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December 23, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 26

COVER
Pope Francis, The People’s Pope (2013 Person of the Year)
He took the name of a humble saint and then called for a church of healing. The first non-European pope in 1,200 years is poised to transform a place that measures change by the century

EDITOR’S DESK
The Voices of 2013 (Cover)

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE
The Long Walk (Nelson Mandela 1918--2013)
Protester. Prisoner. Peacemaker

The Man Who Could Not Cry (Nelson Mandela / Appreciation)
Humor, humility and the ability to compromise were the marks of the man

How I Got to Play the Hero (Nelson Mandela / Appreciation)
An actor recalls the moment Nelson Mandela changed his life

A Leader and a Champion (Nelson Mandela / Appreciation)
South Africa’s rugby captain recounts how Mandela used sport for national healing

FEATURES
Pope Francis, The Choice (2013 Person of the Year)
With a focus on compassion, the leader of the Catholic Church has become a new voice of conscience. Managing Editor Nancy Gibbs explains why Francis is TIME’s pick for Person of the Year 2013

Bashar Assad, The Lethal Tyrant (2013 Person Of The Year / The Short List)
The doctor turned despot kept his grip on power. Still he sits uneasily on his contaminated throne. As Syria disintegrates, another generation of turbulence awaits

Edith Windsor, The Unlikely Activist (2013 Person Of The Year / The Short List)
In her ninth decade, she started a judicial odyssey, fighting a battle she never expected to wage ― let alone win. Now she’s the matriarch of the gay-rights movement

Ted Cruz, The Barn Burner (2013 Person Of The Year / The Short List)
In 2013, the audacious upstart shut down the government on a hopeless quest to stop the President’s signature policy. Love him or hate him, he is a vision of the future

Edward Snowden, The Dark Prophet (2013 Person Of The Year / The Short List)
He pulled off the year’s most spectacular heist. Exiled from his country, the 30-year-old computer whiz has become the doomsayer of the information age
December 16, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 25

COVER
Al-Qaeda’s New Star Rises (World)
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi is creating his own Islamic state in Iraq and Syria. How long before he targets the West?

VIEWPOINT
Rouhani’s Real Test
The Iranian President may find domestic reforms even harder to achieve than a nuclear deal
The Sky’s Not the Limit
China’s new claim on airspace isn’t just about sovereignty but advancing its place in the world

UNITED STATES
Navy Sinks In Hookers and Bribes Scandal (The U.S. Navy)
How the service steered into an alleged supply scam that has cost taxpayers nearly $20 million

LETTERS
Haiyan’s Wake (Conversation)

DESIGN
Ford Is Back in the Saddle with New Mustang (Cars)
Inside the four ― wheeled American idol ― and the risky plan to sell it to the rest of the world

BUSINESS
The Original Wolf of Wall Street Carl Icahn Returns (Investing)
The world’s most ravenous capitalist is taking on the world’s most valuable firm, Apple

THE CULTURE
A Fantasy Fan Visits The Hobbit (Movies)
TIME’s Lev Grossman sees where the magic happens
How to Get to Sochi (Travel)
It’s not too late to crash the Winter Olympics. (And if you’re thinking World Cup, book now)

10 Questions for Emma Thompson
The only person with Oscars for acting and writing, the Brit talks nannies, money and dating Dr. House
December 9, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 24

COVER
Obama’s Iran Gamble (United States / Diplomacy)
A historic but temporary deal to curtail Tehran’s nuclear program may determine the future of the Middle East, and the fate of the President’s diplomatic legacy

BRIEFING
Teaching Hope (Above & Beyond)
How Efren Peñaflorida’s pushcarts bring school to Filipino street children

VIEWPOINT
Pedal at Your Own Peril
London’s bicyclists are outraged by a rash of accidents involving cars. What did they expect?
Shut Up and Fly
Cellphone calls may be coming to airline flights. There’s just one problem: the passengers

COMMENTARY
Zakaria: Big Fuss Over a Small Iran Deal (Worldview)
Critics of the agreement with the rogue state worry it may be the start of a beautiful friendship. It isn’t

WORLD
Krokodil Tears (Russia)
A cheap heroin substitute has destroyed lives all over Russia. Now the deadly drug is creeping into Europe and the U.S.

