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...ready to settle down, there's One Woman, a quarterly that will faithfully-and exhaustively-show a single dream girl. The sexy subject of One Woman's 96-page premier issue, to be on newsstands for $3.50 next week, is Morgan Fairchild, 33, best known as the bitchy bombshell on TV's Flamingo Road. Six photographers portray Fairchild in relatively modest poses and attire. In a variety of interviews, Fairchild is only slightly more revealing, disclosing that she likes older men and as a youth was a "dumpy little pudgy-faced kid, with white hair...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Oct. 17, 1983 | 10/17/1983 | See Source »

Last week, in the two-year story of Commander Richard Byrd in Antarctica, came his successful flight to inspect some 10,000 square miles of Antarctica in a Fairchild monoplane with Pilot Bernt Balchen. They saw some mountain peaks no one had seen before and decided to name them for John D. Rockefeller Jr., one of the heavy contributors to the expedition's fund...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SCIENCE 1929: Einstein's Field Theory | 10/5/1983 | See Source »

...British Photographer Patrick Lichfield in nearly $1 million worth of diamond, emerald and platinum jewels. The idea for the photos came from Olga Rostropovich, the daughter of Conductor-Cellist Mstislav Rostropovich, who persuaded a gaggle of international beauties to sparkle for Lichfield. Among them: Princess Caroline of Monaco, Morgan Fairchild and Lindsay Wagner. The ice was provided by Harry Winston, whose army of security guards was as vigilant as Patti's Secret Service men. At first, while posing for the pictures in Los Angeles, she appeared to be put down by all that glitter. "Look at my nose...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Sep. 26, 1983 | 9/26/1983 | See Source »

...Meselson makes clear throughout a 30-minute interview in his office at the Fairchild Biochemical Laboratory, he has not yet in the least reached the point of pronouncing guilt on the Russians. His research will go "on the basis of hard fact," he stresses, before breaking off the interview under a deluge of phone calls and impending appointments. The task is now to further analyze the "yellow rain" spots under the microscope as well as other experiments. But Meselson, who at 53 has been a full professor at Harvard since 1964, leaves little doubt about where he thinks the research...

Author: By Michael J. Abramowitz, | Title: Pushing For Proof | 7/26/1983 | See Source »

...issue came to a head early last year, when Fairchild and Intel Corp., another local chipmaker, reported two major leaks in as many months. At the Fairchild plant in San Jose, workers discovered that a faulty storage tank had discharged some 13,000 gal. of a mildly carcinogenic solvent called TCA into the underground water supply. A few weeks later, Intel announced that a concrete vault had leaked, and that traces of a strong carcinogen, TCE, had turned up in a farmer's well near by. Fairchild has spent $10 million cleaning up its spill, and the company steadfastly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Computers: Sounding the Tocsin for Toxins | 7/25/1983 | See Source »

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