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Dec 26, 2016 Vol 188 No 27 & 28

Inside the Lives of 4 Syrian Refugee Families

Our Journey Begins

The Fastest Man on Wheels

Mike Pence Is No Ordinary Wingman

Wonder Woman Breaks Through
She’s been a suffragist, a soldier and a sex symbol. But it took 75 years to bring the world’s most famous female superhero to the big screen. Why we need Wonder Woman now.

Beware the Tricks and Traps of Donald Trump, News Manipulator In Chief

Predictions About Prediction in 2017, With the Help of Lisa Vanderpump
Data is out, and pure gut instinct is in

The 2017 Quiz on News-to-Be
Test your news sense by predicting the headlines to come in the year ahead

How Bad Air Came Back

A Collection of Tales That Bind
Flying Lessons aims for maximal inclusion

7 Food Trends for 2017
Innovations that are shaking up how we eat and drink

The European Union Can Emerge From 2017 Stronger, If It Survives

The Reboot Playbook Expands
Hollywood is finding (many) more ways to revive familiar stories

Donald Trump’s Top Priority Must Be a Strong China Strategy
Here are the key elements

The World’s New Diplomat In Chief

2017 Milestones
Anniversaries you’ll hear about

Michael Bloomberg: Where Washington Fails to Drive Progress, Cities Will Act
”Problem-solving mayors in both parties are experimenting with innovative policies”

Eric Schmidt and Jared Cohen: We Must Prepare Ourselves for the Cyberwars of the Future
’We lack the policies to inform consistent behavior among states’

Why America Is Losing Asia
Donald Trump’s victory may hasten a retreat from the region

The 2017 Album Watch List
The pop royals and hip-hop rookies we can’t wait to hear from next year

Calendar: Culture

For the Record

New Frontiers In Medicine
Look for major progress in these key areas By

Where Catcalling Is Criminalized
Verbal sexual harassment is now a punishable offense in Buenos Aires. The Argentine city legislated against various forms of sexual harassment on Dec. 7, becoming just the latest locale to call out calling out.

How AI Is Getting More Human
Robot assistants are on the rise. Here’s what they can already do

Dr. Cristin Kearns
The former dentist turned investigative researcher is exposing how the sugar industry got us hooked

Diversity Waits on a Green Light
With #OscarsSoWhite in view, Hollywood inches ahead

Ban Ki-Moon Reflects on Donald Trump, Global Citizenship and More
The departing U.N. Secretary-General reflects on Trump, global citizenship and the future of disarmament

The Era of American Global Leadership Is Over. Here’s What Comes Next

Jeff Immelt: Localization Can Help America Win Around the World
”Politicians make the claim that our government has helped multinationals globalize and that businesses that globalize are somehow ’crony capitalists.’ This is hogwash.”

With Aleppo’s Fall, Syria’s Civil War Reaches a Grim Turning Point

Can Trump ‘Scrap’ Green Rules?
Undoing Obama’s environmental legacy won’t be easy

Calendar: Discovery

Refugees Through the Looking Glass in “Exit West”
Mohsin Hamid’s new novel imagines migrant escape via magic portals

A New Class of Hard-Ass Heroes
Two Oscar-winning actors and a resident bad girl light up new series

Calendar: Power

Bette Midler
The entertainer dishes on next year’s Hello, Dolly! revival, reissuing her first album and being a mentor

25th JFK Assassination Secrets Scheduled for 2017 Release

Donald Trump’s Shock Doctrine Will Make China Even Stronger
”If America steps back by choice, by consequence it will also be less welcome”

The 2017 Fear Index
What might just happen (or not) in the year ahead

World Elections: Races to Watch
They will determine 2017’s balance of power

The Climate-Change Diet
A new study suggests Britain’s classic dish of fish and chips might not survive in its current form because of climate change (see right). But warmer temperatures and more-frequent extreme weather events are threatening beloved food staples around the globe.

How Trump Is Restocking the Washington Swamp

John Glenn
National hero

Donald Trump’s Schoolyard Rebel
Donald Trump taps a champion of vouchers for all

Alan Thicke
Iconic TV Dad

What You Said About …

Milestones

Racing the Clock In the ISIS Era
With a revamped cast, 24: Legacy is after more than nostalgia

Russia’s Election Meddling Hampers Trump Transition

NASA Has a New Way to Fly
How private companies are modernizing the space program

‘Homesick For Another World’ Is Full of Creeps Who Are Not Totally Deplorable
Ottessa Moshfegh’s story collection spotlights loners and losers
Dec 19, 2016彪ol 188 No 25 & 26

