Linton Weeks

Credit Doby Photography / NPR

Linton Weeks joined NPR in the summer of 2008, as its national correspondent for Digital News. He immediately hit the campaign trail, covering the Democratic and Republican National Conventions; fact-checking the debates; and exploring the candidates, the issues and the electorate.

Weeks is originally from Tennessee, and graduated from Rhodes College in 1976. He was the founding editor of Southern Magazine in 1986. The magazine was bought — and crushed — in 1989 by Time-Warner. In 1990, he was named managing editor of The Washington Post's Sunday magazine. Four years later, he became the first director of the newspaper's website, Washingtonpost.com. From 1995 until 2008, he was a staff writer in the Style section of The Washington Post.

He currently lives in a suburb of Washington with the artist Jan Taylor Weeks. In 2009, they created The Stone and Holt Weeks Foundation to honor their beloved sons.

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Participation Nation
5:03 pm
Sat August 25, 2012

Replanting Trees In New Orleans

Credit iStockphoto.com
City Park in New Orleans.

Originally published on Thu September 20, 2012 11:18 am

More than 100,000 trees — including many beautiful live oaks and magnolias — were lost when Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans in 2005.

In response, Hike For KaTREEna — a nonprofit group dedicated to reforesting the Crescent City — was created.

Since 2006, more than 10,000 volunteers have helped to plant 13,400 trees — including oaks, cypress, red maples, crepe myrtles, magnolias, redbuds, Savannah hollies and citrus trees such as navel orange, satsuma, lemon, lime and grapefruit.

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Sports
5:33 pm
Fri August 24, 2012

Lance Armstrong: When A Hero Lets Us Down

Credit Jim Urquhart / AP
Lance Armstrong speaks to the media after the February 2011 Xterra Nationals triathlon. On Friday, the cyclist said he would no longer fight doping allegations.

Originally published on Sun August 26, 2012 12:54 pm

Lance Armstrong. He has a superhero's name, right out of the comic books. He moved from conquering stages of one kind — bike racing — to stages of another kind — cancer. He's chiseled and driven and known all over the world.

But now we learn that the superhero has given up in one of his biggest battles. He says he will no longer continue to fight charges by the United States Anti-Doping Agency that he used performance enhancing drugs to win bicycle races.

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Participation Nation
3:33 pm
Fri August 24, 2012

Barrio Basketball In El Paso, Texas

Credit Mike James / Courtesy of AUFP
A rainbow of teams at basketball camp.

A summertime basketball camp can cost a kid several hundred dollars. But the Basketball in the Barrio camp — held just two blocks from the U.S.-Mexico border in El Paso — costs just one buck.

Actually, only a portion of the camp is about basketball, says co-founder Rus Bradburd. The experience is sponsored by Athletes United for Peace, a group that tries to promote peace and harmony through sports.

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Participation Nation
12:33 pm
Fri August 24, 2012

Taking Care In Tuscaloosa, Ala.

Credit Courtesy of UA
Community service in Alabama.

One of the first activities of the new school year at the University of Alabama is Hands On Tuscaloosa, a morning of community service. On Sat., Aug. 25, students can choose to refurbish a neighborhood baseball diamond, clean-up a local high school, create a carnival or do something else worthwhile.

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Around the Nation
9:52 am
Thu August 23, 2012

From Politics To Pestilence: Everything Is Earlier

Credit iStockphoto.com

Originally published on Thu August 23, 2012 4:17 pm

Leaves are falling in the summertime. School starts in early August in many places. Politicos are already talking about the presidential election — of 2016.

Everything is happening earlier.

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Participation Nation
4:31 pm
Tue August 21, 2012

Painting The Town In Arkadelphia, Ark.

Through the traveling Mid-America Murals Project, "artists are working with small communities to translate their stories into dynamic visual poems on the walls of downtown buildings," says the project's lead artist Dave Loewenstein.

The group has already created colorful murals in Joplin, Mo., Newton, Kan. and Tonkawa, Okla.

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Participation Nation
12:32 pm
Tue August 14, 2012

Blind Stokers Club In San Diego, Calif.

Credit Evan Rasmussen / Courtesy of the BSC
Captain and stoker in the BSC.

In tandem bicycle lingo, the captain is in the front, the stoker in the back.

