Vol. 143 No. 25

COVER

"We Go After the Real Source of This Problem" (Cover Stories)
Last Friday, President Clinton spoke about welfare reform with correspondents Ann Blackman and James Carney:

The Vicious Cycle (Cover Stories)
When young, single women have children, it almost guarantees they will be poor. Can welfare reform break the pattern?

Want A Baby? (Cover Stories)
First Get a Life

NATION

Campaign Literature We'Ll Never See (Chronicles)

Dispatches (Chronicles)
Welcome to Ground Zero, Rwanda

Health Report (Chronicles)

Homecoming of the Week (Chronicles)

In the Dark (Chronicles)

Informed Sources (Chronicles)

Inside Washington (Chronicles)
Colin Powell, the Reluctant Candidate

Socks Isn't the Only Catty One (Chronicles)

The 10 Most Popular Names for Boats (Chronicles)

The Week June 5-11 (Chronicles)

What Money Can Buy (Elections)
Challenging incumbents has become a rich person's game. But what kind of Congress will that create?

While The Gettin's Good (Politics)
Louisiana's sly, four-term Governor says he won't run again. And for now he won't say why.

Winners & Losers (Chronicles)

WORLD

A Voice in the Wilderness (Russia)
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn preaches his message of moral renewal in the hinterlands, but will Moscow listen?

Hurry Up and Wait (Diplomacy)
In coping with Haiti, Korea and Bosnia, Clinton hopes to buy time and avoid stiffer measures

Thoughts From a Slow Train Across Russia (Russia)

SCIENCE

Ancient Creatures in a Lost World (Environment)
In an isolated, rugged region that divides Vietnam and Laos, scientists find a trove of new species

HEALTH & MEDICINE

Streptomania Hits Home (Medicine)
A bacterial strain that terrified Britain pops up in the U.S., but doctors say there's no need to panic

PRESS

All The News That's Fit Too much graphic violence on TV? Now local stations are coming up with an option: G-rated broadcasts.

SPORT

190 Countries Can't Be Wrong
The World Cup begins this week and will be followed intently around the globe -- except by the host nation

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

On the Money How to Say You're Sorry

Still Brave at Heart
On Normandy's beaches the past returned to infuse the present with new meaning

Time (Contents)
Contents Page June 20, 1994 -- Vol. 143, No. 25

Time (Masthead)
Magazine masthead June 20, 1994 -- Vol 143 No. 25

BUSINESS

Rock 'N' Roll's Holy War
Pearl Jam's crusade against Ticketmaster triggers a needed debate over outrageous ticket prices

The High Cost of Saving (Banking)
Customers grow irate as banks relentlessly jack up service fees and demand ever larger deposits

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

A Time to Kill? (Arts & Media / BOOKS)
John Grisham writes a serious novel about the death penalty

City of the Living Dead E.L. (Arts & Media / BOOKS)
Doctorow's The Waterworks mixes a bizarre horror story with the sights and sounds of 19th-century Manhattan

Growing Up with a Killer (Arts & Media / BOOKS)
Gary Gilmore's brother seeks the cause of evil in his family

Street Stories (Arts & Media / MUSIC)
Rapper Nas blends smooth melodies and harsh themes

Sushi and Soul (Arts & Media / THEATER)
The Hot Mikado is gospel but not a la Gilbert and Sullivan

Sympathy for the Bedeviled (Arts & Media / CINEMA)
Smart, funny, romantic, Wolf is a horror film for grownups

The Lady Becomes the Tiger (Arts & Media / THEATER)
The Woman Warrior makes grand spectacle of a writer's youth

The Mouse Roars (Arts & Media / CINEMA)
Like Disney's other recent cartoon features, The Lion King is winning and gorgeous; like Disney's animated classics, it also touches primal emotions

PEOPLE

A Way to Live, the Way to Die (Obituary)
Dennis Potter: 1935-1994

TO OUR READERS

To Our Readers

ESSAY

Population: the Awkward Truth