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Duke students, she thought, seemed more well rounded than students on some other campuses. I think it was me being a little bit naïve.” Other Duke students who identify as F.G.L.I. At Duke — as well as elite colleges that admit more low-income students — their graduation rate tends to be similar to the overall graduation rate. Over the past decade, as other elite colleges paid more attention to low-income students, they wooed some who once might have attended Duke. “Duke students are really oriented to the world,” she said.
Persons: Ben Denzer, Perkins, Duke, ” Juliana Alfonso, DeSouza, , Stephany Perez, Sanchez, University of Chicago —, Pell, Duke Duke, Melinda French Gates, Adam Silver, ” Gary Bennett, Grant, Bates, Brown, Pell Grant, ” Bennett, we’re, Ithaka, Yale Conn, , Juliana Alfonso, Juliana, Duke Rice, Austin U.N.C, , Karen Dong, ” Dong, ” Randi Jennings, Dong, Duke’s F.G.L.I, Duke —, ” Jennings, Randi, Jennings, Alfonso, David M, Rubenstein, “ It’s, ” Alfonso, Colleges don’t, Bennett, Caroline Hoxby, Christopher Avery, Louis, Holden Thorp, ” Thorp, Ron Daniels, Johns Hopkins, ” Daniels, Catharine Bond Hill, Thorp, Hopkins, Michael Bloomberg, Johns, “ Duke Organizations: Duke University, Perkins, Ivy League, Stanford, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Chicago, Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Columbia, Pell Grants, Duke, Pell Grants Harvard, Penn, Cornell, Dartmouth, Brown, Chicago, U.S . News, Colleges, Midwest, California Institute of Technology, Notre Dame, Bucknell, Georgia Tech, Oberlin, Reed, Tufts, Tulane, Wake, Universities, Wall Street Journal, University of California, University of South, College, Princeton N.J, Pomona Calif, Dartmouth N.H, Stanford Calif, Caltech Calif, Amherst Mass, Grinnell Iowa, Claremont McKenna, Vanderbilt, Opportunity, Elite, Spurs, Texas North, Southern Methodist University, Davidson, California Massachusetts, Stanford Harvard, Berkeley UMass Amherst, Amherst College Pomona, University of Texas, parka, Mardi Gras, Daily, West Union, LIFE, Uber, ” Colleges, Washington University, Hopkins, Vassar College, Johns Hopkins, University of Michigan, University of Virginia, University Locations: San Antonio, South Carolina, M.I.T, United States, Durham, N.C, Georgetown, Georgia, California, San Diego, U.C.L.A, University of South Dakota, University of South Florida, America, Middlebury, Northwestern, Pomona, Swarthmore, Harvard, Texas North Carolina, Texas, Canada, Myrtle Beach, Dallas, China, New Orleans, Irish, Camden , N.J, , St, Johns Hopkins, Wash
As part of this week’s Education Issue of the magazine, The New York Times is publishing the College-Access Index, a list of the country’s most-selective universities ranked in order of economic diversity. For this updated version, we have measured economic diversity by analyzing the share of students receiving Pell Grants, which typically go to students from the bottom half of the income distribution. The list covers the 286 most-selective colleges in the country, defined by Barron’s Profiles of American Colleges and other metrics. Here, you see each college’s Pell share for the entering class in 2020-21, compared with the 2010-11 share. Schools are listed in order of economic diversity as measured by share of the student body receiving Pell Grants.
Persons: Pell Organizations: The New York Times, College, Times, Barron’s, American Colleges, Berea College Locations: Kentucky
Explaining Bidenomics
  + stars: | 2023-09-06 | by ( David Leonhardt | More About David Leonhardt | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
They want the government to spend more money on highways, technological development and other policies that could create good-paying jobs. The experts, in short, believe that they had been too accepting of the more laissez-faire economic agenda often known as neoliberalism. This turnabout is the central explanation for President Biden’s economic agenda, which White House aides call Bidenomics and will be core to his re-election campaign. Foer tells the story partly through Jake Sullivan, who helped design Biden’s domestic agenda during the campaign and then became national security adviser. That’s why several Warren protégés, like Bharat Ramamurti, work in senior White House roles today.
