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MEDIA
LEAD SHEET/SEPTEMBER 29, 2008 ISSUE (on newsstands Monday, September 22, 2008).
To book correspondents, contact Brenda Velez at
212-445-4078-Brenda.Velez@Newsweek.com-or Grace Huh at
212-445-5831-Grace.Huh@Newsweek.com. Read the issue and Web exclusives at
www.Newsweek.com.
COVER:
King Henry (p. 24). Senior Editor Daniel Gross profiles Treasury Secretary
Henry Paulson, who has now emerged as the nation's most powerful leader-the
investment banker in chief. Paulson, the former CEO of Goldman Sachs, came to
Washington from Wall Street in 2006 expecting to deal with issues like Social
Security reform and trade agreements. Now he tries to save Wall Street. He
continues to advise CEOs on the best course of action, to arrange financing and
to get the best terms possible for his clients. Only now his clients are
American taxpayers, the president and the global financial system. Gross talks
to Paulson and examines how we got to this point.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/160119
TECHTONIC
SHIFTS: "A Gloomy Vista for Microsoft" (p. 19). Senior Editor Daniel
Lyons writes about the sluggish start Microsoft's new operating system Vista
had when it was first shipped in January 2007. Users launched a massive online
petition begging Microsoft not to discontinue its old operating system,
XP. And many consumers, including Lyons, who'd bought new PCs loaded
with Vista, reloaded them with XP. Now Microsoft seems to be getting the
message, he writes. Working in collaboration with its PC-maker partners, it
says it has ironed out the glitches. Lyons also points out that the struggle to
get Vista on its feet hasn't hurt Microsoft financially.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/160064
THE BIG
IDEA: "Message: Get a Message" (p.
30). Jacob Weisburg, author of "The
Bush Tragedy" and editor in chief of the Slate Group, writes in a column
that Barack Obama has a range of sensible economic policies, a team of prudent
advisers with a centrist, pro-trade cast and "may even have some grasp of
why the American financial system has collapsed. What Obama doesn't have, so
far, is an economic message. He's missing a story about what's gone wrong with
the American economy and how to fix it."
He writes that Obama's challenge is his cool, cerebral style.
"Reasoning is a fine quality in a decision maker and bodes well for an
Obama presidency. But when campaigning, it's helpful to be a passionate
storyteller as well."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/160084
INTERNATIONAL:
"Why McCain Loves Misha" (p. 36).
Moscow Bureau Chief Owen Matthews reports on the mutual admiration
between John McCain and Georgia president Mikheil Saakashvili. Their
decade-long friendship is among the closest McCain has with any foreign leader.
In many ways he's McCain's McCain-a passionate and unorthodox reformer, and a
stalwart freedom fighter ranged against the Russian bear. But what worries many of McCain's
foreign-policy consultants is how the two of them agree that you can't
compromise your beliefs. McCain's
affection for Misha runs counter to the instincts of many Republican
foreign-policy "realists."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/160069
POLITICS:
"Here They Go Again" (p. 43).
Senior Writer and Political Correspondent Jonathan Darman reports that
for the Democrats to claim that the way it works in modern presidential
politics is
that
they run on ideas and issues and the Republicans run on Karl Rove does not
fully explain a simple reality: for 40 years, Republicans have won the
presidency more often than not. For 40 years, it has been the conservative
party in an essentially conservative nation. In this era, Democrats have
managed
to win
the White House only when they have presented themselves as centrist stewards
of the center-right consensus. They have lost when they let Republicans get under
their skin.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/160083
GLOBAL
GIVING: "How Not To Save the World" (p. 45). Valiant efforts are
being made every day to end hunger, reduce poverty, save lives. But if we
really want to solve the world's problems, here are some things we need to do:
EDUCATION:
"It's Not Just About the Boys. Get Girls Into School" (p. 50). Senior
Editor and Columnist Jonathan Alter writes that one solution to get more
impoverished children in school is to focus on getting girls in school. Despite some recent progress in China and
India, 73 million children worldwide don't go to primary school. Three times as
many never go to secondary school. "The way out is not just to champion
education generally but to focus intently on one subset of the problem: girls,
who make up nearly 60 percent of the kids out of school ... Here's where to
zero in on the challenge: most of the benefits that accompany increased
education are attributable to girls, who use their schooling more productively
than boys."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/160073
POVERTY:
"Cheap Loans at Insanely High Rates? Give Us More" (p. 51). Senior
Writer Daniel Gross writes that what the world needs now is more subprime
lending-a lot more of it. The massive extension of credit to people who lacked
extensive credit histories and documented wages seems, in hindsight, supremely
stupid. But from far from the madding, depressed crowds of Wall Street,
billions of people are starving for credit. In an era when a great deal of
foreign aid has been wasted, or fallen into the hands of corrupt officials,
microlending has built a track record of effective poverty relief. But it needs to move out of the realm of the
social worker and into the halls of finance.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/160074
HUNGER:
"Feeding the 900 Million: Let Them Eat Micronutrients" (p. 53).
Science Columnist Sharon Begley writes that the answer to feeding the millions
of hungry people around the world is not genetically-modified crops. A new
report by agriculture experts foresees a limited role for biotech crops in
reducing world hunger. Yields are unpredictable and GM seeds cost more than the
poor can afford. Low-tech aid, not cutting-edge science, therefore has the best
chance of both feeding the malnourished today and setting farmers on a path to
growing enough to eat (and perhaps sell) tomorrow. The most beneficial and cost-effective immediate
aid is providing micronutrients-vitamins and minerals such as iodine, zinc and
iron-to kids.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/160075
MOVIES:
"The Rehabilitation of Anne Hathaway" (p. 56). General Editor Ramin Setoodeh talks to Anne Hathaway about
her upcoming film "Rachel Getting Married" in which she plays a
recovering drug addict. Her performance is earning Hathaway Oscar buzz for the
first time in her career. But she doesn't talk about Raffaello Follieri, her
ex-boyfriend who was arrested on charges of money laundering and fraud. Her new movie gives her something new, and
very different, to focus on. "I'm curious again," Hathaway says.
"I'm thinking about life as an adventure."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/160076
TIP
SHEET: "Surviving the Storm: What's Safe, What's Not" (p. 61).
Contributing Editor Jane Bryant Quinn offers some assurances to individuals who
are worried about their retirement and bank accounts in the midst of the Wall
Street crisis. Your insured bank account is safe; your money-market mutual fund
isn't as safe as you think, but you can make it safer; your AIG insurance
policies and annuities are safe.
http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/tipsheet/default.aspx
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