Quantcast
 
 
Take your brain for a spin. Test out your knowledge in Newsweek's annual global literacy quiz.
 
 
 


Murder in the 8th Grade

A tale of bullying, sexual identity and the limits of tolerance

 
 
THE LAST WORD
Conservatism: Not TBTF
BETWEEN THE LINES
All Umbrage All the Time
THE WORLD FROM WASHINGTON
'Ich bin ein Commander'
CAPITOL LETTER
A Perception Problem
JUDGMENT CALL
Globalization's Achilles' Heel
LIVING POLITICS
Gaffe Alert!
 
 
Report From the Front
Howard Fineman interviews the presidential candidates
 
 
Get Campaign '08 News On-the-Go

Can't get enough news about Campaign '08? Then check out Campaign Tracker for all the latest. Now available for Windows Mobile phones.

 
 
FROM OUR PARTNERS
Check out the latest campaign news, interactive features, games and more from across the network
 
 
GALLERY
An audio tour of some rare, odd and even vicious mementos from presidential campaigns past
 




RICHARD WOLFFE

There are no easy questions during Obama's road trip

CAMPAIGN 2008

Why evangelical leader Dobson is warming to the GOP candidate

CAMPAIGN 2008

Annoyed by wall-to-wall coverage of Obama's trip to the Mideast, the McCain campaign teased reporters about a potential VP announcement Tuesday. Stay tuned.

CAMPAIGN 2008

Obama's troop-cut policy gets support from the Iraqi government

CAPITAL SOURCES

Fifteen years after the 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' policy was enacted for the U.S. military, Congress is prepping to review the law.

IMMIGRATION

McCain's Hispanic outreach chief is both loved and loathed.

BARACK’S POINT GUARD

How a year in Iraq changed an Obama adviser

POLITICS

They used to be close. Kind of. Jesse and Barack's awkward past.

PROJECT GREEN

Forty years ago, an oil spill near Santa Barbara, Calif., spawned environmental activism. Not surprisingly, residents are none too happy with President Bush's offshore drilling plan.

CAMPAIGN 2008

Will a third-party candidate be a 'spoiler'?

LAW

To get a full accounting of how U.S. interrogation methods were used, the president should give those accused of 'war crimes' a pass.

So much has been made about Barack Obama's religion. But what does he believe, and how did he arrive at those beliefs?

APPRECIATION

Elizabeth Edwards on Tony Snow's life  and death

WORLD VIEW

It seems that, for Obama, faith is about enduring questions.

CAMPAIGN 2008

So much has been made about Barack Obama's religion. But what does he believe, and how did he arrive at those beliefs?

CAMPAIGN 2008

The latest NEWSWEEK Poll shows Barack Obama leading John McCain by only 3 points. What a difference a few weeks can make.

INTERNATIONAL

They jailed him for five years. Now they want him in the White House.

 
 
 
Blogging '08

The Ruckus: NEWSWEEK's guest bloggers weigh in on the fierce primary battle. In partnership with the Media Bloggers Association.

 
 

FACTCHECK.ORG

An Obama ad says he has a "fast track alternative" to imported oil. Actually, it's a 10-year proposal with no guarantees.

FACTCHECK.ORG

McCain ad says Obama's the guy to thank for emptying our wallets at the filling station. We say that's ridiculous.

 
 
July 23, 1967
Detroit explodes in five-day-long rioting that will claim the lives of 43 people and injure nearly 500. In the early hours of July 23, police raided a nightclub hosting a party for two recently returned Vietnam Veterans. When authorities began arresting the 80-plus club patrons, a crowd formed outside, and tempers flared. After booming in the early 20th century dawn of the auto age, Detroit began losing its economic base in the 50s and 60s. Automation reduced the amount of factory jobs, and as work moved out to the suburbs, so did whites. Blacks were largely kept off union rolls and out of suburban housing, resulting in de facto ghettoization. Reports of police brutality increased as "Tac Squads"-small teams of aggressive officers-roamed the city, arresting or beating blacks for minor or imagined offenses. When police mass-arrested the club-goers in July 1967, the tensions over jobs, housing, and race relations boiled over. The unrest came to be known as the "Twelfth Street Riots" (the bar was located near the intersection of Clairmount and Twelfth Streets). It was one of the bloodiest American urban disturbances in history—second in scope only to the 1992 riots in Los Angeles. Parts of Detroit were left in virtual ruin-imprinting an image of a burned-out shell of a city that lingers to this day.
 
 

He's endured the unendurable, and survived. Inside the mind and heart of John McCain.

On the road as the Illinois senator conducts a summer campaign swing.
 
The Peek
 
 
SPORTS

Speedo's new and controversial high-tech LZR suit is helping swimmers smash dozens of records. How the company plans to capitalize on Olympic gold.

Sponsored by
 
 
 
 
Sponsored by
 
 
 
loadingLoading Menu