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...final Informe last Friday night, Mexicans were ready for some drama. And they got it. Congressmen loyal to leftist presidential contender Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who has spent the past two months protesting the results of the July 2 election, jumped from their seats and surrounded the broad podium, shouting "Fuera!" (Out!). So obdurate were the legislators that they blocked Fox, decked out in his presidential sash, from delivering his speech. All he could do was hand the text to congressional leaders in the lobby and go home...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Mexico Keeps Burning | 9/3/2006 | See Source »

...profitability comes in because the client has many different relationships with the bank in terms of private equity, real estate, trusts and stockbroking," explains Deepak Sharma, chief executive of Citigroup's global wealth-management arm for Asia and the Middle East. "This relationship is very deep and very broad." It can also be very close-knit, going beyond the nuts and bolts of standard personal finance. Citigroup Private Bank and UBS host wealth-management training sessions for the sons and daughters of their clients, for example, helping them prepare to manage their inheritance or even take over the family business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bespoke Banking | 8/21/2006 | See Source »

...broad spectrum of Iran's political factions, including reformists, backs a nuclear program as a way of ensuring the country's regional status. Former President Mohammad Khatami might have made the point more softly, but consensus existed long before the arrival of firebrand Ahmadinejad, who makes the case in louder, more menacing tones. There's certainly disagreement over how much Iran should risk in running this course, and what incentives it should settle for in suspending it altogether. But there is a core belief here that without a nuclear program, Iran will be blocked from consolidating its growing influence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Solving the Riddles of Iran | 8/21/2006 | See Source »

...biggest problems, however, may be ethical and constitutional. For now, improved lie detection is likely to have broad public support. But what about when it reaches more surreptitiously into our lives? Biophysicist Britton Chance of the University of Pennsylvania has explored ways to use infrared light projected from a distance to penetrate the skull, looking for signs of stress similar to the ones fMRIs detect. Both that and remote periorbital thermography could be used undetectably in airport lines to spot high-stress passengers. Whether that stress is caused by the bomb you're concealing or the fact you're running...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How to Spot a Liar | 8/20/2006 | See Source »

...Other compromises are made with the farm's livestock. Stone Barns is raising roughly 450 turkeys this season, and most of them are Broad-Breasted Whites, the conventional breed you can buy in a regular grocery store. The Whites are distinguished by their genetically huge breasts and - as a consequence - their inability to have sex with one another. (Virtually every turkey you have ever eaten could not copulate without human aid.) These turkeys are a freak of human engineering, so what are they doing at an idyll like Stone Barns? Ditto the Cornish/Rock Cross chickens, a quick-growing, large-breasted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Farm-to-Table Fetish | 8/15/2006 | See Source »

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