Vol. 130 No. 15

NATION

A Ten-Second Wake-Up Call
It wasn't the big one, but a 6.1 quake stirs fear in California

American Notes AIR FORCE
"We're Going Down"

American Notes ARIZONA
Return to Sender

American Notes LITERATURE
Gumshoe Lit Crit

American Notes NUCLEAR WEAPONS
Too Close For Comfort

American Notes PROTESTS
Wheelchair Warriors

Did A Dead Man Tell No Tales?
A furor erupts over the disclosures in a book about Bill Casey's CIA

Gone With the Wind
Southern Senators may doom the Bork nomination

Is Eight Enough?

The Dwarfs in Disarray
Michael Dukakis is the latest Democrat to wound himself

The Presidency
For Real Fun, Watch the G.O.P.

Unglad Tidings
Robertson stumbles on kickoff

Vitriol in The Rose Garden
Bork is not the only battle between Reagan and Congress

WORLD

Blood And Ice at 20,000 Ft.

Israel A House Divided
Ultra-Orthodox militants step up their fight to impose religious law

Northern Ireland A Different Kind of Terror
Extremists on both sides now use extortion to fund their war

South Africa The High Cost of Non-Nationhood
Pretoria's artificial homelands are an expensive fiasco

Kim Out, Kim Out, Whoever You Are (South Korea)
Sharing a surname, three candidates challenge Chun's successor

The Gulf Message to Iran
No more business as usual

Tunisia Punishing the Pious
A major trial of fundamentalists ends with lenient sentences

World Notes BRITAIN
Champagne Socialism?

World Notes FIJI
Coup Plus Coup Makes Three

World Notes INDIA
The Bite of the Turtle

World Notes NICARAGUA
Getting Back in Circulation

HEALTH & MEDICINE

"Real Food" Stages a Comeback (Health & Fitness)
A glut of dubious ads touts the merit of natural products

SOCIETY

Back Off, Buddy (Sexes)
A new Hite report stirs up a furor over sex and love in the '80s

Heavy Traffic on the Royal Road (Behavior)
Night-trippers look to dreams for inspiration -- and guidance

In Chicago: Seminars Everywhere (American Scene)

On The Springboard of Notoriety (Ethics)
If cashing in is the American way, what's that queasy feeling?

St.Joe to Fifth Avenue (Sexes)

PRESS

Founding Father

Inside Story
"I'm not going to write any more memos"

Paper Party

What Others Say:

SPORT

Carved Down to A Play-Off
Few In the year of the carpenter, champions out of the woodwork

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

Time (Contents)
Magazine contents page OCTOBER 12, 1987 Vol. 130 No. 15

Time (Masthead)
Magazine masthead OCTOBER 12, 1987 Vol. 130 No. 15

BUSINESS

"My Name Is on the Building" (Economy & Business)
* Henry Ford II: 1917-1987

Boom in The Bust (Economy & Business)
Market Taking stock in bankruptcy

Business Notes EMPLOYMENT (Economy & Business)
Perking Along, Picking Up Jobs

Business Notes LABOR (Economy & Business)
Playing Their Own Tune

Business Notes LEGISLATION (Economy & Business)
The Big Flameout

Business Notes MONEY (Economy & Business)
Giving Gold a Fresh Chance

Business Notes TELEVISION (Economy & Business)
Critics Contest Kidvid Content

Setting A Full Table (Economy & Business)
A new book tells how China's farmers vanquished famine

Shoot-Out At Tech Gap (Economy & Business)
A civil war over export controls rages inside the Administration

The InJustice Of It All (Economy & Business)
Stealing software the easy way

EDUCATION

Iron Curtain Raising on Campus
With glasnost, Soviet studies are popular once again

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

An Autumn Harvest (Music)

An Embarrassing Failure (Video)
CBS cancels its latest breakfast-time flop

Cary Grant, Italian Style (Show Business)
Marcello Mastroianni caps his career with a vibrant new role

Drunk on A World Served Straight (Photography)
MOMA brings out the surrealist in Cartier-Bresson

High-Risk Love in an Alien World SOMEONE TO WATCH OVER ME Directed by Ridley Scott Screenplay by Howard Franklin (Cinema)

Rushes (Cinema)

Songs for The Witching Season (Music)
The Boss's new album takes a deep plunge into dark waters

Twits Atwitter MAURICE (Cinema)
Directed by James Ivory Screenplay by Kit Hesketh-Harvey and James Ivory

TO OUR READERS

A Letter From the Publisher (A Letter From The Publisher)

ESSAY

What Really Mattered