Vol. 143 No. 5

COVER

Aftershock The latest catastrophe in a string of disasters rocks the state to the core, forcing Californians to ponder their fate and the fading luster of its golden dream (CALIFORNIA)

NATION

Chronicles (Chronicles)

Health Report (Chronicles)

How Quickly Things Change... (Chronicles)

Informed Sources (Chronicles)

Inside Los Angeles (Chronicles)

Just in Case You Hadn't Heard -- the '60s Are Over (Chronicles)

Los Angeles: Tales of the City (California)
In the aftermath of a 30-second earthquake, Angelenos wake up to anxious, sometimes off-kilter episodes in their lives

Nothing But Blue Skies a Time/Cnn Poll Shows (The Presidency)
Clinton in a comeback, but concerns about Whitewater linger on the horizon

So That Explains the Earthquake -- Gatt! (Chronicles)

The 10 Most Generous Campaign Contributors Named As Ambassadors (Chronicles)

The Next Big One. . . (California)
A hidden network of underground faults crisscrosses Southern California, and some of the cracks could produce earthquakes much deadlier than last week's jolt

The President -- Conceivably (Chronicles)

The Week January 16-22 (Chronicles)

Vox Pop (Chronicles)

Winners & Losers (Chronicles)

WORLD

"They Are Going to Pursue Dangerous Policies" (Russia)

After You, Hafez (Middle East)
Israel ponders whether Syria has spoken the words to break their stalemate in peace negotiations

One Giant Step Backward (Russia)
No matter what Yeltsin told Clinton, Moscow is setting its course away from radical reform

WAR & TERRORISM

Bowing Out with a Bang (Defense)
Inman's angry assault on the press manages to make him sound more paranoid than persecuted

SCIENCE

The Ice Age Cometh?
Last week's big chill was a reminder that the earth's climate can change at any time

HEALTH & MEDICINE

Why the Bones Break (Medicine)
A single gene seems to heighten the risk of developing osteoporosis, perhaps by hampering vitamin D uptake

SPORT

What Did Tonya Know?
The skater's bodyguard tells tales to implicate her. So far, none have been substantiated.

TECHNOLOGY

How Mac Changed the World
Now celebrating its 10th birthday, the computer has made cyberspace cozy

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

The Political Interest
Pat's Healthy Gripe

Time (Contents)
Magazine contents page JANUARY 31, 1994 VOL. 143 NO. 5

Time (Masthead)
Magazine Masthead JANUARY 31, 1994 VOL. 143 NO. 5

LAW

Now for the Movie (Justice)
Lorena Bobbitt is not guilty owing to temporary insanity

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Bourgeois, But No Bore (The Arts & Media Cinema)
A wry British film examines life's rueful disappointments

Busters At Bat (The Arts & Media Books)
Kids from the projects learn baseball, and a bit of hope

Ending a 60-Year Silence (The Arts & Media Books)
In his first novel since Call It Sleep, Henry Roth, 87, returns as a dry documentarian

Furthermore (The Arts & Media Television)

Gershwin, By George (The Arts & Media Music)
It's the composer at the keyboard on a new, high-tech recording of 12 of his best pieces, originally cut as piano rolls

Make Way for the Sellevangelists (The Arts & Media Television)
It used to be a stigma, but more and more celebrities now ask, "Can we hawk?"

Out of Touch (The Arts & Media Cinema)
Sharon Stone stretches, but Intersection never connects

Ringing the Bell (The Arts & Media Theater)
Playwright David Ives scores with an evening of sketches

Still Lucky Jim? (The Arts & Media Show Business)
Comedy czar James L. Brooks tries to fix the movie that used to be a musical

TO OUR READERS

To Our Readers

ESSAY

Enough Bear Stroking