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These were his fatal mistakes, and he now has two years to convince the city's Black community that he does have qualifications beside the fact that he was Washington's heir apparent. But it may be too late. Barring a complete Daley disaster or enormous change in the voting and registration habits of Chicago's Black populace, Daleys have a nasty habit of staying in office...

Author: By John J. Murphy, | Title: A Chicago-Style Contest | 4/15/1989 | See Source »

...controversial New Yorker articles published last month, Malcom sharply criticized author Joe McGinniss for the methods he used to write Fatal Vision, a book about a military doctor who brutally murdered his pregnant wife and two children one night 20 years...

Author: By Jonathan S. Cohn, | Title: Missing the Point | 4/4/1989 | See Source »

...drawn the blood of both superpowers. The Soviets have already realized that their wounds are too serious to ignore much longer, and seem to have beaten an unwanted but tactical retreat. The United States, while maintaining a vigilant attitude, should now pay attention to its own different wounds--a fatal lack of long-term economic, industrial and human investments--before it is too late. Indeed, it may already...

Author: By Bill Tsingos, | Title: One Cold War, Two Losers | 4/4/1989 | See Source »

...whom was seeking a father figure, the other of whom scorned his client as a masochistic "beat freak." The who in this whodunit is known early in the story. Valin is more interested in precisely what happened and why, in how tenderness turned into a transaction and then to fatal abuse. The hustlers' barren backgrounds, the meat-rack bars where they work, the aging queens who shelter them, all are convincingly evoked in Stoner's impassioned journey of detection...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Going Beyond Brand Names | 4/3/1989 | See Source »

...French parents were distraught and desperate. Soon after their firstborn child died at seven months of a rare form of immune deficiency, they received more heartbreaking news. Their second baby, due in August of last year, was suffering from the same, nearly always fatal hereditary disorder, called bare lymphocyte syndrome. They could have aborted the child or allowed doctors to try the same kind of white-blood-cell transplant after birth that had failed with their firstborn. But the couple, who prefer to remain anonymous, chose a historic third option: to let their child receive the first ever transplant...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: One Womb to Another | 4/3/1989 | See Source »

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