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October 24, 2011 | Vol. 178 No. 16

COVER
The Unwinnable War (World)
Despite 10 years of U.S. power, talent and money, Afghanistan is a country of
squandered hope

WORLD
Why Hamas is Losing Gaza
Globally isolated and economically crippled, Palestinians in the restive enclave
are hoping for regime change

PEOPLE
Playing to the Home Crowd (Profile)
Liberia's Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has won the West's heart 窶・and now a Nobel Peace
Prize. But will her people re-elect her?

ESSAY
You've Got Mail
But amid Beijing's online meddling, you might never know who sent it

VIEWPOINT
A Tale of Two Revolutions
What the Arab Spring and the Occupy Wall Street 窶ィ movement have in common

GLOBAL ADVISER
The Magnificent 7 (Next Time You're in ... Salzburg)
Why Hangar-7 is worth a trip in its own right

Servings of Turkey (Amuse-Bouche)
The fresh new tastes of Istanbul

Heavens to Betty (Check In)
Finding a natural paradise in the mountains of New Guinea

LETTERS
Inbox
October 17, 2011 | Vol. 178, No. 15

COVER
The Inventor Of the Future
Steve Jobs remade the world as completely as any single human being ever has,
but he had no business doing it

American Icon
The saga of Steve Jobs is the Silicon Valley creation myth writ large: launching
a start-up in the proverbial garage and building it into the world's most valuable
company

In A Private Light
I first met Steve Jobs on a photo shoot for TIME in 1982. I had no idea that he
was going to be my friend or that he was going to be this incredible genius

WORLD
Postcard from Bogotá
Inspired by a Hollywood flop, María Paola Hernández championed a body-checking
American sport. Racing with the fast and the furious in Colombia's roller derby

BUSINESS
What If the China Bubble Bursts?
Overvalued real estate is driving the Chinese miracle. A crash could send the
U.S. into another recession ― and shift the global economy
THE CULTURE
His Secret's Safe (Books)
A huge new study of Deng Xiaoping oddly gives little away

The Conciliatory Chef (Food)
Making the world a better place, one dish at a time

PEOPLE
10 Questions for Mexican President Felipe Calderón
The Mexican President discusses climbing pyramids, legalizing drugs and why the
U.S. is a tricky neighbor

GLOBAL ADVISER
Divine Path (TIME Traveler)
The Kumano Kodo links shrines, hot springs and scenery

Swing State (After Dark)
Jazz-mad Ethiopia rejoices at the restoration of a long-neglected scene

LETTERS
Inbox
October 10, 2011 | Vol. 178, No. 14

COVER
Tibet's Next Incarnation (World)
The Dalai Lama's "middle way" for Tibetan autonomy is restrained and nonviolent.
Will that change after he's gone?

THE CULTURE
The First Noel
Rock legend Noel Gallagher's solo debut is full of creative promise

Battered Lives (Books)
Women lie at the heart of Mohammed Hanif's new novel

The Missing Links (Sports)
Golf-course design gets back to the rugged basics

WORLD
God and Profits (Cuba)
The Catholic Church is making a comeback in Cuba. While many hope it will play
a political role, the clergy may wield more influence in the economic realm

ESSAY
The Fire Next Time
Will the next Arab-style revolt erupt in an increasingly restive Southeast Asia?

GLOBAL ADVISER
Death from Above (Great Outdoors)
Have fun with airborne predators

Crater Facing (Check In)
Isrotel Beresheet offers a ringside view of a vast desert depression

LETTERS
Inbox
October 3, 2011 | Vol. 178, No. 13

COVER
Why Germany Can't Save Europe, Much Less The World (Europe)
With the euro-zone debt crisis worsening and more than a few angry voters at home,
Angela Merkel is being squeezed on all sides

THE CULTURE
The Lurid World of Indonesian Filmmaker K.K. Dheeraj (Movies)
An Indonesian filmmaker defies Islamic codes with guile, gore and busty U.S. porn
stars

High School Musical (Books)
The haunting melodies of a troubled adolescence

Brush with Modernity; Chinese Ink Painters Reinvent the Form (Art)
The new look of ancient Chinese ink painting

WORLD
Teacher, Leave Those Kids Alone: A Look at South Korea's Education System (South
Korean Cram Schools)
South Korean kids study day and night, which helps explain their world-beating
test scores. Now the government wants them to go to bed early

The Enemy Of My Enemy
Libyan Islamists and Western forces joined hands to defeat Muammar Gaddafi. Could
this be the start of a beautiful friendship?

