Vol. 138 No. 17

NATION

American Notes Colleges
To Keg or Not to Keg?

American Notes Intelligence
Step One For Gates

American Notes Military
Without Clear Proof

American Notes Scandals
No Apologies This Time

Caution Sometimes Has Its Price (Grapevine)

Crime: Ten Minutes in Hell
In the worst mass murder in U.S. history, a gunman turns a Texas cafe into a killing field, leaving 23 dead

Gosh, Those Uniforms Look Familiar (Grapevine)

How I Bought a Gun in 40 Minutes

No Lessons Learned

Nothing Subtle About These Charges (Grapevine)

Press: When Reporters Make News
After dishing the dirt on Thomas and Hill, journalists have to deal with allegations about themselves

Supreme Court: Woman Power
Outraged over the Thomas confirmation, women vow political revenge. But like civil rights leaders, they face rank-and-file divisions.

The Presidency You Shouldn't Win 'Em All

Thomas Hearings Scorecard (Grapevine)

Vox Pop (Grapevine)

Where Have All the Credit Cards Gone? (Grapevine)

WORLD

America Abroad
How Tout le Monde Missed the Story

Burma Heroine in Chains
The Nobel Peace Prize won by Aung San Suu Kyi, under house arrest since 1989, will not bring her freedom

Did Shamir Give Away Secrets?
Yes, says a new book by an investigative journalist, and they were America's top secrets: nuclear targets

Middle East: Let the Game Begin
A peace conference has been convened, but old antagonisms and new accusations could turn it into a diplomatic marathon -- or a bust

Spinner Of Tangled Yarns

World Notes Bulgaria
Squeeze Play

World Notes European Community
And Now, a Euroarmy

World Notes Poland
Bye-Bye, Stanislaw

World Notes the Philippines
A Bit of Yanky Panky

HEALTH & MEDICINE

Cancer From Germs (Health)
A stomach bug is linked to gastric tumors and ulcers

Danger in The Speed Trap (Health)
Are state troopers getting cancer from radar guns?

SOCIETY

When Can Memories Be Trusted? (Behavior)
The remembrance of things past can be a mysterious process, with realities and myths blending into a vivid picture

SPORT

The Last Shall Be First
A happy blend of whiz kids and free agents help Minnesota and Atlanta vault from the cellar to the World Series

STYLE & DESIGN

Saying No to Yo Heave Ho (Design)
A novel prototype takes much of the backache, barked knuckles and manpower out of traditional sailing

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

Cinema (View Points)
Seduction on Canvas

Cinema (View Points)
Speak Up, We Can't Hear You

Music (View Points)
The Bells Ring Now, Tony

Opera: Wagner in Slo-Mo (View Points)

Television No Hits but Plenty of Bobbles (View Points)

Time Magazine Contents Page (Contents)
Vol. 138 No. 17 OCTOBER 28, 1991

Time Magazine Masthead (Masthead)
Vol. 138 No. 17 OCTOBER 28, 1991

BUSINESS

A Mysterious Mover of Money and Planes

Business Notes Charity
Writing Off The Weapons

Business Notes Entertainment
After the Star Is Gone

Business Notes Regulation
Take That, John Sununu!

Business Notes Software
Will You Program Me?

Business Notes the Economy
It's Stuck In Neutral

Global Intrigue: The Wackiest Rig in Texas
When Bahrain's rulers awarded a high-stakes oil deal to shaky Harken Energy, were they also trying to win favors from the White House?

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

A Ruthless Raider's Romance (Cinema)
OTHER PEOPLE'S MONEY Directed by Norman Jewison; Screenplay by Alvin Sargent

Asia's Hot New STAR (Television)
The BBC takes aim at CNN on a satellite-TV service

Candy Box (Theater)

Listen to The Lion (Music)
Even with a masterly new album, will Ireland's eccentric Van Morrison gain the success he has long deserved?

Mocking The Ethnic Beast (Show Business)
A sizzling young comedian draws on his roots to lampoon Latin stereotypes, but some Hispanics aren't laughing

Southern Pine (Books)

The Art Of Memory (Books)

Uneasy Riders (Books)

Wallowing in The Mass Media Sea (Art)
Brash and accessible, the Pop style revolutionized the art world, for better or worse -- but what was its lasting value? A big London show suggests some answers.

PEOPLE

The Man Who Fired a Dog To Save a Buck (Interview)
Tired of cramped seats in planes? Angry at rising fares? American Airlines chairman ROBERT CRANDALL argues that you are still better off in the deregulated skies.

TO OUR READERS

From the Publisher (From The Publisher)

ESSAY

Truths In The Ruins