Table of ContentsBusiness Notes HOUSING My Roof's Got A Hole in It New York Gets a Revolutionary In a surprise, the Philharmonic picks Leipzig's Kurt MasurTwo-Timer A second Pulitzer confirms August Wilson's pre-eminence Business Notes TRADE Ship Me a Pepsi, Please! THE PECKSNIFF AWARD FOR PUBLIC PIETYA Real ''Vision Thing'' Early detection will enable the President to control his glaucomaFear in the First Churches Christianity may be headed for extinction in the lands of its birthTHE ROTO-ROOTER DOWN-THE-DRAIN TROPHYConfucius SaysBetter Late Than Never Bush springs a proposal to ban MIRVed missilesSettling Old Scores, AgainBusiness Notes ARCHITECTURE Dwarfing the Neighborhood? They Made the Pictures TalkBusiness Notes PETROLEUM Cheap Crude By the Gusher Sunbelt Mud Slides While the Democrats brawl, the G.O.P. is rested, ready and richBusiness Notes MARKETING Going Real Far for a Fur He's Back -- in ArizonaCleaning UpSnatching ''Dr. Mengele'' A suspect in a DEA agent's murder is spirited to the U.S.TIME magazine contents page APRIL 23, 1990 Vol. 135, No. 17 ''We Grew Quickly and We Stepped on Toes'' In his first interview since the bankruptcy of Wall Street's Drexel Burnham, company chief Fred Joseph blames the Government and the press for hastening his firm's demiseMortal SinTuna Without The Guilt Canners aim to make the seas safer for cetaceans TIME magazine masthead Vol. 135 No. 17 APRIL 23, 1990 Teen ToughEruptions in the Heartland Who says the Midwest is dull? In two homegrown controversies, Cincinnati is seething over censorship and Milwaukee is bristling at a black revolutionary army BATTLING BLUENOSESEruptions in the Heartland Who says the Midwest is dull? In two homegrown controversies, Cincinnati is seething over censorship and Milwaukee is bristling at a black revolutionary army MCGEE'S MILITIAWhat Makes Giancarlo Run? An inscrutable Italian dealmaker is Hollywood's newest tycoonCocktail with Rum and CyanideWorld Notes INDIA Kashmir Danger Flags American Notes ASSASSINATIONS A Man Who Didn't Hide NIXON Trouble in Lithuania EARTH DAY WILL THE BALLYHOO GO BUST?World Notes IRAQ Saddam Tries Again American Notes INSECTS Here Come The Crickets Volunteer Vice Squad The outcry over tobacco and alcohol marketing reaches a fever pitchCredit to Odgers COVER STORY Late Bloomer Dan Quayle spent much of his life blissfully AWOL from history, a huge handicap even for a faster learner than he has given evidence of beingWorld Notes NEPAL A Taste of Blood Bought Any Good Books Lately? Broccoli and the Hell with It? EARTH DAY ENTERPRISING ECOLOGISTS Who says that what is good for business is bad for the environment? Companies that choose materials wisely and practice recycling < do not have to deplete resources. Entrepreneurs are discovering how to make money by presNew Trench Coats? The cold war may be over, but intelligence agencies are still fighting for bigger budgets as they redeploy forces and shift prioritiesStolen Art Watergate Memoirs NEVER TOO YOUNG Not eager to inherit a mess made by grownups, the next generation is joining the conservation effort. American Notes PRESIDENTS Reagan's Piece Of the Rock American Notes VOICES The ''Miracle'' Of Ryan White EARTH DAY PLANET-SAVING REPORT CARD When TIME named endangered earth Planet of the Year in January 1989, the magazine suggested steps that could help preserve the environment. Most of the ideas carried no timetable, but now is a good time to look at what SOVIET UNION Freedom's Haunting Melody As Georgians ponder which path to take to independence, Gorbachev threatens to turn the economic screws in LithuaniaEARTH DAY GREENING FROM THE ROOTS UP The fanfare masks a quiet revolution: millions of ordinary Americans are leading the environmental movement from their homes and town halls.Big Campus, Big Issues DONNA SHALALA, first woman to head a Big Ten university, tackles professional athletics, alcoholism, and the roles of business and government at WisconsinAll in a Day's Work POLAND Will He or Won't He? Lech Walesa's display of ambition makes Poles wonder if he is the country's savior or spoilerEARTH DAY DEFENDERS OF THE PLANET From around the world, six ''grass-roots heroes'' have been chosen as the first winners of the Goldman Environmental Prize ''for men and women of vision and courage who take great risks for the environment.'' Each will reDieter: A Former Spy's Story EARTH DAY MORE HEROES FOR MOTHER NATURE They may not be household names, but activists from the shores of the Mississippi to the plains of Kenya are making a difference. Confessions of an Ivy League RejectISRAEL Who Was That Bearded Man? An ultra-Orthodox Brooklyn rabbi derails a new government How Mario Blew It Pity PatExpelling The Ghosts of Marx and Lenin Soviet bloc schools embrace freedom and reformThe Ultimate Leap of Faith In bungee madness, life hangs by a threadHeaven's WillPERU Engulfed by ''the Tsunami'' Fujimori comes out of nowhere to challenge Vargas Llosa and force the presidential elections into a runoffTime That Tries His SoulWorld Notes HOSTAGES Waltzing with The Colonel Let's LunchWorld Notes THE PHILIPPINES The Great Escape Divided We RideLOSER OF THE WEEKAmerica Abroad Why Israel Should Thank BushWINNER OF THE WEEK