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Apr 14, 2014Vol 183 No 14

The Taliban’s New Campaign of Fear
‘Microaggression’ Is the New Racism on Campus
There’s a new word on the street that the old-style social racism is still with us, 24/7 ― you’re about to start hearing it everywhere.

Obamacare: Mend it, Don’t End it
The Affordable Care Act has problems. But the GOP campaign to junk it is now finished

The Measure of Two Men
Don’t assume Indonesia’s Joko Widodo and India’s Narendra Modi can revive their nations

Wrong Man, Wrong Battle
Abdul Fattah al-Sisi may win Egypt’s presidential election easily, but fixing the economy is beyond him

Zhang Ruimin’s Haier Power
The world’s largest Appliance maker wants to transform the meaning of Made in China

The Last Coral Reefs
A new survey is documenting the rain forests of the ocean―before they’re gone

Mary Jo White Teaches Old Wall Street Watchdogs New Tricks
The SEC Chairwoman prepares to wield the power of compromise

Woody Allen’s Big Number
The writer adapted his own film gem, Bullets Over Broadway, for his first musical

Alan Partridge Hits the Big Screen
British comedian Steve Coogan expands on his greatest creation

Anything Gwyneth Can Do …
My happily married attempt at perfecting the art of conscious uncoupling

10 Questions With Barbara Ehrenreich
The activist, atheist and best-selling author on cancer, Connecticut and the appeal of voodoo
Apr 7, 2014Vol 183 No 13

What India Wants
Globalization in Reverse
What the world’s trade slowdown means for growth in the U.S.―and abroad

A Time to Cry
Beyond what happened and why, Flight MH 370 is above all a tragedy of human loss and sorrow

The King And O
A series of disagreements have chilled the U.S.-Saudi relationship. But the two countries can’t do without each other

No More Broken Promises
Saudi Arabia has told the U.N. it will do better on human rights. Just as it did five years ago

Mad Men’s Conquest of Cool
It made TV history by making history into TV. Now the stylish ’60s saga writes its final chapter

Baseball’s Next Big Star
Billy Hamilton is ready to give America’s pastime a jolt

10 Questions with Gene Baur
The farm animal activist on cheap food, annoying protestors and the rise of giant sexless turkeys

Putin’s Way
Mar 31, 2014Vol 183 No 12

Into Thin Air

Nigeria’s Reckless Neglect
The government needs to make allies of the civilian population to win the war against Boko Haram

Crimea’s Morning After
Putin rekindles the glow of empire

Big Boost for the Big Bang
One observation proves three theories

Geopolitics and the New World Order
Geography increasingly fuels endless chaos and old-school conflicts in the 21st Century.

The Two Brazils
Preparations for the next football World Cup and the 2016 Olympic Games have exposed deep divisions within the country

Australia’s Shame
Its harsh policy toward asylum seekers betrays the human-rights values it should stand for

Eric Garcetti Writes a New LA Story
The city’s young new mayor is on a mission to restore the urban soul of sprawling Los Angeles

Built in Detroit
A new wave of high-end ventures like watchmaker Shinola helps revive manufacturing in the Motor City

Jonathan Bock’s Film Flock
One man’s quest to Christianize Hollywood

Almost Fameless
I’d always wanted to play myself on TV. But which brand of me was I supposed to be?

10 Questions With Beck
Pop music’s elfin eccentric, Beck, talks about failures, family and how he wishes Beck were a band, not a guy
Mar 24, 2014•Vol 183 No 11

Make Fun Of Everything


Put the Sex Back in Sex Ed
When public schools refuse to acknowledge gender differences, we betray boys and girls alike

Sweep Our Dirty Rivers Clean
This concept for a barge that scoops up debris could keep pollution from reaching the oceans

Let Kids Run Wild Online
Trapped by helicopter parents and desperate to carve out a space of their own, teens need a place to make mistakes

Diversify Corporate America
I wouldn’t have thought my gender affected the decisions I made on Wall Street―until I got fired

Cook with the Whole Farm
Our long-term health―and that of the land―requires a cuisine that transforms agriculture

Stop Sending Aid to Dictators
Traditional foreign aid often props up tyrants more than it helps the poor. It’s time for a new model

