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How might we reimagine the tapestry of teaching, schooling, and preparation to ensure that the changing labor force reinvigorates teaching and learning?
A book review of Elie Wiesel's Night, an autobiographical account of the Holocaust.
Republicans think they know how to run against a Massachusetts Democrat. But it's not clear whether this year's volatile social issues will end up helping Republicans, as they did in 1988.
Julian L. Simon began to force a fundamental rethinking of the deeply ingrained Malthusian pessimism about world population, global resources, and the geo-environment.
Walter Berns reviews Forrest McDonald's States' Rights and the Union: Imperium in Imperio, 1776-1876.
Most Americans say they're environmentalists, but when asked to be more specific, far more say they are sympathetic than active.
By next year, about two-thirds of American physicians will be working as salaried employees of large groups and hospitals. This movement has been underway for years. Over the last decade, the number of independent physicians was falling by about 2% a year. But these trends are now accelerating.
Europe’s current debt crises are a consequence of a region-wide crisis of the welfare state, whose vast promised benefits voters demand, yet are unwilling to finance through self-taxation.





