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Newsweek

Nov 18 2022
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 US

The Archives

Golden Girls

Sound the Horn

Bibi’s Back

Diversity Denied?

‘Hype, Hubris and Blind Ambition’ • GE may have ‘brought good things to life’ over its 130-year history, but its rise and fall is a business cautionary tale for modern times

William D. Cohan

Iran’s Women Lead the Challenge to Theocratic Rule • The focus is on women’s rights, but dissatisfaction with the mullahs is widespread. The regime is responding to growing protests with vicious—and well-practiced—tactics

‘I Feel Invisible’ • A SURGE IN LONELINESS AND ALIENATION IS FUELING A MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS AMONG TEENS AND ADOLESCENTS. HERE’S WHAT SCIENCE SAYS WILL HELP

AMERICA’S BEST BANKS 2023 • With inflation high and interest rates rising, you need a bank that helps you make the most of every dollar more than ever

Discoveries Revealed Through Drought • Extreme drought gripped the world this year, fueling wildfires, draining rivers, reducing harvests. Amid the climate hardship are artifacts of thousands of years of lost history once buried or flooded, now reappearing due to plummeting water levels. From a sunken WWII-era landing craft in Nevada to an abandoned village in Iraq to a medieval horse bridge in England and undersea prehistoric stone monuments in Spain, here are sites that silently witnessed and documented historic climate change.

David Duchovny


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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 US

The Archives

Golden Girls

Sound the Horn

Bibi’s Back

Diversity Denied?

‘Hype, Hubris and Blind Ambition’ • GE may have ‘brought good things to life’ over its 130-year history, but its rise and fall is a business cautionary tale for modern times

William D. Cohan

Iran’s Women Lead the Challenge to Theocratic Rule • The focus is on women’s rights, but dissatisfaction with the mullahs is widespread. The regime is responding to growing protests with vicious—and well-practiced—tactics

‘I Feel Invisible’ • A SURGE IN LONELINESS AND ALIENATION IS FUELING A MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS AMONG TEENS AND ADOLESCENTS. HERE’S WHAT SCIENCE SAYS WILL HELP

AMERICA’S BEST BANKS 2023 • With inflation high and interest rates rising, you need a bank that helps you make the most of every dollar more than ever

Discoveries Revealed Through Drought • Extreme drought gripped the world this year, fueling wildfires, draining rivers, reducing harvests. Amid the climate hardship are artifacts of thousands of years of lost history once buried or flooded, now reappearing due to plummeting water levels. From a sunken WWII-era landing craft in Nevada to an abandoned village in Iraq to a medieval horse bridge in England and undersea prehistoric stone monuments in Spain, here are sites that silently witnessed and documented historic climate change.

David Duchovny


Expand title description text