The Choice

The Teddy Awards, Even In a Year That Set New Lows for Politicians

In 2016, Lies, the Whole Lies and Nothing but the Lies

Amazing Grace

The Best of Culture 2016
Dec 12, 2016 Vol 188 No 24

Former Cuban Leader Fidel Castro Dies at 90

Huge Numbers Demand the Ouster of South Korea’s President in a Fifth Week of Protests
What began as a rally against South Korea’s President Park Geun-hye has morphed into a general indictment of a nation’s social ills

How Castro Will Be Trump’s First Foreign Policy Test

Bringing a Hero Home: A Decade-Long Quest Ends With a Pilot’s Third Burial
A decadelong quest ends with a pilot’s third burial at Arlington

Quick Talk With Helen Mirren
The English actor, 71, stars in Collateral Beauty (Dec. 16), a drama about a grieving advertising executive (Will Smith) who is forced to confront his loss in an unusual way.

Style Over Substance: Why Fidel Castro’s Revolutionary Chic Was a Fraud

Why Michael Keaton Would Rather Be a Dog

The Crucial Difference Between Christmas and a Trip to the Store

Cuba Is a Litmus Test for Trump
’Let’s hope for a pragmatic approach’

Peru Is a Bright Spot on the Global Stage

8 Questions With Krista Tippett

The host of radio’s On Being talks about wisdom, debate, downright disagreement--and coming together when things fall apart

Can Trump Clean Up His Messy World of Conflicts?

Castro’s Cuba Is the Only Way of Life Many Have Known

Haters Shall Be Lovers In La La Land

Jackie Places the First Lady Under a Microscope

A Star-Studded Tribute to a Lovable Lensman

John Legend’s Light Shines Even Brighter

Hairspray Live! Promises Retro Fun With Little Risk

It’s a Mean, Sometimes Sad World-but Reading Can Help

Florence Henderson Was Television’s Archetypal Mom
Television’s archetypal mom

Florence Henderson Was A Wellspring of Comfort

Burma’s Oppressed Muslims at Crisis Point

A Strange Trumphoria Rules the U.S. Stock Market. For Now

France’s Man to Take on the Far Right

Why the Embattled ‘Death Tax’ May Not Be Long for This World

Artificial Intelligence Invades the Home … In Toys
Nov 28, 2016 Vol 188 No 22 & 23

Most Influential Photos

The 25 Best Inventions of 2016

Inside Donald Trump’s Chaotic Transition
The President-elect lays the groundwork for his January move into the Oval Office. But he’s quickly learning that politicians campaign, Presidents govern. Inside the chaotic first days of Donald J. Trump’s transition to power, it’s clear that he faces a steep learning curve

Trump Will Thaw Chilly U.S.-Russia Relationship

Why We Must Focus Now on Maintaining Democracy, Civility and Perspective

India Pays Steep Price for Cash Withdrawal

5 Questions With Natalie Portman
The Oscar-winning actor stars in Jackie , about the emotionally turbulent week Jacqueline Kennedy endured after her husband was assassinated

How Donald Trump Could Remake Global Trade With a Pen

How Donald Trump Can Make Airports and Bridges Great Again

The First Steps to 船rain the Swamp・
The Limits of Military Spending

The Return of 船rill, Baby, Drill・
Donald Trump’s Election Heralds a New Abortion Landscape

Donald Trump’s Immigration Hard Line Would Affect Millions

Beijing Welcomes Trump

The Foreign Policy Hot Spots Facing Donald Trump

Inside the Halting Fight Against AIDS
Nearly a dozen U.S. cities have pledged to drastically reduce new infections and deaths from HIV/AIDS. Progress has been uneven at best.

Bummed About the Election? Finding a New Country Is a Lot Harder Than It Looks

Gwen Ifill
Trailblazing journalist

Teen Angst With a New Edge

Avoid Political Tension at Thanksgiving

Trump’s Presidency Could Mean the End of a Livable Climate

The Sky Is Falling
A large metal cylinder, thought to be a part of a Chinese rocket, crashed into the jade-mining area in northern Burma on Nov. 10. The 15-ft. drum is just the latest piece of space junk to come crashing down to earth.

Donald Trump’s Obamacare Conundrum

A Precarious but Picturesque Perch

McConaughey Goes Carly Rae In Animated Sing

What’s In Eddie Redmayne’s Library

In a Tragedy, Casey Affleck Finds Triumph

Investors Try to Predict Trump

Rogue One Rewinds-and Rewrites-the Star Wars Legacy

The U.S. Continues to Come Apart In the Wake of a Divisive Election

Lion’s True Story of an Unlikely Homecoming

Eddie Redmayne Wants to Make You Believe In Magic Again

Leon Russell
Master of the Boogie

Leonard Cohen
Singer of the sublime

Hidden Figures Calculates the Sum of a Story Untold

Hold Yourself Accountable ・You’ll Be Happier

A Comeback King Fights His Way Back Into the Ring

The Workaholic’s Case for a Four-Hour Day

For the Record

Former NATO Supreme Commander on Trump and Security: Buckle Up
From Russia to ISIS, here’s what sits in President-elect Trump’s inbox
Nov 21, 2016彪ol 188 No 21

The Making of President Donald Trump

Covering History

Donald Trump, the Markets and Economic Growth-What to Expect
Donald Trump’s presidential victory has turned the markets upside down. That’s actually not surprising

Donald Trump’s Foreign Policy Is a Black Box
His supporters want the U.S. to pull back from the world

What’s Next for Democrats After the Clintons?
What does the future look like for a post-Clinton Democratic Party?