UNITED STATES
America’s Pest Problem: It’s Time to Cull the Herd (Wildlife)
After nearly wiping out many wildlife species 50 years ago, Americans are once again living close ― sometimes uncomfortably so ― to all kinds of feral creatures. Why wildlife in the U.S. needs stronger management

THE CULTURE
How Sweden Has Re-Engineered the World’s Music (Music)
The Nordic nation is the music business’s stealthiest success story
The Battle Over America’s Living Rooms (Tech)
Armed with new consoles, Sony and Microsoft are fighting to win over video gamers

LETTERS
Culinary Contemplations (Conversation)
December 2, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 23

COVER
Why China Needs More Children (World)
After decades of the one-child policy, Beijing wants its people to have more kids. It may be too late for that

VIEWPOINT
Lawless in Libya
Its old ruler built no abiding institutions, and its new ones don’t seem to know where to start

TECHNOLOGY
Candy Crush’s Architects of Addiction (Mobile Games)
The ruthless engineering behind one of the world’s most popular mobile games

SOCIETY
What Boys Want (Teens)
Hook-up culture doesn’t just hurt girls. An examination of who is actually falling behind amid parental panic

UNITED STATES
Obama’s Race for the Cure (The Presidency)
The President’s second term may hinge on how fast his health care reform can recover

COMMENTARY
Foorohar: Yellen for America (The Curious Capitalist)
Forget the White House or Congress. The Fed is now our most powerful political institution

THE CULTURE
David Hockney Goes Big and Goes Home (Art)
The artist looks lovingly-with paint, video and iPads-at his native English landscape
10 Questions with William Kentridge
The South African artist on drawing, why he needs a messy desk and the future of his country

LETTERS
Invented in China (Conversation)
COVER
THE TYPHOON'S TOLL
by Bryan Walsh

The most powerful storm on record pulverizes the Philippines, killing thousands. Now survivors struggle to pick up the pieces
November 18, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 21

COVER
The Gods of Food (The Culture)

TIME picks the people who most influence what we eat ― and how we think about it
Andrea Petrini: Paris’s Culinary Starmaker

France’s great cultivator of talent
Yotam Ottolenghi and Sami Tamimi: Masters of the Holy Land Kitchen

The London-based chefs bring Jerusalem’s cooking to the world
Sergio Nuñez de Arco: The King of Quinoa

How the poor man’s food from the Andes made it in America
Dan Barber: King of Kale

The New York chef is rooting his activism in delicious cooking
Aida Batelle: Riding Coffee’s Wave

One woman’s El Salvador coffee plantations are fueling a new trend
Vandana Shiva: Prophet of Boom and Doom

In New Delhi, she’s the bane of big agriculture and genetically modified food
The Dudes of Food

Alex Atala of Sao Paulo, René Redzepi of Copenhagen and David Chang of New York
Got Milk? India Does

Amrita Patel is milking co-op cattle to feed India economy
Michael Pollan: Foodie Philosopher

The Berkeley, California author is writing the commandments of sustainability
Albert Adrià: The Magician of the Moment

El Bulli’s secret weapon is a secret no longer
Wan Long: Taking America’s Bacon to Beijing

Buying American quality to sate worried Chinese consumers
Ertharian Cousin Takes Aim at Hunger

How do you feed 95 million of the world’s poor?
The World’s Most Mysterious Sushi Provider

New Jersey’s True World, a company linked to the late Rev. Sun Myung Moon, dominates the distribution of raw fish

COMMENTARY
Frenemies: The U.S.-German Trade Story (The Curious Capitalist)

Sparring between the countries could damage the global economy
Scarborough: Chris Christie Is a Man for All Factions

Like Ronald Reagan before him, the New Jersey governor could unite the Republican Party

VIEWPOINT
Nothing to See Here
China’s leaders are deluding themselves if they think they can block the truth from the people

