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TIME: Almanac 1993
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1992-08-28
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CONTENTS, Page 4TIME magazine contents pageVol. 133 No. 15APRIL 10, 1989
THE NEW U.S.S.R.
The faces express determination, involvement, expectation
but also anxiety, for Mikhail Gorbachev is well on his way to
creating a new U.S.S.R. TIME presents a 63-page report on how
his reforms are changing the Soviet Union, from polling booth
to factory, from classroom to stage, from wheat field to
metropolitan market. Whatever course the Gorbachev revolution
finally takes, it is already one of the most momentous events
of the second half of the 20th century.
46
THE UNION: YELTSIN'S GREAT COMEBACK
Election victories give populists more clout. -- An
exclusive poll shows what the comrade thinks. -- Haunted by
history's horrors.
74
BUSINESS: LOOSENING THE ECONOMIC GRIP
Self-financing brings cash -- and confusion. -- The co-op
movement is running into resentment. -- Meet the yuccies. --
Joint misadventures.
86
LIVING: HOW REFORMS FARE IN THE PROVINCES
A visit to Tambov, a town in the Russian heartland,
uncovers far more change than expected and a cadre of new
thinkers ready to carry the torch.
98
RELIGION: ISLAM BEGINS TO FLOWER
Soviet Muslims are cautiously regaining their
long-suppressed public voice. -- A photo essay explores
Christianity and Judaism.
108
ARTS: A SPRING FLOOD OF CULTURE
Theater premieres, art exhibitions, poetry readings, film
previews, cultural debates. There are too many to attend. But
is it really a new Soviet Renaissance?
129
ESSAY: AN EMIGRE RETURNS TO MOSCOW
Andrei Sinyavsky finds his countrymen relishing greater
liberty but, after run-ins with the KGB, questions whether
perestroika and glasnost can survive.
3 Critics' Choice
8 Letters
10 Soviet Scene
35 Milestones
38 Nation
94 Medicine
95 Technology
96 Education
102 Health
105 Behavior
106 People
110 Music
112 Theater
116 Art
120 Books
124 Press
127 Cinema
128 Fashion
Cover: Neon sculpture by Let There Be Neon
Photograph by Roberto Brosan