Word: polled
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Good question. A TIME/CNN poll of 1,024 Americans conducted last week suggests that the country is of two minds about health reform. Although 85% responded that they were "very satisfied" or at least "fairly satisfied" with the quality of medical care they receive, 68% said they think traditional fee-for-service plans provide better health care than HMOs, and only 41% of those covered by managed care said they were "very confident" that their plan would pay for their treatment if they got really sick...
...rulers, had bridged the gulf between the northern Hausa group (which dominates the military) and the Ibo and Yoruba groups that populate the wealthier southern regions. His loss leaves a void of candidates that could unite the fractious electorate of Africa's most populous nation in October's scheduled poll...
...that week, Republicans all over the Hill who opposed the McCain bill were talking about the DiVall poll. Never mind that the survey had been partly funded by the tobacco industry and the questions had been written in a way that tarred the bill. "If this is a crisis in America," said Gramm, "America doesn't know it." Flying with Lott to Barry Goldwater's funeral, Speaker Newt Gingrich had also made it clear how desperately the House wanted to avoid a big fight with its base supporters before November...
...factory. It started in wood-paneled salons, spread to suburban living rooms, with their consciousness-raising sessions, and eventually ended up with Norma Rae. In fact, that trajectory is its biggest problem today--it remains suspect to those who have never ventured onto a college campus. A TIME/CNN poll shows what most people already suspect--that education more than anything else determines whether a woman defines herself as a feminist. Fifty-three percent of white, college-educated women living in cities embrace the label. Fifty percent of white women with postgraduate training and no children do the same. But feminism...
...movies are skinny," says Rona Luo, a 14-year-old student at New York City's Stuyvesant High School. "It's not so easy to hold out and think, 'I'm going to be who I am.'" She's not alone. A New York Times poll of 1,048 teenagers ages 13 through 17 found that when asked what they would most like to change, 36% of the girls responded "my looks" or "my body," a percentage that was higher than in the 1994 survey. In an age in which image is often mistaken for both message and directive...