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Newsweek

Oct 29 2021
Magazine

Newsweek magazine has a long-standing tradition of providing readers with the most updated information on the most pressing issues affecting our nation and world today. Newsweek is able to fill the gaps when a story has passed and is able to come up with insight or synthesis that connects the cracking, confusing digitals dots in today's fast paced news cycle.

Newsweek

The Archives

Saviors • Firefighters work to protect a painting with a fireproof blanket during a drill aimed at preserving artworks displayed in the Bordeuax Cathedral in southwestern France on October 12.

Slow Boat to Recovery?

Taking Back

Training Days

The Long Road Ahead • The war may be over, but for refugees from the Taliban the battle has just begun

Talking Points

Navigating Your Career in an Upside-Down World • Work life in turmoil? Here are some ways to rethink—and remake—your career

100 Companies That You Would Sell Your Soul to Work For • OUR FIRST ANNUAL LIST OF BUSINESSES THAT DO RIGHT BY THEIR EMPLOYEES

The Culture Club • CAN OUR NUMBER ONE COMPANY MAINTAIN ITS EMPLOYEE-FRIENDLY WORKPLACE THROUGH THE PANDEMIC AND A GROWTH BOOM? WE THINK SO

Sacred Ground • “A cemetery so beautiful, it invites one to die,” said the caretaker of Tulcán, Ecuador’s cemetery, before he was buried beneath the toucan topiaries he had sculpted. While ostensibly for the dead, burial rituals can also tell rich stories of a culture’s living. From epitaph roasts in Romania, to cliff-hanging coffins in the Philippines, to a graveyard movie theater in Hollywood, here are some of the burial sites that are as fascinating as their tenants.

Sharon D Clarke


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Formats

OverDrive Magazine

subjects

News & Politics

Languages

English

Newsweek magazine has a long-standing tradition of providing readers with the most updated information on the most pressing issues affecting our nation and world today. Newsweek is able to fill the gaps when a story has passed and is able to come up with insight or synthesis that connects the cracking, confusing digitals dots in today's fast paced news cycle.

Newsweek

The Archives

Saviors • Firefighters work to protect a painting with a fireproof blanket during a drill aimed at preserving artworks displayed in the Bordeuax Cathedral in southwestern France on October 12.

Slow Boat to Recovery?

Taking Back

Training Days

The Long Road Ahead • The war may be over, but for refugees from the Taliban the battle has just begun

Talking Points

Navigating Your Career in an Upside-Down World • Work life in turmoil? Here are some ways to rethink—and remake—your career

100 Companies That You Would Sell Your Soul to Work For • OUR FIRST ANNUAL LIST OF BUSINESSES THAT DO RIGHT BY THEIR EMPLOYEES

The Culture Club • CAN OUR NUMBER ONE COMPANY MAINTAIN ITS EMPLOYEE-FRIENDLY WORKPLACE THROUGH THE PANDEMIC AND A GROWTH BOOM? WE THINK SO

Sacred Ground • “A cemetery so beautiful, it invites one to die,” said the caretaker of Tulcán, Ecuador’s cemetery, before he was buried beneath the toucan topiaries he had sculpted. While ostensibly for the dead, burial rituals can also tell rich stories of a culture’s living. From epitaph roasts in Romania, to cliff-hanging coffins in the Philippines, to a graveyard movie theater in Hollywood, here are some of the burial sites that are as fascinating as their tenants.

Sharon D Clarke


Expand title description text