Eye on Education
By Joseph LaBracio | May 18, 2000Take a look at almost every public opinion poll that tracks the issue preferences of voters across the country and you will find education at or near the top of every list.
Take a look at almost every public opinion poll that tracks the issue preferences of voters across the country and you will find education at or near the top of every list.
This weekend many of us will be sending cards and gifts as tokens of appreciation for our mothers, godmothers, step-mothers, foster mothers and countless "honorary" mothers.
We live in a very media-saturated world. From magazines and newspapers to television and the Internet, the American public enjoys a 24-hour news cycle and constant access to what is going on in the world around us, particularly in the realm of politics.
The story begins in July of this past summer. Senator Bob Smith, the senior senator from New Hampshire, delivered a 50-minute speech on the floor of the United States Senate.
The vice president redefined the word contrived at the town meetings in Moore Hall on Wednesday night.
Over the past few weeks, the United States Congress has reached a stalemate in the policymaking process because of the rhetoric and rancor of partisan fighting.
George W. Bush missed his calling. Forget the oil business and owning a baseball team, Bush should have gotten involved with horseracing.
Al Gore, the incumbent Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate, is running from his home in D.C.