Published: September 14, 2008
NEWSWEEK: Media Lead Sheet
September 22, 2008 Issue (on newsstands Monday, September 15, 2008).
COVER: "What Women Want" (p. 30). Senior Editor Julia Baird writes that
although the building excitement over Sarah Palin has given John McCain an
11-point shift among white women, according to the latest Newsweek poll,
history suggests that policy issues, rather than gender identity, may
determine the outcome of this election. "What is now known as the Palin Effect
seems to be overturning almost a century of wisdom about the way women think
and vote," Baird writes. That's partially because pollsters for most of the
past century neglected to actually ask them what they want. "They do want a
better economy, their sons and daughters brought home from war, better health
care, a good educational system. They want fairer media (the Newsweek Poll
found that 34 percent of white women think the media have been too critical of
Palin, and that one quarter ofClinton supporters agree). And to see more
mothers making decisions that affect their lives. To have the chance to run
for office alongside men without being called hags or fools. And, as Aretha
Franklin might say, a little R-E-S-P-E-C-T."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/158893
(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080914/NYSU002 )
DANIEL GROSS: "Lemons, But No Lehman Aid" (p. 25). Senior Editor Daniel
Gross writes that as policymakers hasten to save some companies from the
ravages of creative destruction, they leave others to fail. "Clearly,
financial firms get extra consideration. But being involved in the money trade
is no guarantee," he writes. "These days, size alone doesn't matter. Earlier
this decade, Enron, WorldCom and Global Crossing, three gargantuan companies,
went bust while the government looked the other way. Of course, when the
aforementioned companies filed for Chapter 11, nobody lost electricity or was
unable to make a phone call. 'But if the government envisions that a failure
will have a serious adverse consequence on the economy, it's going to step
in,' says Benton Gup, a professor of banking at the University of Alabama and
editor of the collection 'Too Big to Fail: Policies and Practices in
Government Bailouts.'"
http://www.newsweek.com/id/158615
JONATHAN ALTER: "A Reality Check on 'Change'" (p. 41). Senior Editor
Jonathan Alter writes, "Rather than debating whether Barack Obama voted to
teach sex education to kindergartners (he didn't) or called Sarah Palin a pig
(he didn't), it would be nice if the central dynamic of this contest were
about, say, the record and temperament of each candidate." Alter looks at
McCain and Obama's Senate records and adds that while record and temperament
might not be campaign issues, they may "tell us a lot more about the future
president than all the trivia that passes for news at the moment."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/158767
POLITICS: "Heard Any Good Stories Lately?" (p. 42). Senior Editor Sharon
Begley writes that narratives have been used to attract voters at least since
Lincoln's campaign managers cast him as the rugged rail-splitter from the
country's frontier, not the prosperous railroad lawyer he was. But the power
of the narrative has grown as party identification has weakened-putting more
voters in play-and as the culture has changed. "The outsized power of the
personal narrative today compared with even a generation ago," Begley writes,
"reflects something that has become almost a cliché in political analysis-
namely, that emotions, more than a dispassionate and rational analysis of
candidates' records and positions, determine many voters' choice on election
day."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/158749
INTERNATIONAL: "Pakistan's Dangerous Double Game" (p. 44). South Asia
Bureau Chief Ron Moreau and Investigative Correspondent Mark Hosenball report
that combating Taliban insurgency leader Sirajuddin Haqqani's fighters in the
tribal areas along thePakistan-Afghanistan border has become one of the top
priorities for American commanders inAfghanistan. But U.S. officials say they
have evidence that some elements ofPakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence, or
ISI, are protecting or even helping the Haqqani network inPakistan itself,
and it's raising tensions between America andPakistan, supposed allies in the
war against terror. Senior Pakistani officers say now is not the time to move
against Haqqani because of their limited forces, and because they are
concentrating on militants like Baitullah Mehsud, another powerful Taliban
leader. The Pakistani military and the ISI may also see the Haqqani network
and other Taliban forces as potential assets to gain influence inside
Afghanistan. As long as they're not attacking Pakistani targets, say several
Pakistan experts, the Haqqanis are not a priority. According to the Americans,
however, Pakistani inaction has allowed the Haqqanis to grow from one
insurgent group among many into perhaps the most deadly threat to U.S. forces
inAfghanistan.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/158861
HEALTH FOR LIFE: "Mysteries Of Memory" (p. 64). Reporter Jeneen Interlandi
reports that research published earlier this month in the journal Science has
provided some important clues into how the brain builds memories. UCLA
neuroscientists measured neural activity in the brains of 13 study
participants as they watched short video clips of shows like "Seinfeld" and
"The Simpsons." Afterward, while their brains were still being monitored,
subjects were asked to describe whichever of the video clips came to mind. The
same neurons that had fired as they watched a given clip fired again when they
recalled that clip. The findings offer the first proof of a long-held
assumption -- that reactivation of the neurons initially involved in an
experience forms the basis of human memory. As exciting as that finding may
be, however, some memory experts say the true significance of this study lies
not in when the neurons fired, but in where they were located -- the
hippocampus.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/158758
ART: "The Vatican Breaks Its DaVinci Code" (p. 70). Special Correspondent
Barbie Nadeau reports on why, after several hundred years, the Catholic Church
has gotten back into the modern-art business. This fall theHoly See hopes to
revive its cultural side by searching for artists willing to create new
interpretations of tired spiritual art. The Vatican campaign is nothing short
of a genius hunt for a modern-day Michelangelo or Raphael. The artists will be
chosen by a commission made up of art critics and art-savvy clergy. The
Vatican will send the best forward, perhaps even to the Venice Biennale, a
competition for contemporary artists the Vatican once dismissed as "the
breakdown of art in modern times."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/158580
MOVIES: "A Perfect Casting Call" (p. 72). Senior Editor David Ansen
reviews Darren Aronofsky's "The Wrestler," starring Mickey Rourke. "The
miracle and mystery of perfect casting came to mind at theToronto film
festival as I sat alongside 580 enthralled viewers witnessing the resurrection
of Mickey Rourke," Ansen writes. "To say this is a great comeback for an actor
whose talent was exceeded only by his self-destructiveness is obvious. But
this was a kind of harmonic convergence of player and part that happens once
in a blue moon -- the actor vanishing so completely inside a role that our
sense of his 'real' identity is permanently altered."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/158591
TIP SHEET: "The Devils Want Prada" (p. 74). Chicago Correspondent Karen
Springen provides parents with some tips on how to balance the desire to make
your fashion conscious kids happy without going bankrupt. Some of the tips
include speaking with kids of all ages about the fashions they see teen stars
wearing in the movies or TV; creating a clothing budget for them to control,
or explaining that you can't afford an expensive item rather than saying,
"no."
http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/tipsheet/default.aspx
SOURCE Newsweek
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