Man So Glum? Peres and Shamir part ways over a controversial peace plan Death in Shanghai Business Notes COAL STRIKE First the Calm, Now the Storm Nagging Conclusion Romancing The Roadster Mazda's hot Miata is the sensation of U.S. showroomsTIME magazine masthead Vol. 134 No. 4 JULY 24, 1989 ''Get Up and Walk!'' Argentina's new leader imposes a drastic recovery planHouston, Texas A Slugger and A Dream Experts say George Foreman has a fat chance at best of regaining boxing's heavyweight crown. He thinks otherwiseThat's a Reach, Sir James The raider springs a daring $21 billion bid for B.A.TAIDS Research Photographs by Mapplethorpe One for the Books In rejecting Paramount's challenge to the Time-Warner deal, a judge affirms the right of directors to determine the fate of their companiesWorld Notes FRANCE A ''Mountain Of Sorrow'' Pride of Place Lost and Found At last, Moscow's on the map Washington's Man from Nowhere Who is Craig Spence, and why were all those VIPs at his parties?The Rights of Frozen Embryos Complex, painful dilemmas are raised by in vitro fertilizationA Bizarre and Suspicious Flight After 800 miles, a crash, a swim and a gun woundNews That You Can Choose Time Inc. announces plans to start Entertainment Weekly Trying to Decipher Babel Japanese translating machines make languages less foreignGrapevine Where Were the Media on HUD? Washington journalists missed the scandal when it was breakingCOVER STORY Joe's Bad Trip A TIME investigation of the Exxon Valdez fiasco finds that not only the tanker's captain is to blame for the worst oil spill in U.S. historyRussia's Prophet In Exile ALEKSANDR SOLZHENITSYN publishes the first volume of his epic on the Bolshevik Revolution and gives a rare account of his life in Vermont In his first major American interview since 1979, Solzhenitsyn reflects on his work, his paWe Don't Need Another Heroid The good guys are cyborgs in a pair of summer sequelsHigh-Wire Act On a mission to Poland and Hungary, the President walks a line between pushing reform and making too many promisesBusiness Notes MARKETING The Ultimate Ad Space ''Absolutely an Actor. Born to It'' Laurence Olivier: 1907-1989Business Notes AIRPORTS Freight Goes First Class Jack Be Nimble, Jack Be Quick For Kemp, the mess at HUD is both a hurdle and an opportunityFrom Patrons to Partners Bush's trip shows a changing role for the superpowers in EuropeBusiness Notes COMMODITIES Ferruzzi's Big Pot of Beans The Next Giant Leap for Mankind Two decades after its first moon landing, it is time for the U.S. to head for Mars
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July 24, 19891989-07-241989-07-24
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