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In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 27

COVER
Does the U.S. Constitution Still Matter? (United States)
By RICHARD STENGEL
How fights over the U.S. Constitution illuminate four of today's most divisive
issues: Libya, taxes, health care and immigration

BUSINESS
Betting on Big Solar (Energy)
By BRYAN WALSH
Having established itself as a wind power, GE looks to scale up its nascent
solar-energy business

ESSAY
Land of the Lost
By ANDREW MARSHALL
Thailand's coming election exposes the dysfunction of a once promising nation

WORLD
Rebuilding Japan
In the wake of an earthquake, a tsunami and a nuclear crisis, consultancy McKinsey
& Co. commissioned essays on Japan's challenges 窶・and its many strengths. Some
extracts

Smoke and Mirrors (Economy)
By ROYA WOLVERSON
As Greece copes with street protesters, angry creditors and jittery markets, the
day of reckoning for its massive debt is drawing near

ARTS
It's a Boy (Books)
By MAURA ELIZABETH CUNNINGHAM
And that's precisely the problem for the global sex ratio

GLOBAL ADVISER
Five Reasons to Visit Chengde (TIME Traveler)
By JOHN KRICH
The Manchus picked a great getaway

Start Fretting (Curtain Raiser)
By JAYA JIWATRAM
It's time for Guitar Nights

LETTERS
Inbox
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 26

COVER
What I Learned From My Cancer Scare (Health Special)
By DR. MEHMET OZ
I'm a famous doctor. I give advice to millions of people. But it turns out I'm a lousy patient

WORLD
Postcard from Riyadh
By ARYN BAKER
Lingerie shops have become a battleground for Saudi Arabian gender politics. Joining the fight for freedom at the underwear counter

UNITED STATES
The GOP's New Rules
By JOE KLEIN
It's the Outsiders vs. the Insiders 窶・and the Outsiders have an in

BUSINESS
The End of Cheap Labor in China
By BILL POWELL
Rising wages are sending its manufacturing jobs to Cambodia, Vietnam, India 窶・and the U.S.

PEOPLE
10 Questions for Li Na
By WILLIAM LEE ADAMS
The first Chinese player to win a Grand Slam singles title, Li Na, 29, talks about love, tennis and avoiding the crazies

GLOBAL ADVISER
Why Cape Town's Woodstock Rocks (Amuse-Bouche)
By ALEX PERRY
Cape Town's top chef Luke Dale-Roberts brings new sizzle to an old area

Hepworth Wakefield: For Form's Sake (On Show)
By SIMON HORSFORD
England's bold new sculpture gallery

The Best New Bar in Bali (Diversions)
By JASON TEDJASUKMANA
The Potato Head Beach Club gives Indonesian isle's party scene a boost
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 25

COVER
What Recovery?
By RANA FOROOHAR
The Five Myths About the U.S. Economy

WORLD
Battle of the Jungle
By BRENDAN BRADY/ SORNG RUKAVORN
A group of monks is turning to an experimental U.N. climate-change plan to save Cambodia's forests

BUSINESS
Two-Wheel Appeal
By SALLY MCGRANE
Exhibited in museums and favored by royals, Copenhagen's urban-centric Biomega bikes are on a roll

ARTS
Have Ideas, Will Travel (Culture)
By JYOTI THOTTAM
The Borderless World of Amitav Ghosh

Spice of Life (Culture)
By JEFFREY T. IVERSON
For this chef, flavors are a metaphor of human experience

LETTERS
Inbox
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 23

COVER
Killing Fields: Africa's Rhinos Under Threat
By HANNAH BEECH / BEIJING AND HANOI AND ALEX PERRY / PILANESBERG AND HARARE
How Asia's growing appetite for traditional medicine is threatening Africa's
rhinos

BUSINESS
China's Mining Pit (Economy)
By MICHAEL SCHUMAN / PORT HEDLAND
Australia, economy, China, natural resources

WORLD
Deepening Divide
By ARYN BAKER / BUQAYA, LEBANON
The Assad regime's brutal crackdown hasn't halted Syria's pro-democracy
protests,
but it may yet turn them into a sectarian conflict