Donald Trump Will Face Unprecedented Ethics Decisions as President
The 45th President will face unprecedented ethics decisions

Inside Donald Trump’s Stunning Upset
Inside Donald Trump’s stunning upset

How Hillary Clinton Lost
Hillary Clinton built a machine. The nation wanted a movement

Hillary Clinton Collides Again With Highest Glass Ceiling
Her loss may be as good a sign as any that we池e not ready for glass breaking yet

Donald Trump and the Abyss of the Value Gap

The Unexpected Way Donald Trump Is Like Barack Obama
Millions of Americans voted for Trump, now commentators are asking what comes next

Elle’s Belle: Huppert Resounds In Verhoeven’s Latest

States Lean Left on Local Votes

In the Gilmore Girls・Hometown, Things Are (Mostly) the Same

How to Recover from This No Good, Very Bad Election Season and All Its Spooky Horrors

Was the 2016 Campaign Really the Dirtiest Election Ever?

Want to Go to Mars? Ron Howard’s New Series Gives Red Planet Fever a Boost

The Results: President

The Past Goes to the Hospital

Pop Chart

’The Forgotten Men and Women of Our Country Will Be Forgotten No Longer.・
In Arrival, Amy Adams Takes a Listening Tour of the Universe

The Results: Congress

In Zadie Smith’s New Novel, Performance Is the Tie That Binds, and Divides
Nov 14, 2016 Vol 188 No 20

How the 2016 Election Became a Battle of the Sexes

South Korea’s Familial Presidential Family Scandal

Why Hillary Clinton Is the Only Choice to Keep America Great

The Golden State’s Big Green Bet
California is poised to legalize marijuana, potentially transforming the global pot trade. But an unlikely group isn’t partaking

The Syrians Next Door
Two years after fleeing their home, the Tameem family became the first Syrian refugees in Iowa

There Is Such a Thing As Too Much Voting, and It’s Going on In My Neighborhood

The Balance of Power: Senate, House and State Races to Watch

J.D. Vance on Why Life Might Get Worse for the White Working Class
The Hillbilly Elegy author and champion of an oft-maligned group talks Trump, Clinton and the white working class on the eve of the election

This Just In

Crimes of the Heart in Javier Mar僘s’s Thus Bad Begins

How the Media Got Smarter About Calling Elections

Ireland Grapples with the Thorny Issue of Repealing an Abortion Ban
A young, secular population helped pass same-sex marriage in Ireland last year and wants abortion restrictions overturned ・but the fight is proving bitterly divisive

Disney Makes Its Maiden Voyage to the South Pacific

7 Ideas From Other Countries That Could Improve U.S. Elections
From same-day voter registration to weekend voting

Milestones

Mistaken Names
Apple apologized to U.K. citizen Sharakat Hussain for refusing to give him a refund unless he could prove he was not former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein--who was executed in 2006. Here, other offbeat cases of mistaken political identity.

In This Battle of the Bands, Oasis Beats Iggy

The Real Elena Ferrante Surfaces悠n Books

The Rights of the Heart, Interpreted With Beauty by Loving

Why James Comey Couldn’t Keep the FBI Above Politics

The Real-Life Rebellion Behind Amazon’s Good Girls Revolt

Telling the Lovings・Story In 1966

The Next President’s Financial Imperative: Fixing Social Security

’There’s a lot at stake’

A High-Plains Showdown Over the Dakota Access Pipeline

The Open-Top Submarine

Other Big Issues on the Ballot

Pop Chart

Triviality Is the Mother of Invention

This Internet Yoga Guru Has Fans Flocking to Her From Around the World
One of the most popular practitioners of yoga on Instagram has grown an enormous fllowing, with fans around the world flocking to her sold-out classes

Lebanon’s New Leader Aims to Keep 然egional Fires・at Bay

Why Physical Things Matter in a Digital World
’We are complex creatures’

For the Record
Nov 7, 2016 Vol 188 No 19

Iraq Takes on ISIS as the Battle for Mosul Begins

The Ultimate Insider Who Could Still Change the Game In the Oval Office

’The Jungle Is Over.’ Migrants Leave Calais Behind to an Uncertain Future
In a week’s time the infamous refugee camp will be closed. Where will its 8,300 residents go?

