NATION
Chicago: True Grit on The South Side (American Notes)
True Grit on The South Side
Drugs: A Family Kiss Goodbye (American Notes)
A Family Kiss Goodbye
Environment: Strains on a Friendship (American Notes)
Strains on a Friendship
New York City: A Dealer Pays For His Crimes (American Notes)
A Dealer Pays For His Crimes
Ohio: Keep Your Whiskers (American Notes)
Keep Your Whiskers
Taking Jesse Seriously
His emergence as a front runner changes the race -- and the nation
It's Lonely at the Top
Resignations rock the Justice Department, but Ed Meese clings to his job
Jesse's Concentric Circles
The Reagans Move: Location, Location, Location
With a little help from friends, the Reagans pick a new home
No Vacancy: The housing squeeze gets worse
The housing squeeze gets worse
On The Grapevine
Voices For Jesse Jackson
WORLD
Any Day Now, Honest
Arms: Beijing Surprise: Missiles for the Saudis
Missiles for the Saudis
China One for the Money, One Goes Slow
Why the coast outpaces the interior in the race to prosper
Diplomacy Search for Partners
Should the U.S. deal with the Palestine Liberation Organization?
Nicaragua Taking a Baby Step Toward Peace
Talks inch forward as Congress approves more aid for the contras
Panama The General Strikes Back
A defiant Noriega proves that for now, at least, he is still the boss
South Africa Death in a Paris Hallway
An African National Congress aide is gunned down far from home
Soviet Union Introducing Glasnost Giggles
A literary satire takes on the bureaucracy
Afghanistan: New Offer, Old Refusal (World Notes)
New Offer, Old Refusal
Colombia: Next Candidate, Please (World Notes)
Next Candidate, Please
South Korea: The Ties That Bind (World Notes)
The Ties That Bind
The Philippines: Gringo Jumps Ship (World Notes)
Gringo Jumps Ship
West Germany: Too Close A Call (World Notes)
Too Close A Call
HEALTH & MEDICINE
Food: Taking Out, Eating In (Food)
All the comforts of home -- with no cooking
SOCIETY
Ethics: On Granting an Iranscam Pardon (Ethics)
A debate grows over the President's power vs. the public good
Living: When Women Take Up Arms (Living)
More are intent on being their own protectors
PRESS
Press: In Israel, Wounding the Messenger
An army ban on reporters sends a chilling warning
RELIGION
Religion: Worshipers on A Holy Roll
Scandals and Swaggart fail to deter the Assemblies of God
SPORT
Sport: Can't See Woods For the Tees
Metaling with tradition
STYLE & DESIGN
Design: An Architect for the New Age (Design)
From out of the Southwest rides iconoclastic Antoine Predock
TECHNOLOGY
Technology: Nothing To Sneeze At
Technology: The World on a Silver Platter
A marriage of computers and CDs starts to bear fruit ,
ALSO IN THIS ISSUE
Time Magazine Contents Page APRIL 11, 1988 Vol. 131 No. 15 (Contents)
Magazine contents page APRIL 11, 1988 Vol. 131 No. 15
Time Magazine Masthead APRIL 11, 1988 Vol. 131 No. 15 (Masthead)
Magazine masthead APRIL 11, 1988 Vol. 131 No. 15
BUSINESS
DAIRY PRODUCTS: I Can't Believe It's Not Yogurt (Economy & Business)
I Can't Believe It's Not Yogurt
PRESS: Tabloid King KO's Congress (Economy & Business)
Tabloid King KO's Congress
REAL ESTATE: A Yen for a Hunk of Hawaii (Economy & Business)
A Yen for a Hunk of Hawaii
TRADE: Tough Talks With Tokyo (Economy & Business)
Tough Talks With Tokyo
No Holds Barred: Retailers Battling for Profits (Economy & Business)
Battling for profits, retailers are making Wrestlemania seem sedate
Putting A Leash on the IRS (Economy & Business)
Congress considers a taxpayers' bill of rights
The Taipan from Yale (Economy & Business)
Jardines, the model for Noble House, picks its first U.S. boss
EDUCATION
Education: The Canons Under Fire
Stanford cuts its book list
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Bookends: Apr. 11, 1988 (Books)
Cinema: Dead Letters (Cinema)
Theater: Exorcising The Demons of Memory (Theater)
August Wilson exults in the blues and etches slavery's legacy
Cinema: Funeral March to a Calypso Beat BEETLEJUICE (Cinema)
Directed by Tim Burton Screenplay by Michael McDowell and Warren Skaaren
Video: Get Ready for McRather (Video)
A TV version of USA Today is sparking interest and worry
Music: Siren Songs at Center Stage (Music)
Women violinists of talent and temperament invade a male preserve
Books: When The Outrageous Is the Norm THE HOUSEGUEST (Books)
by Thomas Berger; Little, Brown; 240 pages; $16.95
PEOPLE
Tibet's Living Buddha (Profile)
The DALAI LAMA, 14th in a line of God-Kings, seems a remote, otherwordly exile, yet he is leading his countrymen at a turning point in their 29-year struggle for freedom