Table of ContentsNO THANKS FOR THE MEMORIES A Senator's diary prompts questions of crime, propriety and privacyTIME Magazine Masthead NOVEMBER 8, 1993 VOL. 142 NO. 19 FURTHERMORE BITING HIS HANDLERS An FBI informant's secret tapes raise a troubling issue in the tower-bombing case: Did the bureau screw up?RINGMASTER AND CLOWN FEDERICO FELLINI, 1920-1993THE WEEK OCTOBER 24-30NOT DANCING BUT DROWNING The same themes do not make this bleak work a LughnasaSHOCKING IMAGE SAILING OFF TO THE PAST With his 16th novel about two heroes of the Napoleonic Wars, Patrick O'Brian is seeing his ship come in at lastWITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE A host of shadowy figures is helping Haiti's military rulers hatch a plot to sideline Aristide permanentlyBeloved Nobelist WILD LIKE THE WIND Forces natural and unnatural combine to destroy hundreds of homes and ravage six countiesFeted, Clint Meets Klimt''PLEASE HELP US'' Clinton finally presents his detailed health-care plan, but he faces an uphill fight, thanks to critics in Congress and increasing public oppositionLet the Sunshine In Baby Buster Bonnie RaittThe Triumph of Leni Don't Bother Comparing . . .Too Much Trash REMEMBER THE DEFICIT? While the White House nibbles at it, there are others who would rather take a real whackThe Final Game THE IMAGE DUPLICATOR At New York's Guggenheim Museum, a splashy retrospective hails the ironies of Pop's cool and ever reliable academicFLOAT LIKE A BUTTERFLY, STING LIKE...ALI His role model was the Greatest. Now Riddick Bowe is the champ to look up to: a heavyweight with a sense of mission, a puritanical streak and some solid punch lines.WHAT IN THE WORLD ARE WE DOING? MASTERS OF THEIR DOMAIN Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David are sitting atop the sitcom world. Here's an inside look at how they do it.FURTHERMORE TIME Magazine Contents Page NOVEMBER 8, 1993 VOL. 142 NO. 19 STILL LIFE OF ANTHONY HOPKINS In Remains of the Day, he brings power to an opaque portrait of an English butlerCLINTON'S WEIRD GUY A lively film about the campaign stalks a brightly colored political animalBetter Steve McQueen Than James Darren in Gidget The fashion world's newest paragon of cool seems to be Steve McQueen in The Thomas Crown Affair HEALTH REPORT CLONING: WHERE DO WE DRAW THE LINE? Researchers duplicate a human embryo, provoking cries that technology has gone too farA BUILDER, NOT A SLASHER The man who made Motorola a world-class competitor takes his talents to troubled KodakCALLING GERGEN-SAN UnDIPLOMATic parking MAP How Much Cheaper Are HMO's? ANOTHER AIDS TEASER France's Pasteur Institute touts a breakthrough that could lead to a treatment -- or disappointmentDISPATCHES Clintonism: Trick or Treat?CLONING CLASSICSTHEY CLONE CATTLE, DON'T THEY?Splitting Headaches Better Be Covered THE CRYING GAME After decades of bloodshed and tears, there is still no end in sight to Ulster's agonyNURSE -- A SEDATIVE, QUICKLY! SEEN & HEARDINFORMED SOURCES ''YESTERDAY'S MAN'' CHARTS THE FUTURE After a landslide election victory, Jean Chretien faces separatism, a lame economy and a bare fiscal cupboardSTATE OF ANTICIPATION The Caribbean island agonizes over whether to seek admission to the UnionLETTER TO AN ISOLATIONISTWARNING: IPO MANIA CAN BE COSTLY The sizzling market in new issues is encouraging lots of companies to go public. Small investors, beware.INSIDE MOGADISHU THEY'RE HOT IN THE U.S. BUT EVEN HOTTER ABROADTHE SIREN CALL OF MUTUAL FUNDS The lure of high returns has investors -- pros and amateurs -- plowing record amounts into funds. Both Washington and Wall Street are worried.WAR OF NERVES AT THE NUCLEAR BRINK The U.S. tries secret talks to seek nuclear compliance from North KoreaWINNERS & LOSERS