Campaign Watch: Conventions feature panel 8/28

Photo by Chris Carlson/AP Photo

Your Money - Bankruptcies Wallop Older Americans

Photo-illustration by AARP Bulletin Today staff (bag: Jupiter Images; legs: Charles Gullung/Getty Images)

Your Health: Sneezin' and Wheezin'

Photo by Roy Morsch/Corbis

Phased Retirement. Photo by Ann Cutting/Workbook Stock/Jupiter Images.

Photo by Ann Cutting/Workbook Stock/Jupiter Images

BULLETIN BEATS

Myth Busters

Late-Night Dining

Facts: Those late-night munchies aren’t as fattening as was once thought, studies show.

Databank

The Graduates

Databank looks at the percentage of population age 50-plus who have bachelor's degrees.

Keys to the White House

Who Will Win

What I Really Know

Shared Laughter

Save a Buck

Cheap Textbooks

Scam Alert

Government E-mail

Ask Ms. Medicare

Out-of-Pocket

Health Discovery

Healthy Habits

Finding Your Way

Hospital ERs

Ask the Experts

Marrying Late

MULTIMEDIA SPECIALS

Multimedia: Marathon Woman

Marathon Woman

(3:58)

Visit with Margaret Hagerty, an 85-year-old marathoner.

Multimedia: Fallow Report - Economy Stim.

Economic Stimulus

(4:19)

Special correspondent Allan Fallow talks economic stimulus.

BU Multimedia: Retired Truckers

Semi Retirement

(4:53)

Ride along with Jack and Eloise Murtaugh of Bel Air, Md.

THEY MADE HISTORY

Martin Luther King. Photo by Francis Miller/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images

AUGUST 28, 1963

In front of a crowd of 200,000 gathered for the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, Martin Luther King Jr. delivers one of the most famous speeches in U.S. history, with eight repetitions of the key phrase: “I have a dream.”

1986: Tina Turner gets a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
1955: Emmett Till, a 14-year-old African American from Chicago, is murdered by vigilantes in Mississippi.

Martin Luther King Jr. giving his "I Have a Dream" speech.
Photo by Francis Miller/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images

CARTOON OF THE DAY

BRAIN AEROBICS

Click to Play Sudoku
AARP: Join Now!

NEWSMAKER

Lily Ledbetter-Newsmaker icon

All She Is Saying...

For Lilly Ledbetter, it's simple: Pay me what you're paying the other guy. Or gal. More>>


QUESTION OF THE DAY

QUESTION OF THE DAY

SUBSCRIPTION OPTIONS

AARP Webletter

AARP Webletter

AARP.org's best new features and personalities — straight to your inbox every week

Get the Bulletin RSS Feed

Get the Bulletin RSS Feed

Add AARP Headlines Using RSS

Current Issue

July-August Issue Now Online

View Contents

LATE NIGHT HUMOR

"And some medical groups now want to ban the TV shows ER, House and Grey's Anatomy because they say they get a lot of medical facts wrong. Hey, so do HMOs. They don't ban those."
—Jay Leno