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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 3
-
-
- This week's unorthodox choice of Endangered Earth as Planet of
- the Year, in lieu of the usual Man or Woman of the Year, had its
- origin in the scorching summer of 1988, when environmental
- disasters -- droughts, floods, forest fires, polluted beaches --
- dominated the news. By August TIME knew it was no longer enough
- just to describe familiar problems one more time. "The new
- journalistic challenge," says managing editor Henry Muller, "was
- to help find solutions, and that by definition meant international
- solutions." So we invited a distinguished group of scientists,
- administrators and political leaders from five continents to a TIME
- conference charged with producing a tough but realistic action
- program. The conference was organized by Washington correspondent
- Dick Thompson. His proudest coup was to persuade a team of Soviet
- experts to participate. The group was led by Fyodor Morgun, Mikhail
- Gorbachev's hand-picked chairman of the state committee for
- environmental protection.
-
- Even before Thompson's preparations were complete, our editors
- decided that the growing concern about the planet's future had
- become the year's most important story. Thus was born the idea of
- using the conference as the centerpiece of this week's 33-page
- package, which was coordinated by sciences editor Charles
- Alexander. It is not the first time the magazine has recognized
- something other than humans in its Man of the Year issue. In 1982
- it named the computer Machine of the Year.
-
- The Environment Conference was an extraordinary event, set in
- appropriately pristine surroundings: the foothills of Boulder,
- where the Great Plains meet the Rocky Mountains. For three days in
- November, 26 TIME journalists and 33 experts engaged in an
- interchange of ideas that was as freewheeling as it was productive.
- The meetings took place at the National Center for Atmospheric
- Research, whose staff helped plan the agenda. The Soviets were
- particularly open in what they revealed both about their country's
- environmental woes and on a personal level. At one point Thompson
- challenged Morgun to a game of eight ball on a barroom pool table
- in Juanita's, a Mexican restaurant. To his shock, Thompson not only
- got his match, but was soundly beaten.
-
- While a team of writers and researchers worked on the stories
- back in New York City, art director Rudy Hoglund and deputy
- director Arthur Hochstein, who designed the layouts for the entire
- package, faced a difficult problem: how to create a strikingly
- original cover image. Their solution was to approach Christo, the
- famed Bulgarian-born environmental sculptor. In earlier works
- Christo had draped in plastic large sections of the earth -- a
- stretch of Australian coast, a canyon in Colorado -- but never the
- whole planet. This time Christo bundled a 16-in. globe in
- polyethylene and rag rope and drove more than 350 miles up and down
- New York's Long Island in search of the perfect combination of
- light, air and sea for a photograph. The result -- Wrapped Globe
- 1988 -- is a fitting symbol of earth's vulnerability to man's
- reckless ways.