Monday, April 19, 2010

Magazine

The New York Times Magazine

Weighing the Evidence on Exercise

Does working out really help you lose weight — or keep it off?

Dr. Does-It-All

Mehmet Oz publishes books, writes for magazines and newspapers, hosts TV and radio shows and still performs surgery.

Is Marriage Good for Your Health?

What the research shows about the relationship between relationships and physical well-being.

The Estrogen Dilemma

New science is showing that estrogen’s effects on women’s minds and bodies may depend upon when they first start taking it. What should you do?

The Cheat: Salad Day

How does a restaurant critic stay slim (and alive) on five meals a day?

Diner's Journal Blog

My Life in Food

Sam Sifton, restaurant critic of The Times, shares his food diary — with calorie counts.

Lives

Formerly Unsober

Trading drunken evenings for healthy days.

Sunday Puzzles

You can now download and print the popular variety puzzles from the Sunday magazine free online. Look below for links to this week’s puzzle as well as answers to last week’s.

Send a Letter to the Editor

Letters should be addressed to Letters to the Editor, Magazine, The New York Times, 620 Eighth Avenue, 6th Floor, New York, N.Y., 10018. The e-mail address is: magazine@nytimes.com. All letters should include the writer's name, address and daytime telephone number. We are unable to acknowledge or return unpublished letters. Letters may be edited for length and clarity.

The Way We Live Now

The Fat Trap

Can a mother simultaneously encourage her daughter to watch what she eats and to accept her body?

Questions for Jane Fonda

Body Talk

The actress and fitness guru talks about working out after knee surgery.

On Language

Wellness

How did we end up with this alternative word for “health”?

Idea Lab

The Anatomy of Desire

What is a man’s ideal female form? A study of the blind tries to find out.

The Medium

PharmVille: Dr. Bob’s Web Site

An online forum for people on psychoactive drugs.

The Ethicist

Treating a Son’s O.C.D.

Parents debate whether to sneak medicine into their son’s meals; a doctor who donates blood is tempted to find out how it’s used.

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From the Archive

The Dissenter, Justice John Paul Stevens

Three decades ago, he was appointed to the Supreme Court as a judicial conservative and moderate Republican. So how did he come to lead the liberal wing of a fiercely divided court?

Ripped. (Or Torn Up?)

Rafael Nadal has muscled his way to the top of pro tennis. But will his strength and ferocity ultimately defeat him?

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