Teen Depression and Anxiety: Why the Kids Are Not Alright

Why Real Peace in Colombia Matters to the U.S.-and the Rest of the Americas
5 reasons the U.S. should do all it can to see the peace accord come to fruition

Meet the Pioneers of President Obama’s Clemency Campaign

How Singapore Sees Asia-and America

Anna Deavere Smith on Race, Education and Criminal Justice
’I’ve been interested in people who see the dignity in struggle’

The Forgotten Side of Cancer Care

This Just In

Obamacare Sticker Shock
President Obama’s signature health-insurance plan is facing rising costs, which are likely to continue to grow if Congress and the next President do not agree to rewrite key parts of the law. Here are a few telling statistics.

America’s Canine Protectors

Why Political Predictions Still Contain So Much Uncertainty

Eric Garcetti: Tom Hayden Never Stopped Pushing for Peace and Justice
He fought for rights for all

5 Ways to Help Your Kids Have a Healthy Relationship With Technology
Inside the new standards for kids and screen time

Quick Talk With Andrew Garfield

The American-British actor, 33, stars as conscientious objector Desmond Doss in Hacksaw Ridge, out Nov. 4 (see review, left); next, on Dec. 23, he’ll appear alongside Liam Neeson and Adam Driver in Martin Scorsese’s Silence, about 17th century Jesuit priests.

American Horror Story Is Frightfully Good With Secrets

The Danger of Having Too Many Experts

A Well That Sucks Water from Air

A Leading Man Saves Hacksaw Ridge from Hackdom

Pop Chart

A Shocking Internet Attack Shows America’s Vulnerability

The Pirate Party Sets Sail for Election Victory In Iceland

Read a Novel: It’s Just What the Doctor Ordered
Reading fiction can improve your mental health

A Sprawling Drama About Elizabeth II Aims to Be Netflix’s New Crown Jewel

Valley of Violence Is Hounded by Its True Star

For the Record

Milestones
Oct 31, 2016 Vol 188 No 18

Gretchen Carlson’s Next Fight

The 30 Most Influential Teens of 2016

Argentina’s Mauricio Macri on the Challenge of Change

Beware the Toxic Sequel to Donald Trump’s Flailing Presidential Campaign

A New Look at Greenspan Shows the Economic Perils of Trusting Oracles
’Greenspan’s legacy offers lessons for today’s economic problems’

Even Headstrong Generals Must Answer to Someone

Between Two Worlds: Libya Has Devolved Into a Brutal Marketplace of Human Lives
In the absence of a government, Libya has devolved into a brutal marketplace of human lives

Gabrielle Union on Sexual Assault, Raising Black Sons and Her Move to Chicago
The ’Birth of a Nation’ star talks to TIME about merging acting and activism and how she envisions her life at 65

How Trump Plans to Win-Even If He Loses the Election

A Tense Thailand Mourns Its King - and Fears for Its Future
The country enters a year of mourning, and days of uncertainty

Red on Red: A Divided Labour Is Struggling to Survive

Why Fitness Trackers Aren’t Making Us Healthier

What Hillary Clinton’s Insiders Know That Voters Don’t-Yet

Neither at War Nor at Peace, Colombia’s FARC Rebels Watch and Wait
TIME visits the FARC rebels in a remote camp in Colombia

The Joneses Tries to Shake Up the ‘Hood

Moonlight Enchants by Revealing Itself In a Thousand Facets

Laurie’s New Healing Sleuth Takes a Dubious Chance

Monumental Offenses
After months of protests and court battles, Russia unveiled on Oct. 14 the country’s first monument to Ivan the Terrible, a 16th century tyrant responsible for thousands of murders. Here, three other controversial public sculptures.

For the Record

What You Said About …

This Just In

New Deal on Pollutants Caps Good Year for Climate Action

The Fighters In the Battle for Mosul
The long-awaited attack on the ISIS-held city of Mosul brings together a motley coalition of Iraqi military forces numbering roughly 80,000. The attack force reflects both Iraq’s diversity and its divisions. Here’s a rundown of the major players.

The Social Cost of Solitary Confinement
These conditions aren’t bad just for prisoners. They’re bad for everyone

The Hidden Truth In Every Ghost Story

Milestones

This Land Is Our Land

A Data Breach You Can Smell

Bhumibol Adulyadej

King of Thailand
Oct 24, 2016 Vol 188 No 16 & 17

Inside Donald Trump’s Latest Meltdown

The Harsh Reality of Brexit Sets In

My Household Get-out-the-vote Campaign Hits a Teen Roadblock

Why the Russian Hacks of Hillary Clinton’s Campaign Should Reassure Us All

10 Questions With Jeremy Corbyn
The far-left leader of Britain’s main opposition Labour Party on why insurgent leaders are on the rise and why his wife can’t stand Donald Trump

In the Year of Character, Issues Still Matter

Quick Talk With Rebecca Hall
The British-born actor, 34, gives an award-worthy performance in Christine (Oct. 14), director Antonio Campos’ harrowing reimagining of the final days of Florida TV news anchor Christine Chubbuck, who shot herself during a live broadcast in 1974.

