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TITLE: TIME magazine
[The news-magazine of the century, with all the news, features, and vintage ADS! See FULL contents below!]
ISSUE DATE:
OCTOBER 13, 1997; VOL. 150 NO. 15
CONDITION:
Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)
IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: America's Fascination with BUDDHISM. Up close with BRAD PITT, star of Seven Years in Tibet. COVER: Photography by David Appleby--Mandalay Entertainment.
COVER STORY: The Americanization of Buddhism:
The ancient Asian religion is a certified pop phenomenon with two major movies (one starring Brad Pitt), an avalanche of books and a burgeoning bunch of Buddha boosters. But the faith -is more than the fashion. It has taken root in America, and Buddhism is being propagated in ways the original teachers never imagined.
Seven Years in Tibet: The making of the movie.
Bodhisattva Brad? Not quite, as Bruce Handy finds out.
NATION:
CAMPAIGN FINANCE: One Sugar or Two?:
Will Congress find extra sweetener in videotapes of the President taking coffee with potential donors?.
The Teamsters: The swap that never was.
ENVIRONMENT: The Temperature's Rising:
No matter what the Administration decides about global warming, it will leave lots of people unhappy.
CRIME: So Young, So Lost:
A murder in a quiet suburb reveals a secret layer of trauma.
MYSTERIES: Pictures at an Exhibition: Photos of stolen art emerge. Can the real things be far behind?.
DRIVING: "Reasonable and Prudent": Some Montana folks favor a slightly more specific speed limit.
HISTORY: Armageddon Revisited: A new book uses Kennedy's secret tapes to give a verbatim account of Washington's side of the Cuban missile crisis.
WORLD:.
PRINCESS DIANA: A Dossier on the Crash.
A TIME investigation uncovers the latest details in the official inquiry into the causes of the accident that took her life.
AFGHANISTAN: Return to a Medieval Way of Life.
Christiane Amanpour on the Taliban's crackdown on women.
MIDDLE EAST: The Bungle in Jordan.
Mossad trips up during an attempted hit on a Hamas leader.
BUSINESS.
TELECOMMUNICATIONS: Bernie's Deal.
With its $30 billion bid for long-distance carrier MCI, WorldCom aims to become the No. 1 challenger to AT&T.
MONEY: The Next Step to the Cashless Society.
Two New York City banks unveil smart cards.
LAW: Hooters Boys Need Not Apply.
The restaurant chain can reserve some jobs just for women.
RETAILING: No More Bullying.
The Federal Trade Commission knocks Toys "R" Us tactics.
SCIENCE AND SOCIETY.
NATURE: In Praise of Serpents.
A book celebrates the beauty and mystery of snakes.
BEHAVIOR: Beware the Young Elephants.
In Africa, a lesson in the necessity of adult supervision.
MEDICINE: Fool a Cold.
A chemical decoy may stave off those seasonal sniffles.
THE ARTS.
CINEMA: Soul Food serves up a spicy box-office hit and a lesson that Hollywood can't afford to ignore.
Soul Food and Eve's Bayou: black film's new edge.
Hollywood's own Pynchon, Terrence Malick.
ART: Roy Lichtenstein was Pop's most popular stylist.
PEOPLE: Is Polanski returning?; celebrity fitness books.
ESSAY: Garrison Keillor on a landmark restaurant closing.
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