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Newsweek

Nov 19 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

SAVE 79% Subscribe FROM $ 1.90 PER WEEK

The Archives

Slovenia: Green, smart and creative • The small nation at Europe’s heart goes big on sustainability and digitalization

Not My Mandate • Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia speaks on November 1 in front of the U.S. Capitol in support of first responders who refuse to get vaccinated. On November 6 a federal appeals court panel temporarily blocked a Biden administration mandate requiring the COVID-19 vaccine (with the option for weekly testing instead) for workers at private companies with 100 or more employees. The mandate had been set to take effect on January4.

Make a Wish

It’s a Surreal World After All

Just Ducky

Newsweek’s Autos Awards 2021 • Introducing our inaugural ranking of the best vehicles and brand lineups on the market

Under Fire • For Arizona Congressman Ruben Gallego, a potential challenger to Senator Kyrsten Sinema, January 6 brought back memories of combat in Iraq

Talking Points

Can Stacey brams Save the Democrats_______ Again? • The GEORGIA PROGRESSIVE has BIG AMBITIONS for the PARTY (and FOR HERSELF)

AMERICA’S BEST ONLINE LEARNING SCHOOLS 2022

Be Transported by These Printed Pages • Inspired by Jules Verne’s globe-circling Phileas Fogg, Harvard’s David Damrosch has created a companionable, round-the-world tour in books to inspire armchair travelers and the intrepid in-person adventurer alike. From classical Kyoto to post-war London to modern-day Nigeria, explore how writers encounter the world and how the world bleeds into literature, as they transmute social conflicts and personal traumas into works of pleasure and beauty. What better way to travel than on the page today, and then in person once the last COVID restrictions lift?

Finn Wolfhard


Expand title description text

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

SAVE 79% Subscribe FROM $ 1.90 PER WEEK

The Archives

Slovenia: Green, smart and creative • The small nation at Europe’s heart goes big on sustainability and digitalization

Not My Mandate • Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia speaks on November 1 in front of the U.S. Capitol in support of first responders who refuse to get vaccinated. On November 6 a federal appeals court panel temporarily blocked a Biden administration mandate requiring the COVID-19 vaccine (with the option for weekly testing instead) for workers at private companies with 100 or more employees. The mandate had been set to take effect on January4.

Make a Wish

It’s a Surreal World After All

Just Ducky

Newsweek’s Autos Awards 2021 • Introducing our inaugural ranking of the best vehicles and brand lineups on the market

Under Fire • For Arizona Congressman Ruben Gallego, a potential challenger to Senator Kyrsten Sinema, January 6 brought back memories of combat in Iraq

Talking Points

Can Stacey brams Save the Democrats_______ Again? • The GEORGIA PROGRESSIVE has BIG AMBITIONS for the PARTY (and FOR HERSELF)

AMERICA’S BEST ONLINE LEARNING SCHOOLS 2022

Be Transported by These Printed Pages • Inspired by Jules Verne’s globe-circling Phileas Fogg, Harvard’s David Damrosch has created a companionable, round-the-world tour in books to inspire armchair travelers and the intrepid in-person adventurer alike. From classical Kyoto to post-war London to modern-day Nigeria, explore how writers encounter the world and how the world bleeds into literature, as they transmute social conflicts and personal traumas into works of pleasure and beauty. What better way to travel than on the page today, and then in person once the last COVID restrictions lift?

Finn Wolfhard


Expand title description text