Opinion

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  • ESEA: Congress Must Answer the Hard Questions

    Published April 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    A leading education expert says Congress must answer some tough questions about the purpose of federal aid to education when it reauthorizes the $13 billion Elementary and Secondary Education Act later this year.
  • New Auto Emissions Test Goes up in Smoke

    Published April 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    The Environmental Protection Agency’s new auto emissions test literally went up in smoke at its formal Chicago media introduction February 1.
  • Programs Covered by Ed-Flex

    Published April 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    The "Ed-Flex" educational flexibility bill authorizes the U.S. Secretary of Education to allow any petitioning state to waive certain federal statutory or regulatory requirements relating to seven major federal programs.
  • Rotten Apples in the Classroom

    Published April 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    There comes a point in nearly all debates over school choice when the advocate of public schools appeal to the emotions of the audience by giving examples of misconduct in choice schools: financial mismanagement, fraud, unqualified teachers, or
  • Rough Waters Ahead for American Heritage Rivers Communities?

    Published April 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Warning that persons most affected by the American Heritage Rivers Initiative “have little idea of its potential scope, impact, and cost--both economic and regulatory”--the National Legal Center for the Public Interest, a Washington, DC-based public
  • Scares Du Jour

    Published April 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    An unfortunate characteristic of the American health news scene has been the tendency of the media and the public to misinterpret and exaggerate preliminary reports of health risks.
  • Schools Must Pay for Health Care of Disabled Students

    Published April 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    In a March 3 decision likely to strain school district budgets across the country, a divided U.S.
  • Study: Property Rights Need Not Suffer for Species Protection

    Published April 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    The Endangered Species Act of 1973, adopted to conserve and protect endangered or threatened species, has done little to live up to its mission.
  • Supreme Court to Hear of Law Enforcement, Media Collusion

    Published April 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    "The government believes it is justified in bringing the media along on searches and arrests without authorization in the warrant," explained Reed Hopper of the Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF), "and the media believe they have the right to go anywhere
  • Teacher Union Targets Washington Think Tank

    Published April 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    "The primary purpose or one of the primary purposes [of a political action committee] is to affect government decision making by supporting or opposing candidates or ballot positions.
  • The Fire this Time

    Published April 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    For the past five years, spending by the federal government for forest fire prevention and suppression--most of it in the western states--averaged almost $900 million per year.
  • Union Foils Decertification in Michigan

    Published April 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    An attempt to decertify the Michigan Education Association, undertaken by 55 MEA members in Branch County, Michigan, was foiled when MEA intimidation and interference caused the employees to fear for their jobs and vote to continue union representation
  • Here’s an Opportunity to Make an Impact on Our Schools!

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Bert L. Holt, program director for the Cleveland Scholarship and Tutoring Program, has been involved in education for 35 years, starting as an inner-city elementary school teacher in Cleveland.
  • Unscientific, Deceptive, and a Disservice to American Women

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    NBC health correspondent Dr. Bob Arnot's book, The Breast Cancer Prevention Diet: The Powerful Foods, Supplements, and Drugs That Can Save Your Life was published in October 1998.
  • Analysis: Reformulated Gas: EPA Didn’t Do its Homework

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    In taking the Hippocratic oath, fledgling physicians solemnly pledge they will, “First, do no harm.
  • Opposition to CEQ Appointment Mounts

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    A growing number of environmentalists are opposing the appointment of a “proven ideologue” to the vacant chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ). George T. Frampton Jr.
  • 03/1999 Junk Science Update

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Junk scientists take to heart the sports adage, "Winners never quit and quitters never win.
  • Media Ignores the ‘Hole’ Ozone Story

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Not all climate scientists accept the argument that human emissions of greenhouse gases are responsible for a thinning of the Earth's ozone layer. But the skeptics’ views are consistently ignored by a news media that apparently does.
  • Study: Cash-strapped Park System Need Not Close Facilities

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    While acknowledging that the state of Washington's park system faces serious budget problems, an Olympia-based research group says Governor Gary Locke's threat to close 40 parks is nothing more than political maneuvering.
  • Navy Ice Research Program Runs Around

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Efforts to determine why the Arctic ice cap is shrinking could be seriously hampered by the U.S. Navy's recent decision to discontinue its six-year-old Scientific Ice Expeditions program.
  • Poll: State, Local Governments Better than Feds on Environmental Protection

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Seven out of 10 registered voters nationwide believe that state or local government agencies can better protect the environment than the federal government, according to a new poll conducted by The Polling Company for the Washington, DC-based
  • Making Waves: NCPA Report Sets Sea Level Record Straight

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    A natural phenomenon that scientists find extremely difficult to measure, rising sea levels are nevertheless often summoned as evidence that environmental disaster looms if industrialized nations do nothing to curtail their emissions of climate-warming
  • Global Warming Not Responsible for 1998’s Unusual Weather

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    The United States may have experienced more than its fair share of unusual weather during 1998, but that had nothing to do with global warming.
  • Choice Is Breaking Out All Over

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Although school choice legislation already was under serious consideration in many states, those efforts have been bolstered by last year's Wisconsin Supreme Court ruling on the constitutionality of the Milwaukee voucher program. The U.S.

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