Vol. 129 No. 26

NATION

"Not Guilty"
A jury acquits the subway gunman, but the argument goes on

"We Have Reached Breakpoint"
The President and the Democrats square off over the budget

American Notes AIRPORTS
Asleep at The Gate

American Notes ATLANTA
Close Call For The Mayor

American Notes FLORIDA
A Sparrow Falls

American Notes LOS ANGELES
Skid Row Pavilions

American Notes LOUISIANA
Four for The Chair

Keeping Up His Guard
North again refuses to talk

Rough Seas and New Names
Reagan defends his plan to beef up the U.S. presence in the gulf

The Presidency
Deep in the Bear's Den

Yet Another Saudi Connection
Did illegal support go to Angolan rebels as well as contras?

WORLD

"We Have to Be Realistic"

A Symbol of Pride and Concern
Tear gas clouds the Olympics, but the Games will probably go on

Central America Potholes on the Road to Peace
U.S. concerns hamper a plan and delay a regional summit

Under Siege
As unrest spreads, South Korea faces a crisis of Olympic proportions

High Seas They Couldn't Hit a . . . Oops!
An East-West naval engagement takes place off the Baltic coast

Lebanon The Taking of a Journalist
An American television reporter is kidnaped in Beirut

Rebels Without a Pause
Divided but persistent, the opposition awaits its moment

Scenes From a Neighbor
Kingdom North Korea is frozen in time, in ideology and in its prospects

World Notes AUSTRIA
The Prisoner Breaks Out

World Notes FRANCE
The Greatest No-Show Ever

World Notes INDIA
Confirming the Worst Fears

World Notes ITALY
Going for No. 47

World Notes SOVIET UNION
Rust Remover Works Again

SCIENCE

Spectacle Of Cosmic Surprises
New data from an exploding star keep astronomers puzzled

Telltale Wobbles

HEALTH & MEDICINE

Bypass Breakthrough (Medicine)

Stealthy Epidemic of Exhaustion (Medicine)
Doctors are perplexed by the mysterious "yuppie disease"

RELIGION

Coming To Terms with Judaism
U.S. Presbyterians seek friendship but struggle over Israel

Nine Wins In a Row

The Right To Shun

SPORT

Germany Shows a Pair of Aces
Tennis is visiting its past again at Wimbledon and starting to see its future

STYLE & DESIGN

A Go-Ahead for "Bad Manners" (Design)
Washington will get a deliberately disturbing Holocaust museum

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

Time (Contents)
Magazine Contents Page JUNE 29,1987 Vol. 129 No. 26

Time (Masthead)
Magazine Masthead JUNE 29,1987 Vol. 129 No. 26

BUSINESS

All Aboard (Economy & Business)
Greyhound will buy Trailways

Business Notes ENERGY (Economy & Business)
War Jitters For Crude

Business Notes LABOR (Economy & Business)
More Flies in Their Soup?

Business Notes PROFITS (Economy & Business)
"McPaper Has Made It"

Business Notes REGULATION (Economy & Business)
Rookie on Wall Street's Beat

Business Notes TELECOMMUNICATIONS (Economy & Business)
March of the Modem Mavens

Cutting Ties to a Troubled Land (Economy & Business)
The corporate pullout has brought little change to South Africa

Demystifier of The Dismal Science (Economy & Business)
Walter Heller: 1915-1987

Destination: Europe (Economy & Business)
After a year of caution, American tourists are crossing the Atlantic again

Hot Growth in a Cold Market (Economy & Business)
Consumers are slurping up an endless cascade of frozen desserts

Run Silent, Run to Moscow (Economy & Business)
Congress protests the sale of high-tech secrets to the Soviets

LAW

Memories of The Monkey Trial
The Supreme Court reaffirms the barrier between church and state

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Into The Wild, Mystical Yonder ALNILAM (Books)
by James Dickey; Doubleday; 682 pages; $19.95

Leaving Lake Wobegon Garrison (Show Business)
Keillor closes down a unique radio show

MTV Faces a Mid-Life Crisis (Video)
The first music-video channel is trying to recapture the heat

Welcome To Viet Nam, the Movie: II FULL METAL JACKET Directed by Stanley Kubrick Screenplay by Stanley Kubrick, Michael Herr and Gustav Hasford (Cinema)

TO OUR READERS

A Letter From the Publisher (A Letter From The Publisher)

ESSAY

Speech for A High School Graduate