Persons: Bidenomics, , Biden’s, Franklin Foer, Foer, Jake Sullivan, Sullivan, Hillary Clinton, Biden, Donald Trump’s, Democratic wonks, ” Foer, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Alexandria Ocasio, Cortez, Warren protégés, Bharat Ramamurti Organizations: Democratic, Rhodes, Yale, White Locations: Alexandria
Where Are the Students?
  + stars: | 2023-09-05 | by ( David Leonhardt | More About David Leonhardt | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
“For almost two years, we told families that school can look different and that schoolwork could be accomplished in times outside of the traditional 8-to-3 day,” Elmer Roldan, who runs a dropout prevention group, told The Los Angeles Times. “The most fundamental thing for adults to understand is that avoidance feeds anxiety,” Damour told me. But the problem with giving in to that anxiety is that avoidance is highly reinforcing.” The more often students skip school, the harder it becomes to get back in the habit of going. And the rise in chronic absenteeism is indeed a sign that schools need help. One promising step would be to make teaching a more appealing job, Damour notes, in order to attract more great teachers.
Persons: ” Elmer Roldan, ” Lisa Damour, , ” Damour, Damour Organizations: Los Angeles Times
As his re-election effort gets underway, President Biden is signaling that health care — and particularly the cost of it — will be central to his campaign. “We’re taking on powerful interests to bring your health care costs down,” he has said. Biden is emphasizing the cost of health care partly because it has been one of his administration’s biggest priorities, even if other policies — such as those on the climate and infrastructure — receive more attention. His administration has reduced the cost of hearing aids, reduced the cost of health insurance for people who buy it though an Obamacare exchange and reduced an array of expenses for Medicare recipients. “Millions of people benefit from the health care provisions,” Larry Levitt, an executive vice president at KFF, a health care research group, told us.
Persons: Biden, “ We’re, , “ I’m, Larry Levitt Organizations: White Locations: KFF
China’s Problems Are Real
  + stars: | 2023-08-25 | by ( David Leonhardt | More About David Leonhardt | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
China’s economic problems can seem sudden and surprising. The real estate market is in a serious slump. Unemployment among young adults has surged above 20 percent — and the government has responded by suspending the release of that statistic. “The most terrifying thing is that everyone around me is at a loss of what to do next,” Richard Li, the owner of an auto parts business who has closed two of his four stores, told my colleague Li Yuan. My main argument is that China’s problems are not, in fact, new.
Persons: ” Richard Li, Li Yuan, ,
The eight Republican presidential candidates who took the stage last night had a lot going for them. There was a sitting senator and two sitting governors, as well as an entrepreneur, a few former governors, a former U.N. ambassador and a former vice president. Polls show that several of them have high approval ratings among Republican voters. But the 2024 Republican campaign is shaping up to be unlike any in memory. Donald Trump remains so popular among Republican primary voters that there is no obvious path for any of the other candidates to displace him.
Persons: Donald Trump Organizations: Republican, Republicans, Fox News
The Hunter Biden Case
  + stars: | 2023-08-11 | by ( David Leonhardt | More About David Leonhardt | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The Hunter Biden case has become the latest example of America’s dueling realities. You may see the Hunter Biden obsession as the latest in a line of conservative conspiracy theories, joining Barack Obama’s birthplace, John Kerry’s Vietnam War record and the suicide of Vince Foster. Today’s newsletter is for both those readers who believe the case deserves more attention and those whose instinct is to skip any article about Hunter Biden. Cashing inWhen top Democrats are asked about Hunter Biden, they tend to dismiss his problems as a private issue. “Hunter Biden is a private citizen, and this was a personal matter,” Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, said last month when asked about federal tax and gun charges against him.
