In the News

  1. November 26, 2013

    Nicholas Howson, professor of law, was quoted about the legal risks and uncertainty regarding the Shanghai Free-trade Zone, which was launched in late September.

    South China Morning Post
  2. November 26, 2013

    “Most high-profile journals will insist that work that they accept for publication has not appeared elsewhere. So for investigators to share their data in advance of publication could actually jeopardize their ability to publish their work,” said J. David Allan, professor of natural resources and environment.

    Michigan Radio
  3. November 26, 2013

    David Meyer, professor of psychology, was interviewed about the proposal to lift the Federal Communications Commission ban on cell phone use on airliners.

    CNN
  4. November 25, 2013

    David Nidever, a research fellow in astronomy, was quoted in an article about the collision of two dwarf galaxies in our local group of galaxies, sparking the nearest “starburst.”

    Scientific American
  5. November 25, 2013

    Jonathan Freedman, professor of English language and literature, American studies and Judaic studies, wrote that massive open online courses “are just the latest incarnation of bringing watered-down versions of culture, knowledge and learning to a mass audience.”

    The Chronicle of Higher Education
  6. November 25, 2013

    Comments by Daniel Kruger, research assistant professor of health behavior and health education, were featured in a story about the “foraging for resources” and looting of stores in the Philippines by desperate survivors of Typhoon Haiyan.

    The New York Times
  7. November 24, 2013

    “We will have to see quite a few readings of 3 percent or better (for gross domestic product) to bring unemployment down to a long-run normal rate,” said Daniil Manaenkov, assistant research scientist at the Research Seminar in Quantitative Economics.

    The Detroit News
  8. November 24, 2013

    Richard Curtin, director of the Surveys of Consumers, was quoted in a story about the economic outlook for small businesses nationwide.

    The Wall Street Journal
  9. November 24, 2013

    Gerald Meyers, adjunct professor of management and organizations, regarding the U.S. auto bailout: “It wasn’t just GM [that was threatened], it was the whole supply chain underneath it, and the dealer organizations, and the customers’ retention to a U.S. producer. If you track that all the way down, [the $10 billion loss] was cheap. There was not a better alternative, and it certainly was worth it.”

    The Christian Science Monitor
  10. November 21, 2013

    Donald Lopez, professor of Buddhist and Tibetan studies, was interviewed about his new book, “The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism,” hailed as the most authoritative and comprehensive English-language reference on Buddhism.

    Michigan Radio