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Newsweek

Newsweek is a weekly news magazine covering current events and politics in America. Newsweek magazine is published by Newsweek, Inc. and is headquartered in New York, N.Y. It has been published since 1933 and is currently owned by Sidney Harman. Newsweek covers national news and is the second largest weekly news magazine in the United States, behind Time Magazine. Newsweek was founded in 1933 as News-Week by Thomas J.C. Martyn, a former foreign Time magazine editor. At that time, the magazine cost 10 cents a copy and $4 per year. The name changed to Newsweek in 1937 and it merged with Raymond Moley's weekly magazine, Today. Moley was a member of Franklin D. Roosevelt's "Brain Trust" and to distinguish itself from its competition, Time, which had a similar format, Newsweek carved a reputation for itself as being more liberal and serious in tone. It was the first to assign writer by-lines for its editorial columns. The Washington Post Company bought the magazine in 1961 and its liberal publisher, Katharine Graham, continued to set the publication apart from its two main competitors (Time and U.S. News & World Report). Starting in 2008, the company went through massive restructuring and suffered a reported 50 percent in subscriber rate loss in one year and $28 million in revenue in 2009. The magazine was sold to stereo pioneer Sidney Harman, who is husband to California Congresswoman Jane Harman, in August 2010. Newsweek's editor Jon Meacham's resignation from the magazine coincided with the sale. 52 percent of the readership are men and 47 percent are women. The average age of readers is 52 and 88 percent have either attended or graduated from college. The average personal income of its readers is $99,792.In the 1950s, Newsweek became a leader in in-depth reporting of racial diversity and in the 1960s, under then-editor Osborn Elliott, it became a voice for advocacy journalism, where subjective political positions are countebalanced with facts. In August 1976, Newsweek reported that federal investigators had enough evidence to prove that former Teamsters Union boss James Hoffa was strangled to death July 30, 1974, the day he disappeared outside a suburban Detroit restaurant. The article further reported that the murder was planned and executed outside Michigan. In 1998, Newsweek killed a story about White House intern Monica Lewinsky's sexual relationship with President Bill Clinton. The story broke on news aggregate website, the Drudge Report, which reported that Newsweek's reporter, Michael Isikoff, had gathered enough evidence from sources to publish the story and name Lewinsky, when at the last minute the magazine decided to pull it. Newsweek eventually published the story after the Drudge Report made it public. The magazine is reknowned for its investigative war reporting, most recently in Iraq and Afghanistan. Daniel Klaidman is the Managing Editor.

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Articles from March 25

A Costly Divestiture: Time for a Gut Check. Jack Welch's Affair Is Ending His Second Marriage and Taking a Chunk out of His Wallet
Byline: Daniel McGinn Jack Welch has always admitted that his guilty pleasure is reading the gossip pages. Now the former General Electric chairman's exploits are giving New York's tabloids unusually juicy fodder. Jackpot: GE tycoon's scorned wife...
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A Crazy System: As the Yates Family Assesses Andrea's Life Sentence, a Nation Ponders Its Method of Coping with Madness
CORRECTION PUBLISHED 5/9/02: In our March 25 story on the Andrea Yates case ("A Crazy System," JUSTICE), we misstated the title of the National Mental Health Association. ___________________________________________________________________________ ...
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An Unexpected Kind of Family Foresight: When My Father Began to Make Plans for His Own Funeral, My Mother Didn't Object-She Joined In
Byline: Ellen Ficklen I know it sounds odd. But one of the most remarkable--and one of the kindest--gifts my father gave me was to plan the details of his own funeral service. As a longtime Presbyterian minister, my father was a funeral expert...
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Bringing Up Adultolescents: Millions of Americans in Their 20s and 30s Are Still Supported by Their Parents. the Me Generation Is Raising the Mini-Me Generation
Byline: Peg Tyre When Silvia Geraci goes out to dinner with friends, she has a flash of anxiety when the check comes. She can pay her share--her parents give her enough money to cover all her expenses. It's just that others in her circle make their...
