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...Primary care physicians], often among the lowest paid of all medical specialities, are least able to make up income when taking time away from their clinical practices to teach,” she wrote in a report to a committee charged with reviewing the HMS curriculum...

Author: By Margaret W. Ho, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: HMS Faculty Do Not Want To Teach | 12/3/2003 | See Source »

...culture has developed where teaching has sunk to one of the lowest priorities on everyone’s list,” he said...

Author: By Margaret W. Ho, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: HMS Faculty Do Not Want To Teach | 12/3/2003 | See Source »

...better job of ginning up its base. And while more voters are calling themselves independent, they are voting like partisans. In 2000 and 2002--the election that put Bush in the White House and the one that tested what voters think of his presidency--ticket splitting reached its lowest level in 30 years, according to a study by David Kimball of the University of Missouri at St. Louis. Some suggest this will only get more pronounced. Laura Stoker, a political scientist at the University of California, Berkeley, says that as more young voters who grew up during the culture wars...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Love Him, Hate Him President | 12/1/2003 | See Source »

When action star Fernando Poe Jr. announced he was running for President of the Philippines last week, the Manila stock market fell nearly 2% and the peso tanked to its lowest level in a century. The Central Bank governor quickly announced that the markets weren't freaking out over Poe alone but were reacting to "a series of events over the last four weeks." Indeed: a band of congressmen tried (unsuccessfully) to impeach the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court; the administration of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo saw a mini-exodus of officials, including respected Finance Secretary Jose Isidro Camacho...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Playing His Part | 12/1/2003 | See Source »

...Boston Red Sox and young voters have one thing in common: many people do not take them seriously. Young people have one of the lowest rates of voter turnout because politicians do not take them seriously; politicians do not take them seriously because they vote in such low numbers. This endless cycle goes around and around, but unlike the curse of the Bambino, this curse can be broken. The baseball season is over, the political season has just begun, and young voters are the Wild Card of the 2004 presidential election: will this be the year they turn their reputation...

Author: By Jennifer L. Kritz, | Title: Bad Political Hangover: Youth Fail to Rock the Vote | 12/1/2003 | See Source »

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