Vol. 136 No. 7

NATION

A Deficit of Guts
Washington's fear of making tough choices wrecks the budget summit

American Notes DISASTERS
The Goo Keeps Flowing

American Notes NEW YORK CITY
Children: In Harm's Way

American Notes THE ARTS
Don't Confront The Holocaust?

American Notes WASHINGTON STATE
An Explosive Discovery

And Bomb The Anchovies (Grapevine)

Belated Justice
Another conviction in the murder of a DEA agent

Dumping On The Poor
America's dispossessed have lived for decades with toxic wastes and garbage. Now they're fighting back.

Injuries of The Rich and Famous (Grapevine)

Loser of the Street (Grapevine)

Loser of the Week (Grapevine)

Poetic Justice? (Grapevine)

Rabbit Stew (Grapevine)

Setback For Star Wars
Hawks and doves find themselves in rare agreement as Congress takes a big whack at the Pentagon's wish list

The Help-the-Homeless Trophy (Grapevine)

The Political Interest
Asking the Wrong Questions

The Shut-Mah-Mouth Medallion (Grapevine)

Up From Obscurity
With his maverick views on affirmative action, writer Shelby Steele is being noticed -- and not always favorably

When The Whip Comes Down (Grapevine)

Why Governors Are Squawking

WORLD

America Abroad
The Deterrence Vacuum

Bulgaria A Surprise at the Top
Opposition leader Zhelyu Zhelev is the unexpected choice to become the country's first non-Communist leader in four decades

Can the U.S. Turn Off Iraq's Oil?
Only tough international action will make sanctions stick

Iraq's Power Grab
Audacious and ruthless, Saddam Hussein seizes tiny Kuwait -- and no one is sure where his ambition will end

Europe Don't Count Them Out
On the decline from their bloody peaks of a decade ago, terrorist groups are still inflicting a deadly toll

For The Moment, the Shock Is Limited

Liberia The Marines to the Rescue
President Bush orders Leathernecks into Monrovia to bring out Americans endangered by an increasingly bloody civil war

Master Of His Universe
Iraq's dictator seems capable of doing anything to get his way

Soviet Union Joining Forces
In Reform For once, leading rivals back a common economic program

Trinidad and Tobago
Captain, the Ship Is Sinking Muslim nationalists nearly deep-six a Caribbean government

World Notes BRITAIN
Making Peace Pay at Home

World Notes FRANCE
Mystery Malady

World Notes PERU
Off to a Shaky Start

World Notes THE GERMANYS
Speeding Up The Clock

SCIENCE

Hot Tempers in Hawaii (Environment)
Exploiting clean geothermal energy could threaten a rain forest

HEALTH & MEDICINE

Green Light (Medicine)
Scientists stand on the brink of performing gene therapy

SOCIETY

Romance and A Little Rape (Behavior)
The formula for a successful Indian film raises an outcry

PRESS

Paying The Piper
Israel's funding of favorable news is a p.r. fiasco

Shifting to A Post-Bradlee Post
A cautious top man emerges at the Washington paper

The Passing of an Era
The Philadelphia Inquirer's longtime editor calls it quits

RELIGION

All For Love
An "intimate relationship" leads to an Archbishop's fall

SPORT

The Artful Pick-Off
How Commissioner Vincent rid the Yankees of their hated boss

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

Time Magazine Contents Page (Contents)
Vol. 136, No. 7 AUGUST 13, 1990

BUSINESS

A Trojan Horse In Europe?
Japan's top computer firm buys a Continental foothold

Big Plans for a Small Car
New boss Bob Stempel aims to make GM's latest model a hit

Business Notes BUYOUTS
Why Can't This Bird Fly?

Business Notes CORPORATE HISTORY
Remember the Real Thing

Business Notes LITIGATION
Selling to Beat The Devil

Business Notes PHARMACEUTICALS
The Miracle Is Missing

Business Notes RETAILING
A Toy Shop Goes Dutch

No End in Sight
Politicians hurl blame as the $500 billion S&L crisis races out of control

Rush For Gold: How Silverado Operated

Zipping Along in Asphalt
Heaven An upstart Minnesota company, Rollerblade, streaks to success

EDUCATION

World Without Walls
A sparkling flow of languages enlivens the North Woods

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

In The Heat of the Night (Books)

Modernism's Neglected Side (Art)
A first-rate London show assesses the classical revival, sympathetically but coolly

Real Tinsel (Books)

U Can't Touch Him M.C. Hammer flies high by making rap a pop sensation (Music)

Where The Stagestruck Get Started (Show Business)
Summer stock these days often means a theme park or a cruise ship

PEOPLE

Dressing Apartheid in Nationalistic Clothes (Interview)
Rejecting negotiations with Nelson Mandela, ANDRIES TREURNICHT, leader of South Africa's Conservative Party, warns of a white revolt

TO OUR READERS

From the Publisher (From The Publisher)

ESSAY

Blest Be the Ties That Bind