The San Diego-based Blind Stokers Club, founded by Dave White, pairs sighted captains with blind stokers on high performance tandem bikes. As part of a year-round cycling program, members train for Cycling for Sight, a three-day, 200-mile event that benefits the San Diego Center for the Blind.

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Participation Nation
12:42 pm
Wed August 8, 2012

Providing Holistic Care In Durham, N.C.

Credit Courtesy of Caare
Sharon Elliott-Bynum is the co-founder of Caare.

Originally published on Mon August 20, 2012 10:11 am

This month we are collecting your stories about the good things Americans are doing to make their community a better place. Some of your contributions will become blog posts and the project will end with a story that weaves together submissions to make a story of Americans by Americans for Americans.

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Participation Nation
7:03 am
Fri August 3, 2012

The Pick Of The Litter In Taos, N.M.

Credit Linton Weeks
Bruce Boyd helps clean up his community by gathering the litter that collects on the highway.

Originally published on Fri August 3, 2012 10:23 am

This month we are collecting your stories about the good things Americans are doing to make their community a better place. Some of your contributions will become blog posts and the project will end with a story that weaves together submissions to make a story of Americans by Americans for Americans.

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Pop Culture
7:13 am
Thu August 2, 2012

R Grammar Gaffes Ruining The Language? Maybe Not

Credit Sharon Dominick / iStockphoto.com

Originally published on Thu August 2, 2012 12:32 pm

Good grammar may have came and went.

Maybe you've winced at the decline of the past participle. Or folks writing and saying "he had sank" and "she would have went." Perhaps it was the singer Gotye going on about "Somebody That I Used to Know" instead of "Somebody Whom I Used to Know." Or any of a number of other tramplings of traditional grammar — rules that have been force-fed to American schoolchildren for decades — in popular parlance and prose.

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Participation Nation
12:53 pm
Wed August 1, 2012

Homeless Kids At Play In Washington, D.C.

Originally published on Wed August 8, 2012 12:58 pm

This month we are collecting your stories about the good things Americans are doing to make their community a better place. Some of your contributions will become blog posts and the project will end with a story that weaves together submissions to make a story of Americans by Americans for Americans.

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It's All Politics
9:06 am
Thu July 19, 2012

The ABCs Of Election Reform

Credit Joe Raedle / Getty Images
A Florida election official tests the accuracy of a voting machine on Aug. 4, 2010, in Miami.

Originally published on Thu July 19, 2012 10:49 am

A. Following the controversy-crazy U.S. presidential election of 2000, in which the Supreme Court was drafted to determine the outcome, there have been efforts by various groups to reform the country's electoral system. However, "we have not changed much of substance really since the 2000 debacle," says Norman Ornstein, a co-writer of the 2010 Election Reform Project report.

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Politics
5:57 am
Sat July 14, 2012

'Exhaustion' Can Signify A Lot More Than 'Tired'

We may never know all the reasons why Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., D-Ill., has dropped out of sight, but history teaches us that if a public figure is linked to "exhaustion," the word can be code for something more problematic than simply being tired.

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It's All Politics
6:03 am
Mon July 9, 2012

The ABCs Of Politicians

Credit iStockphoto.com
Even in zoos, donkeys and elephants turn their backs on their parties.

A. First, politicians began omitting their party affiliations on campaign literature and websites. Politics "is a dirty word," says David King, a lecturer on public policy at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. King told the MetroWest Daily News: "Why would you want to put it right out there; why would you sell a shirt with a stain on it? You need to appeal on other terms by downplaying partisanship."

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Monkey See
10:36 am
Thu July 5, 2012

Life In Juxtopia

Credit Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images
Katie Kiang sits by an electrical outlet and a quiet spot to study inside the air-conditioned Westfield Montgomery Mall in Bethesda, Md., on Monday.

Originally published on Thu July 5, 2012 2:48 pm

For five full days — following Friday night's nasty wind-and-rain flashstorm — you were without electricity in the Washington suburbs. Dodging felled trees and fallen power wires, you made daily forays to nearby cafes and coffee shops, establishments that did have power. There you could recharge the batteries in your laptop and smartphone and take care of various electronic chores, such as banking, sending gifts, ordering necessities and sorting through email.

But mostly you stayed home, reading books and actual newspapers, just like in the Olden Days.

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