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Home arrow Magazine Categories arrow Time arrow TIME Magazine, November 17, 2008

TIME Magazine, November 17, 2008

Magazine - Time
Saturday, 08 November 2008

TIME Magazine, November 17, 2008TIME gives you more than just a weekly news summary. Time provides insightful analysis of today's important events, revealing what they mean to you and your family- from politics, to scientific breakthroughs, to human achievement. Plus, Time helps you keep up with the arts, business and society. (Magazines.com)

Time Magazine is a world leader in providing in-depth coverage of world news, politics, culture and business on a weekly basis. Meet the thinkers, innovators and newsmakers who shape our world, and get timely, readable stories on the issues that matter most.

Every issue of Time Magazine provides a “Week in Pictures” photo essay, a thought-provoking “Numbers” column and quick-read news briefs that keep you apprised of the local, national and international headlines that matter most. Read thoughtful essays on health, ethics and technology, and get to know the world’s most important people (one of whom is named Time’s Person of the Year in a special issue).

From stock market activity to reports from the campaign trail to the latest must-read book release, you’ll find everything you need to know when you purchase a Time Magazine subscription. (Valuemags.com)

TIME gives you more than just a weekly news summary. TIME provides insightful analysis of today's important events and what they mean to you and your family--from politics to scientific breakthroughs to human achievement. Plus, TIME helps you keep up with the arts, business, and society. That's why 30 million people worldwide choose TIME. (Amazon.com)

Read TIME Magazine, November 17, 2008 Online

Full Table of Contents. FREE.
You can choose your edition: Asia, U.S., Europe or South Pacific.

COVER
The Meaning of Obama's Win: How He Rewrote the Book
An election in one of the world's oldest democracies looked like the kind they hold in brand-new ones. Nancy Gibbs on a historic night.

Some princes are born in palaces. Some are born in mangers. But a few are born in the imagination, out of scraps of history and hope. Barack Obama never talks about how people see him: I'm not the one making history, he said every chance he got. You are. Yet as he looked out Tuesday night through the bulletproof glass, in a park named for a Civil War general, he had to see the truth on people's faces. We are the ones we've been waiting for, he liked to say, but people were waiting for him, waiting for someone to finish what a King began.

"If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible," declared the President-elect, "who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time, who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer." ...

NATION
A Blue Tide (The Well / ELECTION 2008)
Democrats expand their reach at all levels of government

In Their Words (The Well / Election 2008)
Obama's team on their favorite trail moments

Will a Black President Really Heal the Racial Divide? (The Well / Commentary)
Obama's victory won't heal all racial divisions. To succeed as President, he must still look past them

Obama's Agenda: How to Get America Back on Track (The Well / Election 2008)
You don't hoard political capital in a crisis. Here are five steps that would help get America back on track

Comments (1)add comment

Louise Smith said:

I would like a copy of the November issue with Obama on the cover.
December 07, 2008

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