COVER: "What He Believes" (p. 26). Senior Editor Lisa Miller and Senior
White House Correspondent Richard Wolffe report that although Barack Obama
has spoken often about the importance of religion, questions about what he
believes in and how he arrived at those beliefs persist. In the new
Newsweek Poll, 12 percent of voters incorrectly believe he's Muslim; more
than a quarter believe he was raised in a Muslim home. Obama's reticence in
revealing much about what he believes is understandable considering that
his religious biography is unconventional. Born to a
Christian-turned-secular mother and a Muslim-turned-atheist African father,
Obama grew up with plenty of spiritual influences, but without any
particular religion. Having been baptized in the early 1990s at Trinity
United Church of Christ in Chicago, Obama is a Christian. Although he
severed ties with Trinity, his spiritual life survives through prayer and
the bible. In an interview with Newsweek, Obama says he prays daily for the
protection of his family and that he is carrying out God's will, "not in a
grandiose way, buy simply that there is an alignment between my actions and
what he [God] would want."
(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080713/NYSU001 )
Cover: http://www.newsweek.com/id/145971
Interview: http://www.newsweek.com/id/145967
Poll: http://www.newsweek.com/id/145737
POLITICS: "At Arm's Length" (p. 34). National Correspondent Allison
Samuels reports on the complicated relationship between Barack Obama and
the Rev. Jesse Jackson as well as the misgivings of one generation of black
leaders about the next. The men have different approaches to politics:
Jackson is old school, an unyielding civil-rights-era fighter ever on the
lookout for injustice. Obama-like other younger black politicians who came
up after Jim Crow-is less heated, a results-oriented pragmatist who is
willing to compromise and who sees the old guard's combative style as
obsolete.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/145844
JONATHAN ALTER: "Obama's No-Brainer on Education" (p. 35). Senior
Editor and Columnist Jonathan Alter writes that with the general election
underway, Barack Obama has a chance to show that he can move at least as
far toward real change in education as John McCain. "Obama needs to embrace
a Grand Education Bargain-much higher pay for teachers in exchange for much
more accountability for performance in the classroom." Good teachers need
more resources. But, Alter adds, "they also need to be removed from the
classroom when they fail to improve. Obama occasionally says as much, but
goes fuzzy when it comes to how."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/145843
MILITARY: "A Smarter Way to Fight" (p. 40). Senior Editor Michael Hirsh
reports that American-style counterinsurgency is going global. After years
of fighting a fierce, conventional war against the leftist guerrilla group
known as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the country's
military used a complex, unconventional ruse to free 15 hostages earlier
this month without firing a shot. While the government of President Alvaro
Uribe deserves a lot of credit for its recent successes, the dramatic shift
in strategy over the last two years also has much to do with a quiet U.S.
effort to school allies in counterinsurgency and Special-Operations
tactics.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/145874
INTERNATIONAL: "Why Vietnam Loves McCain" (p. 42). South Asia Bureau
Chief Ron Moreau reports that just about everyone in Vietnam knows who
McCain is, and many of them want him in the White House. That goes for
ordinary Vietnamese, senior bureaucrats and people who met him during his
captivity for more than five years at the Plantation and the notorious
Hanoi Hilton. They like the way McCain pushed Washington to normalize
relations in the 1990s and the way trade has mushroomed from $1.5 billion
in 2001 to $12 billion last year, and they believe he'll help them even
more if he wins.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/145875
PROJECT GREEN: "Beyond Backpacking" (p. 44). General Editor Anna
Kuchment reports that as more people become environmentally conscious,
green travel has shifted from being a trend to becoming part of mainstream
culture. Today a hotel in Times Square is just as likely to call itself
green as a lodge in the Costa Rican rain forest.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/145868
MEDICINE: "The Woman Who Died in the Waiting Room" (p. 48). Reporter
Jeneen Interlandi reports that Esmin Elizabeth Green's death in the waiting
room of the G Building at Brooklyn's Kings County Hospital Center, after
waiting almost 24 hours for a bed, should not have come as a surprise.
Public hospitals across the country have struggled to provide acute
psychiatric care to the poor and uninsured since the early 1960s, when
large mental hospitals began closing their doors en masse. But with
insufficient outpatient services and a dearth of community-based support,
many have ended up in overtaxed emergency rooms. And with just 50,000
inpatient psychiatric beds for tens of millions of people across the
country, the mentally ill typically wait twice as long for treatment as
other patients.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/145870
SHARON BEGLEY: "Lies, Damned Lies and ... " (p. 51). Senior Editor and
Science Columnist Sharon Begley writes about how new statistical tools will
help ferret out mistakes in traditional statistical analysis methods.
"Traditional tools of statistics work fine when analyzing mere thousands of
data points," Begley writes. But "in the new century, we've had a whole new
class of problems, with 100,000 times more data than we used to see," says
Bradley Efron of Stanford University. "That is especially true in genomics,
which spews out data like there's no tomorrow," Begley writes. "In the Wild
West that is genome research, statisticians are the new sheriffs in town."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/145865
SCIENCE: "Common Scents" (p. 52). Correspondent Anne Underwood reports
on a new book on the science of smell, "What the Nose Knows." Author and
self- described "smell chauvinist" Avery Gilbert believes few people
adequately appreciate their sniffers. Most of what we perceive as flavor in
food does not come from the tongue, which picks up only the basic five
tastes. Instead, it comes from aromas of food being drawn up into the nose
from the back of the throat, then exhaled through the nostrils.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/145867
MOVIES: "Bat Trick" (p. 54). Senior Editor Devin Gordon interviews "The
Dark Knight" director Christopher Nolan who talks about the making of the
latest Batman installment and why he chose the late Heath Ledger to play
The Joker. "I'd met Heath a couple times over the years ... One time he
gave me a speech that a lot of young actors have given me, where they
basically say that they haven't achieved, as serious actors, what they want
to before they're pushed into being movie stars. And of all the actors
who've given me that speech, he's the only one that I would actually want
to pay $10 to see give that kind of performance," Nolan says. "People were
a little baffled by the choice, it's true, but I've never had such a simple
decision as a director."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/145508
TIP SHEET: "How to Grow It Alone" (p. 61). Associate Editor Christina
Gillham reports that vegetable gardening is gaining popularity with a
younger set of green thumbs looking to reduce their carbon footprint and
ensure that their food supply is healthy and safe. For those who are
interested in starting gardens but find it somewhat daunting, the National
Gardening Association (garden.org) suggests starting small, with some
raised beds in an area that gets at least six hours of sunlight a day, as
well as using organic seeds from seedsofchange.com or johnnysseeds.com.
http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/tipsheet/default.aspx
SOURCE Newsweek
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