ARTS
Soldiering On (Movies)
By HILLARY BRENHOUSE
One man's journey from trooper to activist

Diplomatic Immunity? (Books)
By JEFFREY WASSERSTROM
Kissinger's China memoir isn't beyond reproach

GLOBAL ADVISER
Inside Turkey's Young Art Scene (On Show)
By PELIN TURGUT
Turkey is fast becoming the country du jour on the contemporary-art circuit

Five Reasons to Visit Koh Kood (TIME Traveler)
By RON GLUCKMAN
Think Koh Samui, but with far fewer people
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 23

COVER
The Optimism Bias (Science)
By TALI SHAROT
Those rose-colored glasses? We may be born with them. Why our brains tilt toward
the positive

WORLD
Faith in the Arab Spring (Egypt)
By BRUCE FEILER
Headlines about Muslim-Coptic violence hide a more hopeful narrative emerging
in the new Egypt: Islam and Christianity can live and build together

UNITED STATES
Torn Asunder (The Tornado)
By DAVID VON DREHLE
For Joplin, Mo., the deadliest tornado in decades turned a peaceful Sunday evening
into a horror show

BUSINESS
In the Pole Position (Automobiles)
By STEVE GOLDBERG
Le Mans Series outlasts the competition with its jet-set fans and hot wheels

Self-Serving Stewardship (Conservation)
By STEPHAN FARIS
How companies protecting their supply chains can protect the environment too

GLOBAL ADVISER
On Location (Next Time You're in ... Anhui)
By SIMON ELEGANT
Huizhou's historic villages attract film crews and artists in droves

Hostage to Comfort (Check In)
By MARY LUSSIANA
And it won't cost you a king's ransom

Swords into Cab Fares (TIME Traveler)
By SIMON HORSFORD
Taxis tour a now peaceful Belfast
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 22

COVER
Sex, Lies, Arrogance: What Makes Powerful Men Behave So Badly?
By NANCY GIBBS
From the alleged attempted rape by Dominique Strauss-Kahn to Arnold Schwarzenegger's fathering a child out of wedlock, what is it about power that makes men crazy?

The Turning Point (Viewpoint)
By ELAINE SCIOLINO
Finally, French women start a conversation about inappropriate sexual conduct

SPORTS
More than Manchester United
By MICHAEL ELLIOTT
How a football club from England's industrial northwest became the world's biggest sporting organization, thanks in no small part to a canny Scotsman

BUSINESS
Making Over Lagos (Africa)
By ALEX PERRY
The governor has a simple plan: turn one of the world's worst cities into one of the best. It just might work

WORLD
How Asia's Notorious Golden Triangle Drug Zone Reinvented Itself
By ANDREW MARSHALL / PHIYER
The notorious Golden Triangle narcotics zone has reinvented itself and is more dangerous than ever

ARTS
Looking At the Messy Birth of Bangladesh (Books)
By JYOTI THOTTAM
Tahmima Anam takes on the messy birth of Bangladesh

GLOBAL ADVISER
Five Reasons to Visit Catania (TIME Traveler)
By STEPHAN FARIS
Put Sicily's second city first on your list

WTF: Bangkok's Hip New Gallery Space (Next Time You're in ... Bangkok)
By JOHN KRICH
Born in a wave of artistic dissent, today's thriving WTF now stands for art and community in Thailand

LETTERS
Inbox
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 22

COVER
Why the U.S. Is Stuck with Pakistan
By ARYN BAKER / ISLAMABAD
The U.S.-Pakistan relationship is no love match. But it will survive the raid
on Osama bin Laden

BUSINESS
A New Crop Of Consumers
By JYOTI THOTTAM / MUZAFFARPUR
To keep its economy booming, India must enrich its farmers. Businesses eager to
sell in rural areas are helping do just that

ESSAY
Grave Lessons
By JORGE CASTAÑEDA
The death of Che Guevara sheds light on a tricky issue: how to avoid creating
martyrs