Under the Giant Heads of Mascots Live Absurd Humans Just Like Us

U.S.-Russia Tensions Reach Dangerous New Level

Surgeons Perform First Uterus Transplant in the U.S.
The procedure can help women born without a uterus give birth

The Financial World’s Rotten Culture Is Still a Threat-to All of Us

Obama Says NASA Will Put a Human on Mars ‘by the 2030s.’ Can It?

Haters Back Off Takes a Star from YouTube to TV

Crossing the Border

How Thinking Like a Kid Can Spur Creativity
3 tips for banishing negative thoughts

13th : An Amendment With an Identity Crisis
Something in the succinct, passionate documentary will make your jaw drop

The Walking Dead Deals a Grisly Blow

One Nation, Up In Arms
Recent mass shootings have renewed the debate over gun rights. And every day Americans are killed by accidental gunshots or by weapons that fell into the wrong hands. Here’s a look at gun ownership and gun deaths in the U.S.

Hart of a Lion : Making an Entire City Laugh at Once

Yemen’s Tragic Civil War Reaches a New Level of Violence

Pop Chart

Milestones

A Tale of Two Tax Plans
A new report from the Tax Policy Center projects how the candidates’ tax plans would play out. The findings, which factor in proposed tax rates and breaks, show sharply diverging results.

Sniffing Out Dog Whistles
Even when people want to use neutral language, it can be hard to find ground that feels fair to all sides. One of the most powerful arbiters of phrasing, the AP Stylebook, has recommended avoiding many loaded phrases over the years, and other major media outlets often follow that advice.

Rebuilding Our Foundations

Certain Women Burns Slow but True

The Accountant Pays Small Dividends on Its Star
Ritualistic details make the film watchable

Why Table Manners Still Matter

America’s New Cardinals
Pope Francis recently named 17 new Cardinals, including three Americans, who will serve as his primary advisers after their Nov. 19 induction. Like Francis, the trio come from the church’s progressive wing, having spoken for immigrants, women and LGBT Catholics, and their appointment signals a shift toward (relative) liberalism among the U.S. Catholic leadership.

This Just In

A Glow-In-the-Dark Bike Path

For the Record

Under the Influence
A flock of starlings recently made headlines by mysteriously flying into trucks and cars on an Austrian motorway, causing miles-long traffic jams. Turns out it was because they were drunk--specifically, on fermented berries. Here are other animals known to enjoy natural highs.

Sci-fi Evolves Into Disturbing Reality In Black Mirror and Westworld
Oct 17, 2016 Vol 188 No 15

Next Generation Leaders

The White Helmets of Syria
As the war worsens, rescue workers risk their lives on the front lines

Syria’s First Responders

Jill Biden: Girls Around the World Are Standing Up For Their Rights
And the lives they want

Why Referendums Have Been Backfiring

Colombia’s Shock Referendum Vote Leaves Peace Deal in Tatters
Voters angry at the concessions given to FARC militants helped defeat the peace accords

Running Mates From the Past Prove the Need for a New Politics of the Future
The old arguments, and the old ways of arguing, have run their course

9 Questions With Bobby Seale
The Black Panthers co-founder, whose new book marks the 50th anniversary of the party’s establishment, talks about guns, Trump and Obama

New Frontiers In Breast Cancer
There are paradigm shifts in how breast cancer is screened for and treated預nd that’s good news for patients

Time Travels In Two Directions

Stolen Art That Made a Return
A pair of Vincent van Gogh paintings stolen from an Amsterdam museum in 2002 were found recently during a police sting of the Naples Mafia in Italy. The combined $30 million find joins other famous artworks to have been recovered.

Milestones

Wave of Unrest Crashes on Ethiopia
At least 52 people were killed in a stampede during protests in Ethiopia’s Oromia region on Oct. 2, allegedly after security forces opened fire on the crowd. The Oromo people claim to be politically and economically repressed by the ruling Tigrayans.

