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...unbelievable," declared a Pentagon official. "We'd never allow something like that to happen here." He referred to the astonishing Soviet decision to let three Democratic Congressmen prowl for four hours through the secret radar facility near Krasnoyarsk in Siberia. The Kremlin permitted the lawmakers and a few aides to snap 1,000 photographs inside the facility, which has been the focus of U.S. charges that the Soviets are violating the 1972 treaty limiting antiballistic missile systems. Predictably, the visit served to intensify debate in Washington about Soviet intentions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: . . . And I'll Show You Mine | 9/21/1987 | See Source »

...mother, a distinguished historian, spent nearly two decades in labor camps and Siberian exile during the Stalin years. He was raised in provincial Kazan by an aunt, completed medical school in Leningrad and became a popular though officially censured novelist. The Burn, his fictional account of Stalin-era Siberia, was published abroad in 1980. For that offense he was stripped of his Soviet citizenship while traveling in the U.S. and found himself stranded there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Silver Lining IN SEARCH OF MELANCHOLY BABY | 8/31/1987 | See Source »

...Wyeth," which has such a vast following in America and has lately acquired a smaller one in the Soviet Union, no doubt because his version of American landscape (bare birches, patches of snow, brown stubble, rocks and iced-up puddles, all under a white sky) looks so like Siberia. To gauge how the roots of his imagination go, one need only compare his painting of the nude Helga with a black ribbon round her neck, face averted, floating in a soup of dark shadow, with the work on which it is based: Manet's Olympia. There...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Too Much of a Medium-Good Thing | 6/1/1987 | See Source »

...topped 3.5 million in sales. Birders account for most of the $14 billion spent annually on the appreciation of wildlife. That includes binoculars, spotting scopes, cameras, records and tapes of bird sounds, computerized software for keeping bird lists, and bird tours that reach any corner of the world, from Siberia and Mongolia (23 days, $3,595 from Wings, Inc.) to Madagascar, Mauritius and Reunion (25 days, $3,775 from Field Guides Inc.). Though some birders regard their hobby as a naturalist rejection of high-tech culture, the rebuke often requires frequent jet trips, Leitz 10 x 40-B Trinovid field...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: All That Jizz | 5/25/1987 | See Source »

...lampshades: "The inspectors will be poking around all the time. It will be a nightmare." Some entrepreneurs suffer an even worse nightmare. "Look at all the people who got rich during NEP," said a young artisan who makes and sells earrings. "A few years later they were | exiled to Siberia. You never know what's going to happen here...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Soviet Union Inching Down the Capitalist Road | 5/4/1987 | See Source »

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