Vol. 130 No. 19
NATION
A No-Frills Summit
After an embarrassing flip-flop, Gorbachev will come to Washington
American Notes LABOR
Solidarity -- And Shelter
American Notes LOUISIANA
Goodbye to Good Times
American Notes POVERTY
The Steady Hold of Hunger
American Notes SPACE
Lift-Off At Last
American Notes TEXAS
Celebrating For Jessica
Evan Mecham, Please Go Home
Arizonans are poised to recall their foot-in-mouth Governor
If At First You Don't Succeed
Reagan picks another conservative for the court -- or so he hopes
The New Kid
A cop is shot at a Texas school
WORLD
Central America Still Gunning for Peace
Remember the Nov. 5 cease-fire deadline? Don't count on it
China Balancing Act
Party reformers and conservatives reach an uneasy compromise
Communism Two Crossroads of Reform
A TIME correspondent takes an intriguing journey through the Soviet Union and China, comparing the substance and pace of the changes that are dramatically transforming the two Communist powers
Human Rights Moscow Cracks the Gates
More Jewish emigrants get the green light -- for now
Kim vs. Kim
(South Korea)
The opposition splits apart
World Notes ETHIOPIA
Let Them Eat Bullets
World Notes IMMIGRATION
Who Killed Mary Poppins?
World Notes THE GULF
Bull Market In Silkworms
World Notes THE PHILIPPINES
Target: Americans
SCIENCE
Putting On Ancient Airs
The Importance of Being Blue
New genetically altered bacteria may lead to safer testing
HEALTH & MEDICINE
Roll Out the Barrel
(Food)
Microbreweries tout flavor and freshness
Strange Trip Back to the Future
(Medicine)
The case of Robert R. spurs new questions about AIDS
SOCIETY
In Massachusetts: Theater Therapy
(American Scene)
RELIGION
Was This Trip Necessary?
A Synod of Bishops rushes to vagueness on the status of women
SPORT
New Formation: Odd Man Out
Some regulars are displaced, but the teams go on
Sight For Sore Ears
ALSO IN THIS ISSUE
Time Magazine Contents Page November 9, 1987
(Contents)
Vol. 130 No. 19
Time Magazine Masthead November 9, 1987
(Masthead)
Vol. 130 No. 19
BUSINESS
A Deficit on the Trail
(The Crash)
Few candidates, so far, show much economic leadership
Caution in The Boardroom
(The Crash)
Companies try to assess the damage from the stock blowout
Cranking Up the Reform Machine
(The Crash)
A welter of investigations ponder new limits on the marketplace
Who's in Charge?
(The Crash)
The nation calls for leadership, and there is no one home
Raiders Retreat -- for Now
(The Crash)
Riding Out the Aftershocks
(The Crash)
A shaken Wall Street struggles to steady its nerves and stage a rally
Risks In Every Direction
(The Crash)
Trimming the deficit will be perilous but unavoidable
Slump At The Sales Window
(The Crash)
The Budget's Sacred Cow
(The Crash)
The Presidency
(The Crash)
The Hands-On Manager
Ups And Downs in the Global Village
(The Crash)
Outside the U.S., the economic shock waves look different
Yapping From The Right
(The Crash)
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Heroism's End? THE MASK OF COMMAND
(Books)
by John Keegan Viking; 368 pages; $18.95
Not Playing It for Laughs
(Video)
From AIDS to the homeless, sitcoms take a turn for the gloomy
Spectral Light, Anxious Dancers
(Art)
In New York, the disquieting visions of Susan Rothenberg
Stagecraft As Soulcraft
(Music)
Nixon, Mao and Chou En-lai meet again -- in Houston
The Empire Strikes Out
(Cinema)
Two films of revolution in South Africa and South London
The Haves and the Have-Mores THE BONFIRE OF THE VANITIES by Tom Wolfe; Farrar, Straus & Giroux; 659 pages; $19.95
(Books)
TO OUR READERS
A Letter From the Publisher
(A Letter From The Publisher)
ESSAY
A Theory of the Panic