Persons: Hunter Biden, you’re, Donald Trump’s, Barack Obama’s, John Kerry’s, Vince Foster, “ Hunter Biden, Karine Jean, Pierre, Organizations: Republican, Democrat, White House Locations: John Kerry’s Vietnam
The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board has spent the last few months trying to boost Gov. As DeSantis’s campaign has sagged, The Journal’s editorialists have offered him tactical advice for confronting Donald Trump. It will shape the Republican Party in the post-Trump era — however far away that may be — and, by extension, influence the country’s economic policy. A Republican splitThe Journal editorial page represents an outlook that dominated the Republican Party from Ronald Reagan’s presidency in the 1980s until Trump’s arrival in 2016. It includes light regulation, low taxes, cuts to government benefits and high levels of trade and immigration.
Persons: Ron DeSantis’s, Donald Trump, DeSantis, Ronald Reagan’s, Milton Friedman Organizations: Gov, Republican Party, Republican Locations: China
It is the biggest what-if of the latest indictment of Donald Trump: What if Republican leaders in Congress had supported impeaching Trump and barring him from holding future office as punishment for his role in the Jan. 6 attack? Soon, though, Republican leaders changed their minds. They feared that banning Trump from future office would anger their own voters. There was little question that members of Congress had the authority to ban Trump permanently from federal office. But once they chose not to do so, the legal consequences for Trump’s actions became much murkier.
Persons: Donald Trump, impeaching, Mitch McConnell, Kevin McCarthy, Trump, Jan, Joe Biden Organizations: Republican, impeaching Trump, Trump, White, Democratic
Biden 43%, Trump 43%
  + stars: | 2023-08-01 | by ( David Leonhardt | More About David Leonhardt | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The first Times poll of the 2024 election cycle shows a dead heat between President Biden and Donald Trump. If those two men are the presidential nominees next year, 43 percent of registered voters say they will support Biden, and 43 percent say they will back Trump. But 43 plus 43 obviously does not equal 100. There are also 14 percent of registered voters who declined to choose either candidate. In the end, a significant number of them probably will vote for Biden or Trump and go a long way toward determining who occupies the White House in 2025.
Persons: Biden, Donald Trump, Ashley Wu Organizations: Trump, Biden, House
But Mr. Biden shows little strength of his own. Democrats can’t necessarily assume the race will snap back into a clear Biden lead once people tune into the race, either. They dislike Mr. Trump more than they dislike Mr. Biden, and the political environment, including promising economic news, seems increasingly favorable to Mr. Biden. And the upside for Mr. Biden among the dissenting 14 percent of voters isn’t necessarily as great as it might look. A two-point edge is certainly better for Mr. Biden than a tie, but it’s not exactly a commanding advantage.
Persons: Mr, Biden, can’t, Trump, , wasn’t, David Leonhardt Organizations: The, Mr
After raising interest rates again yesterday, the Federal Reserve now faces a tough decision. Any further increases in that benchmark rate, which is now at its highest level in 22 years, would heighten the risk of a recession, according to these economists. But other experts — the hawks — point out that annual inflation remains at 3 percent, above the level the Fed prefers. Unless Fed officials add at least one more interest rate increase in coming months, consumers and business may become accustomed to high inflation, making it all the harder to eliminate. For now, Jerome Powell, the Fed chair, and his colleagues are choosing not to take a side.
Persons: Jerome Powell, “ We’ve, ” Powell, Organizations: Federal Reserve Locations: U.S
A major new study has revealed just how much elite colleges admissions in the U.S. systematically favor the rich and the superrich. David Leonhardt, a senior writer for The Times and The Morning, walks through the data and explains why the study is fueling calls to abandon longstanding practices like legacy admissions.
Persons: David Leonhardt Organizations: The Times Locations: U.S
The Covid Origins Debate
  + stars: | 2023-07-26 | by ( ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Did Covid jump from an animal to a person at a food market in Wuhan, China — or leak from a research lab there? — David LeonhardtIn the early days of the pandemic, I was speaking to a variety of U.S. intelligence officials who believed that China was hiding the truth of what happened with Covid. In the name of safety, Chinese officials ordered that coronavirus samples be destroyed. At best, this hampered the later investigation into Covid’s origins, and at worst it was a sign of a cover-up. In this context, some of those intelligence officials believed that people were not paying enough attention to the lab-leak theory.