ARTS
Luck of the Draw (Art)
By ANDREW MARSHALL
Sacred Thai tattoos are said to have propitious qualities

Red Tide (Books)
By JEFFREY WASSERSTROM
The lives being swept along by China's surging changes

GLOBAL ADVISER
The Capilano Cliffwalk: Living the High Life (Great Outdoors)
By TIM NEWCOMB
Keep a firm grip on the handrails 窶・and try not to look down

Three Hours in Antwerp (TIME Traveler)
By SHERIDAN BECKER
How to get a quick feel for this Belgian city

Garsington: A New Home for English Opera (Diversions)
By EBEN HARRELL
This year, Garsington Opera moves from its old home near Oxford to the
1,000-hectare Wormsley Estate in the Chiltern Hills
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 19

COVER
The Royal We (The Wedding)
By CATHERINE MAYER / LONDON
It wasn't just a wedding. It was the House of Windsor preparing for its next act

TO OUR READERS
A TIME Gala and A Royal Wedding (Editor's Desk)
By RICHARD STENGEL

ESSAY
A New Middle East (Worldview)
By FAREED ZAKARIA
The U.S. is going to have to change the way it builds ties in the region. That
won't be easy

ARTS
Party Piece (Art)
By HANNAH BEECH
China's revamped National Museum is a temple to one-party rule

GLOBAL ADVISER
Next Time You're in Rome
By STEPHAN FARIS
A combatant's view of the Colosseum

Revisit L'Amant in Vietnam (Diversions)
By JOHN CLAPHAM
The scene of Marguerite Duras' novella open for tourists in Sa Dec

The Spirit of the Orient Express (TIME Traveler)
By MATTHEW LINK
Luxury train travel comes to South Africa and Spain

A Bath Pub Gets a Hip Makeover (Amuse-Bouche)
By KARI LIPSCHUTZ
The newly opened Hall & Woodhouse that's already an institution in southwest
England
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 18

COVER
Inside the FBI's Terrorist Hunt (United States)
By BARTON GELLMAN
Director Bob Mueller is determined to prove his agency can keep the U.S. safe

COMMENTARY
The Libyan Muddle
By MICHAEL ELLIOTT
It's time for NATO to decide what it wants to do and how it proposes to get it done

VIEWPOINT
Power Shifts
By JOSEPH S. NYE JR.
As access to the information marketplace eases, nations are losing their ability to control it

BUSINESS
You Are What You Owe (Economics)
By SEBASTIAN MALLABY
Why power built on debt is no power at all

Getting Rich Doing Good (Social Investing)
By THOMAS K. GROSE/ LONDON
Social-impact bonds fund programs that target critical issues like recidivism. Investors can earn profits; the public gets better quality of life while saving tax dollars

WORLD
Chernobyl 25 Years Later
By EBEN HARRELL AND JAMES MARSON / PRIPYAT
The long afterlife of the worst nuclear accident in history holds important lessons for Japan today

LETTERS
Inbox
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 17

COVER
The 2011 TIME 100
Meet the most influential people in the world. They are artists and activists,
reformers and researchers, heads of state and captains of industry. Their ideas
spark dialogue and dissent and sometimes even revolution. Welcome to this year's
TIME 100

ESSAY
In the Short Term, Good News (Worldview)
By FAREED ZAKARIA
How the U.S.'s economic strength overseas prevents it from facing its debt crisis

ARTS
Heart of Gold (Art)
By WILLIAM LEE ADAMS
The Afghan relics that have survived improbable odds

GLOBAL ADVISER
Indonesia's Raja Ampat Islands Are Remote Worth the Trip (TIME Traveler)
By JASON TEDJASUKMANA
Excursions to this corner of the archipelago require at least seven to 10 days
but few visitors regret making the journey

Hテエtel le Bristol: Paris Doesn't Get More French (Check In)
By WILLIAM LEE ADAMS
Just two blocks from the Elysテゥe Palace on the chic Rue du Faubourg St.-Honorテゥ,
this hotel has for generations attracted celebrities, diplomats and the world's
most well-heeled travelers