Take Your Ears on Vacation
Being a ‘sound tourist’ can help us get more out of travel―and help reveal sonic delights in our everyday lives

Bring the Doctor with You
The logical next step in managing chronic disease is technology that tracks our vitals and guides us to better health

Putin Has Already Lost
Russia’s economy can’t sustain its leader’s ambitions


It’s Time to Look Beyond Crimea
The U.S. and Europe need to focus on supporting the fragile new government in Kiev

Crimea’s New Boss
Sergei Aksyonov has taken control of Ukraine’s break-away region and wants it to become part of Russia. It may be too late to stop him

China’s Road Show
In the People’s Republic, a car is more than a way to get around. It’s a statement that you have arrived

China Takes Stock
Why the country’s tech firms are flocking to U.S. Exchanges

The Game That Saved March Madness
How a near-upset long ago keeps Cinderellas coming back to the Big Dance

A Secession Plan That Works

Why should Ukraine be the only country that’s ripe for splitting in two?
Mar 17, 2014•Vol 183 No 10

What Putin Wants

Looking Back in Anger
Vladimir Putin may control Crimea, but his 19th century tactics do not bode well for Russia

No Good Choices
Neither of India’s two major political parties augurs well for the country’s liberals

Why Putin Won’t Hold Crimea
He knows the peninsula can’t survive without the rest of Ukraine. So what’s his next move?

The Top of America
After 12 years of anticipation, the tallest skyscraper in the Western Hemisphere is ready for its closeup. How 10,000 workers lifted 104 floors, gave new life to an international symbol and created one spectacular view

50 Most Powerful Women
By pushing into new territories and inspiring women in their home countries, these globetrotters are, quite literally, taking on the world

Big, Unhappy Family
The murderous attack in Kunming puts the spotlight on China’s ethnic divides

Rocky Balboa Punches on Broadway
One of Hollywood’s favorite underdogs is tapped to score a knockout with theatergoers

My Lars Von Trier Problem
A search for light in the great Dane’s darkness

March 10, 2014 | Vol. 183, No. 9

COVER
Kiev’s Russian Roulette (Ukraine)
After deposing a despised President, Ukrainians are watching another powerful leader: the one in the Kremlin

COMMENTARY
The Cost of Chasing Cancer
Why excessive screening can cause unintended harm, stress and waste

VIEWPOINT
Hail to the Chef
Calls grow for the leader of Peru’s culinary renaissance to run for President
Can Turkey’s Erdogan Stay in Power?
The Turkish leader’s authoritarian streak is the most important issue ahead of key elections
What the West Doesn’t Understand About Ukraine’s Politics
Behind the divisions in today’s Ukraine is a post-Soviet oligarchy rooted in the industrial East


WORLD
Treasure Down Under (Australia)
A resources boom has turned Western Australia into an economic promised land

THE CULTURE
On the Night Train With Wes Anderson (Movies)
The director opens a new take on old Europe in The Grand Budapest Hotel
The Guggenheim Goes Back to the Futurists (Art)
The Italian arts movement makes for an indispensable new show

10 Questions with Mark Burnett
The reality TV honcho and ex-paratrooper on the Kardashians, casting Jesus and the one that got away

LETTERS
Rise of the Machine (Conversation)
March 3, 2014 | Vol. 183, No. 8

COVER
Airport Confidential: Inside the Strange World of Airline Cancellations (United States)
These are the men and woman who decide if your flight takes off on time or leaves you stranded

BRIEFING
Tibetan Wisdom (Spotlight)
The Dalai Lama on the Pope, pot and Facebook

COMMENTARY
A Step Backward for Labor (The Curious Capitalist)
Conservatives foiled an innovative union plan at a VW plant ・and now everyone loses

Time to Put Trade Above Politics (Worldview)
Washington needs to realize that a free-trade agreement with Asia is good for us all

ESSAY
Losing Faith
Malaysia should be an example of religious tolerance. It is proving to be the opposite

WORLD
A Child Is Born (The Philippines)
The remarkable birth of a baby in a typhoon-ravaged part of the Philippines becomes a symbol of renewed hope
Photographs by Lynsey Addario

The Modi Model (India)
India’s election front runner says he’ll do for the nation what he did for his state. But is Gujarat really performing that well?

