The people behind Newsweek's new blog chronicling the lives of young Obama supporters.
A lost or stolen cell phone may not be a lost cause. Here are some tips for retrieving your device.
How Ali Soufan, an FBI agent, got Abu Zubaydah to talk without torture.
With an African-American president and the economy in bad shape, extremist groups are trying to enter the mainstream—and they're having some success.
When grisly images of their daughter's death went viral on the Internet, the Catsouras family decided to fight back.
The biographer of the great Brooklyn Bridge on how a proposed new building could ruin an icon of American ingenuity.
Life at Princeton may be more complex now than it was in Michelle's day.
A looming battle over the role foreign judges should play in U.S. courts.
When your résumé says 'disgraced ex-governor,' what do you do next?
Torture is a complicated business, and the real world is never as neat as the imagined one.
Despite a recent spate of killings, the president and fellow Democrats choose not to wage war on assault weapons.
Two pastors from opposite ends of the theological spectrum are still haunted by the school massacre.
As a VP candidate, Alaska's governor was attacked for the state's aerial hunting program. But the partisan bickering belies a complex and longstanding debate.
In the wake of the shooting spree by a Vietnamese immigrant, an immigration expert looks at how the bad economy is impacting newcomers to the United States.
The percentage of self-identified Christians has fallen 10 points in the past two decades. How that statistic explains who we are now—and what, as a nation, we are about to become.
Attorney General Eric Holder wants to release classified Bush-era interrogation memos. But U.S. intel officials are fiercely lobbying the White House to block him from moving forward.
Seattle was a two-newspaper town until one went down. How do you cover your competitor's demise?
Why policymakers need to hear the nation's anger.
Terry Holdbrooks stood watch over prisoners at Gitmo. What he saw made him adopt their faith.
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano says Washington is stepping up its efforts to assist in Mexico's war on drug cartels.
The bipartisan panel that investigated the terrorist attacks was widely praised. But did its final report rely on suspect information?
Cartel-related violence has moved well beyond American border towns.
Jay Dobyns convinced the Hells Angels he was one of them. And that may have been the easy part. After going undercover, he's been a man on the run.
A new memo shows just how far the Bush administration considered going in fighting the war on terror.
Before Rosa Parks, 15-year-old Claudette Colvin refused to give up her seat on the bus.
Author Thomas Ricks on the state of Iraq and why the new president should worry more about Pakistan than Afghanistan.
Everyone wanted a piece of the great bong brouhaha. That's the American way.
Obama will send 17,000 U.S. troops.
I witnessed the ceremony at Dover. I'm not sure it needs flashbulbs.
One month ago, I landed Flight 1549 safely in the Hudson River. In some ways, that was the easy part.
For many young guys trying to leave gangs, the pull of the old neighborhood is tough to resist. How do you let go—and stay gone? NEWSWEEK trailed two men who really want to figure that out for themselves.