NATION
Air Force: A $90 Million Mistake (American Notes)
A $90 Million Mistake
Dallas: See Oswald's Lair - for $4 (American Notes)
See Oswald's Lair -- for $4
Hollywood: Kane Steals Ted's Crayons (American Notes)
Kane Steals Ted's Crayons
Indians: Turmoil in the Navajo Nation (American Notes)
Turmoil in the Navajo Nation
Have Weapons, Will Shoot
As the toll grows, a survey shows Americans want to crack down
Mandela House: A Hand and a Home For Pregnant Addicts (American Ideas)
A Hand and a Home For Pregnant Addicts Minnie Thomas provides meat loaf, reality treatment and straight talk
Raining On Baker's Parade
Who said being Secretary of State would be easy?
That Was Zen, This Is Now
Jerry Brown returns as, of all things, a party regular
The Immigration Mess
A surge of Central American refugees finds the U.S. unprepared
The Presidency: The Real Deficit Is Water
The Real Deficit Is Water
Top-Secret Strategy
The "cuckoo-clock trial" of Oliver North is set to start . . . and stop . . . and start . . . and stop . . .
WORLD
Afghanistan Rebels with Too Many Causes
Who's who behind the mujahedin's quarreling factions
Chemical Weapons The Mysterious
"Doctor B." An Iraqi, Ihsan Barbouti, is the middleman who arranged the construction of Gaddafi's poison-gas factory
Hunted by An Angry Faith
Salman Rushdie's novel cracks open a fault line between East and West
Hybrid Creature, Invisible Man
South Africa Decline and Fall of a Heroine
Why Winnie Mandela is an outcast among black leaders
Why Believers Are Outraged
Northern Ireland: Caught in the Cross Hair (World Notes)
Caught in the Cross Hair
Poland: Reopening an Old Wound (World Notes)
Reopening an Old Wound
Scandinavia: A Sovereign Plea for Seals (World Notes)
A Sovereign Plea for Seals
Terrorism: Fatal Deception (World Notes)
Fatal Deception
SCIENCE
Environment: The Rats Are Coming (Environment)
Can Boston's Pied Piper save the city from a rodent invasion?
SOCIETY
Behavior: Time Is Not on Their Side (Behavior)
Fresh insights into why many poor children do badly in school
PRESS
Press: Knocking On Death's Door
In covering tragedies, do journalists go too far?
RELIGION
Religion: Many Are Called
Dialing for Jesus
TECHNOLOGY
Technology: Chess Prodigy $10,000 prize for a rising star
ALSO IN THIS ISSUE
Time Magazine Contents Page (Contents)
Magazine contents page Vol. 133 No. 9 FEBRUARY 27, 1989
Time Magazine Masthead (Masthead)
Magazine masthead Vol. 133 No. 9 FEBRUARY 27, 1989
BUSINESS
Advertising: Been Lonely Too Long
Been Lonely Too Long
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS: Accounting For Promises
Accounting For Promises
PROPHYLACTICS: A Burst of Controversy
A Burst of Controversy
SAVINGS AND LOANS: Offers They Can't Afford
Offers They Can't Afford
SNACKS: Pass the Pork Rinds, Mr. Prez
Pass the Pork Rinds, Mr. Prez
Damages For A Deadly Cloud
The Bhopal tragedy will cost Union Carbide $470 million
Fill 'Er Up with No-Fault, Please
A solution to the auto-insurance mess: coverage by the tankful
Gimme Shelter
First-time home buyers battle to beat the odds
Leaving Tips: Here comes the service charge
Here comes the service charge
Merger Mystery: Is the media mogul a mole?
Is the media mogul a mole?
EDUCATION
Education: Mixed Review
Some progress, more needed
Education: Peace Crusade
A new breed of antiwar activist takes on military recruiters
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Cinema: Bad Neighbors (Cinema)
Critics' Choice: Feb. 27, 1989 (Critics' Choice)
Photography: Drawn by Nature's Pencil (Photography)
For the 150th anniversary of camera art, Houston maps a world of images
Books: In The Shadow of Dutch Schultz (Books)
Theater: Kitchen Beefs (Theater)
Cinema: Show-Biz Nose (Cinema)
Books: Street Smarts (Books)
SPECIAL SECTION
Travel: Wait'll We Tell the Folks Back Home (Travel)
What $360 million buys these days in luxury and fantasy
PEOPLE
RICHARD DARMAN: Driven To Beat the Budget (Profile)
An idealist with a knack for compromise, a futurist skilled in improvisation, RICHARD DARMAN is a joyful public servant