• James Angel, associate professor of finance at Georgetown University, notes that Schapiro has held key posts in both agencies.

    NPR: Obama Names SEC Pick

  • Dawn Chandler, a management professor at California Polytechnic State University, notes that spending time abroad can teach workers to deal with very different leadership styles.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Gustavo Gonzaga, an economist at Rio de Janeiro's Catholic University, notes that a remarkable one-third of Brazilian workers are made redundant each year, a fact he attributes in part to the labour laws themselves.

    ECONOMIST: Brazil's labour laws

  • Paul Whiteley of the University of Essex notes the increasing separation of political life from the rest of society.

    ECONOMIST: Political parties: Lonely at the top | The

  • Matteo Caroli of the LUISS university in Rome notes the central government has introduced draconian sanctions to force the regional administrations to balance their books.

    ECONOMIST: Europe��s troubled regions

  • The best way to deal with racial conflict is 24-hour immersion, says Charles Moskos, a professor of sociology at Northwestern University, who notes that the most effectively integrated institution in America is the army.

    ECONOMIST: Fire services

  • Simon Chesterman, a law professor at the National University of Singapore, notes that Britain's tough Official Secrets Act would also outlaw WikiLeaks' actions.

    ECONOMIST: An American trial is drawing nearer for Julian Assange

  • Benjamin Siegel, professor of pediatrics at the Boston University School of Medicine notes that it isn't until about age 3 that children can really start to understand and follow rules.

    WSJ: Smarter Ways to Discipline Children

  • Barry Burden, a professor of political science at the University of Wisconsin, notes in a 2002 article in Political Science Quarterly that governors have the executive experience voters want to see.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • As Arthur Caplan, a bioethicist at the University of Pennsylvania, notes, the broader question raised by Seasonale is whether suppressing menstruation is merely a lifestyle choice or, rather, whether it is more like turning a normal bodily function into a medical complaint.

    ECONOMIST: Controlling menstruation

  • Frank Mora, a Latin America expert at the National Defense University in Washington, also notes that Venezuela has little to contribute to the upcoming exercises.

    CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: The upcoming Russian-Venezuelan naval exercises

  • One expert, Dr. John Christy of the University of Alabama in Huntsville, notes that over the last 100 years 35 states experienced record temperatures before 1940, while only 11 have had such temperatures since.

    FORBES: Fact and Comment

  • Although immigrants pose some serious issues, University of Chicago scholar Tito Sananji notes that the U.S., along with Canada and Australia, seems to be doing a better job educating their newcomers than the continental European states.

    FORBES: The Poverty Of Ambition: Why The West Is Losing To China And India

  • Indeed, Linda Lim, a professor of Southeast Asian studies at the University of Michigan Business School, notes that the country's puny savings rate, chronic budget deficits and high ratio of nonworking dependents to workers make it look more like a Latin American than an Asian nation.

    FORBES: The Ronald Reagan of the Pacific

  • Despite such talk, however, presidents have often sparred with Congress over the implementation of laws, notes Kenneth Mayer of the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

    ECONOMIST: Executive authority v congressional oversight

  • The Christian Democratic Union, the most sceptical big party, was an enthusiastic backer of the Tempelhof referendum, notes Volker Mittendorf of the University of Wuppertal.

    ECONOMIST: If you thought Germany did not do referendums, think again

  • Connecticut is one of only 18 states that assess personal property tax on motor vehicles, according to David Brunori, a public policy professor at George Washington University and contributing editor of State Tax Notes.

    FORBES: Tax Rolls Reveal Cars Of The Rich (But Not Horses)

  • In the 1940s the church embraced the welfare state as a modern, professional alternative to charity, willingly dismantling voluntary relief networks and signing over thousands of church schools, hospitals and other bodies to the state, notes Linda Woodhead of Lancaster University.

    ECONOMIST: Bagehot

  • The University of Washington's Richard Morrill notes that the WPA bequeathed "an enduring legacy" around Seattle: bridges and retaining walls and drainage systems, parks and playgrounds, roads and trails, sewers, recreational facilities, airports, streetcars, low-income housing, as well as programs for musicians, artists and writers.

    FORBES: New Geographer

  • And once in power, notes Peter Mair of the European University Institute in Florence, governments lose popularity more quickly, not least because they are constrained by decisions taken in Brussels.

    ECONOMIST: Charlemagne

  • McDaniel says tests are being conducted at top-notch facilities, notes that all three doctors have university affiliations and says that negotiations are in progress to conduct independent tests next year.

    FORBES: Health

  • McDaniel says that tests are being conducted at top-notch facilities, notes that all three physicians have university affiliations and says that negotiations are in progress to conduct independent tests next year.

    FORBES: Technology

  • Dr. Robert Bonow, chief of cardiology at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine, notes that about 10 percent of study participants with a positive test had normal coronary arteries, and 17 percent of those with a normal test had coronary disease.

    CNN: Newer heart test may not be better

  • An economist at Vienna University, Dennis Mueller (born in 1940) notes that the old have to take driving tests to keep their licences.

    ECONOMIST: Charlemagne

  • Prices for national coverage differed enormously depending on how the licences were combined, notes Simon Wilkie, an economist at the University of Southern California.

    ECONOMIST: Mobile telecoms

  • Indeed, we do a pretty good job of selecting gifts for close friends and significant others people we are more likely to "get" and have some good reason for choosing the items we buy, notes Joel Waldfogel, an economist at the University of Minnesota.

    WSJ: How Did Santa Treat You This Morning?

  • Except for Arizona, notes Muzaffar Chishti, Director of New York University's Migration Policy Center, he can't think of a single state or locality that has taken upon itself to enforce federal immigration law without first entering a memorandum of understanding with Uncle Sam.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • This is another fine line, notes Kathleen Flake, a Mormon historian at Vanderbilt University.

    NPR: Romney Seeks to Put the Mormon Question to Rest

  • He also notes the increased sway that faculties now hold over university administrators, which often cause big capital projects to run over budget to satisfy professors' stated requirements.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • "High school did not become de rigueur until about 30 years ago, " notes Patricia Albjerg Graham, education historian at Harvard University and author of Schooling America: How The Public Schools Meet The Nation's Changing Needs (Oxford University Press, 2005).

    FORBES: Grownup Training

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