Hong Kong's Ritz-Carlton: A Hotel with Altitude (Next Time You're in ... Hong
Kong)
By MICHELE TRAVIERSO
Billed as the highest hotel in the world, the new Ritz is perched between levels
102 and 118 at the ICC tower in West Kowloon

Greenhouse Gallery: New Delhi's Arty New Hothouse (Diversions)
By JOHN KRICH
The space mounts exhibits and hosts typography workshops, readings and yoga
sessions

LETTERS
Inbox
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 16

COVER
Amortality: Why It's No Longer Necessary to Act Your Age (Health)
By CATHERINE MAYER
More people are behaving as if they'll never grow old. Is that such a good idea?

WORLD
The Activist Artist of China
By AUSTIN RAMZY / BEIJING
Ai Weiwei is as famous for his criticism of the authorities as for his provocative
art. Now in detention, he's become the symbol of a worrying crackdown

VIEWPOINT
Battered by Its Obsessions
By HANNAH BEECH
Japan sacrificed nature at the altar of technology, and was punished by both

BUSINESS
The China Effect (Manufacturing)
By NEEL CHOWDHURY / PENANG
As the country's economy matures, multinationals look elsewhere in Asia for
low-cost manufacturing

ESSAY
Face Facts
By ANDREW MARSHALL
To try to make a real difference in Burma, the West needs to look beyond Aung
San Suu Kyi

GLOBAL ADVISER
Five Reasons to Visit Colombo (TIME Traveler)
By CHARUKESI RAMADURAI
With war over, Sri Lanka is back on the map

We All Dive in a Yellow Submarine (Diversions)
By RACHELLE DRAGANI
Even if it's homemade

New Leaf: A Frenchman's Vietnam Teahouse (Amuse-Bouche)
By JOHN KRICH
Love of tea leads to a physician's career change

LETTERS
Inbox
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 15

COVER
Democracy, Egyptian Style (World)
By ABIGAIL HAUSLOHNER / CAIRO
The public square opened by the revolution teems with groups seeking a voice in
remaking the country. Not all of them sound as reassuring as the Facebook crowd

WORLD
Why the U.N. Picked Sides in Ivory Coast's Civil War
By ALEX PERRY
Why the U.N. picked a side in Ivory Coast's civil war

The Boom That's Destroying Bali
By ANDREW MARSHALL
Rampant construction, marine pollution, inadequate infrastructure, water
shortages, traffic jams and now violent crime. The boom that's destroying Bali

ARTS
The Dark Beauty at the Heart of Voodoo Art (Art)
By JEFFREY T. IVERSON
The dark beauty at the heart of voodoo art

BUSINESS
Starring Role: How South Africa Became Hollywood's New Back Lot (Movies)
By ALEX PERRY / CAPE TOWN
Top-notch production facilities, low labor costs and a diverse landscape won
South Africa the coveted job as Hollywood's new back lot

GLOBAL ADVISER
Peru's Private Treasures at Museo Larco (Diversions)
By DAVID KAUFMAN
An 18th century hacienda showcases some of Peru's finest and most cloistered
artifacts

In Bangkok, A Passage to India (Amuse-Bouche)
By JOHN KRICH
Chef Gaggan Anand goes molecular in Thailand

London's New Corinthia: Spoiled for Choice (Check In)
By DAVEN WU
Another hot spot on London's growing list of swank hotels

LETTERS
Inbox
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 14

COVER
The Gas Dilemma (Environment)
By BRYAN WALSH
Natural gas from shale rock promises to provide cleaner, abundant energy for the
U.S. and the world. But there's a catch. It could come with significant
environmental and social costs. Can the energy industry be trusted to deliver
the goods so that everyone benefits?

ARTS
Architecture in Bloom (Design)
By HANIFA HARIS
Singapore's ArtScience Museum

And the Band Plays Again (Music)
By GARY MOSKOWITZ
The '60s hitmakers Orchestre Poly-Rythmo lead the revival of Afrobeat

One Nation Under a Hex (Books)
By DOUGLAS GILLISON
But is that the real explanation for Cambodia's ills?