For the Record

The 然oboat・
America’s New Clown Panic

The Digital Cloud Is Underwater-and Vulnerable

Newtown : A Vivid Portrait of a Grieving Community

How Hillary Clinton’s Allies Are Expanding the Vote Behind the Scenes
An under-the-radar strategy that could decide the election

Why Deutsche Bank Is Spooking the Markets

This Just In

Murder, She Wrote

How Mindfulness Can Save You Money
Money has a unique ability to affect the way we think, feel and behave

Why Cats Rule the World

Bold and Fraught, The Birth of a Nation Merits Your Attention

Inside the Fight for Cleaner Air

Emily Blunt Makes a Droopy Girl on the Train Worth Watching
Tate Taylor’s adaptation of Paula Hawkins・novel is surprisingly earnest
Oct 10, 2016 Vol 188 No 14

How Russia Wants to Undermine the U.S. Election

The U.S. Has a Weak Hand In Syria-and Russia Knows It

Joe Klein: The Prepared Candidate and the One Who Is Still a Child

How Real Are the Risks of a Rigged Election?

Hamilton Conquered Broadway. Next Stop, the World
It conquered Broadway. Next stop, the world

How a Reclusive Hedge-Fund Boss and His Daughter Are Reshaping the Republican Party
Robert and Rebekah Mercer have emerged as powerful players in Donald Trump’s campaign, not to mention the fight for the GOP’s future. What is it they want?

Inside Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s War On Drugs

Once Sleepy Singapore Has Become Asia’s World City-While Hong Kong Is Lagging

Dating in Delhi
Young Indians are swiping right on dating apps like Tinder-but they’re looking for something a little different

Narendra Modi Pulls India Back From the Brink on Pakistan
’Military escalation is next to impossible’

‘Inside the Clinton White House: An Oral History’

Hillary Clinton comes across as a decisive woman who inspires loyalty as well as fear

The Developing Space Race
India hit a fresh milestone in its space program on Sept. 26 with the launch of eight satellites into different orbits using a single rocket. It’s one of several space expeditions by developing nations.

Pop Music Is Smarter Than It Appears

Shimon Peres Could Change. Can the Israelis and the Palestinians?

Floating Dorms

Review: Deepwater Horizon Brings Life to Oil Tragedy

Quick Talk With Mark Wahlberg
The actor and producer, 45, appears on the A&E reality show Wahlburgers, about the gourmet burger chain Mark founded with his brothers Donnie and Paul. In Deepwater Horizon, out Sept. 30, he stars as rig worker Mike Williams.

Big Data Breaches
Yahoo said on Sept. 22 that the personal data of at least 500 million users had been stolen from its networks in 2014, making it one of the most high-profile hacks in recent history. Here, a few others.

Mike Love Still Can’t Harmonize With the Beach Boys

The Beach Boy and the Boss: Darkness on the Edges of Two Memoirs

Why We’re Addicted to Email-and How to Fix It

What’s Next After the Peace Deal In Colombia

The Kids of American Honey Hit the Road With a Sweet-and-Sour Hustle
The romance between Sasha Lane and Shia LaBeouf hits the movie’s sweetest note

Why HBO’s Westworld Is Fall’s Most Promising Drama
The beautifully built series is worth exploring

The Growing Case for Shared Parenting After Divorce
’When it comes to parenting, two minds are better than one’

What It Takes to Win the World Series

A New ‘Hate Symbol’

This Just In

Arnold Palmer

American icon

For the Record

What You Said About …

Milestones

Pop Chart
Oct 3, 2016 Vol 188 No 13

European Politics Are Swinging to the Right

The Migrant Kids of Calais Refusing to Wait for the World to Act
As world leaders gather at the UN to tackle the migrant crisis, the displaced in Calais consider desperate measures

Meet the Pastor Who Prays With Donald Trump

All Across the Country, Athletes Are Fueling a Debate About How America Defines Patriotism
From NFL stadiums to high school sidelines, athletes are protesting during the national anthem--and fueling a debate about how America defines patriotism

China Puts a Limit on Russian Ambition

Heroin, Obamacare and Pride: Why Trump Is Finding an Audience In Southern Ohio

Jelani Jenkins: Why I Knelt During the National Anthem輸nd Why It’s Time to Stand Up
”This is not about football, the flag, the military, or Jelani Jenkins. This is about the message: equality for all”

The Mindful Classroom
Some experts think mindfulness is the antidote to distraction, misbehaving--even poor math scores. Are they on to something?

There’s No Such Thing As a Selective Patriot
Colin Kaepernick is right to take a knee

Return of the Classics
Their designs remain unrivaled

The Medical Records You’ve Been Waiting for Are Right Here in This Column
Hillary Clinton’s and Donald Trump’s medical records aren’t records at all

Colin Kaepernick Had No Choice but to Kneel
’We must understand what Kaepernick is protesting’

11 Questions With Jennifer Weiner
The best-selling novelist talks about her family, her difficult childhood and her recent Oprah’s Book Club controversy

How Incentive Prizes Can Spark Innovation

Odd Tax Breaks of the World

Two Religious Pillars Meet

There’s Still More Room-and Need-for Diversity on TV

Once Cool Magnificent Seven Now a Middling Septet

What a Terrorist Acting Alone Says About the Loyalty of U.S. Muslims

America’s Unseen Social Crisis: Men Without Work

Edward Albee
Icon of the American Theater

World Focuses on Superbug Threat
Global leaders gathered on Sept. 21 during the U.N. General Assembly to discuss the growing danger of antimicrobial resistance. It’s only the fourth time the General Assembly has examined a health issue.