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Debunking the Digital Divide: It's Spontaneously Shrinking-And with It, the Exaggerated Popular Notions of the Harm It Did
Byline: Robert J. Samuelson It may turn out that the "digital divide"--one of the most fashionable political slogans of recent years--is largely fiction. As you will recall, the argument went well beyond the unsurprising notion that the rich would...
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Dropping the 'One Drop' Rule: A Good Idea in California May Help America Discard One of the Worst Ideas It Ever Had
Byline: George F. Will It is probably the most pernicious idea ever to gain general acceptance in America. No idea has done more, and more lasting, damage than the "one drop" rule, according to which if you have any admixture of black ancestry,...
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Failure Is the Best Medicine: The Silicon Valley of Today Is Built Less atop the Spires of Earlier Triumphs Than upon the Rubble of Earlier Debacles
Byline: Paul Saffo The dot-com collapse may have been a disaster for Wall Street, but here in Silicon Valley, it was a blessing. It was the welcome end to an abnormal condition that very nearly destroyed the area in an overabundance of success....
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Faster Than the Rest: Google: Stay Focused
Byline: Steven Levy Eric Schmidt, who last year became chairman and CEO of Google, has a theory why the company founders didn't blow it in the way of earlier search-engine competitors like InfoSeek and AltaVista. Why didn't young tyros Larry Page...
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Fight, Then Talk? as the Israelis and the Palestinians Reach a New Peak of Ferocity, Both Sides Begin to See a Way out. How They Get There Is Another Question
Byline: Joshua Hammer The agents of vengeance moved swiftly. Minutes after Israeli tanks rolled into Bethlehem last Wednesday night, 50 Palestinian gunmen surrounded a house in another part of town where alleged collaborators Mohammed Deifallah,...
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Foul Trouble for Andersen: As the Feds Hit the Accounting Giant with a Historic Indictment, Andersen's Chances of a Big Comeback May Hit the Shredder
Byline: Allan Sloan And Mark Hosenball It's March, time to entertain questions about the Final Four. No, we're not talking about college basketball. We're talking about accounting firms. After all, last week's stunning criminal indictment of Big...
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Health Notes: This Week: Losing Weights and Snacks, Safer Transplants, Cholesterol and the Brain, and Saving Your Child's Eyesight
Byline: Stephen P. Williams LOSING WEIGHT It's All in the Snacks Most people see losing weight as a 24/7 battle against fat, calories and overeating--in other words, a battle they're sure to lose. But a new survey by Nutricise, an online weight-loss...
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Infertility: A Guy Thing: Sparse or Sluggish Sperm Can Make Parenthood Inconceivable. but There's Help
Byline: Temma Ehrenfeld Patrick Jermyn will never forget his first experience with a urologist. He and his wife, Jennifer, had been trying unsuccessfully for a year and a half to get pregnant. He was a 34-year-old lawyer, she a 30-year-old schoolteacher,...
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Iraq in the Balance: The Bush Team Is Looking for Some Former Iraqi Generals to Help Oust Saddam Hussein. NEWSWEEK Has Tracked Down the Top Candidates. They're All Veterans of War-And a Few May Be War Criminals
Byline: Evan Thomas and Roy Gutman President George W. Bush's description of Iraq, Iran and North Korea as an "axis of evil" was dismissed as macho bluster in many capitals around the world. But inside Iraq, Bush's tough talk has been taken seriously...
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It's a Whole New World: Linden Lab: Take It Further
Byline: Brad Stone You're flying over rolling green hills and gentle lakes, with a full moon behind you and a magnificent sun directly ahead. You pass over a huge chessboard, frozen on the final move of the previous match, and hook a right at someone's...
