Vol. 139 No. 22

COVER

Summit to Save the Earth the World's Next Trouble Spots and Report Cards for Major Countries on . . .
Carbon Emissions Population Growth Safe Drinking Water Protected Lands

Summit to Save the Earth the Big Green Payoff
Who says what's good for the environment is bad for the economy? From electric cars to solar cells, products that protect the planet will earn hefty profits in the future.

Summit to Save the Earth Sideshows Galore
Summiteers who find the official speeches a snooze can skip out for some rousing rhetoric, tribal wisdom and a festival of the arts. Here's a sampler.

Summit to Save the Earth the Negotiations Scoreboard

Summit to Save the Earth
Population: The Uninvited Guest

Summit to Save the Earth Rich Vs. Poor
North and South will meet in Rio to confront the planet's most pressing ills. The event could change the world -- or be a disaster of global proportions.

Summit to Save the Earth

NATION

Banished by the Queen? (Grapevine)

Dan Quayle vs. Murphy Brown (The Week: Nation)
The Vice President takes on a TV character over "family values"

Et Cetera (The Week: Nation)
The Shredder, Please

Forward Spin (Grapevine)

Frantic Final Hours (The Week: Nation)
A convicted killer dies amid claims of innocence and cries of indignation

Giving Away the Weapons Store (National Security)
The proposed sale of a troubled defense contractor to the French triggers an argument over America's security needs

Not The Grassy Knoll? (The Week: Nation)
A 28-year-old postmortem offers fresh evidence on J.F.K.

Ours Is Better Than Yours (Grapevine)

Tempting The Truth Squad (Grapevine)

That Could Buy a Lot of Pamphlets (Grapevine)

The Blame Game (Grapevine)

The Politics of Cells (The Week: Nation)
Bush tries to fend off his first veto override, on fetal-tissue research

Virtual-Reality (The Week: Nation)
Politics In the Northwest, Perot wins hearts even while Clinton and Bush win votes

Vox Pop (Grapevine)

WORLD

Against All Odds (The Week World)
Calm weather and abject despair drive Haitians back into the sea

China's Smoke Signal (The Week World)
An underground nuclear blast tells the world where to go

Et Cetera (The Week World)
Documented Slaughter

Et Cetera (The Week World)
Unfriendly Fire

Growing Pains (Thailand)
Why the burgeoning middle class in a prosperous Asian country rose up to insist that a flawed democracy was better than military rule

In From The Cold (The Week World)
Always aloof, Switzerland moves closer to its European partners

It's Falling (Really!) (The Week World)
The Leaning Tower of Pisa gets a steel girdle to hold it up

The "Last" Nazi (The Week World)

The King and Them (The Week World)
Thailand's monarch forces an ending to his country's bloody confrontation

Up Against the Border (The Week World)
Ethnic strife in the former Soviet Union threatens to involve Turkey

HEALTH & MEDICINE

Kicking The Habit (The Week Health & Science)
Smoking is at a record low in the U.S., but worldwide deaths are still rising

They Just Don't UNDERSTAND (Health)
A maverick gynecologist argues that male physicians are poorly equipped to care for female patients

SOCIETY

The Tomb of Queen Nefertari (Culture)
Mummy Dearest Damaged by humidity and humanity, the wall paintings memorializing the favorite wife of King Ramses II are gloriously restored

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

America Abroad
The Serbian Death Wish

But Seriously, Folks . . .
Dan Quayle's wacky attack on TV's Murphy Brown obscures a serious discussion about motherhood, morality and government's responsibility

The 34% Solution
Faced with the Perot challenge and a rejiggered electoral map, Bush and Clinton abandon the center to shore up their traditional bases

The Political Interest
Straight Talk About Race

Time Magazine Contents (Contents)
Page June 1, 1992 Volume 139 No. 22

Where Fathers and Mothers Know Best
Despite Quayle's complaint, television is filled with families who may have faults but at least stick together

Why Quayle Has Half a Point

BUSINESS

A Thirst for Competition
Gatorade, the long-reigning champ of the billion-dollar sports-drink field, braces for a big-league challenge from Coke, Pepsi and other contenders

Et Cetera (The Week: Business)
Salomon's Fine

Once More, With Backing (The Week: Business)
U.S. auto executives and their Japanese counterparts face off

Paper Profits (The Week: Business)
GM sets a new sales record, but it's not in the showroom

Underground Partners (The Week: Business)
An American giant stakes out a big oil position in Kazakhstan

LAW

You Don't Always Get Perry Mason
As Coleman goes to the chair, questions remain about his case -- and the quality of court-appointed legal defenders

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

And One for the Road (The Week Arts & Entertainment)
After a week's worth of tributes, Johnny Carson says his last good-night

And Then She Was Nun (Reviews Cinema)

Dancing Till They Drop (Reviews Theater)

Delightful, De-Lovely (Reviews Music)

Onward And Yupward (Reviews Books)

Pet Tricks (Reviews Books)

Reviews Short Takes (Reviews Short Takes)

Rite Of Spring (The Week Arts & Entertainment)
The 45th annual Cannes film festival yields few surprises

The Week Arts & Entertainment (The Week Arts & Entertainment)

The World's Worst Director (Cinema)
Edward D. Wood Jr.'s '50s films are stupefyingly inept -- and so much more

MISCELLANY

Teacher's Pets (The Week Miscellany)

What's Up, Doc? (The Week Miscellany)

TO OUR READERS

From the Publisher (From The Publisher)

ESSAY

In Defense of Good Intentions