Table of Contents
Table of ContentsShoot-Out at the ZZ Corral Wyatt Earp is a soporific ride on an endless trail to nowherePRICE TO BE DETERMINED Party's Over The Beastie Boys aren't as much fun as they used to bePUBLIC EYE THE VICTIM, YOU SAY?THE PIRATES OF SOFTWARE MUSIC DEPRECIATION PLAYING TO THE CROWD Lawyers do battle over O.J. and sympathy as the scandal of the year enters the courtsThe Dreamy Impresario Lincoln Kirstein recounts his gilded youth and the path that led him to George Balanchine and the New York City BalletOLEG CASSINI RESPONDS Jovial Julia Roberts has an ideal role in a bland caper with Nick NolteTHE THREAT FROM NORTH KOREA Lotus Land No More A writer travels around California, where he lived in 1969, and finds much alteredWHEN VIOLENCE HITS HOME Suddenly, domestic abuse, once perniciously silent, is exposed for its brutality in the wake of a highly public scandalBlind LoveSubstandard-Bearer The first of a three-volume lexicon of U.S. slang is a killerA BOLDER JAPAN Bards Of the Internet If E-mail represents the renaissance of prose, why is so much of it so awful?The Boys of Soccer The U.S. surprised a sturdy Colombian squad. But can the Dream Team continue its upstart upsets?TIME contents page July 4, 1994 -- Vol. 144 No. 1 Baby Dali An exhibit shows that the young Salvador Dali thought he could do anything, and he almost couldHavin' Herself a Time At (yes!) 76, Lena Horne returns with a stunning new albumNOBODY'S CALLING IT A BOONDOGGLE NOW RAW DATA Gag Orders Paul Rudnick's The Naked Truth is just a joke machineFIN-DE-SIECLE ALERT Forward into the Past David Byrne creates a new sound out of all his old onesPUFF THE MAGIC BUREAUCRAT! THE MORNING LINE Hot Seat at Wimbledon: Judge, Jury and Shrink The players make all the big money, but umpires like Sultan Gangji make the final callsMORE NEGATIVISM: ELOCUTION DOWN Killing the Psychic Pain A Dutch court says doctors can assist suicides of depressed but physically healthy patientsHEALTH REPORT The Backyard Besieged Environmentalists and regulators want to stifle that suburban icon, the noisy, air-fouling lawn mowerINFORMED SOURCES The Wine Portfolio Beset by sagging sales, the government and a new bug, California's vintners try to promote their waresMoms, Kids and AIDS Can testing and treatment before and after birth help thousands of youngsters threatened by HIV?WASHINGTOON ON THE MONEY How a Falling Dollar Hurts UsTop 10 Sponsors of Congressional Junkets Fading AwayCity on Edge Mired in squalor, awash in glitz, Moscow struggles to find a sense of itselfINSIDE WASHINGTON The U.S. Keeps an Eye on Its Friends HALL MONITOR OF THE WEEK Sharing StonesBLACK GOLD RUSH ; One of history's great oil scrambles is under way as new fields open up abroadWINNERS & LOSERS The Narco-Candidate? A newly elected President is hit with charges that Cali drug lords helped finance his campaignSEEN & HEARDThe Job of JobsAs the Plutonium Cools After a visit from Carter, Kim Il Sung promises to freeze his bomb program, and the U.S. agrees to talksTIME masthead July 4, 1994 -- Vol. 144, No. 1 Tightening the Screws The U.S. cuts commercial air links and sows seeds of distrust among the military leadershipIS THIS THE LAST BEST HOPE? A clutch of Senators comes up with a plan that falls far short of Clinton's dreams, but it may be passableTHE WEEK JUNE 19-25Million-Dollar Bill He promised to shun the fat cats, but now Clinton keeps the cash flowing into Democratic war chests
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July 4, 19941994-07-041994-07-04
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