UNITED STATES
Chris Christie Was Born to Run
He won re-election in New Jersey with a campaign act designed to win the presidency in 2016. Why the New Jersey governor ain’t going away anytime soon
’Any one of those guys would love to trade with me... and have a little bit of a difficult life. They would be ALIVE’ (Veterans)
A deadly explosion in Iraq set Bobby Henline on a path to a new life

WORLD
A Great and Terrible Wilderness
Why Egypt’s lawless Sinai peninsula is turning into the most dangerous place in the middle east

THE CULTURE
Joel Stein: Step Away From the Phone Game, Mom (The Awesome Column)
People are wasting a lot of time. They should really leave that to the professionals
10 Questions for Doris Kearns Goodwin
The historian talks presidential relationships, gun control and dealing with baseball nerves

LETTERS
A Real Highflyer (Conversation)
November 11, 2013 | Vol. 182 No. 20

COVER
The Secret Web: Where Drugs, Porn and Murder Live Online (United States / Crime)
Ten years ago the government built a totally private, anonymous network. Now it’s a haven for criminals

BRIEFING
Life of the Land (Above & Beyond)
Once a child soldier for the Khmer Rouge, Aki Ra now rids the killing fields of their deadly mines

COMMENTARY
Zakaria: The Saudis Are Mad? Tough! (Worldview)
Why we shouldn’t care that the world’s most irresponsible country is displeased at the U.S

THE CULTURE
Hailee Steinfeld Wants You to Forget She’s 16 (Movies)
The Ender’s Game star and Oscar nominee will appear in seven movies headed to the big screen next year

BUSINESS
China Makes Everything. Why Can’t It Create Anything?
China has grown rich as the workshop of the world. but to take its economy to the next level, the country must learn to invent and innovate

WORLD
A Home For Orphaned Gorillas
In the midst of Congo’s civil war, a calm refuge for a species under threat

SPORTS
Mind Games (Chess)
The two biggest stars of chess limber up for the brainiest contest in all sport

VIEWPOINT
Europe’s Favorite Scapegoats
The controversy over a Roma child exposes age-old prejudices

LETTERS
China Rising (Conversation)
November 4, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 19

COVER
Inside Prince Charles’ World as He Quietly Takes Charge (Profile)
Britain’s future king has used a long apprenticeship to build a charitable empire

VIEWPOINT
Britain’s Risky Race-Baiting
By targeting illegal immigrants, David Cameron’s government could fuel extremism
How the Commonwealth Can Urge Reform in Sri Lanka
Commonwealth leaders should use the meeting in Sri Lanka to reform their host

WORLD
Boys Won’t Be Boys
Is Sweden’s push for gender neutrality a noble project or political correctness gone overboard?

LETTERS
Deal or No Deal? (Conversation)

UNITED STATES
The War Within the U.S. Army (Defense)
A force built to fight the Cold War is now battling changes to its size, shape and mission in the age of the drone

SCIENCE
The Muse of Memory (Medicine)
What scientists are learning from an artist who has lost her power of recall

COMMENTARY
JPMorgan Fine: The Worst Possible Response to the Financial Crisis (The Curious Capitalist)
A reported $13 billion penalty for a big bank feels like a populist shakedown. It won’t protect the economy

THE CULTURE
10 Questions for Alan Greenspan
The former chairman of the Federal Reserve on fear, loathing and his favorite dance
October 21, 2013 | Vol. 182 No. 17

COVER
Obama’s Asia Problem (World / Asia)
In the contest for the future of Asia, Obama’s canceled trip opens the door for Beijing’s increasing influence

BRIEFING
Human Art (Above & Beyond)
How a police officer helps heal the wounds of the Japan tsunami

COMMENTARY
Foroohar: The Gridlock Economy Blues (The Curious Capitalist)
Get ready for markets where blue chip stocks trump government bonds, and politics trump the economy

VIEWPOINT
Why Berlusconi Will Rise Again
Italy’s political dysfunction ensures the return of its diehard disruptor

LETTERS
Quest for Immortality (Conversation)

WORLD
The Long Wait (Middle East)
20 years after the Oslo Accords, Israeli and Palestinian negotiators are talking again. The delay has only made a peace deal more elusive
Photographs by Cédric Gerbehaye

