Vol. 134 No. 2
NATION
American Notes ACADEME
Old Bones, New Fight
American Notes NEW MEXICO
Banning a BATmobile
American Notes TEXAS
"Please Don't Die, Tree"
American Notes WASHINGTON
Doing Time for No Crime
Why Pick on Pete?
Charlie Hustle has become the symbol of America's tolerance of gambling -- and the cost of an obsession
Living Life by the Numbers
Still At Loggerheads
Oregon's lumberjacks vs. tree huggers
The Moscow Bug Hunt
After a two-year investigation, U.S. security experts are convinced that Marine guards did not let Soviet spies put taps in the embassy
The Presidency
Hitting the Right Chords
The States Like the Odds
What Price Old Glory?
To protect the flag, Bush calls for an amendment
WORLD
A Call to Arms
China Rise of a Perfect Apparatchik
Deng asserts his authority with a surprise party appointment
Cuba Reading the Coca Leaves
A drug case ensnares top officials and raises questions about what Castro is up to
Eastern Europe A Freer, but Messier, Order In Poland and Hungary, George Bush will confront Communism in flux
High Seas Danger!
Soviet Subs at Work Why Moscow's underwater fleet is so prone to disaster
Japan An Affair to Remember
In the wake of a scandal, Prime Minister Uno runs scared
Soviet Union The Odd Case of M. Orlov
A defector who dies in Moscow turns out to be a spy
Sudan An Early-Morning Coup
Officers topple the unpopular civilian Prime Minister
World Notes GREECE
Three Months And Counting
World Notes MEXICO
The Plot Thickens
World Notes SOUTH AFRICA
New Chapter, Old Verse
World Notes SOVIET UNION
That Rejected Feeling
World Notes THE PHILIPPINES
Slaughter in The Chapel
SCIENCE
Putting The Heat on Japan
(Environment)
Accused of ravaging the world's forests and seas, Tokyo starts to clean up its act
HEALTH & MEDICINE
Drugs From The Underground
(Medicine)
AIDS patients are demanding -- and getting -- unproven potions
SOCIETY
Is The Gay Revolution a Flop?
(Behavior)
A new book urges homosexuals to tone down and blend in
Pennington, New Jersey
(American Scene)
Sweating And Sharing For some women, aerobics provides more than a workout
PRESS
Is It Right to Publish Rumors?
In an age of dirty politics, alas, mudslinging is part of the story
RELIGION
Black Catholics vs. the Church
Disputes in two U.S. cities dramatize a widening rift
STYLE & DESIGN
A Grand Folly in Ottawa
(Design)
Canada's newest museum is costly, controversial and curious
ALSO IN THIS ISSUE
Time
(Contents)
Magazine contents page Vol. 134 No. 2 JULY 10, 1989
Time
(Masthead)
Magazine masthead Vol. 134 No. 2 JULY 10, 1989
BUSINESS
A Raider's Days Of Reckoning
Nearly everybody wants a crack at Paul Bilzerian
Business Notes COMIC BOOKS
Swamp Thing's Quagmire
Business Notes CORPORATE MOVES
Bright Lights, Big Exodus
Business Notes INVESTMENT
GAP Running Up a Global Tab
Business Notes NOSTALGIA
Quick, Name That Jingle!
Business Notes THE ECONOMY
Headed for a Hard Landing?
Heading for D-Day In Delaware
A judge will soon decide whether Time Inc. is up for sale
T. Boone's Tokyo Campaign
The Texas tycoon is rebuffed but scores points back home
The Eyes Gotta Have
It A hip Los Angeles company, Oliver Peoples, smartens up specs
Tokyo Answers the Call
Facing U.S. sanctions, Japan opens its mobile-phone market
Whose Mess Is It?
In the gooey aftermath of three spills, Congress is putting pressure on Big Oil to prevent accidents and do a better job of cleaning them up
LAW
Bad News for Death Row
The court okays the execution of teenage and retarded criminals
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Battling The Myths and Dogma
(Books)
Born Witness
(Books)
Laser Instinct
(Books)
Whole Lotta Irony Goin' On
(Cinema)
PEOPLE
Wanderer Of Endless Curiosity
(Profile)
A self-made man of many parts, the Trinidad-born and Oxford-bred writer V.S. NAIPAUL mirrors a world in constant social flux
TO OUR READERS
From the Publisher
(From The Publisher)
ESSAY
Walking on The Wild Side