Of Maladies and Miracles

A Museum Embraces the Triumph and Struggle of Black America

New York’s Next Monument

Brangelina

Kashmir Attack Pushes India and Pakistan to the Brink

The Wedding Party

This Just In

For the Record

With a Little Help, You Too Can Write a Young-Adult Novel

The High-Tech-Home Revolution Is Taking Longer Than Advertised

Wells Fargo Customer Fraud Deals Political Setback to Banks

Why Cities Need More Trees

Infinite Jests from the Good Place

Milestones
Sep 26, 2016 Vol 188 No 12

Inside Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s War On Drugs

The New Politics of Late Night
In a wild election with a ripe orange target, comics are ditching balance and taking sides

Kim Jong Un Gets the Last Laugh in North Korea
An unyielding North Korea launches its biggest nuclear test yet--and there’s little the U.S. alone can do to stop it

Moms of Young Muslims Enlist in the Fight Against ISIS
The powerful bond between a mother and child is now being used as a weapon to combat radicalization

Global Migration Is a Security and Moral Challenge. Here’s How to Address It
’We need to hold to our values’

A Coming Reckoning With North Korea

How Latinos Drive America’s Economic Growth

My Day on Mars
TIME’S space writer spends 24 hours inside NASA’s Simulated Mars Base in Hawaii

Meet the Pastor Who Prays With Donald Trump

What Comes After for-Profit Colleges’ ‘Lehman Moment’? Possibly an Education Crash

Hillary Clinton’s Biggest Stumbles Have Nothing to Do With Her Health

10 Questions With Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden
The Librarian of Congress, who oversees a collection of 162 million pieces, talks about Abraham Lincoln, overdue books and what she’s reading right now

My Life As a ‘None’ and Other Tales from the Ranks of the Unaffiliated and the Agnostic
Those who are not affiliated with any religion are now almost a quarter of the population

A Death In the Family Inspires Two Works of Art

The New Curse of Blair Witch: It’s Barely Scary

Bridget Jones Hasn’t Lost Her Charm

The Upside of Talking to Strangers

Bons Mots In a New Language

Phyllis Schlafly
Conservative icon

Rachel Weisz
In Denial, out Sept. 30, the actor, 46, plays historian Deborah Lipstadt, who was sued for libel in 1996 for calling author David Irving a Holocaust denier; in the British legal system, the burden fell on her defense team to essentially prove that the Holocaust happened.

Negative Rates Get a Second Look

Barriers at the Borders
It’s not just Donald Trump who’s seeking to build a ”big, beautiful wall.” The U.K. said Sept. 6 that it would fund a wall in the French port of Calais to keep out migrants, one of many in the works around the world.

Why We Should Watch Our Internal Clocks

The Emmys Struggle for Relevance In the Era of the Stream

How Sports Can Move Beyond Lip-Service Patriotism

How Outlook and Social Ties Affect the Way You Age

Lady Gaga Returns to a Changed Mainstream That’s Moved On

5 Simple Ways to Cut Down on Food Waste

Pop Chart

Can the World Agree on a Plan to Help Refugees?

What You Said About …

For the Record

Oliver Stone’s Snowden Lacks a Pulse

In the 2016 Election, Distrust Cuts Both Ways

This Just In

Furniture You Can Grow

Milestones
Sep 12, 2016 Vol 188 No 10

Hong Kong’s Hope

The New Science of Exercise
Doctors, researchers, scientists--even ancient philosophers--have long claimed exercise works like a miracle drug. Now they have proof

Putting the Camera Aside

A Disgruntled Iran Causes Trouble

Don’t Believe the New Myths About America’s White Working Class

Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
Smugglers are putting refugees on rafts that have virtually no chance of completing the dangerous Mediterranean crossing--turning every rescue into a life-or-death mission to save hundreds of migrants

The New Politics of Gun Control
Democrats are finally leaning in, while Republicans talk compromise

Russia’s President Putin Casts Himself as Protector of the Faith

My Brother’s Pregnancy and the Making of a New American Family
My brother Evan was born female. He came out as transgender 16 years ago but never stopped wanting to have a baby. This spring he gave birth to his first child

Gene Wilder
Comic Actor of Pure Imagination

Milestones

I Now Have Scientific Proof of How Awesome I Really Am
And you can too

Emily Blunt’s Deep Dive

Not-So-Close Encounters
A mysterious blip of energy seemingly from deep space was detected by a Russian radio telescope, leading some to suspect alien contact. But abnormal signals have been misinterpreted before.

