Vol. 140 No. 26

COVER

Galileo And Other Faithful Scientists (Cover Stories)

NATION

Dear George: (Grapevine)

Et Cetera (The Week: Nation)
Which Doctor?

Extremely Hazardous Duty (Grapevine)

It's The Nuclear Missiles, Stupid (Grapevine)

Leaky Transition (The Week: Nation)
Real appointments often get lost among the hot tips

Lessons in L.A. Law (The Week: Nation)
New violence shows that tensions are high but the cops are ready

Political Exorcism (The Week: Nation)
G.O.P. centrists organize to wrest the party back from the religious right

Professor Bill's Class: Political Economy 101 Clinton's summit played well, but his promises are looking harder to keep (The Week: Nation)

The Search Goes On (The Week: Nation)
A special prosecutor will probe the Clinton passport caper

The Walkman Was Primitive By Comparison (Grapevine)

The Week Nation (The Week: Nation)

Vox Pop (Grapevine)

Whose Job Is It, Anyway? (Grapevine)

WORLD

A Bill of Particulars on Yugoslav War Crimes (The Week World)

A Bone for the Dogs (The Week World)
With Gaidar gone, Russian capitalists grow wary of the future

And Who Will Pay? (The Week World)
Despite budget woes, the U.N. plans to send troops to Mozambique

Band on The Run (The Week World)
American college students disgrace their school and flabbergast Japan

Blood And Banishment (The Week World)
Answering five deaths, Israel deports hundreds of Palestinians

Cambodia: the Un's (Souteast Asia)
Biggest Gamble The peace-keepers -- a huge commitment in manpower and money -- are caught in a cross fire as they struggle to resurrect a country

Et Cetera (The Week World)
Courting More Chaos

Et Cetera (The Week World)
Who's in Charge Here?

Into Somalia's Zone of Death (The Week World)
Troops reach famine-struck Baidoa, but the looters still lurk nearby

Just Kidding (The Week World)

Nuremberg In Bosnia (The Week World)
The U.S. proposes war-crimes trials of Serbs and Croats

One Step at a Time (The Week World)
U.S. firms can open offices, but they still can't do business with Vietnam

Selling Spree (The Week World)
The U.S. Commerce chief's Chinese trip reaps contracts and controversy

Seoul Survivor (The Week World)
A fierce South Korean race puts an ex-dissident in the Blue House

The Dilemma of Disarmament (Somalia)

The Gift of Hope (Somalia)
Armed for battle, U.S. Marines find mostly smiles and waves as they fan out into the Somalian countryside

HEALTH & MEDICINE

Endangered Legacy (The Week Health & Science)
Bush opts unexpectedly to protect more endangered species

Et Cetera (The Week Health & Science)
Forever Young

Et Cetera (The Week Health & Science)
Oh, to Be in England . . .

This Just In (The Week Health & Science)

What Ailed Tiny Tim (The Week Health & Science)
A literary diagnosis offers a footnote to a classic holiday tale

SOCIETY

An Appointment with DR. DEATH (Ethics)

Briefs Long Time Coming (The Week: Society)

Briefs So Sue Me (The Week: Society)

Briefs Terms of Endearment (The Week: Society)

Death And Taxes (The Week: Society)
New IRS proposals help the terminally ill cash in life insurance

Mercy's Friend or Foe? (Ethics)
As Dr. Kevorkian takes on the state of Michigan over physician-assisted suicide, he may be undermining his own crusade

U.S. Hispanics Say, Call Us "-Americans" (The Week: Society)
They love their country and want to speak English, a survey shows

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

Clinton's People
They Call Him Mack the Nice Everyone loves presidential pal THOMAS MCLARTY now, but wait till he's been chief of staff for a day

Time Magazine Contents Page (Contents)
DECEMBER 28, 1992 VOL. 140, NO. 26

Time Magazine Masthead (Masthead)
DECEMBER 28, 1992 VOL. 140, NO. 26

BUSINESS

A Torrent of Pink From Big Blue (The Week: Business)
IBM announces more layoffs and cutbacks. Will these be the last?

Are America's Corporate Giants a Dying Breed?

Deal of A Lifetime (The Week: Business)
General Motors lures retirees with a batch of brand-new extras

How IBM Was Left Behind
Mainframe computers were its cash cow. Then the industry changed, and Big Blue was just the leader of an obsolete market. Can it ever recover?

Leaning on The Panic Button (Finance)
An executive's best-selling jeremiad about the federal budget deficit is a good scare but a weak prescription

Paddy Power (The Week: Business)
Japan's rice farmers make a last ditch attempt to block imports

The Clear Alternative (The Week: Business)
Colorless products aim to capture the clean generation

The Week Business (The Week: Business)

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Don't Just Sit There! (The Week Arts & Entertainment)
The first interactive movie asks its audiences to get involved

Look Back In Anger (Reviews Music)

Princess of Deals (The Week Arts & Entertainment)

Short Takes (Reviews)

Star Trek: The Next Frontier (Television)
With a dark, gritty new spin-off, the futuristic cult series moves into uncharted territory

Telling An Inner Life (Reviews Art)

The Ultimate Bah, Humbug! (Reviews Theater)

Trying To Hype History (Reviews Television)

Visions Of Robot-Rats (Reviews Dance)

Well, Shut My Mouth (The Week Arts & Entertainment)
The FCC hits Howard Stern where it hurts: his boss's wallet

Why The Christmas Films Don't Sparkle (Cinema)
Half a dozen releases ignore the rules of keeping audiences entertained. A seventh remembers how.

SPECIAL SECTION

Bistro Blues (Travel)
The traditional French cafe is slowly dying out, a victim of le cocooning, le stress and le fast food

Unforgettable Pictures of the Year (Images '92)

TO OUR READERS

From the Publisher (From The Publisher)

ESSAY

The World Is Not A Theme Park