Monday, Nov. 28, 1988
Time Magazine Contents Page
30
COVER: Was John Connally the real target in the Kennedy assassination?
Excerpts from a forthcoming book suggest that Lee Harvey Oswald, angry at the downgrading of his Marine discharge, was out to get the Governor of Texas, not J. F. K. -- Twenty- five years after the assassination, the trendy conspiracy theory is that the Mafia used Oswald to stop the Kennedy brothers' war on crime. -- Hugh Sidey recalls the shattering day that started with cheers and ended in mourning.
20
NATION: The markets read George Bush' s lips and send him a message: there' ll be no honeymoon
As the dollar drops and the Dow plunges, the President- elect begins to assemble a team that he hopes can stop the slide. -- Nine sub- Cabinet jobs that will make a real difference on trade, foreign policy and the environment. -- Louisiana' s Bennett Johnston, a leading contender for Senate majority leader, says Bush' s economic plan is "absolute nonsense."
46
WORLD: Nationalist movements in the Baltic republics and Armenia pose dramatic challenges for the Soviet Union
In Estonia, advocates of increased local autonomy risk a collision with Moscow over the limits of mutual sovereignty. In Armenia, anger continues to rise over the status of the ethnic minority in Azerbaijan. -- Benazir Bhutto wins the vote, but will she get to govern Pakistan? -- P. L. O. Chairman Yasser Arafat declares a Palestinian state in the West Bank.
74
BUSINESS: Shocks from a California insurance quake
Voters who approved a rollback in auto premiums may inspire a wider revolt. -- Why Ross Johnson' s overreaching grab for RJR Nabisco infuriates his board of directors.
82
PROFILE: A global media merchant expands his empire
To critics, billionaire publishing baron Robert Maxwell is a capricious, blustering egotist. He is also a cunning entrepreneur who has added Macmillan to his growing U. S. stake.
87
TRAVEL: Death to discounts, say the airlines
Flush with success and growing demand, the major carriers raise their most . popular discount fares. Business travelers took the first hit, but vacationers will suffer as well.
88
PRESS: Who' s in charge of American newsrooms?
Stormy resignations in Atlanta and Boston raise concerns that the traditional division between a newspaper' s business and editorial departments is beginning to blur.
92
CINEMA: Dickens' novels inspire three new films
His works can fit any format: modern comedy (Bill Murray in Scrooged), musical cartoon (the Disney gang' s Oliver & Company) or period piece (Christine Edzard' s daunting six hours of Little Dorrit).
100
HEALTH: Breaking the "can' t do" barrier
With high spirits and high technology, the disabled are proving that they can succeed at virtually every sport, from cycling and scuba diving to rock climbing and rafting.
105
FOOD: Americans can be thankful for a cornucopia of new and tempting cookbooks
Despite restaurant fever and the rage for prepared foods, home cooking appears to be safe in the U. S., as publishers invest in a whole new crop of recipe books. This year' s harvest features American standards, with emphasis shifting from the Southwest to the Pacific Northwest, and the specialties of Asia and the Balkans.
4 Letters
12 Critics' Choice
14 American Scene
79 Science
80 Space
80 Milestones
87 Behavior
90 People
94 Theater
95 Books
Cover: Frame from film by Abraham Zapruder