Persons: David Quammen, Julian Barnes, — David Leonhardt, Covid Organizations: Times Magazine Locations: Wuhan, China, Washington
In their details, the judicial changes that Israel’s Parliament passed yesterday sound like something that liberals in the U.S. and democracy advocates around the world might support. Going forward, democratically elected leaders will have more power, and unelected judges will have less. But the reaction from political progressives, moderates and even some conservatives — in Israel and elsewhere — has instead been one of extreme alarm. And that alarm stems from worries among many observers that Israel is using the mechanics of democracy to transform itself into an undemocratic country. Freed from judicial oversight, it will have the ability to push Israel further toward becoming a religiously conservative country.
Persons: , Benjamin Netanyahu, Freed Locations: U.S, Israel
Many of my articles have suggested that the colleges are not enrolling as many low- and middle-income students as they could. This morning, a team of economists released a detailed study of elite college enrollment. It’s based on admissions records that several colleges made available as well as tax returns that tracked students after college. The findings likely apply to many elite colleges, including the Ivy League, Duke, Stanford, Swarthmore and Williams. And the implications are particularly relevant when many colleges are revamping admissions policies in response to the Supreme Court’s rejection of affirmative action.
Persons: Williams Organizations: Ivy League, Duke, Stanford, Swarthmore
A New Interest in Unions
  + stars: | 2023-07-18 | by ( David Leonhardt | More About David Leonhardt | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Cantor was one of the founders of a new Hollywood labor union, the Screen Actors Guild, along with James Cagney, Miriam Hopkins, Groucho Marx, Spencer Tracy and others. The previous month, the union’s members had elected Cantor as their president. During Roosevelt’s early flurry of legislation, he signed an economic recovery bill that included a provision giving workers a clearer right to join labor unions than they had previously had. Americans responded by signing up for unions by the thousands. By inviting Cantor to join him for Thanksgiving, Roosevelt reminded Americans of the central role that labor unions played in a healthy capitalist economy.
Persons: Franklin Roosevelt, Eddie Cantor, Cantor, James Cagney, Miriam Hopkins, Groucho Marx, Spencer Tracy, Roosevelt Organizations: Hollywood’s, Screen Actors, Hollywood Locations: Warm Springs, Ga
While unions are more popular than they've been in decades, a smaller share of workers are in unions. It's unclear if the strike wave will translate into a labor resurgence absent pro-union legislation. According to Gallup polling, 71% of Americans said they approved of labor unions in 2022, up from 48% in 2009, marking the highest level of public support since 1965. But none of this necessarily means we're approaching a union boom anywhere near the levels of the 1930s. So while unions are certainly having a moment, it's not yet clear if we're approaching the labor resurgence that some are hoping for.
Persons: they've, Joe's, Alexander Hertel, Fernandez, David Leonhardt, Biden Organizations: Service, Gallup, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Workers, Columbia University, The New York Times, House Democrats, Republicans Locations: Wall, Silicon, unionizing, today's Congress
A Positive Covid Milestone
  + stars: | 2023-07-17 | by ( David Leonhardt | More About David Leonhardt | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Most immunocompromised people are at little additional risk from Covid — even people with serious conditions, such as multiple sclerosis or a history of many cancers. The C.D.C.’s main Covid webpage estimates that about 80 people per day have been dying from the virus in recent weeks, which is equal to about 1 percent of overall daily deaths. data suggests that almost one-third of official recent Covid deaths have fallen into this category. “I don’t know anybody who thinks we’re going to eradicate Covid,” Jha said. Given the politics of vaccination, the recent victims are also disproportionately Republican and white.
Persons: , we’re, ” Jha, Shira Doron, Organizations: Tufts Medicine Locations: Covid, Massachusetts
The Semiconductor Struggle
  + stars: | 2023-07-14 | by ( David Leonhardt | More About David Leonhardt | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +3 min
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Secretary of State Antony Blinken have both visited Beijing in recent weeks partly to improve communication between the two countries. Biden administration officials appear close to announcing rules restricting American firms from investing in many cutting-edge Chinese technology companies. The Biden administration put the restrictions in place Oct. 7. Muse, a semiconductor expert at Evercore ISI, an investment advisory firm. The article explains how the Biden administration is trying to prevent China from getting access to cutting-edge semiconductors, which are vital to many digital technologies.
