July 18, 2008      

North America, International , Business and Economy , Politics , Elections, Vote 2008, Middle East, Region

Barack Obama makes travel plans for Europe and the Middle East

By John Hockenberry, Adaora Udoji, Jesse Baker

Obama’s first major trip overseas next week is drawing major media attention, though the itinerary is still a mystery. Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian territories, Iraq, Afghanistan, Germany, France and the United Kingdom, have been mentioned as possible stops, and three TV networks — CBS, ABC and NBC — have requested that their nightly news anchors tag along.
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North America, Business and Economy , Economics, Markets

Ben Bernanke reshapes the Fed’s place

By John Hockenberry and Adaora Udoji

Federal Reserve Board chair Ben Bernanke is bursting through longstanding boundaries between the Fed and the federal government, some which could fundamentally change the Fed’s place in the American economy. Is this a good thing for the independent Fed?
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Society, Anniversaries and Celebrations, International , Culture, Arts and Entertainment , Africa, History

Nelson Mandela turns 90

By John Hockenberry, Adaora Udoji, Chelsea Merz

As South Africa gears up to toast its favorite citizen, Nelson Mandela, The Takeaway celebrates the former president and anti-apartheid icon on his 90th birthday.
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North America, Society, Health , Business and Economy , Sociology, Global Health, Poverty, Poverty

"The Measure of America" finds disparities in our standards of living

By John Hockenberry, Adaora Udoji, Kent DePinto

Which U.S. state has the lowest life expectancy? Which congressional district has the highest high school dropout rate? The surprising answers to these questions can be found in “The Measure of America,” a new report that measures the American standard of living. Sarah Burd-Sharps explains how we’ve missed the fundamentals in the search of the American dream.
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North America, Health , Business and Economy , Food, Culture, Arts and Entertainment , Nutrition

The latest restaurant trend: Eat now, pay whatever

By John Hockenberry, Adaora Udoji, Chelsea Merz

With food and gas prices soaring, eating out has become a luxury. But a growing movement, with its pay-what-you-can policy, is making a trip to the restaurant affordable—and for some, free. The Takeaway talks to Denise Cerrata, a pioneering foodie with civic-minded flair. Five years ago she opened a restaurant that lets people work for a meal or donate whatever they can afford.
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Asia, Politics , International , Health , Iraq, Military

Army documents reveal shoddy electrical work as Iraq's primary noncombat hazard

By John Hockenberry and Adaora Udoji

Today the New York Times is reporting that shoddy electrical work at U.S. bases in Iraq is more prevalent than the Pentagon has acknowledged. Contractor KBR has reported similar problems in the housing it maintains. Thirteen Americans have been electrocuted in Iraq and hundreds more have been injured.
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Society, Race, Anniversaries and Celebrations, Culture, Arts and Entertainment , Africa, History, Celebrities

David Wall Rice: A million conversations with Nelson Mandela

By David Wall Rice July 18, 2008, 11:19 AM

The thing I remember most vividly about beginning my internship at TransAfrica Forum, the foreign policy lobbyist group founded in 1977 to pressure the U.S. Government to do right by Africa and the African Diaspora, was that I didn't want to be there.

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