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Telemundo E Ipsos Anuncian una Revolucionaria Alianza Investigativa
Las Encuestas Demuestran que la Mayorнa de Hispanos Piensan Participar en el Censo 2010 y Tienen Confianza en que la Informaciуn Personal Recolectada No Serб Compartida con Otras Organizaciones Gubernamentales
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Telemundo and Ipsos Announce Ground-Breaking Research Partnership
Poll Finds Majority of Hispanics Intend to Participate in 2010 Census and Are Confident Personal Information Collected Won't Be Shared With Other Government Organizations
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Presidential Approval Slips Below 50% As Ratings of Obama's Handling of Various Issues Fall Across the Board
Democratic Party Declines in Favorability As Republican Party Recoups
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Concern about Contracting the Swine Flu Has Become Widespread
Two Thirds of Americans Surveyed Give Good Marks to the Obama Administration on Dealing with the Issue
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Obama's Approval Rating Declines Marginally to 56%
A Majority Oppose Sending More Troops to Afghanistan Amid Feeling that U.S. Is Not Winning the War
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For All Its Intensity, Americans Are Not Swayed by the Healthcare Debate
Public Remains Split on Reform Proposals
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Widespread Concern about Rising Food Costs Dampens Americans' Support of Policies Promoting the Production of Corn Ethanol
USDA data linking ethanol to food price increases diminishes Americans' support for policies promoting ethanol
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IGN and Ipsos MediaCT Debut Most Comprehensive Research Study to Date on the Changing Face of Videogamers
Study Breaks Long-Standing Stereotypes and Shows Gamers are More Social, More Active and More Valuable as Consumers than Non-Gamers. Videogamers are More Likely than Non-Gamers to Influence Friends' Attitudes About Pop Culture -- such as Movies and TV -- and New Technology Purchases
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In the Wake of Wall Street Meltdown, Neither Candidate Seen As Qualified to Resolve Crisis: Obama 45%, McCain 46%
But Economy Looms Large As Most Important Election
Issue (36%); National Security a Distant Second (16%)
Obama Leads McCain As Stronger on Jobs and the Economy (48% vs. 40%) and Representing Change (57% vs. 32%) in an Otherwise Tight Race