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...decipher it. Gary Blackton Portland, Oregon, U.S. Klein argued that polling has become "less scientific and more speculative. It means polls should be trusted only to verify broad shifts ... rather than specific point spreads." Even this may be optimistic, since the flaws in polls may be systemic and not random. I would guess that poll numbers roughly correspond to the category of people who are susceptible to telemarketers. If you rely on a cell phone, have caller ID or are worried about identity theft and privacy, then, respectively, you don't have a phone number pollsters can call...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters | 10/21/2004 | See Source »

...even identify their senators or congressperson, let alone tell you how they stand on the issues. Voting a party line doesn’t seem to help either; when asked to identify the parties’ positions on key issues the American public fares worse than a random coin toss...

Author: By Sasha Post, | Title: Deliberate This | 10/20/2004 | See Source »

...seems the revered publication has sunk to a new low, by lauding, however facetiously, the so-called “contributions” of a man who faced and pleaded no contest to criminal charges of domestic violence just this past January.If Brown had assaulted a random woman on the street, society would brand him a dangerous man. Even the Lampoon would not honor someone seen as a threat to its female peers. But when the woman is his own wife, the one person whom society expects him to treat with the greatest respect, we instead write off the assault...

Author: By Laura E. Openshaw, | Title: Breaking the Silence, Changing Culture | 10/14/2004 | See Source »

...connect committee members more intimately with their constituents; yet, the extent of these plans was urging members to meet five new people in their respective districts. And, while that’s a good start, the council really needs to do more to facilitate representative-student relationships. Meeting a random sampling of five students isn’t nearly as effective as perhaps coordinating with HoCos to plan events where students could meet their council representatives—or some other inventive way to make mingling with student council members sound less lame...

Author: By Morgan Grice, | Title: Improving Council Accountability | 10/14/2004 | See Source »

This allows Ronzone to tack on what he calls "a random country," a Kazakhstan or a Congo, to the end of each journey. When he arrives--friendless and unannounced--his strategy for expanding his network frequently consists of walking up to people, saying hello and starting to talk about basketball in his train-wreck sentences. More often than not, they talk back. In Kazakhstan, a conversation with a hotel bellman led to the discovery of three raw but promising players at a club team. "Tony talks a lot, and that gets him into these places," says the Pistons' Hammond...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Looking For Mr. Really Big | 10/11/2004 | See Source »

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