Vol. 144 No. 22

COVER

Reconfigure the Modulators! (ARTS & MEDIA)

Star Trek: the Timeline (ARTS & MEDIA)

The Torch Has Passed Off-Camera, Too (ARTS & MEDIA)

Trekking Onward (ARTS & MEDIA)
As a new generation takes command, the Star Trek phenomenon seems unstoppable

NATION

After the Revolution (Government)
In the turmoil of the GOP takeover, everything is in play, including Bill Clinton's stand on the school-prayer issue

Attention: Jim Baker (Chronicles)

Chronicles (Chronicles)

Don't Run, Take the Money (Chronicles)

Goofy Gets a Pink Slip (Chronicles)

Health Report (Chronicles)

Inside Washington (Chronicles)
To Do: Lunch w/ Gore, Nap, Abolish Commerce

(Chronicles)
News, Culture, Controversy on the Internet

Newt's Battle-Ready Armey (Government)

Retiree of the Week (Chronicles)

The 10 Most (Chronicles)

The Dynamic New Buzz Word (Government)

The Unwelcome Mat (Immigration)
As the Proposition 187 debate roars, the U.S. begins an intensive effort to seal off a 2,000-mile border

The Week November 13-19 (Chronicles)

Turkeys! (Chronicles)

Vox Pop (Chronicles)

Winners & Losers (Chronicles)

Yet Another O.J. Shocker! (Chronicles)

WORLD

A Bloody Taste of Civil War (Middle East)
Yasser Arafat answers the challenge from Gaza's Islamic militants with lethal force, raising fears of worse fratricide to come

Doesn't Anybody Want Peace? (Bosnia)
Strong Serb counterattacks threaten the Bosnian forces, Croatia -- and the Western Alliance

SCIENCE

Dino Dna?
Bits of ancient genes turn up in some very old bones

HEALTH & MEDICINE

Hope for Unhealthy Hearts (Medicine)
A seminal Scandinavian study shows that powerful new drug treatments are safe and really do save lives

SOCIETY

Did Prozac Make Him Do It? (Behavior)

Hot Lines and Hot Tempers

Looking for Mary Poppins
The government moves to regulate the programs that put au pairs in U.S. homes

Suicide Check (Behavior)
Advances in biopsychiatry may lead to lab tests for self-destructive behavior and other mental disorders

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

On the Money Bear in the China Shop

The Political Interest
The Next Big Election

Time Contents November 28, 1994 -- (Contents)
Vol. 144, No. 22

Time Masthead November 28, 1994 -- (Masthead)
Vol. 144, No. 22

BUSINESS

Greenspan's Rates of Wrath (The Economy)
The Fed jacks up borrowing costs, but the move is too much for Main Street and not enough for Wall Street

So Many Dreams So Many Losses
Sony's $3 billion Hollywood debacle is the latest in a series of setbacks for Japanese firms in the U.S.

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

"Teriyaki" (Arts & Media / BOOKS)
Is Slang for Heroin Japan's wealth had to create some decadence; now a writer describes the fast-living youth in the land of the salaryman

A Deeper Shade of Blue (Arts & Media / MUSIC)
Joni Mitchell's new album covers a wide emotional spectrum

Arid Country (Arts & Media / THEATER)
Sam Shepard's first play in a decade is windy and barren

As If We Never Said Goodbye (Arts & Media / THEATER)
Andrew Lloyd Webber's Sunset Boulevard has finally arrived on Broadway. Like Cats and Phantom, it may not ever leave

In The Lap of the Gods (Arts & Media / OPERA)
Welsh bass-baritone Bryn Terfel, at 29, has taken on the world's music capitals -- and he is selling out the house

Parallel World (Arts & Media / BOOKS)
A first-rate novelist adapts Dostoyevsky's life too freely

Pregnant (Arts & Media / CINEMA)
Idea Arnold is great -- well, pretty good -- with child in Junior

The Cyclone (Arts & Media / BOOKS)
On Coney Island, the lives of basketballers soar and fall

Too Much of a Gooey (Arts & Media / CINEMA)
A pair of Santa movies bears overstuffed sacks of sentiment

Trail of Tears (Arts & Media / MUSIC)
Robbie Robertson pays homage to Native Americans

TO OUR READERS

To Our Readers

ESSAY

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