Caltech Magazine ——- Spring 2026 Preview

Caltech Magazine: This issue featuresthe different ways researchers channel the power of persistence to shape their work, explore new projects that investigate how ice melts at Earth’s poles, find out what President Rosenbaum keeps in his office, and much more.

Where Perseverance Meets Discovery

On the power of cathedral-building in science.

The Ice at the Far Ends of Earth

Researchers know the planet’s ice is melting; now, they are uncovering what that will mean for all of us.

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – NOVEMBER 21, 2025 PREVIEW

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY: The latest issue features ‘Epstein’ – The scandal that won’t go away.

The release last week of a tranche of Jeffrey Epstein’s private emails raised more questions about Donald Trump’s links to the disgraced financier.

The US president had spent much of this year trying to bat away questions about Epstein while rejecting pressure to release the bulk of the files. But in an abrupt reversal on Sunday – widely seen as an admission that he cannot control his Maga base on the issue – Trump urged House Republicans to back the release of the files after all.

That was duly passed this week and if the Senate also votes the same way, the justice department will be compelled to release all unclassified materials on Epstein, who died in jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges.

So we may soon find out what Trump has tried for so long to keep buried. As David Smith writes for our big story, last week’s email release pointed less to a grand conspiracy and more to an elite world in which wealthy, powerful and privileged individuals operate above the law.

One thing’s for sure: despite Trump’s wishes, the Epstein scandal isn’t going away just yet.

Spotlight | Can methane cuts avert climate disaster?
With temperatures breaching limits set out in the Paris Agreement, designed to mitigate climate change, experts say tackling the powerful gas could buy crucial time as the clean-energy shift stalls. Fiona Harvey reports

Spotlight | The US military’s plans for a divided Gaza
A ‘green zone’ will be secured by international and Israeli troops, while almost all Palestinians have been displaced to a ‘red zone’ where no reconstruction is planned, reports Emma Graham-Harrison

Feature | What chance did one boy have to survive on Britain’s streets?
When documentary film-maker Pamela Gordon first met Craig in Nottingham, he was 13 and homeless. She still thought his life might turn around, but she was tragically wrong

Opinion | Labour’s asylum plans are cruel, overspun and unachievable
There is mounting disquiet among Labour MPs, while the vulnerable refugees at the heart of this story are living with a renewed sense of panic, writes Diane Taylor

Culture | Stranger Things reaches its upside down finale
After a decade, the Netflix hit is bowing out. Ahead of its last episodes, the show’s creators and cast talk to Rebecca Nicholson about big 80s hair, recruiting a Terminator killer – and the birds Kate Bush sent them

HARPER’S MAGAZINE – DECEMBER 2025 PREVIEW

HARPER’S MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘The Great Robot Con Game’ – And the selling of a $5 trillion pipe dream.

Kicking Robots

Humanoids and the tech-­industry hype machine by James Vincent

The Tune of Things

Is consciousness God? by Christian Wiman

Grievous Country

Photographs from Syria by Victor J. Blue

The Spectator World Magazine – November 2025

THE SPECTATOR WORLD: The latest issue features ‘MAGA Cracks’ – Is the New Right Coming Apart?

Is MAGA cracking up?

A year after Trump’s reelection, is his coalition starting to implode?

Can Trump control inflation?

If voters feel they are going backward, then the vaulting success of the stock market or the tech sector can feel like an insult

The bonfire of the New Right’s vanities

The grandstanding over Tucker Carlson’s interview with Nick Fuentes is exhausting

What would Buckley do?

Will his like ever come again?

THE NEW YORK TIMES – WEDNESDAY, NOV. 19, 2025

‘Really Good Friends’: Trump Lauds Saudi Leader During Lavish Visit

It was a chummy scene that underscored President Trump’s desire to maintain strong relations with Saudi Arabia during a tumultuous period in the Middle East.

Once a Pariah, Saudi Prince Resets U.S. Relations on His Own Terms

Nvidia’s Chips Become a Bargaining Tool as Trump and Its Chief Get Close

Over the last 10 months, President Trump has become close with Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s chief executive, as the company’s chips have become a tool in trade talks.

Nvidia and Walmart Could Ease Wall St.’s Jitters. Or Make Them Worse.

After four consecutive down days, the stock market is looking increasingly queasy. Earnings reports from Nvidia, Walmart and Target could hint at what’s ahead.

Comey’s Lawyers Head to Court to Argue Vindictive Prosecution by Trump

James B. Comey’s lawyers are expected to argue that the Justice Department effectively allowed itself to be taken captive by the president’s desire for political revenge.