NUMBERS
Friday, August 24, 2007
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A week's worth of data, compiled from the last five editions of our daily email newsletter.
School Lunches Get Passing Marks Source: Gallup News Service, August 2007.
An Informed Electorate?
Support for School "Integration"?
When the word “integration” was dropped from the polling question, however, the response was quite different. In an August poll on the same subject, participants were asked whether or not they agreed with the Court’s decision “that public schools may not consider an individual’s race when deciding which students to assign to specific schools.” This time, 71 percent said that they agreed.
Source: Newsweek-
Internet Dating and Beyond A new Pew Internet poll reports that public attitudes toward internet dating services have become more accepting in recent years. In the national poll, an increasing number of Americans say their friends have used dating sites with some success. Sixty-one percent of internet users in the survey said they do not consider someone who uses such a service "desperate." Still, 66 percent of all Americans think that online dating can be dangerous because it puts personal information on the internet. Perhaps because of these worries, internet users are finding other ways to use modern technology in their love lives. Among the survey's subsample of online adults who are single and looking for romance, 37 percent say they have used a dating website. But 40 percent of this same group say they have used the internet to flirt, 21 percent have been introduced to a potential partner by email, and 18 percent have used the internet to maintain a long-distance relationship. And if things don't work out? Nine percent admit having used the internet to break up. Source: Pew Internet and American Life Project, August 2007. Read the full report here.
Not Buying It
Source: CBS News, August 2007.
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