Table of Contents
Table of ContentsThe Other Partner TIPPER She may be a stay-at-home, but she enlightened the rock industry without giving up her drumsBaby Huey on the ATTACK As the dean of the nasty commercial, Floyd Brown has you-know-who in his sightsDemi Makes UpA Week of Multi-Party PoliticsQueen of the Game of KingsBeginning Of the Road To discover the real Bill Clinton, look not at Yale or Oxford, but at the thick forests and fertile plains of his native ArkansasTIME magazine contents page JULY 20, 1992 VOL. 140 NO. 3 . . . Or Is It Creative Freedom?An Interview With CLINTON He denounces the politics of personal destruction and says that Bush himself is to blame for itGORE A Hard-Won Sense of Ease A failed White House run and his son's accident tempered and matured himThe Jung and the RestlessROSS PEROT House of Pain, Place of DenialClinton's Second Chance Fashioning an all-Southern, baby-boomer ticket and offering a ; retooled economic program, the Democratic candidate readies himself for a grueling, down-and-dirty fall campaignIce T: Is the Issue Social Responsibility . . .SHORT TAKES The King's RansomThe Frog PrincessLook Back in AngerPaying the Price of Freedom The Kirov Opera barnstorms the U.S. as its chief, Valery Gergiev, confronts the dilemma of the arts in post-Soviet Russia: how to survive without subsidiesTIME magazine masthead JULY 20, 1992 VOL. 140 NO. 3 Revenge of The AndroidsSailing the Sea of LiesWelcome to the Donors Club A businessman pledges a gift of $100 million, and an ecstatic college offers to change its name to hisNo Great RevelationsOnce Burned, Twice BoldAmerica Abroad The Birth of the Global NationReach Out and Diss SomeoneWhen Spain Was Islamic An exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum evokes the vanished culture of the Muslim conquest of IberiaDan Quayle's Hot Potato-e K-K-K-Katie THE PARTY ON TRIAL Yeltsin's democrats are asking a constitutional court to outlaw the Communist Party once and for allBloodshed in the Balkans GUNS NOW, BUTTER LATER Relief flights are bringing aid, but that is not enough to assuage the anger building in SarajevoPolicies for the Philippines ROSS PEROT'S DAYS AT BIG BLUE As a young and ambitious IBM salesman, he alienated many of his colleagues with his sharp-elbow tacticsA Legal Kind of Kidnapping The Great American LAYOFFS You call this a recovery? In the past year, 375,000 jobs have been lost, many for good, as most industries scale back.I'm Gonna Wash That Cat . . . CAMERA ANGLE Debt Bomb Defused? Brazil and banks reach a pact to end the crisis in Latin America End of the Gold Rush Canadians haul in their nets as a two-year cod-fishing ban begins Misery Has Company -- And Very Little Else Guest Yeltsin offers a bright idea, but the G-7 leaders come up empty Swabbing the Deck The Navy gets a squeaky-clean new boss -- and another black eye GROWING UP POOR IN THE U.S. Fall of the Mighty The law snares an S&L swindler, an ex-envoy and a careless airline A Southern All-Star Team for Democrats The choice of Gore rejects both balance and convention suspense VOX POPHEADCOUNTA REALLY HOT GAMEET CETERA PHYSICIAN, WASH THYSELF ET CETERA DRUG DANGER Red Light? Or Green? Two court decisions go in opposite directions on environmental hazards BUCKYBALLS Brrr! What Global Warming? The eruption of Mount Pinatubo is cooling the planet off -- temporarily ET CETERA JUVENILE DIVORCE COURT Losing an Edge Japan, Germany and Switzerland begin to outpace the U.S. Was Huck Finn Black? A Twain scholar says a loquacious 10-year-old inspired the character Presumed Innocent A trial ends with a nanny's tenuous triumph and a baffling whodunit Big League Shuffle Baseball's boss rearranges old rivalries and makes new enemies ET CETERA BREAKING A SHAMEFUL SILENCE B.C.C.I. Hits Home A Saudi bank roils the markets after its top officer is indicted
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