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WalletHub
WalletHub reached out to Patrice Franko, the Grossman Professor of Economics and Global Studies, for her expert opinion on international credit cards. In the short Q&A format, Franko answered the question What’s the biggest credit card mistake that international travelers make? with "Walking the beach with a wallet full of cards. Take one -- and for me the Amex because of traveller support."
Down East
"Notes from the Underground" is the name of the essay by Lyn Mikel Brown, professor of education, that appeared in DownEast magazine's Maine Homes May-June issue. The essay tells the story of Brown's father, who recorded daily events on the floor beams of his home in Alexander, Maine. "Each year, my father recorded the first frost, the first snowstorm...He registered his children’s marriages and the birth of each grandchild," Brown wrote. "He logged the December day he canoed down lake, the day my mother won $400 in the lottery, the day I was accepted to graduate school."
National Public Radio
In a July 10 NPR story titled "The Famous Big 5 Personality Test Might Not Reveal The True You," Assistant Professor of Psychology Christopher Soto is quoted repeatedly on the origins of the test as well as a recent study testing its effectiveness in developing countries. Researchers are finding "that in many of these developing countries, people tended to agree more than disagree with the Big Five statements," NPR reported. Soto, who is a consultant on a Kenya project as part of the larger study, said, "The most surprising thing to me was if someone was interviewed twice by the same interviewer then their responses across the two tests were pretty consistent," he says. "But if they were interviewed by two different interviewers then their responses were often completely unrelated to each other." The story also ran on local NPR stations across the country from South Carolina to Iowa to Oregon to Hawaii.
Vox
Lindsay Mayka, assistant professor of government, co-wrote an article titled "Brazil’s Supreme Court pushed back against an attempt to cancel participatory councils" that appeared July 8 on Vox's Mischiefs of Faction political science blog. The article discusses Brazil's participatory councils and a recent Supreme Court injunction that blocked President Jair Bolsonaro's decree to dismantle them. "The participatory councils deepen democracy by including groups that typically have less influence through elections or lobbying, such as the poor," the authors wrote.
Vox
Sandy Maisel, the Goldfarb Family Distinguished Professor of American Government, was quoted in a June 26 article on Vox titled "Why Democrats think 2020 is the year they can defeat Susan Collinsin which he expressed skepticism about Collins's moderate image. "Despite the fact she would like to be, she is not John McCain, Maisel said, referring to the 'maverick' reputation the senator sometimes had before his death last year. She doesn’t have the moral rectitude. She’s not going to stand up on these issues and say this is who I am. She frets so much about how she’s going to vote and is the last person to commit,” he told Vox.  The Vox article has been cited elsewhere, including in a Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee press release and in an AlterNet article titled "Behind the scenes of Democrats’ full-throttle effort to unseat Maine’s Susan Collins."
eJewish Philanthropy
Rabbi Rachel Isaacs wrote a letter titled "Small Town Jewish Life Takes Center Stage" printed in the "Readers Forum" section of eJewish Philanthropy June 11, 2019. In it, she chronicles how she came to settle in Waterville and create Colby's Center for Small Town Jewish Life. "Our core values of economic accessibility, dynamic learning, and collaboration across institutional and generational lines have animated all of the center’s programs since its inception," she writes. Communities like Waterville are the future of Jewish life, she continues. "Small town Jewish communities have always demanded elbow grease, innovative solutions, and a determined entrepreneurial spirit. If you look at who is leading major Jewish organizations today, you would be surprised by how many of them come from towns like Waterville, bringing their determination and hard-won Jewish knowledge back to the centers of Jewish life."
History News Network
In an article titled "Are Historians Doing Enough to Address Climate Change?," the author, Walter G. Moss, cited a 1998 book by Jim Fleming, the Charles A. Dana Professor of Science, Technology, and Society. After citing the opinions of others on the dearth of historical writing on climate change, Moss writes, "Fleming’s words of 1998—'Since the mid-1980s, the dominant concern has been global warming from rising concentrations of CO2 and other greenhouse gases'—[this] remains true today."
However, Fleming replied in a comment: "I think we need to look beyond the American Historical Association for our sample of historians addressing climate change. I know that History of Science Society, the Society for the Social Study of Science, and the Society for the History of Technology, to name just three societies, have paid considerable attention to the subject. I, for one, have written three books and edited an issue of Osiris on 'Klima' since publishing my 1998 book. I have been engaged with IPCC (AR4 and AR5) and with the U.S. National Academies in study groups on climate intervention (2 vols. 2015). So dig deeper, and don't accept anyone's opinion without further reading."
Pine Tree Watch
Sandy Maisel, the Goldfarb Family Distinguished Professor of American Government, was quoted in the article "Calling all challengers" in Pine Tree Watch. As speculation on whether or not Susan Collins will be re-elected builds, pundits are weighing in. “I think there is more dissatisfaction than at any other time," Maisel told Pine Tree Watch. "Certainly from Progressives, especially women, but also from conservative Republicans who are angry about her votes on healthcare and the (immigration) emergency.”
Washington Post
An article by Assistant Professor of Government Lindsay Mayka and government and economics major Andrés Lovón '21 was published in the May 23 Washington Post. Titled "How one company’s deep web of corruption took down governments across Latin America," the article breaks down a large bribery scandal that played out across several Latin American countries, including Peru, Brazil, Ecuador, and Mexico. "Prosecutors have investigated and/or charged hundreds of high-level public officials for receiving Odebrecht kickbacks," Mayka and Lovón wrote about the Brazilian construction company. "After investigating Odebrecht’s bribery payments funneled through Swiss and U.S. banks, the U.S. Department of Justice called it 'the largest foreign bribery case in history.'”
Morning Sentinel
Julia Nelson '19 and Catherine Fraser '19, students in the class Environment and Human Health, had letters to the editor published in Waterville's Morning Sentinel. Both letters urged support for L.D. 1433, “An Act to Protect the Environment and Public Health by Further Reducing Toxic Chemicals in Packaging,” a bill currently before the Maine Legislature. Nelson's letter, printed May 20, wrote that the bill "aligns with Gov. Janet Mills’ commitment to a healthy environment and healthy people in Maine as it would ban the unnecessary addition of a variety of chemicals that are used in packaging materials and have understood human health impacts." Fraser's letter ran May 19 and pointed out that "Maine is a leader in creating safer chemicals policy, regulating BPA in 2011 and 2013 under the Kid-Safe Products Act and flame-retardant chemicals in 2017. We need to regulate PFAS chemicals to reduce the body burdens and adverse health impacts associated with these harmful chemicals."