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  • Ford to Expand ‘Green’ Offerings

    Published January 11, 2005
    Opinion -
    Dear Editor: Today's Chicago Tribune carries a story titled "Ford to expand 'green' offerings" that darkly warns that GM and DaimlerChrysler are falling "further behind in hybrids ... Hybrid sales in the U.S.
  • Will Hospital Care Be There When We Need It?

    Published January 7, 2005
    Opinion -
    By now it is common knowledge that the retiring Baby Boom generation will impose tremendous pressure on Social Security and private pension plans as the number of workers per retiree shrinks.
  • A Second Look at Cedar Falls, Iowa’s Municipal Telecommunications Network

    Published January 5, 2005
    Opinion -
    An organization called OpportunityIowa was created recently to “help communities execute a successful referendum to create a communications utility entity in the community.
  • The Conscience of Conservative Blacks: Acknowledgments

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    The essays in this volume are based on presentations made on April 30, 2004 by five conservative African-Americans at the annual meeting of The Heritage Foundation Resource Bank. The meeting took place at the Renaissance Hotel in Chicago.
  • The Conscience of Conservative Blacks: What Is Black Conservatism?

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    Good morning. I am Lee Walker, president of The New Coalition for Economic and Social Change, a nonprofit education and research organization based in downtown Chicago.
  • The Conscience of Conservative Blacks: Black Faith and Black Conservatism

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    Good morning everyone. My name is Reverend Ceasar LeFlore, and I am the Midwest Regional Director of LEARN, which is the Life Education and Resource Network. It is the nation’s largest affiliation of black pro-life and pro-family ministries.
  • Degrees without Value

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    Although Linda C.
  • False Rigor: 8th-Grade Math Test Requires Only 3rd-Grade Skills

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    The dramatic gains in student test scores on a national math exam over the past decade are being called into question by an analysis from the Brookings Institution's Brown Center, which found questions on fourth-grade and eighth-grade tests to be
  • New Approaches to Universal Service

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    I approach this topic with a healthy skepticism about the utility of universal service policy as we know it, but with a concession that it will remain with us in some form or another.
  • ‘Free’ Software Isn’t Free

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    States facing budget shortfalls are poring over government management and purchasing practices in search of any sort of savings.
  • Hands off VoIP

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    As unrecognizable as Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) might be as a term today, it will be on everyone’s lips, and in everyone’s homes, tomorrow if regulators are forced to keep their acquisitive hands off of it.
  • Scientists Dispute Sensational Claims of Arctic Ice Melt

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    Eleven distinguished scientists, most of whom specialize in climatology, on November 16 published an open letter to Senator John McCain (R-AZ), who has repeatedly sponsored congressional legislation that mirrors the Kyoto Protocol, which was rejected by
  • Environmentalist Propaganda for Kids

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    The Future of the Earth: An Introduction to Sustainable Development for Young Readers, by Yann Arthur-Bertrand ($16.95, cloth, 76 pages; Harry N. Abrams Inc.
  • Bill to Hike Income Tax, Lower Property Tax Stirs Debate

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    A strong push is underway in Illinois to radically change how taxes are collected and distributed in the state, mainly in response to complaints from educators upset by how public schools are funded.
  • No Taxpayer Left Behind in Illinois

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    Citizens for Reasonable and Fair Taxes (CRAFT) believes there is a better way to fund education in Illinois.
  • Top 10 Wireless Tax States

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    Since 1993 the average wireless phone customer's monthly bill has gone down almost 37 percent, while minutes of use have increased about 300 percent, according to the Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Association.
  • Tiny Gains Trigger Large PR Effort by National Teacher Certifiers

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    The National Board for Professional Teaching Standards (NBPTS) is touting the results of a new study as proving that its performance-based system of national certification identifies effective teachers who deserve rich bonuses because their students show
  • Ethnic and Gender Diversity Lacking in Teaching Profession

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    Although white students made up about 60 percent of the student body in public schools in 2001, white teachers made up 90 percent of the teaching corps in those schools, according to a new analysis of teacher diversity prepared by the National
  • Test Yourself: NAEP’s ‘Hard’ 8th-Grade ‘Algebra and Functions’ Questions

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    The National Assessment of Educational Progress Web site offers the following questions as examples of "hard" eighth-grade "algebra" problems. Answers are on page 18. 1. The lowest point of the St. Lawrence River is 294 feet below sea level.
  • How Do I Educate Thee? Let Me Count the Ways …

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    Laptop Learning: St. Joseph High School Goes Wireless On September 17, 2004, St.
  • January 2005 Friedman Report: Profile

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    When Lindalyn Kakadelis became director of the North Carolina Education Alliance, she had a passion for school choice and a background that made her uniquely qualified for the job.
  • Teacher Unions Fail to Spread the Blues in 2004 Election

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    Rhetorically, the teacher unions framed the 2004 election as the "most important election of our lifetime." They swore they wouldn't allow the 2000 Florida debacle to happen again.
  • Three Cheers for Rod Paige

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    Outgoing Education Secretary Rod Paige is a great education reformer and distinguished public servant who leaves office after four years of accomplishment, candor, nonstop dedication to America's children, and loyal service to the Bush administration.
  • Fordham Foundation Honors Brandl, Joseph, and Moe as Education Change Agents

    Published January 1, 2005
    Opinion -
    The Thomas B. Fordham Foundation has named John E. Brandl, Marion Joseph, and Terry M. Moe as recipients of its third annual Fordham Prizes for Excellence in Education.

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