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...AUSTRALIAN ELECTION ANZUS: The U.S. alliance is in top shape, but will it stay that way? EDUCATION: Labor's funding plan gets an F from private schools ENVIRONMENT: The fate of forests has become a burning issue...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Complete list of articles | 10/7/2004 | See Source »

...Prime Minister John Howard and his rival Mark Latham are willing to go to save the forests he's heard much about. Though he likes the Howard government's economic record, MacLulich still hasn't decided who he'll vote for. When he does, he says, the fate of Tasmania's old-growth forests will be as important in his choice as the economy. He's waiting to be swayed. "Most people want to do the right thing, wherever it is," says the restaurateur, "and old-growth forests are a global issue." With several polls showing overwhelming national opposition...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stumping For the Trees | 10/7/2004 | See Source »

...little Italian restaurant, the lacquered mahogany walls of a neighborhood pub. For a moment, I even harked back to the buff, headless mannequins in the window of the old Abercrombie, the plastic smiles of the salespeople who always looked like they just hopped off their surfboards. O cruel, harlot fate! Where was the humanity...

Author: By Jared M. Seeger, | Title: Big Yellow Taxi | 10/7/2004 | See Source »

...troops to Iraq? Kerry is either incredibly naive or misleading his constituency. Charles G. Kormendy Frankfurt The upcoming U.S. presidential election is a matter of interest to the world outside America. Recent events have shown that, under the pretext of the war on terrorism, the President can determine the fate of many smaller countries. The international community realizes the danger of allowing one country unlimited discretion in its foreign policy. For that reason, all Americans have a duty to themselves and the rest of the world to exercise democracy and vote for the best candidate on the basis...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters | 10/5/2004 | See Source »

...fate of one stubborn little village normally wouldn't make much of a splash. But Shishmaref and other Alaskan settlements are attracting national attention because scientists see them as gloomy harbingers. "Shishmaref is the canary in the coal mine--an indicator of what's to come elsewhere," says Gunter Weller, director of the University of Alaska's Cooperative Institute for Arctic Research...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: VANISHING ALASKA | 10/4/2004 | See Source »

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