GLOBAL ADVISER
From the Same Cloth (On Show)
Rarely has a fashion duo been better paired

A Perfect Day in ... St. Petersburg
The locals tell you how to spend it

LETTERS
Inbox
September 26, 2011 | Vol. 178, No. 12

COVER
Rick Perry's Mission (United States)
Aggie yell leader. Texas governor. Onetime Democrat. Since launching his campaign
for President, Rick Perry has turned the Republican Party upside down. Can he
win over the Tea Party without making independent voters cringe?

'Americans Are tired of political correctness' (United States)
Rick Perry spoke with TIME's Rick Stengel and Mark Halperin on Sept. 13. Excerpts
follow

WORLD
Unfriended
As the Palestinians push for statehood, Israel finds itself ever more isolated

Epidemic On the Run (Malaria)
How the accelerating antimalaria campaign opened up a whole new model for global
Aid

ECONOMY
How Corruption Threatens Russia's Economic Gains (Russia)
Corruption is driving out entrepreneurs and strangling the economy. Can the
Russian miracle continue without reform?

ESSAY
With Gaddafi on the Run, Assessing the Winners and Losers in Libya's War
Those who refused to help topple Gaddafi are stranded on the wrong side of history

LETTERS
Inbox
September 19, 2011 | Vol. 178, No. 11

COVER
Portraits Of Resilience (Beyond 9/11)
The Day the Towers Fell (Beyond 9/11)
Timeline (Beyond 9/11) EDITOR'S DESK

EDITOR'S DESK
American history has never followed a straight line

COMMENTARY
Terror's Half-Life
For better and for worse, September 11 did not change everything
In this issue

September 12, 2011 | Vol. 178, No. 10

COVER
The Oz Diet (Health)
No more myths. No more fads. What you should eat 窶・and why

WORLD
Sister Act
Yingluck Shinawatra made history by becoming Thailand's first female Prime
Minister. But given the hold her controversial brother Thaksin still has over
the country, is she her own woman?

Postcard from Yaxi
A few Chinese are deciding to opt out of their country's economic maelstrom in
search of a quieter time. The town where taking it easy has become a way of life

ESSAY
A Little Respect
At the root of India's anticorruption protests lies a basic demand for dignity

GLOBAL ADVISER
Five Reasons to Visit Nagoya (TIME Traveler)
And yes, a hulking great car factory is one of them

The Patience of a Saint (Check In)
An undeterred St. Regis is in Bangkok for the long haul

Totally Tubular (Great Outdoors)
Don't dive? Then snuba is for you

LETTERS
Inbox
September 5, 2011 | Vol. 178, No. 9

COVER
The Liberation of Libya (World)
The Gaddafi regime is broken. What will take its place?

How the Lessons of Iraq Paid Off in Libya (World)
WORLD
Collateral Crisis (Somalia)
How a successful U.S. campaign to cripple Islamist terrorists in Somalia
contributed to a catastrophic famine that could kill hundreds of thousands

Terror in the Night
Allegations of rape are tearing apart a Mennonite community in Bolivia

Warriors on the Rise
In eastern Ukraine, a new generation of the legendary Cossacks 窶・with powerful
friends in Moscow 窶・is rallying to a controversial cause

BUSINESS
Up to Code In Liberia (Sustainability)
Using bar codes to guarantee that trees are harvested sustainably could help
Liberia's timber industry do well by doing good

Hitting the Road (Cars)
Race-car maker McLaren guns for the middle-aged-man market

GLOBAL ADVISER
It's a Jungle Out There (TIME Traveler)
But luxurious civilization is afloat aboard the Aria

The Long Run (Great Outdoors)
Head down under for some skiing history

The Brew Yonder (Diversions)
For tea fans, far-off Srimangal is well worth the journey

LETTERS
Inbox
August 29, 2011 | Vol. 178, No. 8

COVER
The New Greatest Generation (United States)
A new kind of war meant a new set of skills. Now veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan
are bringing their leadership lessons home, where we need them most

WORLD
A Long Road To Recovery (Japan)
Five months after the nuclear disaster, Fukushima is still struggling to clean
up and dig out

Scenes from A Revolution (Syria)
A clandestine journey into Syria reveals a once cowed people defying a brutal
and stubborn regime. What would it take for this to end?