WORLD
Afghanistan: India's Uncertain Road
By JYOTI THOTTAM / GURGAON
Attacks on its interests have forced India to tread more lightly in its dealings
with Kabul, but it is still seeking ways to protect and extend its influence

ESSAY
A Time for Renewal
By MICHAEL ELLIOTT
The catastrophes in Japan have given it the chance to shake up the Establishment

GLOBAL ADVISER
From Prison to Paradise (Check In)
By JOHN CLAPHAM
It's amazing what you can do with a former penal colony

Beauty and Brawn (Amuse-Bouche)
By SUDI PIGOTT
Pig out in East London

Rock the Cradle (Next Time You're in ... Johannesburg)
By DAVID KAUFMAN
Joburg's newest cultural getaway

LETTERS
Inbox
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 13

COVER
Why Are We in Libya? (World)
By FAREED ZAKARIA
Barack Obama is trying something rarely attempted before. But he can't be sure
it will lead to Gaddafi's early exit

The Rebels (World)
By BOBBY GHOSH WITH ABIGAIL HAUSLOHNER / BENGHAZI
who are they 窶・and can operation odyssey dawn help these amateur warriors defeat
Gaddafi?

WORLD
Rising to the Challenge
By HANNAH BEECH / TOKYO
Can its young people save Japan? After the earthquake and tsunami, they're rolling
up their sleeves 窶・and shaming an ossified Establishment

BUSINESS
Paris Hotel Wars (Travel)
By WILLIAM LEE ADAMS
Asian chains take on the city's grandes dames by offering a modern spin on luxury

ARTS
A Boy's Own Story (Books)
By TIM KINDSETH
Shamanism, Stalin and coming of age on the steppe

GLOBAL ADVISER
What a Coup: Madagascar's Masoala Peninsula (TIME Traveler)
By LEE MIDDLETON
This little corner feels a long way from the country's political upheavals

Museum Updates Make Krakow a Cultural Capital (Next Time You're in ... Krakow)
By MARY LUSSIANA
Decades of underinvestment are being remedied thanks to generous E.U. funding
and healthy economic growth

Chez Pascal: A Frenchman's Home is his Gallery (Diversions)
By JOHN KRICH
A visit to this stunning private collection comes with the most personal of
services: a guided tour from Pascal Butel, a transplanted Frenchman who is one
of Asia's least known yet most devoted collectors

PEOPLE
10 Questions for Pervez Musharraf
By TIME STAFF
Former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf wants to return to a job that nearly
got him killed 窶・twice

LETTERS
Inbox
In this issue
Edition: Asia
Vol. 177, No. 11

COVER
Healing the Hurt (Science)
By ALICE PARK
Finding new ways to treat pain

WORLD
Justifying Murder for Those Who Blaspheme
By ARYN BAKER / ISLAMABAD
Two assassinations bring Pakistan to a social, political and moral turning point

BUSINESS
A Shining City On a Hill (Real Estate)
By STACY PERMAN / RAMALLAH
Can the West Bank's first planned community help build a new middle class in the
Middle East?

ESSAY
A Plan for Libya
By ROBERT PAPE
The country's looming humanitarian crisis needs to be dealt with now

ARTS
Toy Story (Books)
By PATRICK BRZESKI
A tale of rubber ducks lost at sea becomes a meditation on life, ecology and the
joy of the quest

GLOBAL ADVISER
A Sea Change at Wakatobi (TIME Traveler)
By JASON TEDJASUKMANA
In Indonesia, one of Asia's top dive sites is now much more accessible

Puerto Rico's Food Revival (Amuse-Bouche)
By DAVID KAUFMAN
Taste the island's culinary history San Juan's Mercado Agrテュcola Natural

English Country Goes Rock-'N'-Roll (Check In)
By JO BAKER
Living Architecture is bringing hip accommodation to the rural U.K.

LETTERS
Inbox
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