Monday, May. 18, 1992
Time
18
THE WEEK
40
COVER: A Conviction to Die
If Roger Keith Coleman is electrocuted next week, the system, now less responsive to appeals, will have failed him
28
THE TWO AMERICAS: Playing by Suburbia's Rules
+ Why are the cities desperate? The middle class has left town
35
THE CAMPAIGN: Dueling Images
The race to control the memories of Los Angeles has begun
37
THE ADMINISTRATION: Its Bleeding Hearts
A call by some Bush aides for free-market aid to the poor
38
THE AFTERMATH: Lessons of L.A.
Why police were unprepared to quell the ghetto's rage
50
GERMANY: Well Paid, Well Fed but Angry
Even Europe's most successful country can get the blues
54
AMERICA ABROAD: Uncle Sam as Globocop
But will the U.S. follow when the U.N. leads?
57
INTERVIEW: Life After Hell
Terry Andersen talks of politics, torture and forgiveness
60
BUSINESS: Proud to Be Bankrupt
Chapter 11 has lost its stigma, but is it being misused?
62
RELIGION: New England's Hottest Church
Recruits flock in, but critics call it an autocratic cult
66
SPORT: Sun, Sea and Software
High-tech seamanship in the quest for America's Cup
68
MEDICINE: Reach Out and Cure Somebody
Advances in telemedicine bring top-notch care anywhere
69
TECHNOLOGY: Read a Good PowerBook Lately?
Publishers are betting readers will buy words without paper
70
CINEMA: Many Scripts, One Legend
Summer films: sequels, stars -- and maybe a sleeper smash; Marlene Dietrich: an appreciation of mystery undimmed
TELEVISION Comedian George Carlin: appalling, invaluable 73
MUSIC The Beastie Boys grow up -- sort of 76
THEATER A charming, old-fashioned musical in Washington 78
CINEMA Night on Earth goes nowhere, slowly 78
BOOKS Margaret Drabble bravely portrays the way we live 79
SHORT TAKES Nureyev debuts as a conductor 81
PUBLISHER'S LETTER 4
LETTERS 8
GRAPEVINE 17
MILESTONES 26
PEOPLE 83
ESSAY 84
Cover: Photograph for TIME by David Burnett -- Contact; Press Images