ON THE AGENDA
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By Jenny Choi on December 4, 2008
Greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. were up by 1.4 percent in 2007, after a decline the previous year, according to newly released figures in a report from the Energy Information Administration, the statistics arm of the Energy Department.
Tags: carbon, Climate Change, EIA, emissions, Environment, fossil fuels, Global Warming, government, greenhouseFull Article (0 comments, Add a new comment) -
By Paul Gasbarra on December 3, 2008
The picture was grim this week as the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education released a report predicting that a college education could soon become unaffordable for most Americans. In the past 25 years, the cost of college has increased by 439 percent. [The New York Times notes that this figure is not adjusted for inflation.]
Tags: access to education, college costs, college loans, education, Gasbarra, higher education, Squeeze Play, Student LoansFull Article (0 comments, Add a new comment) -
By Scott Bittle on December 1, 2008
The National Bureau of Economic Research has spoken: the U.S. has been in a recession for a year. Polls tell us that a lot of Americans think the economists are late to the party on this one.
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By Scott Bittle on December 1, 2008
The announcement of the new Obama foreign policy team has been greeted with much talk of a new direction in U.S. foreign policy, a "rebalancing" to emphasize traditional diplomacy over the military in world affairs.
Tags: america's global role, Barack Obama, Confidence in U.S. Foreign Policy Index, diplomacy, Foreign Policy, Hillary Clinton, militaryFull Article (0 comments, Add a new comment) -
By Francie Grace on November 25, 2008
Barack Obama's on board for the economic stimulus package but he's also in favor of reducing the federal budget deficit – just not right away.
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By Jenny Choi on November 25, 2008
Afghan President Hamid Karzai, meeting with a U.N. Security Council delegation today, called for a timeline on the war in Afghanistan. Karzai did not offer a specific time frame, but said, "If there is no deadline, we have the right to find another solution for peace and security, which is negotiations." Meanwhile, talk of a possible U.S.
Tags: Afghanistan, allied, casualties, defense, Gates, Iraq, Karzai, NATO, surge, Taliban, troops, violence, warFull Article (0 comments, Add a new comment) -
By Maya Dusenbery on November 19, 2008
Between the long shadow cast by the economy and the excitement of the historic election of Barack Obama as the new president of the United States, there's one subject which has barely made it into the headlines. Among the ballot initiatives that were decided in the fifty states were three referenda which would have banned or restricted abortion. These measures, in South Dakota, Colorado, and California, were all defeated.
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By Jenny Choi on November 18, 2008
An analysis in the Los Angeles Times today posits what could prove to be a tipping point for the health care crisis: the current economic slump.
Tags: Baucus, Costs, coverage, deficit, Economy, government, health care, Insurance, Kennedy, Obama, President, reform, senate, uninusred, universalFull Article (0 comments, Add a new comment) -
By Michael Remaley on November 13, 2008
The process – not the rhetoric – of change.
If change is to come, we cannot return to business as usual. We have seen so many elections that promised hope and more responsive government. And time and again, we have returned from our polling places to our homes and just waited for change to come. This time, something must be different.
Tags: election, Obama, public dialogue, real change, Remaley, the way forward, we cannot return to business as usualFull Article (2 comments, Add a new comment) -
By Paul Gasbarra on November 11, 2008
Is a diploma by any other name a diploma? I suppose it depends on who you ask. Graduation rates in the country are just under 70 percent, meaning that fewer than seven in ten freshmen who enter the system graduate from high school four years later.
Tags: achievement gap, Dropouts, education, graduation rates, High School, Hispanics, Latinos, public schoolsFull Article (0 comments, Add a new comment)









