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On Okinawa, where more than four years ago U.S. arms won a famous and a costly victory (80,000 dead & wounded), General Douglas MacArthur's Pacific command has carried on a postwar occupation without much notice from the outside world. TIME Correspondent Frank Gibney toured the all-but-forgotten island, cabled: The rice and sweet potato fields of Okinawa creep over the slate volcanic soil, coverin
TIME Magazine Cover: Summer Olympics Special
They entertain us, lead us and challenge us. TIME honors the icons who are defining the world in 2012
Tweet A World of Possibilities In all kinds of ways, our honorees are making an enduring impact around the globe From 100 to Eternity Joel Stein's absolutely bulletproof list of the TIME 100 of All Time Portraits: The TIME 100 Honorees The world's most influential people, from media magnates to cultural titans and transformative leaders Photos: The Man Behind The Clock Video More from Christian Ma
From models and muses to designers and photographers, the world of style has no shortage of superstars. We picked the 100 most influential fashion icons since 1923, the beginning of TIME ... magazine (More in Style & Design)
If interning were an Olympic event, Ivellisse Morales would be a gold medalist. Since her freshman year at Boston University, the 21-year-old public relations major has racked up seven internships. During the course of her odyssey, she has done everything from stuffing envelopes and running errands to writing analytical reports, all the while attending classes and working part time at an outside j
No one could have known that when a Tunisian fruit vendor set himself on fire in a public square, it would incite protests that would topple dictators and start a global wave of dissent. In 2011, protesters didn't just voice their complaints; they changed the world Photograph by Peter Hapak for TIME"Mohamed suffered a lot. He worked hard. But when he set fire to himself, it wasn't about his scales
Clockwise from top left: Getty; AP (2); Getty; AP; Reuters As always, TIME's editors will choose the Person of the Year (in the Dec. 26, 2011, issue of TIME, on sale Dec. 16), but that doesn't mean readers shouldn't have their say. The tallies of our annual poll, below, show which notable people from the past year have received the most yes votes and which have generated the most no's. Next Who Sh
Koji Sasahara / AP Clueless Olympus' Mori, center, and Takayama, left Sometimes capitalism doesn't make sense, let alone dollars. These days in the West, when a major financial institution gives a deadbeat customer a loan and the borrower defaults, the imprudent lender is bailed out with hard-earned taxpayer money. In Japan, it can get even less rational: a publicly listed brand-name corporation s
Jack Arent / Palo Alto Daily News / APJobs speaks at the graduation ceremonies at Stanford University on June 12, 2005 Steve Jobs, whose death was announced Wednesday night, Oct. 5, 2011, wasn't a computer scientist. He had no training as a hardware engineer or industrial designer. The businesses Apple entered under his leadership — from personal computers to MP3 players to smart phones — all exis
A gallery of TIME's coverage of Apple and its visionary leader
We honor the scrappy newcomers and established players that make the Web so useful, entertaining and just plain indispensable
Here's one of the least interesting paragraphs you've ever read: "Last night I opened the front door to let the cat out. It was such a beautiful night that I wandered down to the garden to get a breath of fresh air. Then I heard a click as the door closed behind me." O.K., it becomes a little less eye-glazing after that, with the speaker getting arrested while trying to force the door back open. S
We honor the scrappy newcomers and established players that make the Web so useful, entertaining and just plain indispensable Music & Video Treats for ears and eyes Family & Kids Online fun for all ages Sports For love of the games News & Info Satisfy your need to know Financial & Productivity Saving money — and time Shopping & Travel What to buy, where to go Health & Fitness Sites for a new and i
Dominic Nahr/Magnum for TIME Takeshi Kanno always knew he would save lives in his line of work — but never as many at one time as he did on March 11. The 31-year-old doctor was on duty at the Shizugawa public hospital in the Japanese town of Minami Sanriku when he heard the tsunami alert. He immediately began moving patients to the highest floor, helping dozens of people in the short window betwee
Ko Sasaki/New York Times/Redux To be a Japanese politician is to spend your career exercising restraint. There's the somber suit, the gray demeanor, the vague words that defy position taking. But as radiation wafted from the earthquake- and tsunami-damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant toward the city of Minami Soma, some 15 miles (25 km) away, Mayor Katsunobu Sakurai, 55, abandoned the us
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
The news from Japan continues to be grim. While the world’s attention remains fixed on the catastrophe at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant and on the brave efforts to stop radiation from leaking into the air, sea and land, the toll from the March 11 earthquake and tsunami continues to rise. As I write this column, the official count is 11,232 dead and 16,361 missing, making the disaster the wor
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TIME picks the 140 Twitter feeds that are shaping the conversation. Take a look and vote on whether you think these top tweeters should be on our list. Click here to see the poll results
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TEPCO makes public pictures of the massive wave engulfing the nuclear power plant
Eugene Hoshiko / APLocal officials guide evacuees from Futaba, in Fukushima prefecture, in the emergency shelter at Saitama Super Arena, near Tokyo By 9:30 a.m. local time on March 22, the emergency shelter at Saitama Super Arena, just north of Tokyo, had reached its maximum capacity of 500 volunteers. The other 1,500 do-gooders wanting to help the displaced people of Futaba, the town closest to g
Khaled Abdullah / ReutersYemen's Tawakul Karman, the chairwoman of Women Journalists Without Chains, shouts slogans during an antigovernment protest in Sana'a, Feb. 10, 2011 Sometimes revolutionaries don't look the part. Tawakul Karman, Yemen's most active activist, favors long, loose-fitting gowns and coordinating headscarves. The 32-year-old mother of three looks, well, like a mom. And she acts
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