Table of ContentsCleveland Dreamin'Busy, Busy, Busy, Eh, Senator K.?Scribble, Scribble, Scribble, Eh, Mrs. T.?Finally Ready To Graduate?Are Men Really So Bad?Hush-Hush HospitalityGlobal Warming: A New Warning A report on the greenhouse effect could prod the White House clique that wants to go slow on protecting the environmentA Catfish That Oinks . . . . . . and other tales of how Congress wastes money on pork-barrel projectsBlissing Out in Balmy Belize Pyramids and coral reefs beckon, but the chief attraction of this angler's paradise is stalking the wily tarpon with fly rod and reelThe Rebel Dreams of Oedipus Max Like a conspiratorial uncle, the Surrealist speaks anew to the subversiveness of youthBack to Reality As Americans focus again on problems at home, Bush's approval rating is falling. But that won't necessarily help Democrats.Memories of a World on FireAll Stressed Up, No Place to Go Two films put traveling couples in strange and tantalizing fixesThe First-Pitch ScoreboardThe Whims of Bicoastal Dining Restaurateurs who operate in both Los Angeles and New York City discover that differences run deeper than just the menuOnward, Christian RockersLAW AND DISORDER TIME magazine masthead Vol. 137, No. 16 APRIL 22, 1991 World Notes BRITAIN Is This Zoo Worth Saving? TIME magazine contents page Vol. 137, No. 16 APRIL 22, 1991 A ''Race Man'' Argues for a Broader Curriculum HENRY LOUIS GATES JR. wants W.E.B. Dubois, Wole Soyinka and Phillis % Wheatley on the nation's reading lists, as well as Western classics like Milton and ShakespeareCorrections Intellectual Battles Saving the Daily News To the Iraqi Dead Illiberal and Liberal Education COVER STORIES The First Lady And the Slasher A merciless new biography sparks a furious debate. Was Nancy Reagan really a witch? And has author Kitty Kelley gone too far?Meeeow! The Saga Of Kitty The former Lilac Princess has the world on a leash, so don't mess with herBusiness Notes MEDIA Those Oldies Are Goldies Business Notes NEW PRODUCTS No Butts About It Business Notes PHARMACEUTICALS Thalidomide's Second Chance The Beauty Part P&G agrees to buy Max Factor from debt-laden Revlon Business Notes REAL ESTATE Trump Tries Tokyo Prices World Notes MIDDLE EAST A Few Steps Toward Peace A Global Fire Sale Governments worldwide are selling off state-owned enterprises. The results should be salutary -- but the process can be painful.A Sizzler Finally Fizzles In America's largest insurance company collapse, California officials seize control of shaky giant Executive LifeWatch What You Eat, Kid A U.S. panel urges better diets and cholesterol tests for children, but the report draws fire from both sides of the issueAmerican Notes SPACE Walking on Air American Notes RESTAURANTS Requiem for Horn & Hardart REFUGEES Death Every Day Relief organizations are in a grim race to get aid to the Kurds before the toll from hunger, cold and disease takes a terrible leap -- and so far the helpers are running behindIt's Coming Back to Me Now! At 42, George Foreman is duking it out for the heavyweight boxing crown with a much younger man, and middle-aged wheezers everywhere are following his leadCHINA For Sale: Tools of Destruction Beijing's missile and nuclear-reactor deals defy arms-control efforts and imperil relations with WashingtonAmerican Notes ENTOMOLOGY A Day at The Races American Notes CHILDREN A Few More First Birthdays World Notes PAKISTAN Tightening Islam's Grip Pssst! Have You Heard the One About Augustus? Good biographies take bad behavior for grantedDIPLOMACY A Superpower at the Abyss By building bridges to the reformers, a former President argues, the U.S. may be able to induce Gorbachev to end his unholy alliance with the reactionariesWorld Notes JAPAN Curtains for Kaifu? Mystery of the Cosmic Monster Talk of a mammoth black hole is giving astronomers headaches