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TITLE: TIME magazine
[The news-magazine of the century, with all the news, features, and vintage ADS! See FULL contents below!]
ISSUE DATE: JANUARY 15, 1990 Vol. 135, No. 3
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8½" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: ANTARCTICA. Is Any Place Safe from Mankind? Noriega: The Chase Ends. Cover: Photograph by Bruno J. Zehnder, NYC.

COVER: Antarctica, long protected by its isolation and unforgiving climate, is threatened by the activities of man Growing crowds of scientists, workers and tourists have put increasing pressure on the frozen land's fragile ecosystems. More ominous are threats of oil drilling and mining. All agree development must be controlled, but squabbling over how may doom earth's last pristine continent.

NATION: Noriega is finally in the cooler. Will he try to put the heat on George Bush? Facing U.S. drug charges, the deposed Panamanian leader could raise embarrassing questions: What did the President know, and when did he know it? - How a wily papal nuncio in Panama City outwitted an unwelcome guest. -A baffling shift in a murder case stirs racial tension in Boston.

WORLD: After the giddy celebrations of freedom, the dull throb of the hangover East Europeans grapple with the sobering task of political, economic and moral reconstruction.Violence in the south and separatism in the north make nationalism one of Moscow's most pressing problems. An Iranian tanker spills nearly twice as much oil as the Exxon Valdez, but the immediate impact on the environment is less dire than that of the Alaska mishap.

BUSINESS: Who's in a boom? Who's in a gloom? In the topsy-turvy U.S. economy, it depends where you live. The Northeast is slumping; the Southwest is resurgent. - Navy agents crack a bid-rigging scheme.

PROFILE: Blue-blood historian Lady Antonia Fraser She fights for dissidents, criticizes Thatcherism and dodges Fleet Street attacks in her activist life with Harold Pinter.

EDUCATION: Check me out a ladder Libraries are enjoying a surprising renaissance and expanding their roles, despite tight municipal budgets and cutbacks in government aid.

SPORT: Who's on first? Only the polls know for sure Notre Dame had the toughest schedule, topped the polls most of the season and won the biggest bowl victory. So, naturally, Miami is declared the champ.

HISTORY: The master spy who failed Who really gave the H-bomb secrets to the Soviet Union? Newly revealed facts about one of the murkiest episodes in U.S. history yield some intriguing answers.

ESSAY: Even Darwin could not explain life's origin California's decision to teach evolution as both fact and theory is a slippery equivocation that alloys science with dogma. But in a sense, we are all creationists.



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