Vol. 137 No. 6

NATION

A Betty Grable For the '90s (Grapevine)

A Burst of Firsts (Grapevine)

A Graduation Gift From Uncle Sam (Grapevine)

His Successor? Probably a Kinsman (Grapevine)

Is Saddam Cracking Up? (Grapevine)

Keeping Their Traits on Ice (Grapevine)

No Creeps Allowed In This Campaign (Grapevine)

WORLD

Murder And Mayhem
Mayhem

South Africa: The Twilight Of Apartheid
De Klerk moves to sweep away the last legal pillars of racial inequality

Soviet Union: New World Order? Or Law And Order?
Reformers fear that a crackdown on street crime and business fraud heralds more repressive moves

World Notes
CANADA: Take It or Leave It

World Notes
ECONOMIES: Prescribing Shock Therapy

World Notes
GERMANY: Fall of The Mighty

World Notes
SOMALIA: The Price Of Victory

WAR & TERRORISM

America Abroad (The Gulf War)
The Villain's Advantage

Environment: Dead Sea in the Making (The Gulf War)
A fragile ecosystem brimming with life is headed for destruction

Iran: The Not So Innocent Bystander (The Gulf War)
By agreeing to park Iraq's planes, Tehran is positioning itself to play a stronger role in postwar gulf politics

Islam's Idea of "Holy War" (The Gulf War)

Leadership: The Man Behind A Demonic Image (The Gulf War)
To fathom the cruel complexities of Saddam, one must explore the world and the anger that shaped him

Strategy: Saddam's Deadly Trap (The Gulf War)
With his planes and troops outclassed, he is trying to score a political victory by luring the allies into bloody trench fighting

The Allies: Good Riddance To Arms (The Gulf War)
Why two economic superpowers, Germany and Japan, are such reluctant warriors

The Arsenal: Who Armed Baghdad (The Gulf War)
Almost every nation with weaponry to sell did, including America's allies. Even worse, the purchases were funded by Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.

The Battlefront: Combat In the Sand (The Gulf War)
The allies repel Baghdad's attempt to start the ground war and claim supremacy in the air

The Home Front: Land That They Love (The Gulf War)
Patriotism and its symbols dominate the debate over the gulf war as both sides emphasize concern for the soldiers and for the fate of the nation

The Moral Debate: A Just Conflict, or Just a Conflict? (The Gulf War)
George Bush invokes a long-standing Christian doctrine to defend his military action against Saddam

The Presidency (The Gulf War)
George Was There

The State of the Union: So Who's Minding The Store? (The Gulf War)
Bush gets big applause with his inspiring war rhetoric. But domestically, is he embracing deja voodoo economics all over again?

SOCIETY

Lost In America (Behavior)
For Vietnam vets hunkered down in the jungles of Hawaii, the war never came to an end

PRESS

How Dailies Cover a TV War
After a slow start, newspapers play catch-up with fresh angles, skeptical analysis and a blizzard of lively graphics

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

Time Magazine Contents Page (Contents)
Vol. 137, No. 6 FEBRUARY 11, 1991

Time Magazine Masthead (Masthead)
Vol. 137, No. 6 FEBRUARY 11, 1991

BUSINESS

"If You're Going to Do a Party, Do It Right!"

BANKING: Is It Broke Yet? (Business Notes)

STYLE: Where Surf Meets Rap (Business Notes)

TAXES: The Ballad of Willie's Woes (Business Notes)

THE ECONOMY O.K., O.K., We Give In! (Business Notes)

TOYS G.I. Joe Lands On Boardwalk (Business Notes)

Small Wonders
Burned by big-star salaries and fancy productions, Hollywood suddenly sees a hitmaking formula in films that are warm, playful and cheap to make

Where Do They Go from Here?
Before it's over, the recession is likely to put as many as 2 million people out of work. And benefits are running low.

EDUCATION

Our Student-Back Guarantee
High schools are starting to offer warranties on their graduates

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Critics' Voices (Critics' Voices)

Hard-Luck Guy: THE GRIFTERS (Cinema)
Directed by Stephen Frears

Hats Off to A Genius! (Music)
Worldwide, the Mozart bicentennial offers mostly the most

New Thrills for Pretty Woman (Cinema)
Sleeping With the Enemy

PEOPLE

On The Mistakes Of War (Interview)
ROBERT MCNAMARA, architect of the Vietnam War, talks about the Persian Gulf conflict -- and, for the first time, about the one he can't forget

TO OUR READERS

From the Managing Editor (From The Managing Editor)

ESSAY

Apocalypse Now?