Vol. 140 No. 25

COVER

Great Expectations (Cover Stories)
As Operation Restore Hope begins, Somalis want the U.S. to stay long enough to fix not just their diet but also their society

It Takes More Than Food to Cure STARVATION (Cover Stories)
The biology of malnutrition makes rehabilitation difficult, and for children it often means lasting scars

Today, Somalia ... . . . (Cover Stories)
Tomorrow, why not Bosnia? The success of Bush's mission could put pressure on Clinton to intervene elsewhere.

NATION

Bill And Hillary's New Year's Eve (Grapevine)

Briefing Odor Free (The Week: Nation)

Et Cetera (The Week: Nation)
Those Tapes Again

Et Cetera (The Week: Nation)
To the Victors ...

How Hoffa Haunts the Teamsters (Labor)
Ron Carey promised to clean up the union. So why is he sounding as defiant as the old boss?

Nasty Boys, Nasty Time (Grapevine)

No Longer Home Alone (The Week: Nation)
Clinton announces the first round of appointees, and an eclectic bunch it is

Plunging Ashore into Blazing -- TV Lights? (The Week: Nation)
The U.S.-led intervention in Somalia gets off to a relatively peaceful start

Revolving-Door Jam (The Week: Nation)
The new Administration unveils tighter rules on lobbying

Stamps Of Disapproval (Investigations)
A federal probe into alleged campaign-fund abuses focuses on one of Congress's most influential budget decision makers -- and one of Clinton's most powerful allies

Such Good Friends (Grapevine)

The More Things Change (Grapevine)

The Nasty Nor'easter (The Week: Nation)
A huge, howling storm sweeps across the U.S. and lashes the East Coast

Trouble From Home (Grapevine)

Vox Pop (Grapevine)

Win One, Lose One (The Week: Nation)
Iran-contra prosecutors convict Clair George but fail on Poindexter

Word Watch (Grapevine)

WORLD

"Holy Work" Destroys All Peace in India (The Week World)
The razing of a mosque ignites riots that pose the worst crisis since 1947

Back On Track (Canada)
After the constitutional referendum, the threat of national disintegration has dissipated. A TIME panel of experts sees a dramatically different future ahead.

Et Cetera (The Week World)
A Wall of Death

Et Cetera (The Week World)
Ballot Protest

Kremlin Compromise To quiet obstreperous Deputies, Yeltsin triggers a referendum (The Week World)

Regal Separation (The Week World)
Splitting up a marriage made in Camelot can be a royal headache

Second Look (The Week World)
There are plans afoot for new moves into Bosnia and Macedonia

Selective Refuge (The Week World)
Germany's main parties reach agreement on a new asylum policy

The Euro-Train Is Late (The Week World)
E.C. leaders paper over differences with outdated Maastricht timetables

The New Royal Watch: (Britain)
Waiting for Wills Charles and Diana separate officially, but the announcement raises more problems than it solves

The Unholy War (India)
Militant Hindus demolish an ancient mosque -- and threaten to tear down democracy in the process

HEALTH & MEDICINE

Fear of The Big Whopper (The Week Health & Science)
Scientists debate earth's vulnerability to asteroids -- then and now

Look, Ma, No Cable! (The Week Health & Science)
The FCC gives a tentative green light to video via microwave

TB's Return (The Week Health & Science)
Health officials say it's time to shut down the resurgent killer

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

Bill's Dream Team Of Supersalesmen (The Transition)
Clinton reassures the markets by naming Establishment figures to top economic jobs. But the President-elect still plans policies to prime the pump.

Time Magazine Contents Page (Contents)
December 21, 1992 Vol. 140 No. 25

Time Magazine Masthead (Masthead)
December 21, 1992 Vol. 140 No. 25

Worst-Kept Secrets (The Transition)
Clinton's transition team is leaking like a sieve, but there's a little method in the madness

BUSINESS

Donna Inc. With talent, drive and a willingness to break the rules, Donna Karan has made a distinctive mark as a designer and built a formidable apparel empire

Et Cetera (The Week: Business)
Solid Defense

Even Icahn Gets The Blues (The Week: Business)
The financier gives up control of ailing TWA, and Iacocca mulls a rerun

Father Knows Best (The Week: Business)
The SEC nails the son of a corporate baron for insider trading

The Week Business (The Week: Business)

The Week Business (The Week: Business)

EDUCATION

What Makes This School Work?
Malcolm X Elementary has everything going against it -- except the commitment that may be changing students' lives. Or even saving them.

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Cheerless NBC Drops a Top Show and Could Lose (The Week Culture)
Letterman, its late-night franchise

Days Of Blood And Roses (Reviews Books)

Kid-Lit Capers (Books)
An edible sky, a talking dog and other delights for young imaginations

Mademoiselle Saigon (Reviews Cinema)

Short Takes (Reviews)

Stuuuupendous! (Television)
Adults wince, but a giant huggable dinosaur is all the rage on children's TV and at America's toy counters

The Baseball Barons' Bread and Circuses (The Week Culture)
The sport's owners contend with hard times, racism and sudden death

The Wooing of David Letterman (Show Business)
Rival CBS makes the top bid for the NBC star, who was passed over for the job of Tonight show host. Now his network must persuade him to stay or see him become a competitor.

Torn From Body and Soul (Reviews Music)

Two More for The Road (Reviews Dance)

TO OUR READERS

From the Publisher (From The Publisher)

ESSAY

Sometimes, Right Makes Might