Vol. 139 No. 11

NATION

American Notes Fraud
What's Up, Doc?

American Notes Law
Choosing Castration

American Notes Politics
No Laughing Matter

American Notes Trials
Tale of The Tape

Bring on the Grownups (Grapevine)

Brother's Helper

Forward Spin (Grapevine)

Maybe He's Not So Bad After All (Grapevine)

Seat-of-the-Pants Politics (Grapevine)

Spookier Than We Thought (Grapevine)

The Challenger What Does Pat Want?
Buchanan has already drawn blood and divided the G.O.P., but he won't be satisfied until the party embraces his arch-conservative agenda

The Democrats Southern Fried Feuding
As Tsongas and Clinton pull ahead, they begin hurling negatives at each other -- and reveal a lot about themselves

The Political Interest
Onward to the Rust Belt

The President Why Is This Man Smiling?
With his campaign in turmoil, Bush not only has little to cheer about but also has no apparent plan to pull himself out of the doldrums

The Spirit of '76

Trials Why Is "Sammy the Bull" Singing?
Copping a plea for 19 murders, a high-ranking Mafia turncoat offers testimony that may finally scrape the Teflon off Gambino boss John Gotti

Vox Pop (Grapevine)

Who Shot J.R.?

WORLD

Diplomacy Is the West Losing Russia?
More than food and financial aid is needed. The reformers must feel that the world is at their side in the struggle for democracy.

France Meddling with the Marseillaise
A proposal to bowdlerize France's barn-burning anthem provokes an indignant Mon Dieu! from traditionalists

Saudi Arabia A Modest Step Forward
King Fahd loosens his grip on the government

Tragedy Massacre in Khojaly
The blood feud between Armenians and Azerbaijanis claims 200 civilians

World Notes Germany
The Right to Get High

World Notes Russia
End of the Party Line?

World Notes Turkey
Underground Morgue

World Notes Yugoslavia
Another Vote To Leave

SCIENCE

Space Program for Sale
Top Russian scientists and hardware that NASA covets are available at bargain-basement prices, but the U.S. government is dragging its heels

HEALTH & MEDICINE

A Medical Accident? (Medicine)
New speculation links polio vaccine to the birth of AIDS

SOCIETY

A Conspiracy of Goodness (Ethics)
Rescuing Jews during World War II took a special kind of heroism: ordinary human compassion

The Hidden Hurdle
Talented black students find that one of the most insidious obstacles to achievement comes from a surprising source: their own peers

PRESS

"Don't Quote Me, But . . ."
A U.S. Senator cries foul to sexual-misconduct charges, but the accusers are not the usual anonymous sources

RELIGION

Christians Spar in Harvard Yard
Does it matter that the campus chaplain is gay? Some conservatives say it does, and he should resign.

TECHNOLOGY

Ding! Whrrrrrrrrrrrr. Crash!
A tiny virus called Michelangelo whips the computer world into a frenzy but in the end creates more hype than havoc

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

Time (Contents)
Magazine contents page Vol. 139 No. 11 MARCH 16, 1992

Time (Masthead)
Magazine masthead VOL. 139 No. 11 MARCH 16, 1992

BUSINESS

Business Notes Marketing
Battle for Young Minds

Business Notes Newspapers
Free Ads for The Asking

Business Notes Settlements
Let's Not Make A Deal Yet

Business Notes Telecommunications
Dial 0 For Robot

Hard Times The Great Energy Bust
More than any previous recession in the U.S. oil and gas industry, this one smells dangerously permanent

Trials A Lawyer's Precipitous Fall from Grace
Harvey Myerson faces as much as 20 years on charges of swindling $3.5 million

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

A Story of Vim and Rigor (Books)

And What a Reign It Was (Television)
In his 30 years, Carson was the best, providing a bedtime blanket of amusing rituals and quirks, and a barometer of the national mood

Midnight's Mayor (Television)
Jay Leno, succeeding Johnny Carson as late-night host to millions, has already won the office of Most Popular Regular Guy in America

Critics' Voices (Critics' Voices)

Doing It Right the Hard Way (Cinema)
The radiant Howards End caps 30 years of Merchant Ivory filmmaking: on the cheap, but with style

Summoning The Glory Days (Cinema)

The Battle to Film Malcolm X (Show Business)
To portray the black hero his way, Spike Lee has taken on rival directors, black activists, the studio and the budget

Two Who Are On Their Way (Theater)
Plays by Howard Korder and Jon Robin Baitz acidly etch how we live now

PEOPLE

In The Brutal World of L.A.'s Toughest Gangs (Interview)
LEON BING spent four years with the Crips and the Bloods to find out why thousands of American teenagers are waging war on one another in the desolate heart of the City of Dreams

TO OUR READERS

From the Publisher (From The Publisher)

ESSAY

We Are Ignoring Our World Role