Gentle Into That Good Night (Dementia)
Until there’s a cure for dementia, the world must look after growing numbers of elderly sufferers. Europe is showing the way

THE CULTURE
Hollywood’s Moment of Truth (Academy Awards)
In the Best Picture race, this year’s Oscars favor fact over fiction

Lupita Nyong’o: The Front Runner (Academy Awards)
Her harrowing turn in 12 Years a Slave brings the Kenya-born actress accolades she couldn’t prepare for

LETTER
SOlympic Dream (Conversation)
February 24, 2014 | Vol. 183, No. 7

COVER
The Committee to Save Mexico (World)
It’s the hot new emerging market. But can President Pe Nieto and his team of reformers really turn their country around?

WORLD
Cycle of Revenge
The Central African Republic has been unstable since independence, but now Muslims and Christians are killing each other in a conflict that has become Africa’s Unholy War

UNITED STATES
Obama’s Legacy Project (Criminal Justice)
The president returns to his roots in the fight for criminal justice

LETTERS
State of Mind (Conversation) EDUCATIONThe School That Will Get You a Job (High School)
A new kind of education shows why four years of high school isn’t enough

VIEWPOINT
The West’s Backfiring Boycott
Russian President Vladimir Putin will not forget which leaders spurned his hospitality at Sochi

THE CULTURE
Frozen’s Hot Following (Movies)
The chilled-out fairy tale has burned up the box office

10 Questions for ’Johnny Walker’
An Iraqi-born interpreter for the Navy SEALs talks about finding targets and then becoming one
February 17, 2014 | Vol. 183, No. 6

COVER
The Quantum Quest for a Revolutionary Computer (Technology)
Quantum computing uses strange subatomic behavior to exponentially speed up processing. It could be a revolution, or it could be wishful thinking

COMMENTARY
Karzai’s Not-So-Crazy Endgame (Wordview)
The Afghan President’s bizarre behavior has rational roots in a bloody history

VIEWPOINT
Talk of Water Wars Is Hot Air
History shows that mutual interest prevails in even the most arid regions

LETTERS
Hillary on the Horizon (Conversation)

WORLD
Meet Monsieur Reform: François Hollande (France)
Why the world needs France’s president to succeed in reviving his country’s fortunes ― and why the odds are against him
China’s Shadow Banking
What the execution of maverick businessman Zeng Chengjie reveals about China’s netherworld of shadow finance ― and its risk to the global economy

SOCIETY
The New Dating Game
Smartphone apps have turned courtship into an addictive pastime. Can love really be just a swipe away?

THE CULTURE
George Clooney’s Art of War (Movies)
Monuments Men recalls fight at the museum
February 10, 2014 | Vol. 183, No. 5

COVER
Sochi’s Sixth Ring (2014 Olympics)
Terrorism fears prompted Russia to build a ”ring of steel” around the Olympics and guard it with 40,000 troops. For Putin, it’s the ultimate test of his promise to make his country safe for everyone
Road to Redemption (2014 Olympics)
For Russia, the Games are a chance to exorcize the ghosts of Vancouver
An Olympic Ice Storm (2014 Olympics)
Two powerhouse coaches will see their bitter feud play out in Sochi
Teen Queen of the Slalom (2014 Olympics)
For American ski prodigy Mikaela Shiffrin, practice (and lots of sleep) makes perfect
Ski Like a Medalist (2014 Olympics: Travel)
When the Games are gone, world-class slopes open up to the rest of us

COMMENTARY
TIme to Talk About Inequality (The Curious Capitalist)
It isn’t just a social issue ― it’s putting the future of the U.S. economy in peril
You, the People (In the Arena)
Obama urges Congress to quit bickering and just get the job done. Like the rest of us do

VIEWPOINT
Tale of Two Champions
Li Na’s individualism echoes the boldness of jailed Chinese activist Xu Zhiyong
Putin’s Other Games
Although focused on Sochi, the Russian President will fight to hold sway over Ukraine

WORLD
Kiev Rocked by Violence
Ukraine’s capital is shaken by confrontations as the government seeks to steer the former Soviet nation away from Europe and deeper into Russia’s shadow