UNITED STATES
How the Zapruder Film Came to LIFE (Personal History)
Fifty years after JFK’s assassination, Richard Stolley recalls his chase to secure the tragic images
Michael Bloomberg Wants to Be Mayor of the World
As time runs out on his days ruling New York City, the billionaire reformer is taking his crusade global

THE CULTURE
Meet the Jungle Cook Alex Atala (Food)
Brazil’s top chef puts the Amazon on a plate
Digital Art Clicks on the Auction Block (Art)
A new wave of digital works has collectors bidding
October 14, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 16

COVER
Statecraft and Stagecraft (Worldview / Iran)
A deal with Iran will be difficult ― but at least we know what it will contain

VIEWPOINT
You Mean Women Have Brains?
With its economy still floundering, patriarchal Japan has a breakthrough moment

WORLD
Power Vacuum (Pakistan)
How Pakistan’s electricity shortage makes it poorer ― and more dangerous

COMMENTARY
Rana Foroohar: Congress Is Bad for the Economy (The Curious Capitalist)
Instead of leadership, we get showdowns. No wonder consumers remain wary about growth

UNITED STATES
It’s Only Going to Get Worse in Washington (Shutdown)
The fever never broke. Cooler heads have not prevailed. And the next self-inflicted crisis may be worse than the last

SPORTS
Struggling Nascar’s Plan to Get Back in Gear
Aging red-state fans. Cars that have gotten too boring. How racing is trying to reinvent itself for a new generation-at 200 m.p.h.

THE CULTURE
Filmmakers Overcome the Laws of Gravity (Movies)
Just making the new Sandra Bullock thriller turned into a harrowing journey of its own

LETTERS
Merkel Magic (Conversation)
September 30, 2013 | Vol. 182 No. 14

COVER
Google vs. Death (Technology)
How CEO Larry Page has transformed the search giant into a factory for moonshots. Our exclusive look at his boldest bet yet ― to extend human life

EDITOR’S DESK
A New Beginning (Cover)

COMMENTARY
Not the Time for Big Sticks (Worldview)
Obama should hold the bravado and respond reasonably to Iran’s conciliatory signals

FEATURES
The Future of Smoking (Society)
Electronic cigarettes could save lives ― or hook a new generation on nicotine
What Every Child Can Learn from Kentucky (Education)
As schools adopt the Common Core, nationwide standards, they are drawing lessons from an unlikely pioneer
Bill Clinton: How To Save the World (World)
Ahead of his annual conference, the former president on the secrets to making change

BRIEFING
World

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE
Contents (Table Of Contents)

BRIEFING
Ray Dolby (Milestones)
The sage of stereo
Briefing
The $10 Billion Question (Tech)
Larry Summers (Milestones)
The man who won’t be Fed chief
Unchecked Aggression (Nation)
The Navy Yard attack and our broken security-vetting system
Toys With Smarts (Business)
Collectible high-tech playthings are a hit with kids
Milestones (Milestones)

THE CULTURE
Eric Schlosser’s Stunning Secret History of America’s Nuclear Arsenal (Books)
The author of Fast Food Nation delivers a tale of power in the atomic age
Strike! Joel Stein Wants You to Join His Twitter Union (The Awesome Column)
With the social network going public, TIME columnist wants Tweeting big shots to start billing by the character
The $20,000 Home (Design)
Lessons from the rugged frontier of low-cost design where a house comes cheaper than a car
Pop Chart
The Top Stops for Wine This Season (Escapes)
From Walla Walla, Washington, to Italy’s Friuli region where to taste the fall’s finest grapes
Ten Questions with Richard Dawkins (10 Questions)
The evolutionary biologist on new words, his education and, of course, God
Don’t Believe the Pipe: The Rise of René Magritte (Art)
A new show at the Museum of Modern Art tracks the Belgian surrealist’s uneasy reality
Jhumpa Lahiri’s Lowland: A Novel of Time and Loss (Books)
The Pulitzer Prize-winner returns with a work of tremendous power
Section Table of Contents