BUSINESS
Heading for the Hills (Wine)
How global warming has Spanish winemakers rethinking their grapes, adapting their
fields and moving their vines to higher ground

GLOBAL ADVISER
Putting It Out There (Amuse-Bouche)
Some of France's best chefs head for the sticks

Three hours in Kolkata (TIME Traveler)
Got half a day? Here's how to max it

Roll Out the Barrel (Grapevine)
Japanese whisky comes of age

ESSAY
My Hero!
Farewell to a Bollywood icon whose global appeal literally saved my life

LETTERS
Inbox
August 22, 2011 | Vol. 178, No. 7

COVER
The End of Europe (Global Economy)
Its economic union is unraveling, London is ablaze, and the continent's once
dependable trading partner the U.S. is too feeble to save the day or the euro.
Say goodbye to the old order

WORLD
Troubled Waters (China)
The acquisition of a decommissioned Soviet carrier, at a time of naval tension
in Asia, heralds Beijing's growing territorial ambition

London's Long Burn
An outbreak of arson, looting and lawlessness caught Britain and its leaders by
surprise. Why they should have seen the troubles coming

ECONOMY
Seeking Growth After the Arab Spring (Middle East)
Unless it can nurture entrepreneurs and create jobs, the popular movement that
toppled the dictators won't make a difference in real lives
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
In Qatar, Arab Art Finally Gets the Showcase it Deserves (Art)
Mathaf aims to shake up the world of Arab art

Tie Me Animals Down, Sport (Television)
Beware of the gonzo nature-TV presenter

Capital Appreciation (Books)
Tom Scocca's portrayal of Beijing contains home truths too

GLOBAL ADVISER
Five Reasons to Visit Makassar (TIME Traveler)
Eastern Indonesia's gateway bustles with life

Dutch Treat (Check In)
The Canal House puts the fun back into solemnity

Hue and Fry (Amuse-Bouche)
Even the common fare of Vietnam's imperial city is fit for a king

LETTERS
Inbox
August 15, 2011 | Vol. 178, No. 6

COVER
The Debt Deal's Failure (United States)
Congress proved incapable of solving America's money problems. The result is that
it lost the world's trust

The Tea Party's Triumph (United States)
A populist movement underestimated by both parties has shown that it's here to
stay

ECONOMY
Business is Booming: African Executives Are Leaving the West and Heading Home
(Africa)
Lured by surging growth in frontier economies, Africa's best and brightest are
leaving the West and returning home, where business is booming

ESSAY
Viewpoint: Far-Right Ideologues Must Take Responsibility for Islamophobia
It's time we grappled with the ideological underpinnings of far-right Western
terror

WORLD
He Wants You to look at Him (Norway)
To get the world's attention, this Norwegian mass murderer killed 77 innocent
people. But under the scrutiny he craves, Anders Behring Breivik amounts to less
than meets the eye

GLOBAL ADVISER
Ants on the March (Next Time You're in ... Seoul)
A part of old Seoul faces redevelopment

No Sex, Please. We're Gentrifying (After Dark)
Sテ」o Paulo's red-light area gets a makeover

Goga Party (Amuse-Bouche)
It's small, perfectly formed and the toast of Shanghai

LETTERS
Inbox
August 8, 2011 | Vol. 178, No. 5

COVER
Journey 2011: Travels Through Islam
Discovering a world of change and challenge in the footsteps of the 14th century
explorer Ibn Battua

World Wanderer (Ibn Battuta's Journey)
Ibn Battuta chronicled the medieval era's great globalizing force: Islam

The Rise of Moderate Islam (Journey / The New Islamists)
The Arab Spring is forcing once extremist groups to soften their political
positions

It Takes a Neighborhood (Journey / Istanbul)
Why Istanbul's Bagcilar quarter is where to see the new Turkey

Urban legend the Pull of Tangier (Journey)
Somalia's Sea Wolves (Journey / Piracy)
For the world, piracy is a major scourge. For Somalia, it's big business

The Making of an Emirate (Journey / Dubai)
It was Western, not Islamic, financial know-how that built Dubai's grandeur

In Pursuit of Romance (Journey / The Sexes)
For young Saudi men and women, dating means staying ahead of the law

The Sands, and Waters, of Time (Journey / The Sahara)
The New Great Game (Journey / Central Asia)
The theater is Kazakhstan. The player: China

The Exodus from Bukhara (Journey / Jews)
History on a Plate (Journey / Food)
A taste of Ibn Battuta's world survives in a wheat-and-meat delicacy

One Faith, Many Strains (Journey / Schisms)
Shades of Radicalism (Journey / Kerala)
Kerala has long been India's most open and tolerant state. That's changing

Spain's Identity Crisis (Journey)
Muslim immigrants are changing the complexion of a deeply Catholic land

A Voyager for the Ages (Journey / Travelogue)
What Ibn Battuta saw and heard centuries ago still resonates today

