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- 1From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Byline: Jessica Ramirez Hard times mean the rich are selling a few Cartiers. There's very little that can come between Melanie Fascitelli and designer labels like Missoni and Jimmy Choo. The successful 32-year-old...
- 2From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Forget Joe the Plumber--what's in store for you, and the rest of the country, if McCain's or Obama's reforms are enacted? These six groups might see very different outcomes. Single person with no insurance Neither...
- 3From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Byline: Daniel Mcginn For a century, the place been turning out corporate leaders. But it's not all cause for celebration. The institution has flaws, and now's the time to address them. As birthdays go, the...
- 4From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)A weekly mathematical survey of dubious behavior that measures, on a scale of 1 to 100, just how low you can go. Under fire for a joke about John McCain and Depends, Sen. John Kerry blunders through a squirrelly...
- 5From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Byline: Lorraine Ali Jett Williams never met her father, Hank. Then she came across his lost recordings, and she heard him laugh at last. According to Hank Williams, Mother's Best Flour makes "the best biscuit you...
- 6From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Byline: Joan Raymond Can MRI technology do a better job than mammography in detecting breast cancer? That question has been on the minds of many women after Christina Applegate revealed that her breast cancer was...
- 7From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Byline: Claudia Kalb The author of a new book about autism says exactly what he thinks about vaccines and other hot topics. Paul Offit--salt-and-pepper hair, wire-rimmed glasses, Phillies fan--hardly seems like...
- 8From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Byline: Howard Fineman It is eerily quiet at Barack Obama's headquarters, an open expanse that takes up the entire 11th floor of an office tower in Chicago's Loop. It's nearly as silent as a study hall, which is...
- 9From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Byline: John Sparks Talent Is Overrated: What Really Separates World-Class Performers From Everybody Else By Geoff Colvin With everything from houses to 401(k)s (as well as collateralized debt obligations) turning...
- 10From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Byline: Lily Huang Good design can mean dated products can have renewable life cycles. Over the summer, a really cool piece of gadgetry went on the market and, in the mere blink of three days, into more than a...
- 11From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)The Democrat's plan would mean more government programs and between 26 million and 34 million more people with health insurance. Opponents say it would also mean higher health-care costs. 'Now is the time to keep the...
- 12From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Byline: Allison Samuels Jamie Foxx--actor, singer, comedian--has his fingerprints all over Hollywood. His latest gig: Sirius Radio's "The Foxxhole." He spoke with Allison Samuels. What made you want to do radio?...
- 13From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Byline: Marc Peyser You might say that Sean Avery is the human equivalent of jock itch. It's his job, as the baddest badass in the National Hockey League, to annoy his opponents, to get under their skin--anything to...
- 14From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)One of the sharpest and most telling differences on foreign policy between Barack Obama and John McCain is whether the United States should talk to difficult and disreputable leaders like Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad or...
- 15From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Byline: Keith Naughton; With Hilary Shenfeld Ten percent of U.S. showrooms could be gone by late 2009. WAL-Mart might not have difficulty selling Hot Wheels this year, but auto dealers are struggling to move the...
- 16From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)See "Two Museums, One Culture" at the Museum of Russian Icons in Clinton, Mass. This ambitious survey of icons from the 16th through the 19th centuries includes 16 rare works from Moscow's Tretyakov Gallery ($5;...
- 17From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)In the hyperrich and hyperreligious Dallas enclave known as the Park Cities, Bible study is a contact sport. Author Kim Gatlin, a wealthy, gorgeous divorcee, was inspired to write "Good Christian Bitches" about the...
- 18From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Byline: Benjamin Sutherland The PC maker used to be an industry icon. Now it's had to remake its marketing and manufacturing. Dell Computer soared to the top of the PC industry in the 1980s and '90s by innovating...
- 19From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Byline: Louisa Thomas Men have long vilified Cleopatra, but she's earned a royal treatment. Cleopatra has always been a player in other people's dramas, if in different roles: she can be a coquette or a feminist,...
- 20From: Newsweek. (Vol. 152, Issue 18)Charlie Sheen a cad? Denise Richards may still be singing that tune, but Sheen would prefer to be called a dad. Sheen's real-estate investor wife, Brooke Mueller, is pregnant--with twins. In case you're keeping score at...