The Future of Handwriting

We Shouldn’t Dismiss People Who Deny Facts

The Anthropocene Should Bring Awe-and Act As a Warning

Behind the Whirlwind Rise of Beatlemania In Eight Days a Week

Disney’s Next Heroine: The Anti-Princess

Theater Calendar

How to Find Your Best, Most Unfussy Workout
Experts recommend that everyone get a mix of cardio and strength training, neither of which requires a pricey gym membership. Here are six simple workouts with proven health benefits.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: Political Incorrectness Is Just a Strategy
When Donald Trump and others lambast correctness, they’re just distracting from real issues

Art

Issa Rae’s Breakout Moment

How Peace-Finally-Came to Reign Throughout the Western Hemisphere

A Candidate In Utah Blazes a Trail Just by Being Herself

Why Self-Driving Trucks May Be the Next Big Thing on the Road

Apple’s $14.5 Billion Tax Spat Signals a World of Uncertainty for Big Corporations

EpiPen Scandal Is Yet Another Sign of Coming Pharma Crisis
Valeant, Turing, Theranos and Mylan show the fallout of epic greed. The victim? American consumers

’Racist’ Technology Is a Bug-Not a Crime
Why do we consider it our jobs to say that mistakes indicate ’racism’?

For the Record

A Looming Power Vacuum Threatens Uzbekistan

This Just In
A roundup of new and noteworthy insights from the week’s most talked-about studies:

Foer’s Family Drama

A Safer Sandy Hook School

Keys In the Song of Life

Tales of a Kids’-Lit Power Couple

Vicente Fox: Donald Trump Is Like a ‘Street Fighter’
In the midst of his ongoing Twitter battle with Trump, the former President of Mexico spoke to TIME
Sep 5, 2016 Vol 188 No 9

The Secrets of Super Siblings

India’s Economic Engine Has a Rocky Road Ahead

We’re Working Harder Than Ever, So Why Is Productivity Plummeting?
Most economists believe American blue and white collar workers alike are firing on all cylinders. Why that hasn’t translated in a boost in global productivity

What Donald Trump Knew About Undocumented Workers at His Signature Tower
He has long denied knowingly using undocumented workers to demolish the building that would be replaced with Trump Tower

Akhil Reed Amar: How Hillary Clinton Is Like Alexander Hamilton
The author of The Constitution Today extols the relevance of a document so essential that he carries three copies

Sexism Is Over? Give Me a Break.
A summer of harassment and misogyny-big and small-shows how far we have to go

The New Transplant Revolution
A rise in transplants that improve lives rather than save them is filled with promise and ethical dilemmas

The First Task for Donald Trump’s New Campaign Chief: Manage the Candidate

The Benefits of Friendship With Hillary Clinton

Nigeria Wages War on “Indiscipline”

Donald Glover Doesn’t Care What You Think Anymore
The actor-writer talks about tackling race in his new show, those Star Wars and Spider-Man rumors and ignoring the haters as Childish Gambino

Review: The New Ben-Hur Is Mildly Exciting At Best
You can never be sure what this $100-million spectacle is trying to be, or exactly whom it’s for

Review: Barack and Michelle’s First Date, Imagined, in Southside with You
Inspired by fact, the film shimmers with warmth

Review: Edgar Ramirez Makes a Dazzling Roberto Duran in Hands of Stone
The real fighting spirit is there in Ramirez’s eyes

This Is Why Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte Will Get Away With Murder
A culture of impunity protects him in the way it does many Philippine politicians

Can Virtual Reality Help People Manage Pain?

This Just In

Quick Talk with Clea DuVall
The actor, 38, wrote and stars in her directorial debut, The Intervention, a dramedy about a group of friends who gather for a weekend to try to persuade two unhappily married pals to divorce.

A New Wave of Miniseries Lends Clarity to a Muddled Medium
The Best Limited Series field is the richest category at the Emmy Awards

Milestones

A Taste of a Carless Future
This summer Rwanda’s capital, Kigali, became the latest city to ban cars from the roads on select days, joining a global movement by cities grappling with car-related fatalities and worsening air pollution.

For the Record

Where Rio Goes from Here

Talk May Be Cheap, But It’s Humanity’s Best Asset
A review of Tom Wolfe’s new nonfiction book, The Kingdom of Speech

Pop Chart

You’ll Cry Until You Laugh at Amy Schumer’s New Book

The Bright Side of Darker Emotions

Europeans Cooling on NATO

‘Smart’ Tattoos

The Hidden History of Books

What You Said About …

Frank Ocean’s New Look Could Last
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