WORLD

New Year's Evil?

Federal agents are scrambling to stop a new Y2K worry: terror

SCIENCE

BRIEFING

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

BUSINESS

Christmas Postponed

After the big e-holiday: a mountain of packages, a blizzard of complaints

LAW

Poor Grade For Vouchers

A judge flunks Cleveland's use of vouchers for parochial schools. But will that stall the movement?

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Cinema: The Odd Fellows (The Arts / Cinema)

The unconventional life of Andy Kaufman proves perfect for Hollywood's Boswells of the offbeat

SPECIAL SECTION

Albert Einstein (Person Of The Century)

(1879-1955) He was the pre-eminent scientist in a century dominated by science. The touchstones of the era--the Bomb, the Big Bang, quantum physics and electronics--all bear his imprint

A Brief History of Relativity (Person Of The Century)

What is it? How does it work? Why does it change everything? An easy primer by the world's most famous living physicist

Unfinished Symphony (Person Of The Century)

Strings may do what Einstein finally failed to do: tie together the two great irreconcilable ideas of 20th century physics

The Age Of Einstein (Person Of The Century)

He became, almost despite himself, the emblem of all that was new, original and unsettling in the modern age

Franklin Delano Roosevelt: (1882-1945) (Person Of The Century / Runners-Up)

He raised the edifice of the American Century by restoring a nation's promise of plenty and by intervening to save a world enveloped in darkness

Mohandas Gandhi (1869-1948) (Person Of The Century)

In an age of empire and military might, he proved that the powerless had power and that force of arms would not forever prevail against force of spirit

The Sacred Warrior (Person Of The Century)

The liberator of South Africa looks at the seminal work of the liberator of India

The Children Of Gandhi (Person Of The Century)

His strategy of nonviolence has spawned generations of spiritual heirs around the world

The Web We Weave (Person Of The Century / The Future)

We've had the Internet in many forms over the centuries, creating a collective mind that thinks faster and faster

12th Century: Saladin (c. 1138-1193) (Person Of The Century / The Most Important People Of The Millennium)

The Kurdish adventurer proved to the Crusaders that God had no trouble favoring an infidel

13th Century: Genghis Khan (c.1167-1227) (Person Of The Century / The Most Important People Of The Millennium)

The world conqueror swept through Asia like an apocalypse and set in motion forces more powerful than the sword

14th Century: Giotto (c. 1267-1337) (Person Of The Century / The Most Important People Of The Millennium)

With his brush, the severity of religious icons melted into warm humanity, and the face of the Godlike became the face of man

16th Century: Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1603) (Person Of The Century / The Most Important People Of The Millennium)

The goddess of the Reformation defeated Europe's greatest power and set Britain on its epic journey to empire

17th Century: Isaac Newton (1642-1727) (Person Of The Century / The Most Important People Of The Millennium)

His scientific search for a grand design in the universe overturned ancient assumptions

18th Century: Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) (Person Of The Century / The Most Important People Of The Millennium)

A political visionary's expression of the American mind still inspires revolution around the world

19th Century: Thomas Edison (1847-1931) (Person Of The Century / The Most Important People Of The Millennium)

His inventions not only reshaped modernity but also promised a future bounded only by creativity

The Necessary Evil? (Person Of The Century)

Why all Adolf Hitler's destructiveness is not enough to make him Person of the Century

Our Evolving Culture (Person Of The Century)

A short history of four simple ideas and how they changed the way we dream, travel, learn and walk

LETTERS