Vol. 134 No. 20

NATION

A Pay Hike for the Poor
But the minimum-wage increase may not help low-paid workers

American Notes CONGRESS
A Break for Ollie North

American Notes PROTESTS
More Fuel for The Fire

American Notes STRIKES
Passing the Top Hat

American Notes THE DEFICIT
No Gains, So Pains

American Notes THE NAVY
Cruising for A Bruising

Californians Keep Out!
A wave of transplants from the Golden State touches off a backlash in Seattle

Grapevine

Grapevine

Grapevine

Grapevine

Hard Words To Hard-Liners
Nixon delivers blunt advice to China's leaders

It Rhymes with Malta

The Saltwater Summit
Bush's agreement to meet Gorbachev off Malta marks an overdue shift; now the U.S. wants to prop up a Soviet leader

WORLD

After The Wall

East Germany: No Longer If But When
As thousands more flee, Krenz struggles to save his socialist state, but the tide of change may push it inexorably toward Bonn

If Not the Sandinistas . . .

India Puppies and Consumer Boomers
A brash new middle class is stirring up social revolution

Nicaragua Playing Politics with Peace
Headed toward elections, Ortega blows his cool

The Presidency
"I Felt I Had to Draw the Line"

World Notes BRAZIL
Now, He-e-re's Silvio!

World Notes HISTORY
Judgment On Katyn

World Notes NAMIBIA
Disinformation Or Hoax?

World Notes NUTRITION
Man Wants To Bite Dog

SCIENCE

Oldest Dinosaur
A stunning discovery provides clues to the course of evolution

The Chernobyl Cover-Up (Environment)
Are Soviet officials still concealing the truth about the disaster?

Tritium Puzzle
An H-bomb ingredient is gone, and no one knows where

HEALTH & MEDICINE

Take A Walk -- and Live (Health)
A new study says even mild exercise can postpone death

SOCIETY

American Casual Seizes Japan (Living)
Teenagers go for N.F.L. hats, Batman and the California look

New York City (American Scene)
A Place to Be Somebody At Harvey Milk School, gays and lesbians are the norm

PRESS

Final Edition
Red ink stops the presses at the L.A. Herald Examiner

The Deadliest Beat
For Colombian journalists, covering the drug story can be fatal

RELIGION

The Battle over Gay Clergy
Demands for toleration shake many North American churches

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

How The Earth Maintains Life (Ideas)
An intriguing scientific theory continues to win adherents

Time Magazine Contents Page (Contents)
Vol. 134, No. 20 NOVEMBER 13, 1989

Time Magazine Masthead (Masthead)
Vol. 134, No. 20 NOVEMBER 13, 1989

BUSINESS

Business Notes CIGARETTES
Not Out of the Picture Yet

Business Notes COMPETITION
No Dumping At Home

Business Notes COSMETICS
Smog Screen For the Skin

Business Notes PUBLISHING
He Hates Long Goodbyes

Business Notes WALL STREET
Taking the Pledge, Again

Ford's Sporty New Number

Special Report: The Quest For Quality
In U.S. Goods Making It Better Rising to Japan's challenge, many American companies are toiling zealously to improve the design and craftsmanship of their products

Sure, We'll Take Manhattan
A Japanese firm invests in a gem: Rockefeller Center

The Supply-Side Scourge
Cocaine is so abundant that interdiction fails to affect prices

EDUCATION

The Redshirt Solution
For some children, delaying kindergarten is the right choice

LAW

Cops On Camera
A TV network beams crime tips to the precinct house

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Back In Time (Books)

"Let's Get Busy!!" (Video)
Hip and hot, talk host Arsenio Hall is grabbing the post-Carson generation

Critics' Voices (Critics' Voices)

Downbeat Duo (Theater)

King Ken Comes to Conquer (Cinema)
A brash British star turns Henry V into an antiwar war movie

Rhinoceroses in The Living Room (Books)
Chris Van Allsburg taps into children's sense of mystery

Suburban Sleep (Books)

SPECIAL SECTION

A Texas-Size L.B.J. Obsession (History)
Robert Caro, 14 years into his biography, traces a web of deceit

Reinventing The Train (Travel)
Overnight luxe rules on a run between Chicago and Washington

PEOPLE

A Soldier Talks Peace Marshal (Interview)
SERGEI AKHROMEYEV, Gorbachev's top military adviser, speaks frankly about his nation's troubles and signals a desire for an even faster pace toward disarmament

TO OUR READERS

From the Publisher (From The Publisher)

ESSAY

Heroes, Bears and True Baloney