Shamrock only exists on St. Patrick's Day. Every other day of the year, it's just young clover.
Hispanics had the highest rate of any people without health insurance. Children in poverty had a higher uninsured rate than any other children.
Overall, the story is that uninsured rates are relatively stable.
This stabilization in overall coverage rate can be explained by increases in government coverage that offset the decline in employer-based coverage.
What's happening ... is kind of similar to what happened in the early 1990s where you have a recession officially over and then several more years after that a rise in poverty.
The threat of an avian flu pandemic is already very real for companies with employees in Asia, but European employers need to be prepared too.
This is a simple matter of consumer privacy. I feel strongly that sensitive personal information, including our cell phone records, should be protected from the eyes of strangers.
This is the second consecutive year that households did not experience an annual change in real median income.
For children, uninsured rates appear to be declining over time.
There's two principal myths about shamrock: that it's unique to Ireland, and that it never flowers.
I guess what happened last year was kind of similar to what happened in the early 1990s where you had a recession that was officially over and then you had several years after that of rising poverty.