COVER: Hillary Clinton: "'I found my own voice.'" (p. 31). Editor Jon
Meacham opens the cover package on the 2008 election by examining Hillary
Clinton's dramatic comeback win in New Hampshire and whether the battle for
the Democratic nomination is one that will be determined by the
historically complicated issues of race and gender. Meacham writes that,
"Torn is a tough word, but ... it aptly captures how many Americans, and
not just Democrats, already feel about 2008. Some women are nursing guilt
over supporting Obama; some African-Americans worry they are doing the
wrong thing by voting for Clinton. And these are early days: we are only
just beginning to grapple with the questions of race and gender that the
campaign will raise again and again through November." The campaign now
moving out of the largely white states of Iowa and New Hampshire to the
rest of the country will soon mean that the politically engaged across
America will be presented with the likelihood that a woman or an
African-American will be the Democratic nominee and perhaps the president.
And, as Clinton says, it's a good "problem" for America to have, he writes.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/91795
(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080113/NYSA004 )
"'I Get a Little Wonky'" (p. 36). Meacham interviews Hillary Clinton
about finding her own voice that led to her win in the New Hampshire
primary. She also discussed issues that ranged from her childhood in
suburban Park Ridge, Ill., to John Wesley, Reinhold Niebuhr, Martin Luther
King Jr. and, of course, Barack Obama. "I get so focused on what I want to
do as president that I get a little wonky. I get a little out there, with
details, with five-point plans for this and 10-point plans for that, and I
think that what I'm proposing really is both achievable and important, but
it's not what gets me up, so why should it get voters excited?" Clinton
says. "So I went back to listening, and to really engaging the voters, and
just laid it all out there for them to make their judgments."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/91756
POLITICS: "The Incremental Revolutionary" (p. 39). Senior White House
Correspondent Richard Wolffe and Chicago Correspondent Karen Springen
report on the reality of Barack Obama's central claim as a candidate-that
he is a change agent, a lifelong reformer who will heal Washington by
bringing together feuding politicians of both parties-examining his voting
record in the U.S. Senate and in the Illinois Senate.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/91755
"The Dirty War Moves South" (p. 43). Investigative Correspondents
Michael Isikoff, Mark Hosenball and Editor-at-Large Evan Thomas report that
2008 promises to be a banner year for gutter politics and technology serves
as a force multiplier for crude partisan passion. A Newsweek investigation
suggests that political hit jobs are already rampant and likely to get
worse. Some are done the old-fashioned way-anonymous fliers left on
windshields or shoved under doors-and some, increasingly, by hard-to-track
e-mails and automated phone calls.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/91664
INTERVIEW: "'I Could Outcampaign Anybody'" (p. 44). White House
Correspondent Holly Bailey talks with John McCain on the campaign trail,
two days after his New Hampshire primary win, about how he found his
footing. "I feel great. One of the pivotal moments for me was over July 4
weekend. I was coming back from Iraq with Lindsey Graham, and I realized
that I owed too much to those kids fighting over there to give up. It gave
me gumption to stay in and fight for what I thought was right, no matter
what political failure or defeat I might take ... I said at the time I
could outcampaign anybody, and I think we did that in New Hampshire,"
McCain tells Newsweek.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/91667
LIVING POLITICS: "No Room for Rudy" (p. 46). Senior Political
Correspondent Howard Fineman writes that, "Rudy Giuliani sees Florida as
his Cape Canaveral: the launching pad for his better-later-than-never
campaign." "But that's where the good news ends for Giuliani," Fineman
writes. "Even if Florida might be congenial territory, the ideological lay
of the land in his party is not. Of the three groups that compose the
modern GOP-hawks, who want an aggressive foreign policy; evangelicals, who
fret about family values, and tax cutters, who think government asphyxiates
economic growth-Rudy has yet to find a home in one."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/91665
BETWEEN THE LINES: "Is Penn Mightier Than Axe?" (p. 49). Senior Editor
and Columnist Jonathan Alter profiles the chief strategists for the Clinton
and Obama campaigns. "Hillary's man Penn is a pollster by profession and
the quintessential Beltway guy. Obama's 'Axe,' who has been with him since
the early 1990s, is a hardheaded reformer who made his reputation as a
media consultant with TV ads focused on character. Penn's weapon is his
brain; Axelrod's is his gut," Alter writes. "I'm not a big believer in the
idea of presidential candidates as creatures of their handlers ... But in
an age of James Carville and Karl Rove, it helps to know a little something
about the chief strategists in the candidates' corners."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/91666
BUSINESS: "The Economy Sucks. But Is It '92 Redux?" (p. 52). Senior
Editor and Columnist Daniel Gross reports that America's faltering economy
may be the deciding factor in the 2008 election. "Not since James Carville
helped Bill Clinton take the White House 16 years ago by reminding him
'it's the economy, stupid,' has the nation's economic state played such a
key role in a presidential campaign," Gross writes. "Today, the nation is
perilously close to sliding into a recession." With Special Correspondent
Ashley R. Harris and Los Angeles Bureau Chief Andrew Murr.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/91655
HEALTH FOR LIFE: "A Guide to Predicting Your Medical Future" (p. 59).
General Editor Mary Carmichael and Correspondent Roxana Popescu offer a
detailed guide to the medical exams you need, and those you can do
without-in your 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s and beyond-in this installment of
Newsweek's ongoing "Health for Life" series, in conjunction with Harvard
Medical School. The package also looks at advances in personalized
medicine-how your molecular structure means personalizing medicine for you.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/91657
BOOKS: "Death of a Nation"(p. 76). Senior Editor Malcolm Jones reviews
"The Republic of Suffering," a new book on the Civil War. "The horrific
Civil War body count, estimated at 620,000 dead, is a well-known statistic.
Less familiar, but of no less importance, is what all that dying did to the
populations north and south of the Mason-Dixon line during the war and for
decades to come. It is that gap in our understanding that historian (and
Harvard president) Drew Gilpin Faust so brilliantly addresses," Jones
writes.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/91653
THE ARTS: "Lights, Camera, Austen"(p. 78). Senior Editor Cathleen
McGuigan reviews "The Complete Jane Austen," a 10-week series of films
based on all six novels airing on PBS's Masterpiece Theatre. "They have all
the ingredients we've come to expect: lyrical landscapes and opulent
country houses; star- crossed lovers tripped up by snobs, fools or
connivers. But these new films also point to the perils of translating
Austen to the screen," McGuigan writes.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/91691
TIP SHEET: "The Right Stuff" (p. 80). General Editor N'Gai Croal
reports from the Computer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on the latest and
greatest gadgets that will change our lives.
http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/tipsheet/default.aspx
SOURCE Newsweek
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