Vol. 134 No. 24

WORLD

America Abroad (East-West)
Reciprocity at Last

Anatomy of A Purge (East-West)
In an exclusive account of Jakes's ouster, TIME reveals how the Czechoslovak party chief double-crossed Gorbachev and lost

Cat And Mouse in the Casbah

Central America No Place to Hide
Now armed with missiles, the rebels bring the war to the wealthy and increase tensions between San Salvador and Managua

Turning Visions Into Reality (East-West)
In the stormy Mediterranean, George Bush gives Mikhail Gorbachev his proposals for changing from cold war to cooperation. But will events outstrip the two leaders' ability to shape the future?

Finis for The Master Terrorist?
After 15 years of bombs and bloodshed, Abu Nidal is said to be ill and his organization rapidly disintegrating

Gorbachev, God and Socialism (East-West)

India The Fall of the House of Nehru
For only the second time since independence, the electorate votes the Congress Party out of power

Kohl Takes On Topic A (East-West)
By unveiling a scheme for the "confederation" of the two Germanys, he pushes a delicate issue to the fore

Middle East Still Stuck in the Stone Age
As the Palestinian uprising enters its third year, both sides have reason to mourn

Switzerland The Swiss Army Gets Knifed
Once a revered institution, the militia suffers flesh wounds as the country's citizens reassess its role

Terrorism Target for the Red Army Faction
A moribund group roars back by killing "The Lord of Money"

The Conscience of Prague (East-West)

The Philippines Soldier Power
Relying on U.S. assistance to battle the worst threat yet to her government, Corazon Aquino clings precariously to her post

The Presidency (East-West)
Talk of Peace, Tools of War

What Have You Done for Us Lately? (East-West)
As soon as the Czechoslovak regime grants one reform, the people demand another

World Notes CAMBODIA
The Prince Presses On

World Notes COMORO ISLANDS
Death Among The Ilang-Ilang

World Notes ETHIOPIA
A Wounded People Starves

World Notes HONG KONG
Goodbye, and Here's $620

SCIENCE

No Home for Hot Trash (Environment)
A U.S. nuclear dump is delayed

HEALTH & MEDICINE

A Mother's Gift of Life (Health)
Her baby gets the first U.S. liver transplant from a living donor

Can Drugs Cure Drug Addiction? (Medicine)
Researchers are developing new treatments to battle abuse

Counterattack (Health)
Alpha-interferon becomes the first treatment for hepatitis C

SOCIETY

Key West, Florida Pritam Singh's Strange Career (American Scene)
An eccentric developer brings good taste to a tacky island

Whose Right to Die? (Ethics)
The Supreme Court will finally wrestle with the ultimate question

PRESS

Editor, Heal Thyself
Britain's racy tabloids try internal reforms

STYLE & DESIGN

Tacky Nostalgia? No, These Are Landmarks (Design)
The doo-wop architecture of the 1950s may not be classy, say preservationists, but it's a slice of history

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

Time Magazine Contents Page (Contents)
Vol. 134, No. 24 DECEMBER 11, 1989

Time Magazine Masthead (Masthead)
Vol. 134, No. 24 DECEMBER 11, 1989

BUSINESS

A Golden Boy's Woe: "I'm Virtually a Slave"

Business Notes AEROSPACE
Soviet Wings, Capitalist Tool

Business Notes DEALS
Heads I Win, Tails You Lose

Business Notes ENTERTAINMENT
This Video Has An Arf a Minute

Business Notes PUBLIC OFFERINGS
Blazing Shares

Business Notes TRANSPORTATION
All Aboard? Not Quite

Special Report: Raiders on The Run Debacle on 34th Street
How takeover debt helped kill off the venerable B. Altman chain

Special Report: Raiders on The Run
The Big Comeuppance Once the scourge of boardrooms, marauders no longer get much respect

LAW

Have Law Degree, Will Travel
Fed up with thankless conditions, many lawyers are taking a hike

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Critics' Voices (Critics' Voices)

Dreamscapes (Theater)

Marriage to The Bitter End (Cinema)

Mock Crisis, Real Players (Video)
Ted Koppel gets officials to act out a U.S.-Soviet confrontation

Of Cats, Myths and Pizza (Books)
Vivid volumes celebrate children's imagination

Warty Worm (Cinema)

Wild Seed in the Big Apple (Show Business)
Garrison Keillor returns with a New York-based radio show

PEOPLE

He Stopped The Shooting (Interview)
EGON KRENZ overruled his bosses to prevent bloodshed during demonstrations in East Germany. But despite a West German proposal to develop closer ties, he sees no chance for reuniting the two countries

Nothing Less Than Perfect (Profile)
With style, grace and cold fire, FAYE WATTLETON, president of Planned Parenthood, champions a woman's right to choose

TO OUR READERS

From the Publisher (From The Publisher)

ESSAY

Being Right in a Post-Postwar World