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