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TITLE: NEWSWEEK
[Vintage News-week magazine, with all the news, features, photographs and vintage ADS!]
ISSUE DATE: JULY 17, 1989; Volume CXIV, No. 3
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: The future of ABORTION. In America: New restrictions: How tough will the states get? A dilemma for Doctors. The War within the court. Cover: Photo by Antonin Kratochvil.

TOP OF THE WEEK [Major Top Stories]:
AROUND THE BLOC: When George Bush visits Poland and Hungary this week, he will get a glimpse of two nations undergoing rapid and unsettling change. Mikhail Gorbachev's reforms have sent Moscow's European satellites swinging out of orbit. What may one day emerge is a Central European region dominated by neither East nor West. International: Page 30.

THE FUTURE OF ABORTION: A bitterly divided Supreme Court handed down its long-awaited abortion ruling last week, upholding the constitutionality of a Missouri law that put restrictions on abortion. Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 decision that established a woman's right to abortion, was still the law of the land, but it had been narrowed. Now the debate shifts to the political arena: legislature by legislature, law by law, clause by clause, partisans on both sides of the issue will struggle for control of the future of abortion in this country. Pro-choice and anti-abortion protesters greet the court's decision last week. National Affairs: Page 14.

ZOOS GO BACK TO NATURE: Zoos traded barred cages for realistic-looking enclosures years ago. But now they're doing more than make the exhibits look natural. Many are adding sounds, lights, even weather, to simulate the wild. The efforts are paying off. The zoos are fostering natural behavior and long-lost survival skills in their animals. Science: Page 58.

[FULL NEWSWEEK LISTINGS]:
NATIONAL AFFAIRS:
THE FUTURE OF ABORTION IN AMERICA (THE COVER).
How tough will the states get?.
The new political rules.
The state-by-state outlook.
A dilemma for doctors.
The hazards of do-it-yourself abortion.
The war within the court.
A slap on the wrist for Ollie North.
Trying to stop, Jesse, stop.
INTERNATIONAL:
A bloc turned upside down.
East Europe's best and worst.
Power sharing in Poland.
Israel: "The word for today is revenge.
A party in Pyongyang.
Mexican opposition PANS out.
Turnaround in Afghanistan.

BUSINESS:
What you won't hear in Paris.
A "soft landing" or a slump?.
Weekend hackers, take heart.
The case of the singing CPA.
Jane Bryant Quinn.
My Turn: Dan Rather.
George F. Will.

LIFESTYLE:
Television: Talking people into talking.
Design: That chair has arms.
Sports: The end of a fairy tale.
Fashion: The Who's Who of hues.
Family: Homosexual families and the law.

THE ARTS:
Theater Starry starry "Night".
Movies:
"Licence to Kill".
"When Harry Met Sally...".
Gibson and Glover return.
Books: Living out a fantasy.
First loves, first guides.
SOCIETY:
Science: Wilder places for wild things at the zoos.
Education: The great British brain drain.
Technology: Phantom computer of the cockpit.
Environment: Asbestos: the long goodbye.


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