UNITED STATES
A Troubled Marine’s Final Fight (Veterans)
When his nation called, Marine Sergeant David Linley answered. But when he came home hurting, his country let him down
San Francisco’s New Disruption (Cities)
The tech wealth transforming the West Coast city has unemployment down, evictions up and tempers flaring

LETTERS
Gendered Profile (Conversation)
February 3, 2014 | Vol. 183, No. 4

COVER
The Mindful Revolution (Health)
Finding peace in a stressed-out, digitally dependent culture may just be a matter of thinking differently

COMMENTARY
The Case for Snooping (Worldview)
Obama’s liberal critics say his speech on the NSA didn’t go far enough. Why they’re wrong
America’s Economic Moment (The Curious Capitalist)
The U.S. economy is a world beater again ― but 2014 will tell whether that’s good for everyone

WORLD
Cities of Sorrow for Syrian Refugees (Refugees)
James Nachtwey captures life in the camps, housing some of the more than 2.3 million Syrians fleeing their civil-warn torn country

SOCIETY
The ’Tiger Mom’ Superiority Complex (Cultures)
A new book from Amy Chua and Jed Rubenfeld seeks to explain why some groups succeed in America, and some fail. But when does cultural pride cross over into racism?

THE CULTURE
Jason Reitman Breaks from Comedy (Movies)
The director’s new movie Labor Day, is a left turn from his usual work
Pussy Riot, the Art Show (Art)
”Cat Art Show” updates the feline form from cute to cutting

ESSAY
Four Presidents and a Rumor Mill
In the Philippines, ex-leaders don’t fade away ― they engage in extreme feuding
January 27, 2014 | Vol. 183, No. 3

COVER
Can Anyone Stop Hillary? (United States)
WHY Clinton’s 2016 candidacy-without-a-campaign dominates the political galaxy

COMMENTARY
When to Live Blog Your Cancer
Are Lisa Adams’ 160,000 posts too much? Why disclosure isn’t overexposure

VIEWPOINT
America’s Other India Problem
What if the politician who was barred entry to the U.S. becomes the next Prime Minister in New Delhi?

LETTERS
Picture Perfect (Conversation)

WORLD
A New Beginning in Tehran
The short-term nuclear deal lifts the fog of hostility to reveal Iran and the U.S. want many of the same things. Is a real rapprochement possible?
How to End the Crisis Now (Davos / Europe)
Four things Europe should do to put its debt debacle behind it ― for good

BUSINESS
Look Out Google and Apple, Here Comes Dr. Dre (Music)
The famed music producer and his collaborator Jimmy Iovine made a fortune selling headphones. Now they’re out to conquer streaming music

THE CULTURE
Brand Name Painter
Brendan O’Connell finds art buyers in the aisles of a supermarket
January 20, 2014 | Vol. 183, No. 2

COVER
Janet Yellen: The Sixteen Trillion Dollar Woman (United States)
In her first and only interview as Fed chief, the economist says why she thinks the housing market is back on track, companies will invest, and more new jobs are on the way this year. She now has the world’s largest economy in her hands

BRIEFING
Child Support (Above & Beyond)
Nepalese activist Pushpa Basnet gives a home to children whose mothers are in jail
Run Run Shaw (Milestones)
Emperor of Chinese cinema

VIEWPOINT
BIITS and Ballots
How elections this year in five emerging markets could boost ― or hurt ― reform
A Bad Diet
India’s food program for the poor is well intentioned ― but it’s also wrongheaded

WORLD
Iraq on the Brink
Spiraling sectarian violence and weak rule of law could tip the country back into civil war
Pussy Riot’s Next Fight
Russia’s most famous political prisoners are free. Here’s what they are planning next
How to Feed 800 Million People
India has launched the world’s largest food-subsidy program. Will it work?

