Monday, Apr. 25, 1994

Time Contents Page April 25, 1994 Vol. 143 No. 17

THE ECONOMY: Whose Recovery Is It, Anyway? 30

Clinton's constituency is still feeling pinched

THE WORKPLACE: No Longer a Sanctuary 34

Murder has become the No. 1 killer of women on the job

WHITEWATER: The Revision Thing 38

To the frustration of aides, explanations change almost daily

TRADE: The China Syndrome 39

An arms deal underscores America's mixed messages to Beijing

LAW: One Person, Seven Votes 42

Will a radical electoral system help redress racial inequities

RWANDA: Anarchy Rules 44

Tribal bloodlust and political rivalry unleash a slaughter

BOSNIA: A Little Force Is a Dangerous Thing 47

Two mini air strikes spur the Serbs to close in on Gorazde

IRAQ: Trigger-Happy Tragedy 50

U.S. helicopters are shot down over Iraq -- by U.S. warplanes

COVER: New Ideas for Controlling Cancer 54

A series of stunning discoveries, including several announced last week, is unlocking the genetic secrets of how a tumor becomes malignant and spreads through the body. This knowledge could lead to much better treatments than the current arsenal of surgery, radiation and chemotherapy.

BOOK EXCERPT: A Soviet Spymaster's Story 64

Allegations of betrayal at the heart of the U.S. atomic program

BEHAVIOR: Tales from Outer Space 74

A Harvard psychiatrist claims that UFO abductions are real

THE ARTS & MEDIA

Design: Fashion just gets worse and worse as the fall shows

feature cartoon contortions. A tell-all book on Calvin Klein

76

Music: Think Nirvana is bleak? Try Nine Inch Nails 81

Books: Elizabeth Bishop's letters trace a poet's life 82

Theater: Dead for two centuries, Pierre Marivaux is hot 85

Diana Rigg takes on Medea, the greatest role for a woman

/ Cinema: Hugh Grant drips charm but has a wicked side too

87

PEOPLE 89

OBITUARY 90