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Table of Contents: March 7, 1994
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In this issue
Edition: U.S.
Vol. 143 No. 10
Read the Cover Story

COVER
Double Agent (Cover Stories)
The FBI says a spy deep within the CIA sold secrets that led to the death of U.S. informers in Russia


NATION
A Product Michael Jordan Hasn't Endorsed (Chronicles)

Company in Question (Intelligence)
Even before the Ames case broke, the agency was in the middle of an almost complete restructuring

Dispatches Desperate Straits (Chronicles)

Fine Tuning (Chronicles)

Health Report (Chronicles)

Inside Moscow Danger on Russian Subways and Trains (Chronicles)

Lillehammer Babylon an Opinionated Winter Olympics Roundup (Chronicles)

My Country for a Rolex (Chronicles)

New Alias, Old Tricks (Intelligence)

The Organization Man (The White House)
Harold Ickes is helping the President get his act together and drive a harder bargain on health care

The Week February 20-26 (Chronicles)

Winners & Losers (Chronicles)

Zhirinovsky Beat (Chronicles)


WORLD
Back in the Shadows (Diplomacy)
As the U.S. expels a Russian spook, relations between cold-war rivals threaten to devolve into a cold peace

Next, Friendly Persuasion (Bosnia)
Buoyed by success in Sarajevo, U.S. envoys press for a settlement between Bosnia's Croats and Muslims

Playing Host to Some Dubious Guests (Bosnia)
They're grateful for peace, yet many Sarajevans are sorry Russians brought it

The Making of a Murderous Fanatic (Middle East)

When Fury Rules (Middle East)
The Hebron massacre prompts some to call for more blood -- and others to hope for quicker progress toward peace


SPORT
End of the Winter's Tale (Figure Skating)
The showdown between Kerrigan and Harding is over, and the winner is, no surprise, Oksana Baiul

The Olympics That Came in From the Cold (Figure Skating)


ALSO IN THIS ISSUE
How to Tap a Computer

Public Eye Harry and Louise

Time (Contents)
Magazine Contents Page MARCH 7, 1994 VOL. 143 NO. 10

Time (Masthead)
Magazine masthead MARCH 7, 1994 VOL. 143 NO. 10

Search inside this issue:

BUSINESS
Disconnected
The collapse of the Bell Atlantic-TCI deal may slow but not stop construction of the information highway

Inflation Terminator (Money)
Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan vows to beat back the threat of price rises, even before they happen


LAW
Another Judgment Day
In San Antonio, a jury acquits 11 Branch Davidians of murder but finds five guilty of manslaughter


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Aged to Perfection (The Arts & Media / MUSIC)
Two CDs showcase the warm, sinuous voice of Billy Eckstine

Between Two Worlds (The Arts & Media / BOOKS)
Two black journalists provide compelling accounts of their struggles to succeed in the white mainstream

Furthermore (The Arts & Media / MUSIC)

Half-Baked Alaska (The Arts & Media / CINEMA)
Steven Seagal heads north for his most inane epic yet

High-Fiber Moralist (The Arts & Media / BOOKS)
America's unhealthy eating habits inspire novelist Paul Theroux's latest burst of satiric sleight of hand

One and Only (The Arts & Media / THEATER)
Solo performers are all the rage, sometimes literally, onstage

Sweet Dreams From Vietnam (The Arts & Media / CINEMA)
The Scent of Green Papaya, nominated for the foreign-language Oscar, unearths a poignant, shimmering old Saigon

The Power of Celine Dion (The Arts & Media / MUSIC)
Canada's star chanteuse sang hits from Beauty and the Beast and Sleepless in Seattle; now she's reached No. 1 on her own


TO OUR READERS
To Our Readers


ESSAY
The Search for Virtues


Quotes of the Day »

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GREGG KEESLING on reports he received a call from an Army official saying he wasn't eligible to receive a condolence letter from President Obama because his son committed suicide, rather than dying in action.