Persons: Janet Yellen, Antony Blinken, Biden, ” Yellen, Yellen, Gina Raimondo, you’d, would’ve, , C.J, Alex Palmer, Alex Organizations: , U.S, Biden, ISI, Times Locations: U.S, China, Beijing, Japan, Netherlands, Taiwan
But starting in 2012, Shinzo Abe, then the prime minister, began pushing for a new approach, one that he argued was more fitting for modern realities. Japan’s current prime minister, Fumio Kishida, plans to raise defense spending gradually to 2 percent of economic output, and the public reaction has been “remarkably sanguine,” Motoko says. The additional money that countries spend on defense is money they cannot spend on roads, child care, cancer research, refugee resettlement, public parks or clean energy, my colleague Patricia points out. One reason Macron has insisted on raising France’s retirement age despite widespread protests, analysts believe, is a need to leave more money for the military. Those other countries, sensing a more threatening world, are now once again promising to pull their weight.
Persons: Shinzo Abe, Motoko Rich, Fumio Kishida, ” Motoko, Patricia, Macron, Organizations: North Locations: Japan, Germany, Tokyo, China, North Korea
The Global Immigration Backlash
  + stars: | 2023-07-11 | by ( David Leonhardt | More About David Leonhardt | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Rutte’s decisionWith today’s left-leaning and centrist parties largely accepting of high levels of immigration, right-wing parties have become attractive to many voters who favor less immigration. The governing coalition there collapsed on Friday after centrist parties refused to accept part of the conservative prime minister’s plan to reduce migration. Rather than alter his plan, the prime minister, Mark Rutte, dissolved the government, setting up an election this fall. Yet he came to believe that reducing immigration was “a matter of political survival” for his party, my colleagues Matina Stevis-Gridneff and Claire Moses reported. Although the details are different, President Biden has also recently taken steps to reduce unauthorized immigration.
Persons: today’s, Jason Horowitz, Jason, Mark Rutte, Matina Stevis, Claire Moses, Biden Organizations: The Times, Democratic Party Locations: France, Germany, Italy, Sweden, Finland, Spain, Netherlands, Dutch, U.S, Mexico, Europe
How Elba Makes a Living Wage
  + stars: | 2023-07-07 | by ( David Leonhardt | More About David Leonhardt | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Early in Barack Obama’s recent Netflix documentary series about American jobs, viewers meet a housekeeper at the Pierre Hotel in New York named Elba. Elba is meant to be a symbol of difficult service-industry work in today’s economy. “I don’t worry too much about money,” said Elba, who recently became a grandmother, “because I know I can count on my paycheck.”Many other service workers earn far less. Full-time Starbucks baristas in New York City often earn less than $35,000 a year, while many Walmart employees make even less. Across New York City, the median household income is about $75,000 — which is less than Elba and Francisco make.
Persons: Barack Obama’s, Elba, Francisco, Pierre Hotel’s, Organizations: Netflix, Pierre, Walmart Locations: New York, Elba, New York City, Francisco
New England biasNew Hampshire’s critics often point out the many ways it does not look like the rest of America. I have covered the New Hampshire primary, and I too found it charming. The clearest pattern is that New Hampshire prefers Democrats from nearby, regardless of their ideology or national appeal. The closest thing to a substantive counterargument from New Hampshire officials is that their state is a swing state, unlike South Carolina, which is solidly Republican. In a very close national election, New Hampshire might even determine the Electoral College result.
Persons: Biden, Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter, Clinton, , Bernie Sanders, John Kerry, Paul Tsongas, Michael Dukakis, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Marianne Williamson, ” Ray Buckley Organizations: New, Democratic, New Hampshire, Biden, New Hampshire Democratic Party Locations: England, America, New, Greece, United States, Hampshire, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Vermont, South Carolina
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