Monthly Archives: June 2009

Healthcare reform bills flowing

With a variety of healthcare reform bills emerging in Congress, a new CBS News/New York Times poll shows 72 percent of Americans favoring creation of a politically controversial public insurance option for coverage.  School of Management Professor Stephen Davidson, author of the forthcoming “In Urgent Need of Reform: Saving the U.S. Healthcare System,” can discuss […]

BU’s CRaTER starts orbiting the moon on June 23.

Barely 60 minutes after Thursday’s launch of NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, the BU-developed Cosmic Ray Telescope for the Effects of Radiation instrument was turned on to begin measuring radiation levels. Over the next 12 months, CRaTER will provide data to help Harlan Spence, its developer, assess the risks of the harsh lunar and deep space […]

On the Globe watch

The Boston Globe’s largest union meets again on Monday with management to talk about a new contract with the parent company The New York Times.  The union also has set July 20th  for a contract ratification vote, though there’s no contract yet to ratify.  College of Communication Dean Tom Fiedler, a Pulitzer-winning former executive editor of […]

Cookie dough recall

Nestle USA is voluntarily recalling its Toll House refrigerated cookie dough products after reports of people getting ill from eating the dough raw.  School of Management Professor Michael Salinger, a former director at the Federal Trade Commission, can discuss the mechanics of such recalls. Contact Michael Salinger, 617-353-4408, salinger@bu.edu

Reports: Cronkite “gravely” ill

Former CBS News anchor Walter Cronkite, 92, is reportedly “gravely ill,” according to sources.  College of Communication journalism Professor Robert Zelnick, a long-time ABC News correspondent, can talk about the impact “The most trusted man in America” had on broadcast news. Contact Robert Zelnick, 617-353-5007, bzelnick@bu.edu

Brokers and “fiduciary” duty

Individual investors can benefit from a proposal within the Obama regulatory reform plan that obliges brokers to put their client’s interest ahead of their own and act with a higher “fiduciary” standard.  School of Law Professor Tamar Frankel, an expert on fiduciary law, can discuss how it would clear up the blurring of when the […]

New U.S. Patent Boss

President Obama will nominate IBM’s David Kappos as director of the Patent and Trademark Office and under secretary of Commerce for intellectual property.  School of Law Professor Michael Meurer, an authority on patent law, says the appointment is a good sign “for those of us who hope the patent system can be reformed to better […]

SCOTUS rules on DNA tests

The Supreme Court has decided 5-4 that convicts have no constitutional right to test old DNA evidence, ruling against an Alaska man convicted in an attack on a prostitute 16 years ago.  School of Law Professor Tracey Maclin can discuss the constitutional ramifications. Contact Tracey Maclin, 617-34688, tmaclin@bu.edu

Providing the right vaccine(s) for young and old

The delicate balancing act between manufacturing enough of the yearly influenza vaccine that is widely administered in the fall and limiting the production of the forthcoming vaccine to control the H1N1 flu virus pandemic to children and people under 30 years old, raises competing constitunency concerns for Al Ozonoff, assistant professor of biostatistics who has […]

Teenagers admit to cheating on tests via their cellphones

According to a recent study, highschoolers are using their cellphones in classrooms as cheating devices by text-messaging one another answers to test questions.  Only about half of those polled think that cheating in this way should be considered a “serious offense.”  Assistant Professor of Curriculum & Teaching in BU’s School of Education Scott Seider can […]