Vol. 129 No. 13
NATION
A Transfusion of Fear
Blood recipients are told to consider AIDS testing
American Notes ACID RAIN
Down Payment For Clean Air
American Notes CORRESPONDENCE
The Duke vs. The Gipper
American Notes GUILT
Settling with Uncle Sam
American Notes NEW YORK CITY
A New Day, A New Scandal
American Notes SCAMS
Flights of Fortune
Marathon Man
Dukakis signs up for the race
Prepping The President
Step On It
Congress ups the speed limit
Taking His Own Medicine
The Bill Comes Due for Deaver
The President's former aide is indicted for perjury
Well,He Survived
The reassuring part was not what Reagan said but how he said it
WORLD
Britain Sugar Bowls and Election Fever
A generous Conservative budget foreshadows an early vote
Israel Brothers with Blood in Their Eyes
In Jerusalem, U.S. Jewish leaders wade into the Pollard fray
Nicaragua Coping with The Contras
As Congress wavers, Sandinista confidence grows
Pakistan Knocking at the Nuclear Door
A key ally confirms that his scientists can build the Bomb
The Gulf Life Among the Smoldering Ruins
Iranian firepower turns Basra into an urban wasteland
The Philippines
Sharpening the Swords of War + Communist determination stiffens, and hope for peace dims
World Notes EGYPT
Strange Signs And Portents
World Notes LEBANON
Two Out, 23 To Go
World Notes NORTHERN IRELAND
Dr. Death Goes to Rest
World Notes WEST GERMANY
A New Way Of Thinking
World Notes YUGOSLAVIA
Comrades Take a Walk
HEALTH & MEDICINE
Furry And Feathery Therapists
(Health & Fitness)
Pets are welcome medicine in nursing homes, hospitals and prisons
Gene Of The Week
(Medicine)
Hair-Raising News
(Medicine)
Is "Thucydides Syndrome" Back?
(Medicine)
Toxic shock can be a fatal complication of flu
New Nostril Nostrum
(Health & Fitness)
One
(Food)
Potato, Two Potato . . . No matter how you slice them, chips are in
SOCIETY
In Alaska: Boom Times Yield to a Bitter Bust
(American Scene)
Romantic Porn in the Boudoir
(Sexes)
The VCR revolution produces X-rated films for women (and men)
PRESS
Newswatch
Blaming the Customer
RELIGION
A Really Bad Day at Fort Mill
Evangelist Jim Bakker resigns from his Praise the Lord empire
SPORT
Coming to The
Four with More Of all the promising events, this one delivers the goods
STYLE & DESIGN
An Elegant Sweep Toward Heaven
(Design)
Japan's modernist master architect wins the coveted Pritzker Prize
ALSO IN THIS ISSUE
Time
(Contents)
Magazine Contents Page MARCH 30, 1987 Vol. 129 No. 13
Time
(Masthead)
Magazine Masthead Page MARCH 30, 1987 Vol. 129 No. 13
BUSINESS
Business Notes AIRLINES
(Economy & Business)
A Frequent Non-Flyer Plan
Business Notes COMPENSATION
(Economy & Business)
Tin Parachutes For Little Folk
Business Notes FINANCE
(Economy & Business)
What's a Billion Among Friends
Business Notes MANUFACTURING
(Economy & Business)
The Comeback Of the Beast
Business Notes TOYS
(Economy & Business)
G.I. Joe Meets Star Wars
Cold Feet
(Economy & Business)
Fujitsu drops its Fairchild bid
Lights! Camera! Cut the Budget!
(Economy & Business)
Independent filmmakers are stealing the scene in Hollywood
Serving His Clients All Too Well
(Economy & Business)
Wall Street's spreading scandal fells a prominent trader
Telephones Get Smart
(Economy & Business)
With network intelligence, the old handset has become a computer
The Executive Suite Goes
(Economy & Business)
Traveling Hotels try harder to lure the corporate customer
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Bookends Lovely Me: the Life of Jacqueline Susann
(Books)
by Barbara Seaman Morrow; 480 pages; $18.95
Implications Of Apocalypse
(Books)
Moonlighting on The Edge
(Video)
ABC's classiest hit is also its biggest headache
Party Of One OUT OF STEP: AN UNQUIET LIFE IN THE 20TH CENTURY by Sidney Hook Harper & Row; 629 pages; $29.95
(Books)
Toward The Freight Yards of Fiasco STARLIGHT EXPRESS Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber; Lyrics by Richard Stilgoe
(Theater)
What Makes Seiji Run?
(Music)
At the peak of his career, Ozawa remains a man of two worlds
TO OUR READERS
A Letter From the Publisher
(A Letter From The Publisher)
ESSAY
A Change in the Weather
(Cover)
As Reagan's era recedes, compassion and Government activism regain favor
The Public's Agenda