BUSINESS
Liftoff Lit (Ask the expert)
Three new books share the hard-won secrets of launching a startup
A Paler Shade of Green (New Energy)
After years of squabbling, can Washington declare a truce on energy policy?
Fresh Air (Small Business / Radio)
History for the hardcore. Jokes for jocks. Entrepreneurs are reinventing digital broadcasts

September 16, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 12

COVER
The World According to Vladimir Putin (World)
Moscow is taking an ever more controversial stand with the U.S. Why Russia’s leader dreams of imperial rebirth

COMMENTARY
Obama’s Slippery Slope in Syria (Worldview)
Striking at Assad won’t end the conflict. But it may drag the U.S. into a complex civil war

WORLD
The Cult of Bashar Assad (Syria)
Even the Syrian President’s father didn’t want him to rule Syria. But the accidental dictator won’t give in

VIEWPOINT
Britain and the F Word
Environmentalists can take heart: fracking in the U.K. faces many daunting hurdles

UNITED STATES
Syria: Inside the D.C. War (War Vote)
Will Congress follow the President into an attack that no one wants?

THE CULTURE
Corliss: A Tribute to Japan’s Movie Master (Movies)
With a daring war film, Hayao Miyazaki lays down his pen
10 Questions for Yoko Ono
Artist and activist Yoko Ono on creativity, John Lennon’s legacy and why she feels no need to retire

ESSAY
Under a Chinese Moon
Beijing’s commitment to manned space flight is a reminder of what the U.S. could once do

LETTERS
Define Down Under? (Conversation)
September 9, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 11

COVER
Across the Red Line (United States / Obama’s Foreign Policy)
Evidence of a brutal chemical attack in Syria poses a defining test to the U.S.’s reputation and to Barack Obama’s foreign policy vision

COMMENTARY
The Alchemists of Wall Street (The Curious Capitalist)
Clever financing may reward shareholders, but it does nothing to help the economy
Pop’s Drop: From Madonna to Miley
Cyrus’ derivative stunt reveals an artistically bankrupt music culture

VIEWPOINT
Theater of the Absurd
China’s Bo Xilai show trial is not so much about corruption as it is about settling political scores

WORLD
Egypt No Longer Matters (Viewpoint)
Egypt Has Never Been More Important (Viewpoint)
Treasure Land
Afghanistan’s mountains are rich in untapped minerals that could prove to be a blessing ― and a curse
The Curator’s Conundrum (Photography)
The world’s top photojournalism festival is 25. can the profession it celebrates survive?

THE CULTURE
I Have Sung the Future (Profile)
Janelle Monáe broke out as an R&B innovator. Now she’s going full eclectic

LETTERS
Germany and the Euro (Conversation)
August 26- Sep 2, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 9

COVER
Martin Luther King Jr: Architect of the 21st Century (One Man. One March. One Speech One Dream)
With a single phrase, Martin Luther King Jr. joined Jefferson and Lincoln in the ranks of men who’ve shaped modern America

We Were There: Memories of the March on Washington (One Man. One March. One Speech One Dream)
They planned and organized, led and inspired. From Harry Belafonte and Joan Baez to John Lewis and Julian Bond, 17 participants in the March on Washington recall that historic day

The Legacy of the ”I Have a Dream” Speech (One Man. One March. One Speech One Dream)
Casting aside his script, King reset every standard for political oratory. Presidents ever since have been trying to match his words, power and moral authority

Race in America, 50 Years after the Dream (One Man. One March. One Speech One Dream)
In some ways, America has exceeded King’s visions. In others, however, his to-do list remains far from finished

What the Dream Means to Me (One Man. One March. One Speech One Dream)

BRIEFING
Home, Smart Home (Tech)
New gadgets bring household automation into the smartphone era

COMMENTARY
Let There Be Light
Plans to grow genetically modified plants ignited a firestorm at Kickstarter. They shouldn’t have

THE CULTURE
Do These Glasses Make Me Look Boring? (The Awesome Column)
In which I try to top Google Glass as a lunch companion

10 Questions for Ertharin Cousin
Head of the World Food Programme Ertharin Cousin on feeding millions, food security and foul-tasting cookies

LETTERSDetroit Goes Bust (Conversation)
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