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NEWSMAKERS: Britney, Bye, Bye, Bye?, No Goods on Winona, the Child Who Wasn't There, and Don't Touch That Dial
Byline: Devin Gordon and Ana Figueroa Britney, Bye, Bye, Bye? The rumor mill has long been unkind to pop power couple Britney Spears and Justin Timberlake--last June, a radio station claimed that they had died in a car crash--but now it's getting...
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O Pioneers: There's a Bright Golden Haze on Broadway, Where 'Oklahoma!' Has Landed. in a Season of Revivals, This Is the One to Beat
Byline: Cathleen McGuigan "Oklahoma!" is the granddaddy of modern American musicals--the first, it's famously said, to use the songs to advance the drama, rather than to temporarily derail it. If you're a fan of musicals, you know this show by heart....
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Periscope
Byline: Rod Nordland, Babak Dehghanpisheh, Scott Johnson, Sami Yusefzai and Ron Moreau; Eleanor Clift and Adam Rogers; Howard Fineman; Julie Scelfo; Bret Begun; Keith Naughton; Katherine Stroup; H.D.S. Greenway; George F. Will After Anaconda: Al...
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Perspectives
"What is this, a Keystone Cops operation?" Florida Rep. Mark Foley, in response to the Immigration and Naturalization Service confirmation of student visas for two September 11 hijackers. A Florida flight school received notice on March 11 that the...
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Silicon Valley Reboots: The Dot-Com Bust Was Bad for Wall Street, but It Was the Best Thing to Happen to This High-Tech Crucible
Byline: Steven Levy After the dot-com bubble was reduced to soap scum, cynics took to calling its epicenter "Death Valley." Venture capitalists switched from free-spending Medicis to Scrooge McDucks (2000: $21 billion invested. 2001: $6 billion)....
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Terror's Cash Flow: Is Al Taqwa, a Shadowy Financial Network, a Secret Money Machine for Osama Bin Laden?
Byline: Mark Hosenball In neo-Nazi circles, 74-year-old Albert Huber is something of a celebrity. The retired Swiss journalist gives talks to far-right groups around the world, condemning Zionists and arguing that the Holocaust was exaggerated....
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The Film of Tomorrow: Foveon: It's the Technology
Byline: Steven Levy Before describing what it's been like to create a company with traditional business values while Silicon Valley was going mad with greed, Foveon chairman and founder Carver Mead insists on giving a slide show showing something...
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The Impossibility of Seeing and Knowing: An Enigmatic German Gets a MoMA Retrospective
Byline: Peter Plagens The 70-year-old German painter Gerhard Richter is one of those artists whose exhibitions prompt more discussion about the rationale behind the work than what the art looks like. Richter, you see, deliberately paints in a variety...
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Three Mammals and a Baby: Chill with a Clever Computer-Animated Kids' Comedy
Byline: David Ansen Twentieth Century Fox may have shut down its animation department after such costly failures as "Titan A.E." and "Monkeybone," but its parting shot is a winner. "Ice Age," the computer-animated family film from director Chris...
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Until Dust Do Us Part: In a New Study the Dirty Truth Is Revealed about Men, Women and Housework: Nobody Really Wants to Do It
Byline: Dirk Johnson Once upon a time, men were treated like indulged children in the house, as women bustled about cleaning, sweeping, cooking. That was 50 years ago, some men say. That was this morning, some women say. Want to start a fight?...
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Upholding Moore's Law: Intel: Back to Basics
Byline: Brad Stone You won't see many teary eyes at Intel these days. While the high-tech in-dustry continues to limp through tough times, execs at the Santa Clara, Calif.-based microchip giant, founded in 1968, cling to the advice of their cofounder,...
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'Welcome to Kurdistan': Part of Iraq Is Happy-The Autonomous Region without Saddam
Byline: Owen Matthews in Kurdistan Rebel-held territory" has rarely, if ever, looked so good as the Kurdish region of northern Iraq. The Franso Hariri football stadium stands in downtown Arbil among a forest of construction cranes, the rising skeletons...
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