THE CULTURE
Ishmael Beah’s New Battles (Books)
The former boy soldier has a new book and is getting good at living between two worlds

ESSAY
Jahi McMath, Ariel Sharon, and the Valley of Death
Heroic medical procedures can leave us in a limbo between life and accepting what’s beyond

LETTERS
Person of the Year (Conversation)
January 13, 2014 | Vol. 183, No. 1

COVER

2014: User’s Guide

The World’s Most Powerful Person: Janet Yellen (2014: User’s Guide / Power)
The incoming Federal Reserve chair will battle unemployment, the most important economic and social problem of our day

Political Races to Watch in 2014 (2014: User’s Guide / Power)
This year’s midterms will bring peril and primaries for incumbents of both parties

Pot’s Next Frontier Stretches from Oregon to Rhode Island (2014: User’s Guide / Power)
Expect more cracks in the grass ceiling

In 2014, U.S. Leaves Afghanistan on Brink (2014: User’s Guide / Power)
All U.S. combat troops are set to leave Afghanistan by year’s end

Hotspots to Watch in 2014 (2014: User’s Guide / Power)
Stories that will dominate headlines around the world this year

Jack Dorsey Is Changing Your Wallet (2014: User’s Guide / Commerce)
Fresh from his Twitter payday, the entrepreneur looks to expand the reach of his payment system, Square

Tech’s Big Promises for 2014 (2014: User’s Guide / Commerce)
Companies are betting on blockbuster gadgets

The Private Space Race Is On (2014: User’s Guide / Commerce)
Here’s a look at the ventures that are changing how we explore the galaxy

Foroohar: The Flat Paycheck Recovery (2014: User’s Guide / Commerce)
The U.S. economy is finally growing. So far, low-wage jobs lead the way

Scientist Searches for Second Earth (2014: User’s Guide / Innovation)
Somewhere out there are worlds that can support life. Lisa Kaltenegger has a way to find them

El Niño Is on Its Way (2014: User’s Guide / Innovation)
When the Pacific Ocean warms in 2014, the weather will get weird

Who Your Baby Will Be in 2014 (2014: User’s Guide / Innovation + Tech)
What lies ahead for children born this year

New Cures for Old Ailments (2014: User’s Guide / Innovation + Tech)
Some of our most common chronic illnesses will get fresh therapies

Seth Meyers Does It Late (2014: User’s Guide / Culture)
The Saturday Night Live veteran is a different kind of frontman for late night television

Culture Calendar (2014: User’s Guide / Culture)
Pencil them in: the movies, books and shows you won’t want to miss

Out With the Kale: The Newest Favorites Among U.S. Chefs (2014: User’s Guide / Culture)
In with the kohlrabi, which is finally becoming popular with men and women in the kitchen

The Places You’ll Go in 2014 (2014: User’s Guide / Culture)
This year’s sights, from Picasso’s Paris comeback to the aurora borealis in full bloom

Fear Index (2014: User’s Guide / Culture)
Asteroids, no. Sharks, yes?

Sarah Hendrickson Is Born to Fly (2014: User’s Guide / Sports)
Meet the 19-year-old who’s about to shatter the Winter Olympics’ coldest glass ceiling

Fresh Sports at Sochi (2014: User’s Guide / Sports)
New Olympic events to lure a younger audience

Major League Stars for 2014 (2014: User’s Guide / Sports)
This year’s breakouts will shake up stodgy franchises

Neymar Rising (2014: User’s Guide / Sports)
The Brazilian hasn’t let comparisons with soccer’s legends drag him down

The Future Is Now ... Ish (The Awesome Column)
I predict major social shifts in 2014. And a lot more vegans

COMMENTARY
Boomers Can’t Let Go of the 1960s
That awful decade is embedded in our national attitudes, manners and mores

Zakaria: 2014 Is a Make or Break Year for China (Worldview)
Corruption. Pollution. Debt. Will Beijing’s leaders tackle the challenges before the bubble bursts?

LETTERS
December 30, 2013 | Vol. 182 No. 27

COVER
The Year in Pictures

BRIEFING
Seller Beware (Above & Beyond)
Wang Hai is making the rights of China’s consumers his business

COMMENTARY
Even After Volcker, Banks Aren’t Safe Enough (The Curious Capitalist)
The fine print in the new rule shows the extent to which the financial system is still vulnerable

LETTERS
Wheel and Deal (Conversation)

VIEWPOINT
A Half-Delivered Promise
Twenty years after NAFTA, the benefits to Mexico’s economy remain uncertain

THE CULTURE
The Best of 2013
In 54 wide-ranging lists, TIME surveys the highs and lows, the good and the bad of the past 12 months

ESSAY
Camille Paglia: It’s a Man’s World, and It Always Will Be
As men lose ground in school and the workforce, here’s what feminists get wrong about the stronger sex

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