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Dates: during 2000-2009
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That's why we decided to add a new feature to our political coverage: the Defining Moment. In a series of biographical pieces on the major candidates, we identify a pivotal event in their personal or political life and explore how it altered them forever. We begin this week with Karen Tumulty's look at how Mitt Romney, as Massachusetts Governor, applied his businessman's mind to the seemingly intractable problem of health care and devised a plan to insure all his state's citizens--an achievement he now downplays to conservative audiences...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Innovation | 11/2/2007 | See Source »

Last year at this time, students were rushing to the post office to send in their application to Harvard. No longer. Though many other undergraduate institutions are gearing up to accept a large portion of their 2012 class, Harvard admissions officers will wait until January to begin vetting applicants. Though few colleges have followed Harvard’s example so far, we still hope that will change as admissions officers across the country come to realize how big of a boon the elimination of early admissions policies is to high school students and universities alike. When Harvard decided last September...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: November Without Applications | 11/1/2007 | See Source »

...opposition figure with intimate experience of these pressures is activist Ahmed Néjib Chebbi, founder of the Progressive Democratic Party, Tunisia's most outspoken opposition party, which has no seats in parliament. When TIME interviewed him in Tunis, Chebbi, 64, was about to begin a hunger strike to protest an eviction order from his party headquarters, which he said was one of the few gathering places for activists. Although the party is legal, its members say it is shut out of parliament by being starved of exposure. "In 15 years as head of the party I've had eight...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tunisia: The Price of Prosperity | 10/31/2007 | See Source »

...listen. But even as he was criss-crossing Rome in a hectic 14 hours earlier this week, Negroponte's attention was fixed on a factory near Shanghai. That's where within a week - after all the development and design and gigabytes of both hype and scepticism - mass production will begin on the state-of-the-art, low-price computer that its backers are billing as nothing less than the most ambitious education project in world history. "We are blasting off," Negroponte said, as his car rolled through downtown Rome between appointments. "I can look at everything I've done...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bringing Cheap Computers to the World | 10/31/2007 | See Source »

...Taiwan-based laptop manufacturer Quanta will begin by turning out 44,000 units a week at a recently expanded factory in Changshu, northwest of Shanghai. Negroponte said some 300,000 orders have been booked so far. The goal is to be turning out a million laptops a month by mid-2008. That avalanche, the critics will say, better start rolling soon. But Negroponte doesn't seem to mind the doubters. Four years ago, he ran into Michael Dell, founder and CEO of Dell computer makers at the World Economic Forum and told him - again - about his concept for making inexpensive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bringing Cheap Computers to the World | 10/31/2007 | See Source »

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