The Enduring Message of Hangzhou (Journey)
One Man's Odyssey (Journey / The Route)
Along with Marco Polo and Zheng He, Ibn Battuta is one of history's great explorers.
He set out from his native Tangier in 1325, when he was just 21. By the time he
returned home for good almost 30 years later, he had covered some 120,000 km and
nearly every part of the Islamic world

Editor's Desk: An Islamic Odyssey (Journey) BUSINESS
India's Leading Export: CEOs (Management)
Multicultural and resource-short, the subcontinent may be the ideal training
ground for global bosses

LETTERS
Inbox
July 25, 2011 | Vol. 178, No. 4

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/asia/0,9263,501110725,00.html#ixzz1S82zU9GfVol. 178, No. 4

COVER
Tabloid Bites Man (Media)
Rupert Murdoch sacrificed the U.K.'s biggest Sunday paper to protect something
more precious 窶・his influence

WORLD
Red State
Why China is invoking the life and times of Chairman Mao

UNITED STATES
Conspiracy Of Two (Debt Crisis)
Barack Obama and John Boehner met in secret to solve the debt crisis. Can they
push their colleagues to find a compromise?

LETTERS
Inbox
Readers' letters
BUSINESS
A Future of Price Spikes (Megatrends / Food)
Population growth is outstripping food supplies. Unless farm productivity
increases rapidly, the cost of food can only go up

SPORTS
Power Shortage
Jose Bautista reigns, but the home run isn't king

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Summer 60 (The Culture)
Six fabulous cities, with 10 seasonal suggestions for each. That's Time's Summer
60. Whether you're already basking in the sunshine, or planning to travel to one
or more of the destinations we spotlight, check out the coolest lists of the
hottest stuff
July 18, 2011 Vol. 178 No. 3 / Time Asia

4 | Inbox
BRIEFING

7 | Verbatim

8 | LightBox
Joplin's Fourth of July

10 | World
U.K. tabloid hacking

12 | United States
Mark Halperin on immigration reform

13 | Politics
Debt wrangling in D.C.

14 | Economy
Space-shuttle shuffle

16 | Milestones
Artist Cy Twombly

COMMENTARY
17 | Viewpoint
Adam Cohen on the Strauss-Kahn case

18 | Curious Capitalist
Rana Foroohar on why M.B.A.s are bad for business

20 | In the Arena
Joe Klein on rethinking Head Start

FEATURES
22 Sudan in Crisis
Why a two-state solution has yet to produce peace by Alex Perry and Alan Boswell

28 Seafood's Next Wave
After decades of overfishing, we're taking fish production to the farm. What that
means for our health and the planet's by Bryan Walsh

36 The Fans Go Wild
When readers write their own adventures for their favorite characters, is it
kidnapping or art? by Lev Grossman

BUSINESS
41 | Middle East
Decades of plundered wealth have been brought to light by the Arab Spring

44 | Brazil
The country's overvalued currency is a sign of serious economic imbalance

THE CULTURE
46 | Books
Jonathan Franzen, Edmund White and 21 other authors talk about their favorite
vacation reading

52 | Global Adviser
Tracing Abraham's epic wanderings; Malacca's hippest addresses; culinary
innovations with Thierry Marx

54 | Essay
Why China's economy may defy the doomsayers

56 | 10 Questions
Astronaut and shuttle veteran Story Musgrave

ON THE COVER: A sea bream born and bred in a Portsmouth, N.H., hatchery. Photograph
by James Wojcik for TIME. Styled by Brett Kurzweil. Fish courtesy Local Ocean
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 178, No. 2

COVER
Day of the Dead (World)
By TIM PADGETT / DURANGO
The drug war is Mexico's tragedy. Now its survivors are fighting back

The Way Forward (Viewpoint)
By JORGE G. CASTAÑEDA
The U.S. won't change its nature but could change its policies

BUSINESS
The Silicon Savanna (Technology)
By ALEX PERRY / NAIROBI
Kenya is ground zero for a broadband movement that's changing Africa and the world

ARTS
Indian Summer (Art)
By SIDDHARTH DHANVANT SHANGHVI
The Pompidou looks east for the season's big show

A Quiet Revolution: The History and Significance of the Muslim Veil (Books)
By AZADEH MOAVENI
The long history and complex significance of the Muslim veil

GLOBAL ADVISER
Three Hours in Doha (TIME Traveler)
By EMILY RAUHALA
How to kick off a trip to Qatar

Fiji's Rainbow Reef (Great Outdoors)
By IAN LLOYD NEUBAUER
Find gold at the bottom of Rainbow Reef

Cultural Revamp in Montreal (On Show)
By DAVID KAUFMAN
Haute couture and high culture come together

LETTERS
Inbox
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