Vol. 134 No. 21

NATION

A Game of Winks and Nods
Why both sides are downplaying a U.S. payment to Iran

A Nice Guy Finishes First
But Dinkins may not be tough enough to cope with New York

American Notes ALABAMA
Lest We Forget

American Notes HEROES
An Overdue Honor

American Notes IRAN-CONTRA
Secord Makes A Deal

American Notes MISSISSIPPI
Poo-Poo Choo-Choo

American Notes THE NAVY
Payoff for a Shipmate

Blink Or Go Broke
The budget battle nears the bottom line: bankruptcy

Breakthrough In Virginia
In a model of crossover politics, Douglas Wilder becomes the first elected black Governor and shows others how to crash the color line

Prince Edward and the Past
Massive resistance has faded, but something hidden remains

The Losses Keep Mounting
Michael and Kitty Dukakis suffer a nightmare year

White Lies, Bad Polls

WORLD

America Abroad
Washington's Captive Policy

China Advice from a Former President
As Deng Xiaoping makes room for Jiang Zemin, Richard Nixon reflects on his visit to China and argues why it is time for Washington to improve relations with Beijing

Freedom!
The Wall crumbles overnight, Berliners embrace in joy and a stunned world ponders the consequences

Is One Germany Better Than Two?
Western leaders liked to call for reunification when they thought such prayers were in no danger of being answered. Now they must worry about keeping Europe stable

Jordan Bye-Bye Moderates
A ballot surprise for Hussein

The Presidency
Present at the Construction

Wall Of Shame 1961-1989

World Notes BRITAIN
This Tory Won't Tarry

World Notes CANADA
Can a Mountie Be Turbaned?

World Notes INDIA
Battle of the Bricks

World Notes LEBANON
Hell to Chief

World Notes NAMIBIA
Patience and Clenched Fists

HEALTH & MEDICINE

Alzheimer's Rise (Medicine)
The disease may be twice as common as doctors thought

SOCIETY

Should Gays Have Marriage Rights? (Ethics)
On two coasts, the growing debate produces two different answers

RELIGION

Priestless Rites
Catholic bishops okay services led by nuns and lay people

STYLE & DESIGN

A Crazy Building in Columbus (Design)
Peter Eisenman, architecture's bad boy, finally hits his stride

TECHNOLOGY

The Incredible Shrinking Machine
Breakthroughs in miniaturization could lead to robots the size of a flea

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

Teaching Japan to Say No (Ideas)
In a provocative new book, maverick legislator Shintaro Ishihara tells his countrymen to be more assertive

Time Magazine Contents Page (Contents)
Vol. 134, No. 21 NOVEMBER 20, 1989

BUSINESS

Business Notes ADVERTISING
One-Liners and Broken Taboos

Business Notes COST OF LIVING
Land of the Rising Prices

Business Notes DAIRY PRODUCTS
The Herd's Going Dry

Business Notes PERESTROIKA
Coffee, Tea or Camaraderie?

Business Notes POSTAGE STAMPS
Getting Your Last Licks

Grounded, Frustrated and Angry
A three-month strike by Australian pilots paralyzes a continent

Money Angles
Too Much Firepower to Fit the Crime?

Running Low On Gas
Slow car sales and new Japanese "transplants" bring harder times for Detroit's automakers

EDUCATION

Facts Of Life
California sides with Darwin

Shootouts in The Schools
Educators adopt tough tactics to cope with classroom violence

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Canned Soup (Video)
Jackie Mason gets the hook

Critics' Voices (Critics' Voices)

Festive Film Fare for Thanksgiving (Cinema)
With a Mermaid as hostess, Magnolias on the table -- and a turkey called Valmont

Festive Film Fare for Thanksgiving (Cinema)
With a Mermaid as hostess, Magnolias on the table -- and a turkey called Valmont

Festive Film Fare for Thanksgiving (Cinema)
With a Mermaid as hostess, Magnolias on the table -- and a turkey called Valmont

Fresh Faces from Beantown (Music)
Boston's New Kids on the Block lock up the charts

Poet of The Desert (Books)

Round-The-clock Yucks (Video)
Two all-comedy cable networks prepare to square off for viewers

Slice Of Death (Books)

The Whole Town's Talking (Show Business)
Hollywood has a wisecracking, baby-faced sleeper hit

Underdogs (Books)

PEOPLE

From The Tropic of L.A. (Interview)
Novelist and poet KATE BRAVERMAN says Eastern editors think Western writers are chimpanzees, but she sees the world quite differently

TO OUR READERS

From the Managing Editor (From The Managing Editor)

LETTERS

What You Eat