Newsweek

  • The pre-tween beauty crisis

    Newsweek (once again) discovers that the girls are not all right.
  • Paul Krugman's "15 minutes"

    Surely the gadfly economist's track record has earned him more than an Andy Warhol-allotment of fame.
  • Your baby, your "baby brain"

    Stress during pregnancy increases the risk of schizophrenia in children. If that worries you, maybe you'll forget about it soon.
  • I now pronounce you ... selfish and condescending?

    The anger over a woman's article about never tying the knot shows just how threatening anti-marriage talk still is.
  • The Giuliani code

    According to Newsweek, the ex-mayor's situational ethics derive from his working-class Italian Catholic background. Where's Bill Donohue when you need him?
  • Engendering change

    Some happy news on the transgender tip.
  • WSJ bests Newsweek, calling gay couple "couple"

    It's just the real estate section, but still.
  • The damage done

    How that Newsweek article really did a number on women.
  • Newsweek: Did we mention we were wrong about that marriage stat?

    The magazine's nostra culpa is its cover story.
  • Newsweek "spinster" speaks out

    Not waiting for Prince Charming, never was.
  • Newsweek: OK, singles, now you can worry about terrorism

    Twenty years later, the magazine says you might get married after all.
  • The "war on boys" escalates

    Newsweek's cover catapults the issue to the middle of the American consciousness.
  • Newsweek's anorexic cover girl

    Is she too glam a poster girl for a dangerous teenage plague?
  • The president's days of malaise

    A new poll has Bush's approval rating at a record low 36 percent.
  • Cheers for tears

    Why women should feel free to cry in the workplace -- and anywhere else they damn well please.
  • "The president always knows"

    Why won't anyone ask Bush when he first learned of Valerie Plame's identity? That's one question he doesn't need to wait for the special prosecutor to answer.
  • What did the FBI know?

    According to Newsweek's Michael Isikoff, FBI agents in London began avoiding the subways months ago.
  • GOP lawmakers join call to close Gitmo

    Even Vice President Dick Cheney is now hinting at the possibility -- though Rumsfeld's Pentagon continues to hype the prison's importance.
  • More tortured logic

    Confirmation of Quran desecration at Gitmo prompts The Wall Street Journal's latest apologia on abuses in the war against terrorism.
  • Fear and explosions in Kabul

    Afghanistan isn't Iraq yet. But when a suicide bomber blew himself and two other people up inside my hotel's Internet cafe, it became impossible to ignore the rising anger at foreigners here.
  • U.S. integrity down the toilet

    Forget about Newsweek: The Pentagon reveals more details of Quran desecration at Gitmo (very late on a Friday). No evidence of flushing -- but does splashing urine on the holy book count as abuse?
  • How nervous is Newsweek?

    After being vilified for its anonymously -- and erroneously -- sourced story on Koran abuse, the magazine goes all out in identifying its sources.
  • See no evil

    Cloaked in myopic self-righteousness, the Bush administration is trying to make its gulag problem disappear by attacking Amnesty International. This isn't just blind and arrogant, it's harming the national interest.
  • Still to blame

    Newly declassified files on detainee abuse include sworn statements by a Pentagon employee about a military interrogator who threw the Koran on the floor and "stepped on it" -- provoking detainees to riot.
  • The ugly truth in the mirror

    From declassified FBI documents to a new report from Amnesty International, will the U.S. confront mounting evidence of its brutal practices in the war on terror?
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